ally offered for sale. For planting in the border, 

 choose fan-trained trees, 2 or 3 years old, providing 



tbey have been properly transplanted. {See Pruning.) 



liidoor peaches and nectarines, with proper care, are 

 profitable for 10 years after planting. The following 

 temperatures for the peach house are suitable for early 

 Forcing : for the first two weeks, 40° by night and 50° 

 by day ; then a rise to 45° by night and 55° or 60° by day, 

 with the sun, which should carry them until their bloom- 

 ing period ; then 50° by night and 60° to 70° by day, 

 with sun heat ; after the fruit is set, a rise of 5° or 10° 

 on mild nights would be all right, with the day tempera- 

 ture correspondingly increased. Peaches delight in 

 fresh air: therefore air should be given at every oppor- 

 tuniiy . Syringe the trees twice a day in bright weather ; 

 hold off while the trees are in blossom ; after the fruit 

 is set, syringe again twice every bright day, and once a 

 week with whale-oil soap, using enough soap to just color 



the water. This is a good remedy for greenfly, spider, 

 etc., and produces a fine, glossy foliage. It is better to 

 disbud by degrees rather than to remove a large quan- 

 tity of foliage at once, which would naturally cause a 

 check to the tree. Disbudding requires good judgment. 



FORCING 



The shoot, if not needed, should be pinched, leaving 

 three or four leaves to develop the fruit. Trees that are 

 properly cared for during the summer months need 

 little pruning in the winter. Probably the hardest task 

 of all to the grower is thinning the fruit, but this must 

 be done. There cannot be any set number for a tree to 

 carry. Judgment must be used in that respect. Necta- 

 rines can be cropped more heavily than peaches. After 

 the crop is gathered, all the useless wood should be cut 

 away to allow plenty of light and sunshine around the 

 wood that is intended for the following season. When 

 the wood is thoroughly ripened it is in condition to 

 stand zero weather. The temperature of peach houses 

 can go down below zero without a bud being killed. In 

 fact, it is not necessary to use any artificial heat until 

 starting the house. Close the house down frosty nights ; 

 open up in the morning before the temperature rises 

 much, and avoid exciting the buds. Sometimes one has 

 warm days during the winter months. On such days it 

 is well to keep doors as well as ventilators open. 



All the peaches and nectarines recommended for the 

 peach house are admirably adapted for pot work. 



Other fruits may be added 

 plums, cherries, figs, apri- 

 cots, etc. (see articles un- 

 der these headings). The 

 following are some of the 

 best varieties the writer 

 has grown: Pltims— Gol- 

 den Esperin, Jefferson 

 Denniston Supeib Green 

 Gage, Grand Duke The 

 Czar, Early Transjarent 

 Pears — Magnet, 1 rin< ess 

 Souv. du Congres 1 ouise 

 Bonne de Jersej Pitmas 

 ton Duchess, Beurre Diel 

 Apples -'Wnii&m'f Fa\or 

 ite, Benoni, King of the 

 Pippins,Washington King 

 of Tompkins Count\ Belle 

 de Pontoise, Bismarck 

 Peasgood Nonesuch 

 Lady Henniker Thomas 

 Rivers, Alexander Co\ 

 Pomona. Wm. Tt rnei 



Forcing Hard\ Plant 



—An economical meth 1 1 



of obtaining large quanti 



pears, 



Df flo 



in 



for 



extensively used 

 onimercial florists 

 cut - flowers and 



851 Lilac pruned for forcing 



Plants usually forctd 

 are hyacinths, tulips 

 narcissus and other 

 Dutch bulbs, HI} of the \allL\, astilbt, dicentia, h\biid 

 perpetual roses, Deutzia gracilis, hvbrid rhododen- 

 drons (J?. Sinensis, i.e., Azalea mollis), &nd Ghent aza- 

 leas, and lilacs. For other plants, see A.G. 14:402 (1893). 



This mode of procuring flowers at small cost has 

 always been more or less in vogue among plantsmen, 

 ami of late years has received fresh impetus, owing to 

 the heavy demands for decorative plants at Easter. It 

 is iKit only an inexpensive method of getting flowers, 

 but with most plants, after a little experience, the time 

 of blooming can be easily calculated. The process has 

 limitations, at any rate with our present knowledge of 

 the matter, inasmuch as, with the exception of "retarded 

 plants " and a few bulbs, it is not practicable in late 

 autumn and early winter. It is possible, however, that 

 by using "retarded plants," i.e., plants held over their 

 natural time of flowering by keeping them in cold 

 storage at a temperature sufficiently low to prevent 

 growth, this difficulty may eventually be overcome. Ex- 

 cept, however, with lily-of-the-valley, which is admir- 

 ably adapted to this practice, we know little of the pos- 

 sibilities of this form of Forcing: it is hoped that other 

 plants, equally useful, may be treated in this way. It 

 is evident that, on account of the cost of storage, bulky 

 plants could not be handled. 



The requirements for successful Forcing are: (1) a 



