Round the Year in the Garden * 



od with soil; in f large 



Daffodils, and Hyacinths ;hey can 



usually be covered to '*, which 

 answers quite well. 



covered wholly. Af milbs 

 that one needs to ha 



Amateurs of i \ -' the 



bulbs turn yellow as th< t the general 

 appearance of ints is 1 1 



watering may account for t iefly, 



I think, to tho fact tha* t taken, 



out of the ashes or oth< they 



were placed to form roots, the b? 



full light. At that stage the leaf d&r and 



. injured, and therefore for a few day 

 ought, to be shaded so that the exposure to full light 



RJffi9^*yetifa^JiMd wv/Jftf aft fft ow 



for tJ ot curiosity is call rch or tne East, 



and i icamW3&5ofl ni | xojf14 { t will 

 come into bloom in an 



parativeiy warm i ^ r PXP 

 on the mantelshelf. It c 

 for it is something like 



When growth begir > pot 



the bulb in ordinary \> ; it in 

 the greenhouse. 



There is no need bulbs 



for pots to Daffodils, TuLv 1 a few 



others equally o f- lish Iris, 



Ixia, Sparaxis, Lilium, Ant- i- of 



Bethlehem and others that ha* '^rred 



to in this chapter? Every 3 >w a 



few fresh flowers ; tb.i is the w rmial 

 interest in gardening, 



Lilies in Pots, The favc ^ in 



Aower-pots is the White Truiiii" iongi- 



ilorum), of which the varl ner than 



36 



