Dec. A 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 
811 
y is published, price 6s, clot 
i Rahs HA AND- BOOK OF CHEMISTRY with a 
hase index of peierene cé. By G. H. CaunTsEr, Esq 
pondon: W. S. Orr & Co. and W. & R. Chambers, Edinburgh. 
The Saceenecy Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1841, 
MEETINGS IN THE THE ENSUING WEEK. 
Zoo log ie 
Geo! gical 
Botan’ 
y - + + + Geological s 2 ote 
all flowers, the Double 
that it is climate much more than anything else that | 
| determines the blooming of the Double Yellow Rose 
a ie om ye which i is strengthened by several consider 
nor 
ber; indeed, to have seen somewhere little paper gar- 
| dens, — from tinople. w were 
adorned with many kinds of plants. 
mirable for the skill wi i 
nb pruning which we must look for success 3 aes 
Nth 
It 
Mn in “a 0 wher in a 
ineli ined to be gr avelly, nst the 
he rose is 
war 
tary ¢ exception or B 
dry soil, 
| for each pla ing painted in its natural ec 80 
that they oo the delight of the beholdérs. Arhong 
these plants were Double Loerie tiga dm 
= arg rr beautiful plants.” It was rer me 
to England 
direct from Totals nople, eee 
ed, been brought thither out of Syria 
its being a n 
the “ my a TFlevifera,” ignoran tly sup 
the 
is the how “a all haw: in the — of 
this estimate - 
view 
ths ago begged pon 0 
wih the result of | ier ex epee ce Bree > pie 
by means to arriv Ositive 
t, perhaps, su 
ated, yet, thanks to the intelligence | © 
nts, we have collected t 
the su 
stance of which we now wraceel to place before our 
readers. 
One of the most common statements is, that the 
Double Yellow Rose is Hepes of Jon, § confined or 
smoky situations. T his. may be p 
——- eee 
b- 
nts agree- | suited to it; an 
— HA bee fasten na Calicut, in 
ma tells us he 
will only be where the soil is light on warm, 
ON THE SEASON FOR TRANSPLANT 
AGREAT diversity of — 
e 
Som 
2 se = particular ec seasons have 
ing eee opinions as 
planting abu trees pry pret as mar as pauses, 
planting: oats of the results of planting Ev: 
already a appeared in the 
be induced to send you a statement of the facts and 
pl 
ht bi as it would tend to Feinave the 
Ly : 
winds, are spoken ol of; and we have not a hey sets 
from pet or cities. 
most flourishes 
In what aspect 
gathered Troi this that in ten cases 
aa wi ith an east aspect, in eight with a ‘north, i in 
= — 
only one ease is the h spoken a4 this, 
ig: is by W. Leveson Gow wer. Esq., wh oses, 
at Tits sey, near Godstone, are well known “for their 
ndent, whose interesting com 
erdaee ta Gf *8.” nce doubt- 
her occasions, has sent us the 
Jaden corres 
nications ae t 
language 
‘ The gardens in which the finest and most perfect 
Yellow R re those of the villas on a 
hills : around Florence ; while in the gardens in the to 
judices or an conclasions of some, by 
tia, 8 remarks, which pa ghor our ideas entieh, bet- | * 
er than any of our own :— 
clearly suceess or failure pipes at 
| different seasons, and . pele: Stimulate others to make 
further inquiries and more accurate observations. Ur 
| this impression, and and theoretical no- 
i eh on T lant- 
| deciduous trees and oy enture to day before. you 
my reasons for dissent. The season 
in the 5: Theory of Hortieultare” as | the | most favourable 
lanting, f November and 
f 
mays ‘ot west wall. On ine other ving 
liek ‘at gravell ily. oe amy. eke ee even a vily 3 
and d Mr. Rivers speaks of the sandy and gravelly dis- 
Engla 
| the follo — cirew 
The r 
December, or between the fall of the leaf in autumn and 
liest part of spring, and chiefly for ee aed 
ect than in P 
Bh Arno, in 
bou sa on either 
of rather abru 
nd. reason app! 
mstances :-—The valle 
nce lies, is a deep trou 
gh, 
“ hand by f lofty fills, 
rupt 
ascent, and of a dry a and not very tich soil. The lower 
part of the valley is poi ne at ment ee: th bi loaded 
with a perceptible d heavy m in the ings and 
430 Re 
Because the ‘roots of a plant are necessarily mi 
r less 
nd are consequently fa se oo 
support = stem than they were before the mutilat 
; and in simmer, when there is the srenmat 
able able height on the pt of the hills, ad ws it suddenly 
s» being bounded by a strongly line rg 
rectly clear. ea height 
ree mass of wpe, locally termed * 
mpera 
a3 
felied in n full leaf in. cits foliage 
f | sently wither, the bark will dry up, and the whole 
LY ee ha lage boo Satbealy lopped in N 
vember, when its foliage has nat! 
m 
ry; the te’ and a poate b may vary, 
but ¢ the most its point is represented by the Flo. 
blossoming. But, on the 0 ang = hand, we 
+.) at such a height above t 
e Arno bergenerally al 
from the * epee produce tase Yalow a 
dat nce, W while | ose below ii _, The nae 
of spring, when its efforts tor Seni by iaranieden. 
| leaves only accelerates its end, and | these two pages 
considered to 
eisbees that | he has had it in the greate 
bi every flower 
fa the Bl blue clay of Essex, and that he has 
0 fa 
iE 
: 3 Pwr ti Sta ickead fe This seems to point to be Ser amare tes a gf sine ei eevee Se ae es 
ined clay in the saihe county. We | tse of the imperfection of aa not one | that the suecess upon the whole would be i 
wever, that upon y examining the | bt in @ bundred bas sufficient strength of v if they were transplabted in November, when the 
' ‘ overcome in velopment. : : Ave sacauier e ae 
so ~tlsy eiyerted to, they. do not appear to be cits whore single nay, aot get a European fa tine oF year: But es winless transplant 
se : ih from One patt of a gard r a nursery 
be rather of mal than ge- | dens, is reported to exist. The climate of is, per- | within ret ai y, as will g ly be the then, 
attempting to connect the haps, the driest in be word not sel dee Yet | T think, I have good reason aa. 
< jar aspects, as, for example, stiff the plant lives. pig the p Leong “Th of Herticultare 
east or west, and light land with the north, | Sou fs the perth of Germany | the preser of the roots and-the selec 
Weave met with no suec a suitable day be attended to; those plants will be 
appears to be always nece: ; u tthe Bepere or Avot at Malve found to succeed the most perfectly which are trans- 
iwrence Mentions a case in Bucks , at Clinen, or in any _paria of Wales ging where a ihe planted early in autumn soon after the leaves begin to 
b Hall. = Buid was planted when a to afford hills rising above the | put while a considerable quantity yet remain in a mature 
sucker, against an eas all almost entireh usual mists of their respective rivers, ase Hey plants | ond ef t There is evidently “ate 
from the south ; aga was vas ie of Yellow Roses on the high ground and on the low. | between transplanting a tree in sumimer, when it is in full 
father (who was a a great sportsman ER t high produce in any degree | jear and in auttinn, when the leaves have partially fallen. 
the roots of ) Cy i a In the former would be so 2B ain tamer 
old worm ; alge cog nb that success would be ; there 
dash. reg elena at absolute or relative height | would nt pobay oes bribe nie, 
‘mont! a atmosphere, ipened wood, 
re Pg Sopa Fie) by ves. Batin 
ily i aa as of the score of solar and at- 
ora odified, 
before | Ls y 
