JAN. ae 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
39 
ma varium, the flow 
ceedingly OZE: 
brighter —— than th e 
ides 
of which ov ae arger 
original. The plant was raised from seeds sent t 
A Som iy Se from the Swan River colony. 
beautiful flower. The iron conservatory ee 
pe ie = injury from the severe _— and the evergreens 
—Jan. 
and of a much 
space surrounded by large 
orange-tre 
presume, the dou! ale purpose of retainin 
is 
sum), a  acaaaee growing erescrr on and having “the 
rees—answ 
g the rt 
ering, w 
see em Peg t description | of trees for the purpose of mg 
ound well-formed heads, or plants trained en que- 
| revsers or dwarfs in the usual. bush fashion. devon imme- 
di | be repar red by nual os 
the open air appear unharmed. 
RMebiews. 
The Eastern Arboretum ; or, Rural Register of all the 
nthe County = 
en | bongiiticel to be 
To the = Mn Grigor Reems 
this our British" mournirt 
“to think 
it deserves ; to those who un- 
Is tree,’ _ we recommend | 
5 
r 
the world at 
iate effect, honge should 
for 
pruning e, two, or 
¢ 
r roots pon reduced, 
n hei 
by digging a ‘inah: ro the trees, and removing all 
ia roots by: means of a vaca spade. Inthe course of 
f fibrous Toots will be fo rmed, whi ch 
dervalue 
the scenery of the W: 
“* At present, few peo 
ae iti is very often c 
Norfolk. By James Grigor Tusivated by Drawin 
of Trees, etched in Copper by H. Ninham.— Long ; 
London; and Stacey, Norwich. 8vo. i Jn to VIII 
Tuovucu lying n the marie coa: v5 and e sed to th 
cold orfolk ii of the pe counties 
ject, we maintain there are 
eauty it possesses. 
see an 
certain 
bid costaad 
ple 
only a cumberer if ae f Se ao n- 
ut short in its career be hg it | large aera 'S are 
Though a gloomy 2 f 
situations which n 
pi ind the ball roe pared down, to a whether 
making their ir escape from it. ——_ 
circular mass of soil 
is aa stadt each tree a slight depression i in the ae Or 
oe 
of England, —richly w wooded, ak ‘watered, thickly spotted and ruined her words, the trench i s not quae _— in; a this 
hice country seats, and a model of ieultu ne skill Tt tower it has a charm which even the _pine and cypress | circ sie furrow is filled wit h liquid m 3; OF common 
uld be, therefore, difficult to select better oliage | dung may be laid round each tree = ae autumn, and 
f thi i ds t with the solenaley of such places than a the rains 
ie Ef 
nf 
Briers, or drawn 
_ The author stated that slargiom 
eful ha aring Foi } 
aa oe leew 
pi 
r of man, by a right a 
ledge, in overcoming shore ditions, and converting a 
barren solitude into a fertile r siden 
f 
for such situations i in all sirilnns comnteien: 
eS 
| by the worms. 
13 ema a l are 
cens sure 
“No foreigner, ins isited 0 
distriets, would believe that the pa which “contain :s 
with plums and 
cherries 
At the » May I, a Report 
| pay the financial mre of t the Sait ~ the Year ending 
3ist Marc The need 
0. course, Mr. Grigor’: '$ wor me, tches 
local, censists of details that the Norfolk puy are 
chiefly comeenied eat ut it also embraces a variety of where =e storm and the Sepa riot as they may. It 
bie einai nd numerous facts to whi _ persons pa obvi 0 every one, that a few trees would’ not only 
having country-seats should attend. For uses which | afford shelter to such B araagy but induce birds to perch 
e their _— 3 
the 
the uchate shows to have produced their sok pay in 
Norfolk, must, lead elsewhere to the same con iclus and 
residences of that county, apply with equal eek to other 
way, 
parts of England. The author is an —— tin his w: 
and, like all writers of that class, i is apt 2 be led i 
once loved ape HH. 
