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Wood and garden

Chapter 78: FOOTNOTE
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About This Book

This collection of practical, month-by-month essays records observations and advice for woodlands and gardens, blending horticultural instruction with aesthetic reflection. The author describes seasonal progress from winter structure to spring bulbs and flowering shrubs, gives guidance on planting, pruning, thinning, propagating and training climbers, and recommends combinations for shelter, colour, and texture. Emphasis falls on using native and hardy shrubs for year-round interest, the placement and care of bulbs and rock-plants, and the visual effects of foliage and bark; photographic studies and hands-on examples illustrate how to shape informal, naturalistic plantings.

Japan Privet, foliage for winter decoration, 16

Japan Quince (Cydonia or Pyrus), 50

Jasminum nudiflorum, 164

Junction of garden and wood, 34, 270

Juniper, its merits, 26;
its form, action of snow, 27;
power of recovery from damage, 29;
beauty of colouring, 30;
stems in winter dress, 31;
in a wild valley, 154, and onward


Kitchen-garden, 179;
its sheds, 179, 180


Larch, sweetness in April, 51

Large gardens, 176

Lavender, when to cut, 105

Lawn-making, 146;
lawn spaces, 177, 178

Leaf mould, 149

Learning, 5, 189, 190, 273

Lessons of the garden, 6;
in wild-tree planting, 154;
in orchard planting, 183;
of the show-table, 241

Leucojum vernum, 33

Leycesteria formosa, 100

Lilacs, suckers, as strong feeders, good kinds, 23;
standards best, 24

Lilium auratum among rhododendrons, 37, 106;
among bamboos, 106

Lilium giganteum, 95;
cultivation needed in poor soil, 142

Lilium Harrisi and L. speciosum, 106

Lily of the valley in the copse, 61

Linaria repens, 259

London Pride in the rock-wall, 120

Loquat, 204

Love-in-a-mist, 251

Love of gardening, 1

Luzula sylvatica, 61


Magnolia, branches indoors in winter, 16;
magnolia stellata, 50;
kinds in the choice shrub-bank, 101

Mai-trank, 60

Marking trees for cutting, 151

Marsh marigold, 52

Masters and men, 271

Mastic, 102

Meconopsis Wallichi, 165

Medlar, 129

Megaseas, colour of foliage, 17;
M. ligulata, 103;
in front edge of flower-border, 211

Mertensia virginica, 46;
sowing the seed, 84

Mice, 260, 261

Michaelmas daisies, a garden to themselves, 125;
planting and staking, 126;
early kinds in mixed border, 135

Mixed planting, 183;
mixed border, 206

Morells, 59

Mulleins (V. olympicum and V. phlomoides), 85;
mullein-moth, 86, 270

Muscari of kinds, 49

Musical reverberation in wood of Scotch fir, 60

Myosotis sylvatica major, 53


Nandina domestica, 206

Narcissus cernuus, 12;
N. serotinus, 14;
N. princeps and N. Horsfieldi in the copse, 48

Nature's planting, 154

Nettles, to destroy, 259

Novelty, 249

Nut nursery at Calcot, 11

Nut-walk, 9;
catkins, 11;
suckers, 11

Oak timber, felling, 60

Old wall, 72, 116 and onward

Omphalodes verna, 45

Ophiopogon spicatum for winter cutting, 16

Orchard, ornamental, 181

Orobus vernus, 52;
O. aurantiacus, 62

Othonna cheirifolia, 63


Pæonies and Lent Hellebores grown together, 76

Pæony moutan grouped with Clematis montana, 70;
special garden for pæonies, 72;
frequent sudden deaths, 73;
varieties of P. albiflora, 74;
old garden kinds, 75;
pæony species desirable for garden use, 75

Pansies as cut flowers, 57;
at shows, 243

Parkinson's chapter on carnations, 94

Pavia macrostachya, 103

Pea, white everlasting, 95

Pergola, 212

Pernettya, 165

Pests, bird, beast, and insect, 259

Phacelia campanularia, 63

Pheasants, as depredators, 261;
destroying crocuses, 261

Philadelphus microphyllus, 103

Phlomis fruticosa, 103

Phloxes, 135

Piptanthus nepalensis, 63, 206

Planes pollarded, 215

Planting early, 129;
careful planting, 130;
planting from pots, 131;
careful tree planting, 148

Platycodon Mariesi, 108

Plume hyacinth, 49

Polygala chamæbuxus, 164

Polygonum compactum, 136;
Sieboldi, 258

"Pot-pourri from a Surrey garden," 18

Primroses, white and lilac, 44;
large bunch-flowered kinds as cut flowers, 58;
seedlings planted out, 85;
primrose garden, 216

