Wattles And Wattle Barks Being Hints On the Conservation And Cultivation of Wat
Wattles And Wattle Barks Being Hints On the Conservation And Cultivation of Wat
Maiden, J. H. (Joseph Henry), 1859-1925
The book Wattles And Wattle Barks Being Hints On the Conservation And Cultivation of Wat was written by author Maiden, J. H. (Joseph Henry), 1859-1925 Here you can read free online of Wattles And Wattle Barks Being Hints On the Conservation And Cultivation of Wat book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Wattles And Wattle Barks Being Hints On the Conservation And Cultivation of Wat a good or bad book?
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" In this form its quality can be more readily judged; but when the supply of mature trees became diminished, nearly all the bark was chopped or ground prior to shipment, good and inferior being bagged together. " 2. Chopped, i. E. , into pieces a few inches in length. In the Sydney market bark is usually sold chopped, in bags. 3. Ground, forming a substance something like " tow" ; and 4. Powdered, that is of course, if the bark is not too fibrous to permit of this being done. It is not desirab...le to push the process of grinding too far, as wattle-bark is no exception to the generality of powders, in forming "balls" when thrown into water when too finely ground. WATTLES AND WATTLE-BARKS. 19 (k. ) ADULTERATIONS OH SUBSTITUTIONS. Good wattle-bark is sometimes mixed with inferior, and this admixture may be either intentional or accidental. " Blue bush " bark {Acacia ~brachy- botrya, page 45), for instance, is sometimes chopped up to adulterate pycnantlia bark. Silver wattle bark (dealbata) is occasionally so like green or black wattle bark (decurrens), that it would deceive an expert, particu- larly if chopped, and while the two barks can be instantly separated, as a rule, I can readily understand some specimens of silver wattle bark inadvertently mixed with bark of better quality, and passing muster.
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