a SRC T ee a ee ee ee ee eee 
JULY 10.] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
IS COLONY, illustrated 
‘Bi; ‘peige 306. 6d., will be found 
esirous of ob! information 
the vegetable pean ram of AUSTRALIA 
Ridgway, Piccadilly, 
Che Gardeners’ Chronicle. |» 
cUEpsy, JULY 10, 1841. 
Iw gardening, as in all other arts, there 
first principles to which Eason everything else ma as 
be ultim: rately reduced, an which practice, how- 
it may be, wir be found in ases 
iat more or Jess immediately. Among such 
rinciples, that w which is $ most commonly los nip at of 
ee 
S*oe ne RIV ER. eae re, petals” A SKETCH 
figures of peo 
ef 
| delicate flowers which are 
of warm weather, 
forest-trees by barbaro ? . Every 
to spring up on the return | 
Limp then, can we Tutilate our 
summer 
spared and al 
Sy the separate: action of each cat Sad leaf may 
doubtless is, extremely small, yet we are to re 
be, | 
- | trying 
er sate it is by re pe such respane of minute 
os ae Ae crest is construct 
lath 
pas a depth 
pte 
insbaeat rae 
drought, if planted at 
surface as to enable the fibres of the seminal roots to 
f liquid 
s 
Jo 
a 
D 
ee "Srey The ob 
leayes, and 
eh 774 £ ia 
that the health Ad otner part ts OF 5 
This i 
g moreover, pide may be , purposes of 
y ones 
> 
of | of worms 
mors er ge, had i Bxcatlevey wopeed ‘ts 
judicious plan of f spreading hot quicklime or the re- 
a 
¥Y OUrned ashes Or 
th. L. 
ss gm 
up in every nag at r’s room, ge so scl th that it 
po omapene ee continually, 
| it will be in teresting to 
por of the soil destined for the experi» 
of produce. But to this we shall advert next week. 
In the present 
ugar-duties, 
which now pease: a) age ge oi of polis, 
rg hte 
wondrous system of life quite as perfect as that of the 
Wheat in 
we believe, only within |" 
a very short time that an: Pate steep ts have been 
to introduce it there, an opinion having been enter- 
our West India 
Py ae ini It would be 
suck 
page nae nak gly al 
that this important office is assigned, and to enable | 
st: af sheigey do. nates seit Gave doubt 
food, 
y, because | the country of ae 
temperature 
on. | and connected ane Cérn-duties and Si 
an which 
linewies coutinns to seomaie; if not dprvia of its base. 
rm | Bue although t 
will rew 
h the most most natural union may be thus stp- 
wn extensiy vely 
} di 
of man. The leaves have veins the which their | 
fluids 
Wheat, the ‘Tri ticum compositum, is 
ry ee 1 1 
pass, and cells i held w 
respiration 
from the air, and give for r carrying off perspiration. 
whose natural habits have been changed by | ong e1 ex- 
posure to a hot rage Ans ch, f ~yprare as" the 
hard ‘Vittoria Wheat ion i 
c=) ‘J 
Gate 
tell us, that ugh a leaf may lo 
more than a bi | thin skin, it ai be framed for 
some tial purpose. A ct, both a 
‘ons Ne 
$I 
vok like meh ner! thereft 
the de stacton of the parts to which those 1 names are 
Hf it 
perience has proved be the 
‘There is before us a letter from Mr. Fox, the Agri- 
EYE 
Peay ae 
nape in Bermuda, from which the 
rete e 
ws vee tf ea 
at was the other day at pene 55 oe Vittoria 
tee within certain 
adept pa ring: Stri 
ri bacy quepeigensinal mes 
kernels. Thi 
of a 
leay, 
| with watery matter, but 
ey Seay 
pied. I. pul ba aie small and long—the 
short, plump, gross 
ly found in 
the Bae yom 
ot bei also bi 
yp 
eats leaves are developed, 
| an embryo bud is fenee, which protrudes as the season 
the | reunion of such identical portion all that could be effected 
a bud from a different shoot of either the sa 
mits 
operation. 
whereby Mls re, dpeetes, and even some genera 
ted on 
y observation ‘in the Spring, it will be seen that buds 
rogress as shoots ; at short intervals pb these 
and in the axil of each leat 
are pro- 
vances. Sometimes these 
ct into shoo! ots | in the 
("| are produced, but generat 
i, | they remain in the : state ae 
ough leaves are thus es+ 
tho 
the sont og hedenrelgxine’ Bor geshgr cn for dnt pla 
ang #, 7 
the 
way though the bark, and runs down in 
as happens to 
aging 1 
Our Correspondent, Dr. Hamilton, setae. 
the Mulberry-tree. when i 
for silk-worms, and as occurs to | 
at gee 
upon the same subject:— 
potent ind lee ee etness will be 
collected in their " berries. Rob the Potatoe of its fe 
culture of Wheat has been hitherto subjected in the 
the 
“The following are the results, as far as they have as 
liace 
> 
tubers ; and so of all things else On the 
the M 
oer hand, : 
are given in a letter from 
fon 
Eocene reer 
Tange othe ender | nly x 
ck, bear 
ar ngs meas Soa yep The bud is cut 
entering 
from the shoot, by 
tive. he tad Ths ges 
the = f a to be 
bringing it out 
some instances very well, bat n not below, the bad. #ortion of yee thus “necessarily 
é Z 1 a with the bid E == ring the 
e, they have failed in other | Po 80 as t old of the wood 
a pee ‘ . | between the th 1 p the Lin, and thus pull 
principally owing to: the attack of WOrMS | forwards and reeves "Bently the e whole of a 
or grubs. | The ears that were réaped on a spot under | bark will = ig expos _ Paemes a smooth. 
were very he: 3 they came surface. g tire 
inl : ‘py | the first, 
ho: you, by rice seal 
about five per cent. I was in hopes of renewing the es bia 
‘ion of woody 
which is our ik 
only planting season in the year ; but the most severe | connexion with 
