One of the most striking features of the central area and especially amongst the loamy plains and sandhills, is the number of clay-pans.
Their course at first was along the upper part of the Murchison River, which he describes as running through fine grassy flats, good loamy soil, with white gums in bed and on flats, the water in some of the pools being rather brackish.
That stable manure may be used when fresh, but it should be always mixed with more than a fourth of good loamy soil.
After the bed is spawned, a covering of compact loamy soil is spread on the surface, 11/2 in.
They are easily grown in any loamy soil, and flower from May to July.
They require a deep rich loamy soil, and if in beds, plant them from three to four inches deep, and one foot apart.
They are all of easy culture in any loamy soil inclining to moisture.
A shady situation agrees best with them; and they require loamy soil, free from any kind of manure, except it be fully decomposed.
They delight in a richloamy soil, and require plenty of moisture while in a growing state.
These roots like a fresh rich, well pulverized, loamy soil.
If planted in baskets, it should be potted in a porous loamy soil, and kept moist in the summer and perfectly dry in winter.
In March, the plants should be repotted into as small pots as convenient, employing a good, loamy soil and ample drainage.
In January or February, as the bulbs show signs of life, pot them almost on the surface of a rich loamy soil, and employ the smallest pots possible.
The Dianthus thrives in a sandy or loamy soil, with full exposure to sunshine, and the plants scarcely need water or any attention the whole season through.
Put on the lights and leave the affair for five or six days; then lay down a bed of rich loamy soil of a somewhat light and turfy texture, about nine inches deep.
When grown in pots it requires a strong loamy soil, with plenty of manure, and throughout the summer the pots should be allowed to stand in pans of water.
To produce fine specimens a firm loamy soil is necessary, with abundance of water all the summer, and moderate supplies all the winter.
This bulb requires a rich loamy soil and an open position to bring it to perfection.
The soil should be of a slightly sandy or loamy nature, and not wet.
He is found principally in slow, deep, quiet rivers, which have a loamy bottom.
In the silence of the little room the girls could hear a swollen creek rushing; rich, loamy odours drifted in from the forest that had been soaked with long April rains.
A light rope was tied; an experimental tug broke it like a string, tumbling Alix violently in a sitting position, and precipitating her father into a loamy bed.
The country passed through was one giant mass of forest, pine and poplar, resting generally upon loamy clay--a good agricultural country in the main, similar to many parts of Ontario when a wilderness.
It revealed a good farming country, however, free from stones, and the soil a rich, loamy clay throughout.
The nearest on the south side are the prairies of Spirit River, a small stream which divides several townships of first-class black, loamy soil, well wooded in parts, but with considerable prairie.
But why is it that light soils, need more manure than loamy or heavy lands?
It is greater in loamyand clayey soils; but is still small.
Owing to the soft, loamy character of the Plain of Esdraelon, this was often impassable in the winter and spring.
The loamy soil of the plain dries quickly and is then very hard, but when wet becomes at once a hopeless morass.
These turf pots are made of spongy, fibrous turf--whether loamy or peaty is not material, provided it is full of fibre, so as to admit of being readily traversed by the roots.
Plowing clayey, or even loamy soil, when wet, tends rather to press it together, and render it less pervious to air and water.
All gravels, black mud of swamps, and loamy soils of any kind, are readily drained.
The lime-tree affects a rich feeding loamy soil; in such ground their growth will be most for speed and spreading.
Red Clover is usually cultivated in stiff clays or loamy soils; and when sown alone, about sixteen or eighteen pounds of seed are used for the acre.
Abounds much in our natural meadows, particularly in the best loamy soils, where it is very productive and nutritious.
Their loamy beds had been quite washed away, and their fences and some of their huts carried clean down the creek.
The oblong beds are raised some ten inches above the level of the walks, and the light and loamy earth is kept in first-rate condition.
Sandy, loamy soil is better than the heavy soil for vegetables and berries, if moisture is kept right, because it can be more easily cultivated and takes water without losing the friable condition which is so desirable.
But early planting must be in ground which is loamy and light rather than heavy, because if the soil is so heavy as to become water-logged the kernel is more apt to decay than to grow.
How to grow Set out in spring in loamy soil or sandy loam in a sunny exposure with moderate irrigation.
Young plants grow easily from seed sown in flats or pots in sandy or loamy soil with some shade and with enough water to keep the soil moist.
They grow in sandy or loamysoil with enough water to keep the soil moist during the growing season; they endure prolonged drought in their native habitats and hence should not be watered excessively in cultivation.
Young plants grow readily from seed in moist sandy or loamy soil in pots or flats in part shade.
The cuttings should be dried off first to give the cut time to heal over, planted in gravelly or loamy soil with about one-half of the cutting covered, and watered once a month during the growing season.
Plants may be grown from seed in the usual way, in pots or flats in sandy or loamy soil in part shade, with enough water to keep the soil moist.
The plants thrive in the loamy soil of foothills and mountains in Central Mexico.
How to grow Transplant at almost any season in sandy orloamy soil, and give moderate irrigation to keep the soil well moistened.
Wislizeni grows well in the sandy loamyclay soils of the desert bajadas and along the foothills.
Young plants grow readily from seed in pots or flats, in sandy or loamy soil, with enough irrigation to keep the soil moist; part shade is desirable.
They may be transplanted at any season in gravelly or loamy soil irrigated enough to retain moisture during the growing season.
Large plants prefer sandy or loamy soil, especially limestone soil with irrigation about once a month, and some shade.
The grade of the tile must be properly adjusted to the porosity of the soil; that is, in open, porous, and gravelly soils a grade must be steeper than in loamy and dense soils.
Is it Snow Hill that greets me back To this old loamy cul-de-sac?
Generally speaking, the cultivation of the Narcissus out of doors is without difficulty, if we can give it a free, loamy soil, and a pure air.
A good, loamy soil is suitable for all classes of Tulips, but where it is heavy a little coarse sand may be placed about the bulb.
The English florist's Tulip ought to have a good loamy soil, the bulbs being planted three inches deep and four apart in lines.
Plow in the fall all heavy, loamy land that you intend to plant in spring.
Having considered the question of harvesting and shipping to market, then obtain the moist, loamy land described above, if possible.
All loamy land settles and tends to grow hard after the frost leaves it.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "loamy" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: adobe; doughy; earthy; gumbo; pasty