PRUNING PIGS
... Prime by pe. - petual roses in lx•ds and borders, sni : rrceutly planted fruit trees. Shorten nes. ly planted raspberries, blackberries, and loganberries near to tbe ground. ...
... Prime by pe. - petual roses in lx•ds and borders, sni : rrceutly planted fruit trees. Shorten nes. ly planted raspberries, blackberries, and loganberries near to tbe ground. ...
... fire brigade. Since Easter £3,000 has been realised by the letting of chairs on the cliff and beach at Wcstcliff-on-Sea. Blackberries have been gathered on the outskirts of Guildford. fully a month before the usual season. Peterborough Guardians have objected ...
... will be as big as the parent plant from which they were detached. The loganberry is a croaa between the raspberry and the blackberry, retaining most of the characteristic' and growth of the latter, whilst the fruit is more like that of the raspberry, only ...
... s, herbaceous phloxes, paeonies; fruit trees, roses. Prune old fuchsias, gooseberry bushes, newly planted raspberries, blackberries. Admit air freely to frames containing violas, calceolarias, pentstemons. mamuerites. Top dress lawns with fine soil and ...
... Fertilise peaches, nectarines and vines in flower. Shorten to within a foot of ground newly planted raspberries, loganberries, blackberries. Drees lawns with txmemeal, 4os. per square yard. Lift and replant old rhubarb in fresh quarters of freshly dug and. enriched ...
... bean, spinach, onion, kek. Plant cauliflower, cabbage, pctato, artichokes, sea k a le, horseradish; straw berry, raspberry, blackberry; evergreen and il,ciduous glirubs, rcses ; herbaceous and alpine plants. Prune hybrid perpetual roses tu and borders. Tie ...
... shoot a stick of ,uftleient length. Liquid manure will be beneficial when the buds show. Keep long tatr.)ng growths of blackberries and loganberth's tied in to the supports, and the old fruiting growths closely cut. New plants,. of strawberries should ...
... Eaton (St. Edward street). Fruit and vegetables; Waterfall Church, Ipstones Church, Cauldon Church. Blackberries; Mrs, Gould. Flowers and blackberries; Mrs. Swinson (Alton). Magazines and flowers; Mrs. Hall (Homefields). French beans; Mrs. Wilson (Hillesden) ...
... wood to ripen thoroughly. Por vines carrying crops plenty of air is also essential. Cut awov the fruit-bearing growths a blackberries at the base immediately the ripe fruit ha's been cleared. Ground sheuld be prepared as early. as possible for the autumn ...
... for very poor soil in the case cf apples, pears, peaches, and ne.ctarines, but for eFooseberries, currants, raspberries, blackberries a rich soil is best. Lift all tubers as soon as possible now, and preserve them through the winter by clamp fig on a piece ...
... apples to . every - three pounds of blackberries, and three-nuartem of a pound of sugar to every pound of' the mixed. fruit. Peel, core, and slice the apples thinly and place in the preserving pan with the blackberries. Boil till the jam sets, then place ...
... crumbling away to nothiug on close inspection. Then what is your reason for /creating one? If reasons were as plentiful as blackberries I would give no man a reason on compulsion. she quoted softly. And he swung , upon his heel and walked to the window, ...