upon t he 
vagant ; ; markable instance of which occurs in his 
grassy to me 
grey and ven 
fash 
foliage or lead yew itself, ‘are in 
there and gi we be “rm what real 
use “ ina nee of a bird would be n such ation ?’”?— 
But surely Bavisad are fee mee of f green ckirclivaiis Scat- 
fered o over | which are pre melt all Ay solemn 
i the restin, ose we 
covered coun and yi 
"the 
nds, | bag thik shadow ¥ nei, 
3% ab) nd in 
wer, the 
ighbouring trees, the 
any places the oso 
di stricts the com 
sccout of Feldorye Park—a place on which, he says, 
“* Hea en has | and 
7 ink th, 
Mr. Geldart, Neoneleol it about “17 years ago, and converted 
Scottow is a noble 8 specimen of the pees He 
At 
_— and m 
cottage wall. « Against 
Lah 
nst the wall of some cotivlldings is 
li. 7s. if allow: 
nce 2 be ma ade > for the arrears of 1839, not Predict the 
vould Nave peer 
h receipts of the year exceeded th 
8397. 7s. . 6d. Tn addition to bonds 
the year on ac of the new conservatory. onded 
debt of the ety was #5 ~ e same time the 
property of the Society w ased in value by 
iit Rogers, on 
etter ily give a few ex 
th t ligt that the land in 
hood. ; 
in part a bog or rather swamp, 
Sica ko Pyracantha), clad with large bunches of bril- 
‘tracts. 
bp peat “othe things, the a oriaee har de apd i a0 the 
about it; andin At a rising slope of bad : Pe cee my 
no means ill-suited to planting. There is, however, in 
bar sy so much goo! od si sn sag? os good feeling, and gene. 
r. Grigor’s book, that we 
cannot quarrel even with his ignaihes io 
Such a work is not suited to a Erinal 2s examination ; we, 
therefore, content ourselves with a few prorat to shine 
the general fogs and manner of the whole. 
‘The history of trees, sb e author, ‘is coeval with 
Our first ents in Para aradise shad their 
Ayr 
we sight, were lost at the fall, en has survived “this 
wreck of all things to interest us in ‘their 
They come 2 a us hallowed e 
P' 
— ot man. 
A +h + +h + 
of 
serves more ge 
in len, ngth.”” 
beauty amidst the desolations of November, and de- 
ulfure 
It covers a space of 24 yards | 
general d. hat 
will get up heat i ina etme aad pb ya the ritter of the 
easy test of xeellence in a hot-water apparatus, by 
i z 
water vga be ergs iad bats _Upon 
tw 
¥ 
ers observed, tha ere an 
“There is one thing of rege 
bare Na “si 8 works 
ortals call t 
in th sae ure, 2, aguating or ugly ; 
pein that if t Bnei 
intended 4 t to PA ai fanc’ 
thought of 
are wn a "ee oor short- ‘es ed | 
he poplartee, plang ns other objects 
clined t ae 
? 
of those park eh persons Wher when rare of n 
tural objects, call thing pela —_ ss, and 80 0 
ratus is pro- 
ee can sdifons be effected 
el. 
Peaioat avatola 
beg bhi dk 
uch an 
Without & an extravagant waste of fu 
certain 
va am hapten 
ied ii 
rfections 
is tree, or anything else oF the | kind 
ility in different from what its Mak 
mperfe would 
ytain it are inches in diame ae ge will also 
la: 
ce if properly pt or, in fut, Bae nea for the 
aste of heat heey the chimney, vies 8 es under such 
«3 interest upon eatth, and loaded, as < Neots, wit Weg uite agree with Mr. Grigor in what he says of the std rapidly, fi as much fuel 
mberd t hich is ofte derstood. ary by a ipa’ 
T - * the beginning’ “of the beautiful apparel | tom Demadetl tinea adh pr — ae alae reese oe Scart i | zealous of the honour of his apparatus. es Rogers co 
which eg put on in her dewy infancy, pe yet she had-} 43, trees i% eady observed, Muskau vg thir - it is too 
become estranged from her sae = , When her happy ttering.’ Cobbett repres St. it as ‘a great ugly tree;’ pik shall contain fuel enough to pens the pipes on 
home was the garden ‘ yas af Saag imilaé Tan says it is ugly. wil Pm eat as they can radiate duri g the ene and 
__ Spee aking of the Haw pr many varieties i in the | little hesitation in stati t what is here said as to the which Tis} be depended be oe hs and 
we find some "4 as ag ah a asad fuel is put in 
meri in which we cordially agree. Sarely the White-thorn, a 9 it Pri a gi is caaue In ning the pro aie "that should be borne by 
. 4 pais dividual the su nat pipe to the surface of glass, the author re- 
-* — beer trees which pleased us most of all, and which anyother gens gro so pis “hee gree a ferred in terms of great praise to Mr. Charles Hood’s 
offend by their formality. All ost valuable treatise on hot-water apparatus pohap 5. 
