TH 
E GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
. Br. Leaf, for Pine Apples. ‘To Mr. 
Mr. W. Dowson 0 W. Esq., 
Tillery, gr. to His Gene the Duke of Portland: for Peaches and 
3 M c arquis of Aberco 
| edifices of their town was Cypress wood ; but M. Bouchet 
has ascertained that as is timber is Larch. 
Nect: b "OgE0, to the M wn, for 
mo ee M bg coh Selb?” ” ing Strawberry. ‘lo seg Litt le Karly Strawberry. (Fraise petite hative). ae 
Snow, for C bers. To R..Brook, Esq., for Apples and Pear: cultivators « of Fon! tenay-aux- -Roses have giv en this 
To Mr. Bruce, gr. to B. ier, Esq., for a Green-fieshed M to a Straw which they 
a nde fenid evsagecd eis B. eo ‘ler, ig ay Searcher oo — to the Paris market it does not prodace runners, but it 
To Mr Bruce, gr. to B. Miller, Esq., for Ixora coccinea. To Mr. the kind called Quatre-saisons. 
Bruce, gr. to B. “Miller, Big. fo humile. To Mr. im 
Bruce, gr. to B. Esq., Cactus Mallisonii. To Mr. ST 
Mountjoy, for Gloxinia ‘violacea. Mr. Young, for Searbety Bon Jaridinier. 9° 
discol Prize Pinks.—Names of the 24 Pinks shown b ny Mr. 
rast len f thi us to defer _ C. Knight, which were awarded the First Prize in the 
next week the proccedings of many ot jeties. We have in Amateurs’ Class at t1 he last Chiswick Show : a 
hand reports of th yal Botanical Society of Edinburgh, Hor:i- ha ady Aclan m's Queen Duke of Bedfu 
itural (June 15), Floricultaral, Royal South . Linnean, | Bray's Invine Werden's a eartstone's 0. * victoria 
Jersey Agricultural and Horticul Royal Caledonian, en Omega Cousin: dit Cousins Ei hie eee 
viene, Devon and a and icaticaltuest, Birming- seme en Date bots Senenen | Brig 
» 5 pisby, Newcastle-on- isan: Eve and Kirkdale. Dekins Burdett Beauty of Kent Majestic 
—- tear} Hallow pay Bh eal = sone Q 
NOTICES OF NEW PLANTS WHICH ARE Wachee: rohehuea F wy 
ames of the 12 whieh oereregy First Prize in Amateurs’ 
EITHER USEFUL OR ORNAMENTAL. Class at South London ety :-— 
Caor MA cTa’site. Sho Chorozema. ( ous any ja Heartstone’s Queen 
Climber.) —This is a i Swan River climber, of sngall size, Mijeatic 4 Lady Hallows 1 ¢ Church’s nHowens 
admirably adapted for covering a small trellis in a _— n-pot. mer’s Queen me in the Hing 3earge Kelson 
its flowers are orange, slightly tinged with crimson, and ex- nee Here | Warden of Winches ecrete ‘Herm 
er pretty. They appear in abundance at the ry - every rookneck Gourd.—This in American variety, 
shoot. Wabnre received it from Mr. Standish, of nomena and | least a good deal a Scene hat esteemed in th Uni 
pectin red abundantly in the garden of the Horticultural _ ie The frait is small, yellow, slightly warted, as 
F'RtA LONGILA BRIS. Long-lipped E’ria. (Stove Epiphyte.)— nearly at right awa about a third of | its length. 
A native of Panay, in a Parma ees it was sent to Iti is s very prolific, but waite fit to eat young, on ac 
Messrs. Loddiges by M ming. {t is very like E’ria brac- | of 
téseens, but is a finer or id bears more flowers; and is| pon hapalcana ra 
distinguished at once by its lip, whichis not truncate, and hi ie pit 4 . 
three equal wavy ridges prolo: ost as far as the tipof the i _ ape Me is at length officially announced 
middle lobe, which is ayes! Erne ame RR I paterara the meeting at Plymouth will commence on ‘Thurs- 
IA aRMBNI'ACA. Apricot- E’ria. (Stove Epip, yte. 
A beautiful epiphyte, sent to Messrs. Loddiges by Mr. Cuming, day , the boas J al > and — ft n Wed dnesday » the 4th 
who found it abundantly in th , in the island of Negros, ust. e shall re somicaiea 
and elsewhere. Its flowering stem isa foot high, and bears relate to the matters concerning this Jo arnal; but w 
great number of large, tough, apricot-coloured scales bi -| gret to see tha t Zo ology and Botany are still mixed 
fhe flowers, however, are a dull brown, not at all pr . eh It would be far hatte y a 
Whisis the first of the Erias withlarge coloured bracts that we have 
soon; exist in Java, according to lume.— Bot. Reg. section were formed an Fosmalie Physiology, Botany, 
Crerocu’ILuM FYLieks. Slender-stemmed Cyrt lum. (Stove | and Horticulture. 
