Oct. 23.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
ntti 95 
699 
HORT SOCIETY OF LONDON 
OTIC is (Rik oy pS, f ie 
N&S ew pet pele in BED mogth during Noxember r, 
Enya d Jani on Noy. 2nd, Dec. 7th, and 
Jan. 18th. 
91, Regent Street, Aug. 13th, 1841. 
auanauauamumuueS=SSS 
Che je Gardeners | Chronicle. 
ABEURRAD | OL TORE 23, 1841. 
Tur season for na has nearly arrived, and 
all aah have that operation to perform should be 
tb the 
y oan. Dis plant, ae are flourishing in all d 
and eo est of pu 
rt of of Directors and Board } 
Contro! e 
boas was tikes of the rapid tangy afforded by t 
onths ; thus, if they are ip any time in summer 
ib icy they Base then be sown the following poh 
¥ d 
y ent the seeds are gene very excitable, 
overland mail, and now for m ey months a a constant | and grow mat once when put into moist soil, and the refore 
wero of the seeds has bee! eived in England, | # 
ery large cost a the East ‘Ind o dia 5 aly. The We itd day in nature the same operation it 
pa of these importations has been pat of : ogress, Seeds 
n 
n, and either haps é in the seed-vessels 
on the plant, or fay pate st and scatter the seeds upon 
{ ~ surface of the ground. In both ay ances, not being 
ered with ear! th, they are exposed to the hot summer 
of the seeds, which now as it were enjoy a season of 
} Tepose, era to burst into life when planted and watered 
pa weather 
getting re 1 
os 
me 
oO 
Ate cs, 
Plante rs may scat there is no seaso 
the autumn for transplanting and that if delies are 
dangerous in or oar cases, they are most especially 
mn whose success depends upon the 
oie or aye = modif fy. 
rare > aiheaben: es ary Cedar he Hi aa rk has 
reached o ur shores, sca ta and thousands are 
in the posession of ma i of the great landed propri- 
etots of Great Britain uring In. 
PP ae 
Even in the north of Ireland a : springing up like 
the Larch. in open s eed-be ds; hall’ soon | see 
ing seeds early i in the year is 
At: ee ha —— pea them h 
ae har Arse sgh approach of winter. _ Every « one who 
has the m of tender 
of the frst i ciated 
Supposing —_ that the seeds are in inti and 
that the prope e flat pots 
ndo 
& Evergr ree ns 
ne ven 0 pre 
A wise 
or 
of Mount Lebanon. 
Up D to ) oe sy 2g time, however, the seeds could 
7 
at the price of the worthless flat 4 see Cedar | 
le £ed wif 
| 
‘ lak } + 
. 
- 2 “tee 
only btained by 
pa ap should then be fil ied { to within ‘half an far, of 
arty to make it fevel ‘and more solid. Jf this 
any al 
coner, the excellent — hemanie a Y hon c Com- 
pany’s Ces otanic Garden a Bn a r, , can obtain it 
the “ia are pre’ from ing. They 
shouke fh be ‘sown 7 Pia a ss per a 
ey 8 to 
if a 
the la a 
be planted i ude water. ei must wait 
ill it is dtsined again 5 a oo ded la ry is, how 
ever, unfit for bearing anything beyond Willows, 
Sallows, and Alder bu shes. . By beginning | early the 
Q, the of public 
mun oded from 
propitious season for committing them to the ground. 
P 
could 9 
ve po pa of the Bee 1 Indie E Comy ni 
expense 0 of the overland “conveyance is dou 
soil, after which they should be watered and remove 
the seed-house. 
In al. > pani A - rseries or g 
is set sing 5 
¢. ‘bi Mind pews & nasereiprs an 
m, Bye ms 7 saee the seed- a  daek bright sun- 
1 
ardens, a house, pit, or frame 
ee - a 
will deny ‘the importance of early p 
One 
will a: 0 
lantin 
to his success in the spring ; another to the 
and a _ a , for anything we eae 
seaso ast year selected by the plan 
Ppé 
system of puddle- planting, which may be performed | 
1 | 
TO the 
n the act of ny ah require = 
the Tiel Government has it in consi to 
allow h 
anything for 
+h Tt oe ewe 
hieh lh 
instead we postage, 
modatio 
The 8 same ion of vausbiey counsels which have = to 
Y grea accom- 
wapo rating propertii 
highly injurious. i Me gilt care, Dx owever, mint ‘a 
taken not to supply too much moisture, otherwise th 
tender seedlir ngs will most certain mg 
— Ty eed, if our memory does rr 
ceive u: Titer in a contemporary publication vould 
mer rade us ie. take Midsummer in aes ence to al 
other s 
g- 
7 . 