rep czy sufficiently in the present ders: and which Heating ‘ofthem, therefore in lines and avenues, or whe! he observed, the most preposterous blunders were z 
aig writers have attempted to depreciate— 6 mean ‘the | over <n ebatinied repetition: of. thet & place, shows | mitt i 
hawthorn, the common thorn of our hedge, being, in OUr } miserable taste, an ught never to ede Phe the quantity of 
opinion, one of the most orn we have. = of itaclt ‘however, is unquesti y beautiful: its | Pipe poe Pn to Sie am oe ied sired ; while 
Some ay consider this a strange fancy, yet we main al aia stately outline nd ‘ond growth withal, the boiler being la and of very ae "consti patil 
it is a correct one, and that species is among the le will maiitain fof iE-a distineuishedl place asa lands a vast quantity of fuel was burnt ¢ to waste. The ; gardener 
liest objec ar nae: at sithough. the dowers off, oi ip in ehh. try sin it thrives.” finding his heat defici : 
this tree may wither, does it not leave us ruby records that | it conclusion, we must not pass rte — Soy threw on fuel, i in the e hope of i increasing it, “but the only 
it has not flo — in vain, “which are re perhaps as beautiful y Mr. Ninhans, without a sword of p a tists It truction of the 
Pe as the ? The fruit of some of this ri pater br bre ery Pesach eristic | boiler itself, But the-publication “ef Mr. Hood’s wae 
le branches of coral, others are as i Sof ress. yee the ch of 5 yar in hot-water apparatus 
whilst some are of a jet-black colour. Gilpin, ie some pretses eane tee re be better understood. If, however, the earlier apparatus 
inp? had or other, was led to call them uninterest- Proceedings of the Horticultural Society of Londen! 7a modély deficient in = “yensiy of pi employed, 
a 2 > = the bloom is spread over ent: in too much bias No. X. y of those miore recently erected err im the opposite 
ba = ane so that it must be so, w e suppose.” Ayoruer Number of these Pr: s has appeared. | extreme ; the err = not in the data 
desett, male ed wit inter olkham; once an oasis in a} We find i in tk man 7 igs well anaes of perusal. In| orin the calculations, but from assuming as the -somnag 
with rarely occurs i 
¢ “In comm non We tay that the individual who Rie os lace, , there i s the substance of a paper by Mr. od hear oo air! a temperature which ae y 
y a blade of grass to grow where ots of P re 3 from | which we give the following no * pailding has time to esol down to a. corresponding 
none existed befor sie actor to hiscountry, Whi eet: It appears that, in consequence of the confusion | temperature; a power of 30° for greenhouses and of 
take: Likasines tea —- € our high appreciation of | in the a of pears, the author was induced to plant | 45° for hothouses is, in Mr. Ro pinion, ample 
re ea oe physically and cons: specimen trees of all the varieties he then seemed hat under any circumstances. urged that it is 
whiclr spring from a vast tract of ture being | fearing | Cea much ground would be wasted i the experi pve easy to work an apparatus below its power, and 
brought into such keeping, teem with such ent, that such an atrangement is economical of fuel,—which, 
fetal is now stretched around us? ofthe simple an- superabundant growth, and inducing early fruitfulness. within ‘certain limits, is sgl but if t aie of pipe 
n — in = en ss, th necessary, the ans — 
ie at i ie sited, ain dag tas ited plan firm Ment soil in his nursery, if removed one 0 
pen ul pei ecorated, and inhabi fn ie middle of the consecuti ively, acq uired a stunted and pro rolific pics if | the fortace ord fo n, and a — waste, insteal of ay 
— ry, by Tho meow Drege sce of Leicester.” ii ] necessarily re 
oan it reign open barren estate; a deseri trees fi e a emovals | " ie M 2 me d to thi great im 
which a to us all that is cheerless and uninviting. tees inthe ses sa estat be ent rae — 4 = ssion, 7" i pase coil niverted to am. : fe of. ipo 
Under the han d of impro vement, howe ever, this 5 | in apples. But in. attempting to remove his ‘pear- -trees, n th p use for prdenan most eff 
ave tral author coi that it would be | ble t tual mode of prod i i as: 
of country, either meery with the best of ti inber—the Seat a trench round them, and cut all their root able surfaces of water above the | level. of the Pies which. 
ko > ie awey f this respect Phi a ‘ mean 
cultivated, garden-like fields, ” ‘falfilled.  S nid 
: were completely pecimens of ‘various temperature of the house. The troughs commonly em= 
At Mr. Peter’s, of Westwick, the author found there Kinds of pear-trees thug t PE yed are — only in as far ——— i 
was a very food p by covering a circle at | of the author’s views. _ toe tian small, and becoming quickly empty; afford 
