Indoors and Under Glass, by F. F. 
Rockwell 
 
Project Gutenberg's Gardening Indoors and Under Glass, by F. F. 
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Title: Gardening Indoors and Under Glass A Practical Guide to the 
Planting, Care and Propagation of House Plants, and to the 
Construction and Management of Hotbed, Coldframe and Small 
Greenhouse 
Author: F. F. Rockwell 
Release Date: September 1, 2007 [EBook #22484] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
GARDENING INDOORS AND UNDER GLASS *** 
 
Produced by Tom Roch and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team 
at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images produced 
by Core Historical Literature in Agriculture (CHLA), Cornell 
University)
GARDENING INDOORS AND UNDER GLASS 
A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE PLANTING, CARE AND 
PROPAGATION OF HOUSE PLANTS, AND TO THE 
CONSTRUCTION AND MANAGEMENT OF HOTBED, 
COLDFRAME AND SMALL GREENHOUSE 
BY F. F. ROCKWELL Author of Home Vegetable Gardening 
NEW YORK McBRIDE, NAST & COMPANY 1912 
Copyright, 1911, 1912, by McBride, Nast & Co. 
Published September, 1912 
* * * * * 
[Illustration: Too few people realize the possibilities for enjoyment in 
prolonging the garden through the winter months indoors] 
 
FOREWORD 
There is nothing which adds so much sunshine and cheer to the rooms 
of a house besieged by winter and all his dreary encampment of snow 
and ice, as the greenery, color and fragrance of blossoming plants. 
There is no pastime quite so full of pleasure and constant interest as 
this sort of horticulture; the rooting of small slips, the repotting and 
watering and watching, as new growth develops, and buds unfold. 
Some have the magic gift, that everything they touch will break into 
blossom; others strive--perhaps too hard--only to gain indifferent 
results. It is hoped that this book will aid those of the second class to 
locate past mistakes and progress to future success; and further that it 
may indicate to those more fortunate ones of the first class the way to 
more extensive achievements in the work they love. 
This is not a technical book; simply an attempt to tell in so plain a way
that they cannot be misunderstood the everyday details of the 
successful management of plants in the house and within such small 
glass structures as may be made, even with limited means and time, a 
part of the average home. 
There is another aspect of the case worth considering; so much so in 
fact, that it is one of the reasons for writing this book. By the use of 
such modest glass structures as almost everyone can afford not only is 
the scope of winter gardening enlarged and the work rendered more 
easy and certain, but the opportunity is given to make this light labor 
pay for itself. Fresh vegetables out of season are always acceptable and 
well grown plants find a ready sale among one's flower-loving friends. 
CRANMERE, August 1st, 1912. F. F. R. 
 
CONTENTS 
PART I--PLANTS IN THE HOUSE 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I INTRODUCTION 1 
II THE PROPER CONDITIONS: LIGHT, TEMPERATURE AND 
MOISTURE 6 
III SOILS, MANURES AND FERTILIZERS 14 
IV STARTING PLANTS FROM SEED 22 
V STARTING PLANTS FROM CUTTINGS 29 
VI TRANSPLANTING, POTTING AND REPOTTING 35 
VII MANAGEMENT OF HOUSE PLANTS 44 
VIII FLOWERING PLANTS 51
IX SHRUBS 70 
X FOLIAGE PLANTS 81 
XI VINES 90 
XII FERNS 97 
XIII PALMS 103 
XIV CACTI 110 
XV BULBS 116 
XVI VERANDA BOXES, WINDOW-BOXES, VASES AND 
HANGING BASKETS 128 
XVII HOUSE PLANT INSECTS AND DISEASES 132 
XVIII ACCESSORIES 140 
PART II--HOME GLASS 
XIX ITS OPPORTUNITIES 146 
XX THE COLDFRAME AND THE HOTBED 149 
XXI THE CONSTRUCTION OF CONSERVATORIES AND SMALL 
GREENHOUSES 156 
XXII METHODS OF HEATING 167 
XXIII MANAGEMENT 172 
XXIV FLOWERS 180 
XXV VEGETABLES 193 
XXVI VEGETABLE AND BEDDING PLANTS FOR SPRING 197
INDEX 207 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
A flourishing flower bay Frontispiece 
FACING PAGE An isolated bay-window conservatory 8 
A tiled window-sill garden 9 
Preparing flats for the "sub-irrigation" method of watering 28 
Cuttings ready for sand 29 
Geranium cuttings ready for potting 29 
Potted cuttings ready for their first shift 40 
Striking Rex begonia leaf cuttings 40 
"Crocking" in a flower pot 41 
Seedlings ready to transplant 48 
A flower bay protected with heavy curtains 49 
Pride of Cincinnati begonia 60 
Pansy geranium 61 
Primrose (Primula obconica) 61 
The Silk Oak (Grevillea robusta) 72 
Otaheite orange 73 
Baby rambler rose 80
Araucaria excelsa 81 
Screw Pine (Pandanus Veitchii) 88 
Rubber plant (Ficus elastica) 89 
Vines on an indoor trellis 96 
Crested Scott Fern (Nephrolepis exaltata, var. Schoizeli) 97 
Propagation of Boston Fern by division 100 
A variety of the Fan Palm    
    
		
	
	
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