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Böcker i Gardening in America-serien

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  • av Edward Sprague Rand
    366,-

    In this 1888 volume, Edward Rand provides not only a record of his personal experience cultivating orchards at Glen Ridge, but also a ready reference on the culture and species descriptions for other popular orchid varieties.

  • av Ernest Thomas Cook
    196,-

    This 1905 volume edited by Ernest Cook gathers advice from the foremost authorities on carnations, picotees, and pinks to provide the gardener with the best cultivation information.

  • av Charles Linnaeus Allen
    280,-

    This 1909 book is a comprehensive reference on all aspects of bulbs and tuberous-rooted plants.

  • av John Weathers
    370,-

    John Weathers's 1911 work is detailed discussion of bulbous plants from all over the world.

  • av C. W. Gurney
    266,-

    Gurney's 1894 work attempts to provide practical guidance to horticulturists and orchardists working in Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, Nebraska, and the Dakotas.

  • av Frank Albert Waugh
    270,-

    Systematic pomology, or the branch of pomology dealing with our knowledge of the fruits themselves, is explored in Frank Waugh's 1903 book, as well as the trees, bushes, or vines on which they grow. He treats three distinct subjects: description, nomenclature, and classification.

  • av Liberty Hyde Bailey
    370,-

    A prolific author on all aspects of horticulture, Liberty Bailey provides readers with a historical background on native American fruit varieties, including grapes, mulberries, apples, and berries in this 1906 work.

  • av Walter Nicol
    356,-

    This 1802 work describes the means by which fruits and kitchen-garden staples such as grapes, mushrooms, salad greens, and herbs, among others, can be forced by use of greenhouses and other means.

  • av Franklin Reuben Elliott
    380,-

    Franklin Elliott's 1859 work is a comprehensive source of information on the varieties of fruit available for culture in the United States in the mid-19th century and how they were cultivated.

  • av Thomas Bridgeman
    180,-

    This delightful 1847 work by Thomas Bridgeman is a complete source of information on kitchen gardens. It contains not only descriptions of the most common culinary vegetables and herbs, as well as instructions on their planting and care, but also a monthly calendar of maintenance tasks.

  • av Edward James Wickson
    306,-

    Edward Wickson's 1910 work provides information specific to growing vegetables in the climate and soil conditions of California.

  • av Lucius Daniel Davis
    296,-

    Lucius Davis's 1899 work is not a scientific text but rather a layman's guide describing the characteristics of the types of shrubbery suitable for planting in the United States.

  • av Charles Pack
    316,-

    This 1919 book describes both the success of the war garden in helping to reduce food shortages during the World War I period and the necessity for maintaining these gardens during peacetime.

  • av Bliss S. Brown
    266,-

    Bliss Brown's 1916 volume is a complete source of information on the marketing, packaging, and transportation of fruit for sale.

  • av William Robinson
    296,-

    William Robinson presents descriptions of ornamental, hardy, herbaceous, alpine, and bulbous plants with directions for their culture and arrangement.

  • av Nils J?nsson Rose
    336,-

  • av Maude Gridley Peterson
    316,-

    This useful field guide, published in 1914, helps readers identify plants by their fruit and/or leaf.

  • av William Lambeth
    240,-

    Lambeth and Manning's 1913 work provides a unique perspective on Thomas Jefferson. Rather than concentrating on his political life, they instead investigate his intellectual pursuits as an architect and designer of landscapes.

  • av Marshall Pinckney Wilder
    140,-

    This 1881 work by Marshall Wilder, president of the New England Historic Genealogical Society, provides an interesting history of horticulture in the city of Boston and its surrounding area.

  • av H. A. Burberry
    196,-

    H.A. Burberry's 1900 reference is a complete source of information for the amateur orchid cultivator.

  • av John Claudius Loudon
    496,-

    This 1871 volume, a revision and enlargement by William Robinson of John Loudon's original text, is a classic work on the growth and management of fruits and vegetables.

  • av William N. White
    356,-

    This 1868 edition returned to print a work that had long been unavailable. With the death of its original author, William White, in 1867, the incomplete manuscript was completed by J. Van Buren and Dr. James Camak.

  • av H. M. Stringfellow
    196,-

    H.M. Stringfellow, in this 1896 work, aims to show that the principles of horticulture, as they were put into practice at the time, are wrong and that there is a more natural, easier, and inexpensive way to grow fruit than was commonly done.

  • av Peter Henderson
    320,-

    Peter Henderson's 1898 work focuses on useful information and helpful hints for those who garden for pleasure rather than profit.

  • av William Kenrick
    356,-

    After a short discussion of climate issues in America, William Kenrick's 1842 book provides a history and description of the types of fruits and their varieties available to be grown in America, with instructions for their cultivation.

  • av Thomas Warren Field
    266,-

    Thomas Field's 1858 work covers all aspects of the culture of pears.

  • av Samuel Bowdlear Green
    180,-

    Prolific gardening writer and educator Samuel Green published this 1894 work to aid the amateur fruit grower in cultivating fruits for personal use and to sell. Covering the most widely available and stable varieties known, the work provides descriptions of the fruits as well as advice on the best way to grow each variety.

  • av Edward Kemp
    346,-

    This 1858 work is the first American edition of a work that had already been through two editions in England. It is a comprehensive source on landscape design, complete with sketches and detailed instructions for lots of all sizes.

  • av Nathaniel Paterson
    266,-

    Nathaniel Paterson's 19th-century work presents information on the culture of fruits, flowers, and vegetables for upper-class homes.

  • av Harry Higgott Thomas
    316,-

    Harry Thomas's 1916 text calls the reader's attention to the flowers, fruits, and vegetables of each season while noting the chief garden work to be done in each successive month.

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