Epiphyte.)—A hilam with the yellow flowers _ an On. a 
eae impo! Guate by Bateman. Ithasavery DEN M EMORANDA. 
Mr. 
jer'stem, above two feet long, perfectly simple, on the ex- 
peint of which are four or: five 
egg esr: 
flowers about the size of 
those Of aculitu 
LAa’LAcr “Rovearon LIA 
Hovea-leayed Lalage. (Gr 
ered with; Messrs. Losiabes? 
fad Co., of Exéter, by whom it was exhibited at a setter of the 
itural ter in Regent-street, at the end of March last. 
garden p her broader: leaves, 
Lod pane pokemons genus, allied 
Bot. , Pee 
trou pare ine ‘purple Ipomee’a. (Greenhouse 
—For the first » of Ipomee’a tyrianthina our 
é are indebted to G. F. Dickson, Esq.; and it has been 
“vince ne rag hago gee gy The fol- 
lowing details of its history and culture us by Mr. 
= . “ft was collected by & friend in the vicinity of Real 
del Monte: andthe rodts, which resemble a 4 
were potted immediately after their arrival, and put im a little 
eat, where; ina ‘days, they began to push out several young 
ted i Palsoanysa the present 
year rich Ioam, pall fucked dung, and @ _— 
perl ath ner mts now again specimens, 
blossom cperinay erg 5 by the middle work — they sy 
ence towering t bsg ac ina 
seagon remov 
in which 
sent appears ery too late if alw kept int th a 
as ays in. the greenhouse, 
ami their colours . — not so vivid when 
the winter. 
the pnd spn of propagation usually followed with dahlias 
ee 
Higi 2 br much interest was excited afew y: ago he 
minds of horticulturists and amateurs of landscape-gardening 
by the account published by Mr. Lo » in Vol. 10 of his Gar- 
hood, few observa 
He found Highclere in great beauty of foliage, with the excep 
tion of the Beech, which had suffered Considerably from a pacer 
blight, and in character and scenery al st dantly destitying the 
eulogies of Mr. Loudon. The place is extensive, with miles 
‘ood! and 1 local eircum- 
stance, 0 conspicuous hills, 
singularly contrasted, one (Sidon 1 Hill) “most dpc adorned 
with wood arranged in the hap pies est man the er (Beacon 
sq 
nd scaffolding, erected for the Bogen 
into execution a splendid design of our great Mr. Barry, 
whieh excited much bas ares at the last exhibition o of the Royal 
Academy. The pleasure-grounds around it geen Seg 
thei = Rh jodendrons. Th Rhodo- 
ediate between R. aan perenten 
a = ont were: represented to him to have 
} 
Just ou 
brillian varied livery of bright crimson. “The double 
BS) eawente these hybrids and R. ponti var. atro-pur- 
pureum, were exceedingly utiful, of man ades of “mag 
‘These second crosses are qui 
elere, where. the R. Alt acler ulenea proce and is hardly 
recovered from the rm of's fsa — The first set of the many se 
brids raised at at Highcle: ediate between Rhododen 
hi 
dron md canard brit "Thees pkats, we ich form ex- 
tensive were fect hillocks of bloom, so fusely 
as searcely to permit a leaf to be seen. There were 
also a few interesting hybrids betwi iense 
R. jicum, ,w is more novel, between R. ponti 
and R, panulatum; but th last have not yet attained a 
| flowering age. We have said enough to show that the hybrid 
odendrons were full of int 
+ i horti iy; 
MISCELLANEOU bat the extraordinary » blended with a fragrance t 
pated saturate the surroun atmosphere, the hybrid 
Microscopie ical bie Asan pamces of minute and | ‘Azateas, it would be difficult to .. The hybrids between 
organised — ical es destroying the living pe ger Azalea calendutacea var. triamphans and Azalea ru major 
part upon which they grow were masses of odorous peat of bas » scarlet, crimson, 
£ discovered “i F ge, yellow, cream colour, with int ediate and inter- 
ts, whicl: he hele = Faogi fn te ke a Limax agees min; tints of great variety. “one large compartment of eight 
i git, pletely destroyed the borders, forming in their aggregate a Catherine-wheel pattern, 
embryo, Ehrenberg observed the appearance of Cheeto- | riveted the attention, and could not easily be matched. Several 
phera (Tremella rica upon seales of Salmo | 2¢W hybrid Aza'eas were in flower for the firsttime. Of these 
pperlanus. over has d bed th th hanes oot on ime Sa seo my ohana eet 
eperlan v 8 descri e growth of Confery. cens major, one of which, of singular beauty, communicated by 
upon toes of Triton yam ee ob- | the noble proprietor, will be figured in the Botanical Register. 