Primula denticulata, 184

Progress in gardening, 249

Prophet-flower (Arnebia), 56

Protecting tender plants, 145

Pterocephalus parnassi, 107

Pyrus Maulei, 50


Queen wasps, 63

Quince, 128


Rabbits, 260

Ranunculus montanus, 50

Raphiolepis ovata, 204

Rhododendrons, variation in foliage, 35;
R. multum maculatum, 35;
plants to fill bare spaces among, 37;
arrangement for colour, 64 and onward;
hybrid of R. Aucklandi, 69;
alpine, 165

Ribbon border, 266

Ribes, 50

Robinia hispida, 203

Rock garden, making and renewing, 115

Rock-wall, 116 and onward

Rosemary, 204

Roses, pruning, tying, and training, 38;
fence planted with free roses, 38;
Reine Olga de Wurtemburg, 38;
climbing and rambling roses, 39;
Fortune's yellow, Banksian, 40;
wild roses, 43;
garden roses: Provence, moss, damask, R. alba, 78;
roses in cottage gardens, ramblers and fountains, 79;
free growth of Rosa polyantha, 80;
two good, free roses for cutting, 80;
Burnet rose and Scotch briars, Rosa lucida, 81;
tea roses: best kinds for light soil, pegging, pruning, 82;
roses collected in Capri, 105;
second bloom of tea roses, 110;
jam made of hips of R. rugosa, 111, 184;
R. arvensis, garden form of, 129;
R. Boursault elegans, 192;
China, 205;
their scents, 235

Ruscus aculeatus, 151;
R. racemosus, 152

Ruta patavina, a late-flowering rock-plant, 107


Sambucus ebulis, 258

Satin-leaf (Heuchera Richardsoni), 53

Scilla maritima, 14;
S. sibirica, S. bifolia, 32

Scents of flowers, 229 and onward

Scotch fir, pollen, 53;
cones opening, 54;
effect of sound in fir-wood, 60

Show flowers, 242

Show-table, what it teaches, 241

Shrub-bank, 101;
snug place for tender shrubs, 121

Shrub-wilderness of the old home, 100

Skimmeas, 101, 165

Slugs, 262

Smilacina bifolia, 61

Snapdragon, 251

Snowstorm of December 1886, 27

Snowy Mespilus (Amelanchier), 52

Solanum crispum, 204

Solomon's seal, 61

Spindle-tree, 127

Spiræa Thunbergi, 50, 104;
S. prunifolia, 104

St. John's worts, choice, 103

Stephanandra flexuosa, 103

Sternbergia lutea, 139

Sticks and stakes, 163

Storms in autumn, 122

Styrax japonica, 101

Suckers of nuts, 11;
robbers, how to remove, 24;
on grafted rhododendrons, 36

Sunflowers, perennial, 134

Sweetbriar, rambling, 39;
fragrance in April, 51

Sweet-leaved small shrubs, 34, 57, 101

Sweet peas, autumn sown, 83, 112


Thatching with hoop-chips, 169

Thinning the nut-walk, 10;
thinning shrubs, 22;
trees in copse, 151

Tiarella cordifolia, 53;
colour of leaves in winter, 21

Tools for dividing, 136;
for tree cutting and grubbing, 150;
woodman's, 158;
axe and wedge, 159;
rollers, 160;
cross-cut saw, 162

Training the eye, 4;
training Clematis flammula, 24

Transplanting large trees, 147

Trillium grandiflorum, 61

Tritomas, protecting, 146

Tulips, show kinds and their origin, 55;
T. retroflexa, 55;
other good garden kinds, 56


Various ways of gardening, 3

Verbascum olympicum and V. phlomoides, 85

Villa garden, 171

Vinca acutiflora, 139

Vine, black Hamburg at Calcot, 12;
as a wall-plant, 42;
good garden kinds, 42;
claret vine, 110, 205;
Vitis Coignettii, 123

Violets, the pale St. Helena, 45;
Czar, 140

Virginian cowslip, 46;
its colouring, 47;
sowing seed, 84


Wall pennywort, 120

Water-elder, a beautiful neglected shrub, 123

Weeds, 256

Wild gardening misunderstood, 269

Wilson, Mr. G. F.'s garden at Wisley, 184

Window garden, 185

Winter, beauty of woodland, 7

Wistaria chinensis, 43

Whortleberry under Scotch fir, 51, 61

Woodman at work, 158

Woodruff, 60

Wood-rush, 61, 165

Wood-work, 163


Xanthoceras sorbifolia, 103


Yellow everlasting, 120

Yuccas, some of the best kinds, 91;
in flower-border, 201




FOOTNOTE

[1] The planting of large vineyards, in some cases of private enterprise, had not proved a financial success.


THE END

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