THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
[N° 99. 
Sutumn or arg’ are apt to be killed or severely injured, 
cut in the sping rm after ' they are in leaf | 
so much on the presence of water, or the radiation of ca- 
loric into the atmosphere (for 
ere + 
igh as from low grounds. the gravi itation of 
ldd 
} 
St ee hae 
f the leaf, or soon sg ill bl 
the ‘low soa “and thence the rapid 
wa < c 
with impunity. This proves that all copious ago ag 
mor, soul called, such as the Bi rch, ase nd many 
more, sh 
So that itis not the luxuriant t vegetation, and 
three feet long, including the petiole, and four in, i 
—T. TL ig reo a gfield, Birmingham ene, 
Slate Flues.—A gentleman oe at caphom havi 
Occasion for a poy tl agains’ all, in 
ine 
‘ 
& 
BB 
5 aa 
b 
expedient of ma ing a 
on sh soil of the ‘ Valles of the Thames” Pate n 
clines your tender plan sh <a whe the ame plants 
ae I or on h 
i 
PeE 
fiue was of the sort called Valencia, 
Pe § 5 cf 
(2 Ses H Fah 5 7. 
ut inju: 
wn for 
result of cies, . ea agg phe. 
og ae big oom | be tr 
Tal wae: prun- 
g in the spring o nyo if it is : judicionaly done 
t these seasons, little wi will "be required i in the winter. If | 
trees intended for 
dormant state, the frost, dry cutting winds, strong 
t hat pe vessels will = per- 
tual con ere when those of the las pha 
ill vi 
2 a 
hig sol va me oy hp is $ called i 
aps 
nit ems are not. I will venture to say that i 
of the still clear nights of last winter i By therm, ometer 
k from five to 
It is pretty certain that this country was never visited by 
a Severer co! old than that of the 20th ‘January, 1839, a 
o 
8 
Loe 
& 
a 
wad 
Foren es F 
pare ent, which o taelf would be a great advan- 
2 
Erythrin ‘a Galli, Hardy.—A stro " 
epee — ‘zal, planted near a —— wal hives =a 
Ist of Meni in soil = — 
mould, with a little 
7 a 
Ouse ; a plant has lived out 
and si 
sun in ee mill contract Bigs bark, me render it 
hard, that buds will not be readily emitted by it, nor 
ore than 
three or four degrees ; ‘ nevertheless, that difference was 
gree 
the last four years, by covering it with 
litle pa _ or coal. ashes, during the e winter ter mo nths. It 
till the sap is in motion in every part of the t tree. From this 
witnessed on the Common Laurel, the hardy indigenous 
whic! 
strike as freely as Dahlia cuttings, with 4 little | bottom 
earl: 
gersise ale i to ps aaa more phad to 
copious bleeders, as the Birch and Oa! k. In additi on to. the 
-made wenn ds are ‘not exposed to the weather for 
‘ve or six mont 
art can ome plc before the formation of read wood and 
Furze, the Walnut, and ev = the true English evergreen— Peon en off with a bit of the 
the Holly. In many low situations in Sussex, on dry and oi ohare tached ; of the stronges 
sandy soils, the Walnut ate killed outright, or so much y be left t to exhibit their splohaek a oral spikes in the 
red as to —_ all its ‘‘ lop and top,’’ whilst in hi seis as the summers are more dry and warm jn 
ones it remained oe pang 3 and it is worthy of remark | En ngland than in this country, = “— satisfied this beautifal 
that the youngest per most vigorous trees escaped where | plant would — as freely as y he us plants, by 
ones perished, a sh militati a the ob- | a little pro ager ef —P. Keane, Lismore 
ule: in 
gs my 
ss m, One growing in a high and particularly ‘ary. situ- 
ations, the other i ina low and moist one, the r has 
Castle. 
The Cricket -—The Cricket, ik ata was an 
ai at 
J 
hall 
sn 
alate, te show ar we Took al at t the subject titer 
ntly from Mr. Suite whose opinion, ~ ie tof a 
sideration. ] 
8 ial 
st yea war wood is destroyed, and it shows no rit F 
whilst the ee futng, wi its hey are withered, has 
fruit buds ning, whi sprouting vigorousl 
heir food. It ee 
ways to destroy them, s. At peers 
Occurred t © most fortunately to. try & common 
ot, with i 
pittiog po’ 
} salable Py 
ce, deserves full ey 
ee 
obtain aed 
‘several degrees s (both were ceceeueal | 
tater the neh 4 pore ate posers and February. I be- 
lieve that the superio vital ¢ energy 0 of the plant 
in p. 323, will 
a of a power of so much 1 promise, 
nity, will not be readil 
power of _Fesistance. But ‘the discussion of this branch 
Two were ana within ps kite! ~ 
3 ai 2271 Crickets were wipes: in 1 them.— 
£0 
Strawberries.—The usual — and that ; which i iste. 
commended by Mr. Keen m, is 
the beds in Mar To 
ah 
i 
f 
and other destructive pean 
mPa 
mot the ollowing course is resins 
inher 
of beer a vines the variableness of, = they power feos 
ces of ‘time an place, health or romeo | 
fo: 
best courage the e prove a , letting them root in 
smal pots sunk i in the 
If tn th be eee Sa 7 2 
well rooted in their 
nly praptoed them twice 
qe 
a 
ar | 
al 
i 
i acco! th 
-gcwedbeinagn gy It is not too much 
ine 
nj ign 
pias of oi organ- 
= Neverthe the flex- | 
ibility of many en th ariety o of fo orm, | 
Yr, ihoo: nd t! 
eae: 
g 
&. 