served sea Infusoria upo Ac- | Our limits preclude us from — into more detail on this 
cording to thi rver the pai soniitiad peterson ere eS pearesge seh et ncg rte eS 
species of Vorticella. Sebéalein saw the growth of Fungi pr serapaee one ahs von Hateusens: enone 
in the pustules of Porrigo lupinosa; an gen! shores had been rebuilt in e: it > enlarged so as to 
ticed the di — ighly-organised members accommodate the noble proprietor, who, with his family, resided 
this division etable kingd nag SP r, | in it during the last summer, pending the alteratior his : 
veg gdom, in the yo = |e et seen, as it was seen by our friend, in the 
sunk under typhoid fe ever.— Microscopic | with its ing ex of r, its ds of Azaleas, its 
a = banks of Rhododendrons, and other heath-mould plants—its 
Pé ou ia Montpelier Ln the garden of M. Eugene pacnasther nb meer agg condeeatas malgniieds ne sicmmiees 
ert a Mas Lemasson, near Montpelier, exists re! im the rg as Famers after the designs 
one of = largest orizmnal Cy ab ap in Europe itis | Mr. Barry—is deseribed to us of the loveliest and 
6of. high. a Beseesaed tile | enjoyable of scenes. We icc ¢ cnet for the present, with 
ago, and b = [onesies viewsof the last two Highclere 
below the kr 
a ithorintaly. J ast 
Tn the 
nay C; peeves as 
pelier £ 
[N° 95. 
andyas ; these groups have a picturesque but not 
nias, and Mau 
unnatural aspect: pace fine bins are cultivated Aged 
which we observed a large specimen of tricolor: chiek 
object is the very large collection of pee lias, the, a are 
informed, not re- potted til neat paid have made their growth, in 
der that they may flower m eely, and not produce quite so 
much wood.— June 14. 
_Fai irbairn’s Nursery, Claph —There are here man large 
cimens of the rarer kinds of I Heaths; 7 “ “observed p -f os 
several ae varieties of tricolor re 
hi 
gs, ses in the usual 
ade: ica a seems generally reat There was an excellent 
dis vad “a fi » i 
£00! 
gs 
ae isting of ed flowers; the blossoms are just ex. ' 
ce Eabedal days they may be expected to bein full per- ; 
m.— Jen | 
CALENDAR OF OPER ATIONS far j \S for the ensuing Week. 
ys fap es or black fly, bec comes troublesome on Cherry- -trees, 
Sante puplicobie ca to 
branche: 
ae eS 
all tender insects infestin; 
ND ORCHARD. 
Department. 
—There is a fant ad inher op at this season of 
the ene growing Pines ‘ick, 
The ts about to make their 
ey should, therefore pe all the room 
mite gas to eeyent dies becoming long an 
plunging now, if 
er from those ripening as soon as 
Give occasional a of 
undance of 
nge colour. 
manure-water, except to new iy potted plants, and ab 
air at all favourable o; Mp org or Ege 
ees ry.— Where the frui cut, use for a few days strong 
easures to a red spider pais then give the vines free 
ell-drained bo: aren bi watered 
upwards, a few at 
every precautionary means 
stir the surface of the border inside the house; water the 
one, if necessary, and keep every clean. 
Fia-Hovuse.—Summer pruning may be practised here, if it has | 
not been rendered unnecessary by disbudding before. Give air 
and water in abundance. 
e plants as they advance 
in 
bet ‘op. 
shoots, renewing the linings if 
t mee a few days, they will put forth vigorous and 
fruitful a which may be treated as the edo pita 
all favo le occas regular 
ose y bad 
Sener stop thos 
until the renihite’ pater —~ _ ots for training are obtained ; 
layer of grass or litter to p too rapid evaporation 
will 
useful. 
eep a cool moist atmosphere, by giving 
air and wetting the fioors. 
Out-door Depar pomey ee eee 
The main crops of Onions, Carrots, Beet, and Scorzon wid 
be kept regularly hoed and thinned ; most "Ginds of herbs may 
propagated by catiigs 4 or division in shady situations; destroy 
weeds everywhere, and hurtful insects of kind. 
Broccotr.—Any kinds i 
outnow. Should t 
plant 
NS.—Top the advancing crops as they come inte blossoms 
great measure, will —— the bi black fly appearing epo™ 
between 
re 
face of Wb cantis abou: <ie'pbante ts loosened with the 
CautirLowens.—If the scents for the Michaelmas cmp we pang 
ently resins ed, they may be pricked out; water 
eo! 
if 
Capac. baer few may 
Coleworts. 
week for 
Enprve.—A few may be transplanted in shallow drills betwees 
advancin, 
the Celery, or on a ick border. 
Kipyxy Beans.—Earth-up and stake or succession, 
Lerrece.—Water those new ly planted, and sow + for su 
Peas.—Should the bn mes sake them dry, the advancing crap 
and as 
a 
g 
§ 
r 
g 
Fil 
i 
must be given to air, 
morning and 
stirred and mea, 
bi 