warn our read 
Sahih of other eo countries to India. pated, Asia 
ath-seed should be removed ; str as we suppose this to 
he mabey in spring, no artificial | ill that 
I the seed 
received from the — Recuy’ quite suffici ent, 
good and if it has 
Min or, Africa, a 
products i the East through “the Company's 
sdeserbed the young plants will soon make 
pra Dy and when the 
their appearance above gro vund. As they get fits - 
~ acne ‘should be gradu ally discontinued a aud ro 
| oe The ey should then be put singly into thu op -pots in 
that wth e's a nting may BB: 2 at any pid the history of famines and mis sery thus averted from 
- ate piebs ng wi siltuly sh even in August, self by the wise foresight of his British conquer- 
0 i arn has ; eta will bless the day when the barbaric macnn 
ore i 
ample A in a garden of th 
Regent's 
s Park ; bt heed 2 ne auturon ‘must | 
sist upon the wide 
f his =u Lap me ae 
peas tness of vili 
the fengeat Lifer a of ye ‘ortcoltnra 
ee cottager 
peat soil, _—e wae, and. afierwards removed to 
ja mts ed frame. Here they will remain Pa ten days 
ora porkcteom hie I their vente estublish themselves in their 
new rage al when more air may each be admitted, 
Ir is 
Societies to give of books 
hy 
have 2 ig ingui 
this p I ier 
oF 5 
varieties are in the first instance 
4 Le 
| spond books ke not be on eke ates only, bai sul 
of a practical nature, and — to ee 
hension of the peasantry. Much good mig as 
e 
¢ 
: tions to be somewhat 
cal, in the absence of the ouer on whic 
unded. But the e subject * so important that w 
camo! withhold them until we shall have room hes a 
Ze aipae m on the su ai which for aught we know 
led . fas till ‘the 
note reparation 
t dogma- 
ws 
oa 
a2 
nm is i“ thd 0 ar ad sdéaiieert ok our 
to be worth the soundi 
We are, however, Brot ided with reasons in nig 
We shall lose no opportunity of producing. 
by a jndicions selection of Book pes: e When our 
of 
Sa afterwards peoliiied 4 a. 
ceessful in Pp is of the 
ince for the omen rst you! nd psc ouilye 
he inciples upon which such suc- 
2 par 
cess depends. These they 
former numbers of the Cabteee pioguesade When the 
list is complete, we a publish it for the benefit 
— ly. 
& Hyacrinru is now in demand for the poh 
a of Stor siaod — we had proposed to mak 
eral observ on its inepagenent Bis 
other ings poi, ae : dale fe ng more on the prese 
occasion than git raphe the following rules ae 
ace the bulbs dark ull r oois have begun to 
pot wet. 
No o particular time can be specified fo r striking cuttings of 
Heaths, because | the plants are | in a fit State for taking off 
iiss as ‘a pas oe peor and a The plants 
from whi ch the cuttings are taken must be perfectly 
healthy Pp i in th 
number of cases will a be thrown away. The wood 
rig ¥ 
- As soon as the roots ae forming, 
and place th em in J 
bring “the bulbs 
7 st possible 
2 da tae in the Theory of Horticulture. 
vi te Nu mber (p. (62, col. c.), was one of the 
= important announcement nts which we have yet 
ad the tuni 
Bg" 
I the 
= the Bie: nide or Holy Cedar of 
ains, Sipcompss e most rtant to 
it sss ey ery good peas and ea ud one; 
0 oba tain it were loug unayailing, until 
resent Secretary = the Coss of Di- 
mn cones on his return from 
ich grewin inthe; wt Bs 
young it is almost cer! tain to damp off. The short inet 
shoots, shot an inch or fe inch and a half long, 
d the I 
raya 
lace. 4. When the ee are growing, give them j always be chosen, an caves stripped off ese 
more sem and increase the quantity = the leaves | avout half their length, and the ends eut ode with a 
ae eae gaat them from the light sharp knife: in this state they are ready for the cutting- 
till they are Sceaty to 5 Rowe. 6. After ei flowers are | Pot: The “Sulit in emtagen d ag A SiGe 
Ou sl 
pas ifn the bulbs into the ground out of doors sill. a vite a cial Pe ta 
and other substance to ; ith whieh th ts 
off. Ea se these paragraphs mill td boii ct Eas The ssilver-sand 
the nibjes of a separa 
Heaths, ot almost any | sand will: pode nie purpose; it 
agra be be eae phone of the management 
? bul all kinds, as we shall show 
possible. Tbe cuttings may then be inserted i in the sand, 
ATHS. ter ti halt au inch ig quite “snficient. The ey 
ON THE PROPAGATION SOF CAFE por ge from a . har er to sy cece doe the i 
cuttings. eeds are either sepet from the Cape of ticles of sand round each entting, — sender them 
Good :* or gathered from vente ts which have flowered pe without any further trouble. i-glasses are - 
es “4 should be he ao ba sas Big Ld to suc: as I have frequently struck them w ithout 
oy A in the h € this ki When they are used, th ley mus st be 
ie eat 
sowing should be deferred ‘ls spring. yt hen seeds of | sien t 2 p 
kind are sown late in the year, they — en they are eens 
ss atall, orif they are excited into growth, the stim pit the as tau ona k in a situation 
- and the days are so short and dull, that) moist end shaded, and iow es “will be s 
set sick d pEand a damp of. For the same ee — with the same circums: ee 
eeds. whic sayed in this country should either 
5 in or. very early in summer, In many Very little artificial heat is necessary in striking E 
ieee oon ere fk mem ones | ech certainly inuriows. A Cosmas a 
soon he 2 ripe; but. pce Aged ay 5 nearly ex auste or tl e sh rt 
as as they eae ae ae es ed poet ee ae oeeae 
tine ene! ar cater aloe fume sigh shaded 
as aie mote ic re oe | wait ed The care ‘required afterwards is to 