6 
. 
= 
to too nee pri bso 
Avclinatication To p oun that your theory is coi orrect | 
as to the subsoil requiring to be dry for ~ eRe: 
of plants, I can give you an aca enon 
om _ had planted several erg ce a ete a 
of fi sete cnohlns sheltered spot 3 
the co: ontisognien as that we lost them all by the succeed- | 
ing winters of 1837 38. eer" of = kinds lated oe F 
drier subsoil in re survived the : las win 
m fruit the next 
preven’ 
S Obtained t "vais an 
pai —K. 
Frankfort Public Walks.—1 ‘recollect being much 
struck some € years ago in the public walks of Frankfort, 
great changes, and we phe be insensible to the nume- 
rous accessions to the fi ithin the pe 
toric period. Some p not seem capable of an 
change, whilst others, pa pe of them MEET. ol of the 
use to man, pn bea widest range, and s 
og 
+f} 
larly one, 
tree (9ft. Serer in Pe slightest degree 
S found that oe winter ethey were 
high) has 
from the late intense vost ad believe it to be the 
'y in 
use in whic! ch preg 
which was taken away in 
ee 
18it - at 6ft. from 
aH 
at 
20ft. We have h 
te 
very fast orks; me specimen — bad tilled ha had reached 
ad 
F g gin a syieante 
ena garden, there being 
3. 
a large bus 
vur years, 
t fe 
without | the slightest protection, a and it is no now flowering 
Coat Fs ce this pions no longer 
Pranklor: in one or two later visits I have 
are 
I believe. 
the horse, for 
5 if not, like man, a ae of the tropies. 5 oe lives 
state of nature within a = ome 9 of those w lati- 
passing through is 
i to 60° of the e northern and 30° @ of th 
Yellow—Henry Curtis, Glazenwood. ~ 
Basvké&ri 
stéria 7 aonees has in- 
temarks on its cultivation. 
has attended my * treatmen 
ig up 
sie lg 
ries ? _ But it is i my object, page pre- 
h general co’ nclusions of your 
rts few 
When the pse ulbs were Bs avn from Mexico by 
Mr. Barker, in Ta85, ene a can oa oe 
were soo) in, 
them was with m 
of one se paiat in it gti oe effect | of ore of soil i in 
took : 
a Me "Petty, Bartholomesiert Birmin 
F 
7 £ Penne Te Hae 
hich I co 
1. } — ‘of 
with m' 
herds, sferwerd that tof the 
to their ph oad pi yortow for in to the 
comparative deppity of such as are grown in high ¢ and 
pots eudo- 
Pelbe, and i ly Palled up the 
ug 
ose on the o! 
sntteaat who aaa for the value 
engages to kee 
small price ee ee 
to 
pre ntly dressed person is 
y an there is no instan 
: whilst menti see this socie 
hit it would perhaps be w 
yo) Wtilo 2 fene trane. 
about the size of walnu is being done, I aha the 
that ‘in 
such a situation 
poi tom importance, the vastly higher Cp cngretae of such 
plant near ti glass, for I find 
md fescriplan better, Ts and are more heal hatin the 
ak 
igre ‘certain that i f Gd. ti aie 
om ones, the number of visitors Seal em 
— Many very respectable people with Gere or i 
Places in times of severity. I do not deny ot 
grown in mote and vich soils, ceteris paribu 
72 
and have more water in their eoaonitn, 
Kinds standing in 
iven 
pen | when it was in fall fone it was weld red omy, Som me 
f plants are injured if syringed pape 
ns : such, hone is not the - ha a plant; 
the contrary, sw 
such treatment seems to suit it, iafectally 
The plant havin 
the comparative intensity o of cold in hie 
, he vil soon perceive that it doo" 
-| three feet ong, and bearing from 30 to 37 blossoms each, | blosso 
pare Yellow Roses.—E. R. is obliged by t a 
notices which have ma ayn of Mis qier}i concerning 
} double yellow ro His four beds psy did not 
X X supposes, 
m the opposite cause, for they — ar 
yat rather 
flowered, and the seudo- ise men thsy reached the point of Proper and 
bulbs bei A ‘ee F o farther progress — ba: edge of the unopened rar 
not be removed from the mperature they were in ne peared as minute inet infested oad 
| et ina flowering ouditions: whieh cn glk fom 70° to | though kept itself Poco The border will 
80°; but especial care should ped taken to keep them | tri tried in i ease of a fine sucker, now vadeuneails that 
ated until the period Of rest is over. By this mode of Sse ae ell of Hornsey informs us 
tment E oie made plants te of iiadiead size and beauty, | our Fate R. F. is in errorinbelieving that Sait 
flower at interyals all th round. rire roof | stans ha! ie in England. ae 
a e excell: t t last i several plants from seeds given him 
with seven spikes, or scapes of yi bee each of which was | 
. The pseudo-bulbs 
and 2 
are six inches 
half round, and the leaves are 
high, and 11 inches: 
friend Dr. Lush, one of which produced a single lovely 
nan oi pa se bea ote oe 
Sabet aie West 
The aaventegs and Economy of Rain-water —We are 
See 
