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Orange And Lemon Trees
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The Lawn: How To Make It And How To Take Care Of It
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The Rose: Its General Care And Culture
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Planning The Garden
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The Wild Garden A Plea For Our Native Plants
The Winter Garden
Window And Veranda Boxes
Spring Work In The Garden
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Fall Work In The Garden
The Lawn: How To Make It And How To Take Care Of It
Planting The Lawn
Shrubs
Vines
The Hardy Border
The Garden Of Annuals
The Bulb Garden
The Rose: Its General Care And Culture
The Rose As A Summer Bedder
The Dahlia
The Gladiolus
Lilies
Plants For Special Purposes
Arbors Summer-houses Pergolas And Other Garden Features
Carpet-bedding
Flowering And Foliage Plants For Edging Beds And Walks
Planning The Garden
The Back-yard Garden
The Wild Garden A Plea For Our Native Plants
The Winter Garden
Window And Veranda Boxes
Spring Work In The Garden
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A Chapter Of Afterthoughts Which The Reader Cannot Afford To Miss
Soil Required Its Preparation
General Remarks On Manuring With Green Crops
Varieties
Influence Of Soil On Seedlings
How To Cross Varieties
Smooth Vs Rough Potatoes
Cut And Uncut Seed
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Insects Injurious To The Potato
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Value Of The Potato As Cattle Food


Camellias Orange And Lemon Trees

from Your Plants



Dear reader, did you ever see a large Camellia plant in full blossom? If

you have not, I will risk my reputation by saying that all other flowers

within my knowledge, barring the rose, dwindle into insignificance when

compared with it. It excels the finest rose in doubleness and form of

its flowers, and puts the virgin lily to shame for spotless purity and

whiteness; if it only possessed fragrance, it would be unquestionably

the Queen of the floral world. What I shall have to say in regard to

this plant, I hope will have the effect of introducing it into many

homes where it has hitherto been little known. Few outside of

professional florists have undertaken to cultivate the Camellia, for the

reason, we suppose, that it is thought to be quite an impossibility to

raise and bloom it successfully outside of a green-house; this is a

mistake, although many believe it otherwise. I contend that Camellias

can be as easily and as successfully grown in the window-garden as the

Rose or Geranium.



Camellias bloom in the winter, and at no other season of the year.

Plants should be purchased of the florist in the fall or early in

winter, and such plants as have flower-buds already formed; those

plants, if kept in the right atmosphere, will bloom profusely, but they

must have an atmosphere of 50 deg. until the buds are all expanded, after

which there will be no danger of the flowers blasting. As soon as the

bloom has all passed off, the plants should be taken from their cool

quarters, and placed with the other plants in a warm temperature, and

watered freely, to encourage a vigorous growth previous to removing them

out-of-doors in the spring. As soon as all danger of heavy frosts is

over in the spring, the plants should be taken from the house and

removed to some shady location, under a grape-arbor, in a pit or frame

covered with shades; here leave them standing in the pots "plunging" the

pots in earth or sand to prevent too rapid drying out.



The summer is the period in which the flower-buds are formed that bloom

in winter; the plants should be kept growing, and watered freely

throughout the summer. They must be left out-of-doors as long as the

weather will permit, but, on the approach of frost, take the plants into

the house, and let them stand in a cool room, where the temperature is

not over 50 deg.. This is the critical time, for if they are removed into a

warm temperature of 70 deg. or 80 deg., the buds will all blast and drop off,

and no flowers will be produced.



If the plants are large and well-budded, a succession of bloom will be

yielded throughout the entire winter. There are a number of varieties,

embracing colors from red, pink, variegated, etc., to the purest

waxy-white. The Double White Camellia Japonica, the white sort, is the

most valuable for its bloom, the flowers being sometimes four to five

inches in diameter, exceedingly double, with the petals imbricated, and

of a waxy texture, and are highly prized by florists, who often charge

as high as one dollar per flower for them. They are invaluable for

funeral occasions, when pure white flowers are required. Plants are

multiplied by either grafting or budding them on the common stock; it is

almost impossible to raise plants from cuttings; they are slower than

the Azalea to take root.





Next: Orange And Lemon Trees
Previous: Azaleas How To Cultivate Them


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