af THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
y be cooled either by evaporation, or 
cold air, but it differs from the 
with which iti is moved, and pa 
2 fo rmed in 
the surface is in 
heavier or denser a kind of circulation is imme- 
diately established, this cold water aug eee oe the 
manner, 
the case, all circulation in the u 
if the surface water is then cooled still ed it no 
its effects only become 
through the air; 
punog er e, a solid substance, | 
A AE EA when its rays fall upon 
cont e hn 
The 
ly oam, At 
pran as soon as 
f the land ought to be 
plough wrenching would re 
ow out at 
gi this = 7 — 
workmen ao 
plants should pe Lee in in art Boab some vies nt i 
reh; but rop put in then never succeeds so 
psy sbiut Mitcham i is so sa sandy, warm, and 
2 
of a pond is = heyy the whole 
0 40 Oe, after that, the surface only |. 
soon 
to 
nce it has arrived at 
ut inin November they 
The only ad- 
of which 
e plant v vel y D 
3 ice sean 
er below is in fact protected from contact 
with the reall air by the film of ice at the surface, 
ice i t the 
ar iel n deep ponds 
not ay. never pi pe 84554 8 falls in 
ree from 
å fetch 20l., the expenses 
The ground being all lined out, plants 
are lifted out of the old plantatio t is 
destroyed, and split into any pieces as possible 
The further they are split down, so as to have 
them, so much the better; for, if by carelessness a 
| strong slip is broken off high up, that roy i is almost sure 
to die before summer. The serted at least 
six inches deep, leaving only about threo e of the 
P 
head above ground, ane Sey are place 
eac The first year they 1 
of 
31 108. ; ‘cutting, about 78.; 
oth a trifle, 
The proper time for cutting is 
N 
; distilling, pie ir 105 
just a the lower 
1 to change colou a darkish 
which water 3 -< greatly, and fro 
singular cause, but 
ficiently simple cat intellig ible, 
rface of clear hike does not become cold 
av 
ich, when lo ing into, f 
earth, w 
osed to the bcbling influence of 
er such circumstances it sometimes 
— she sia order of things is reversed, 
h 
ik the 
them, and the consequence they become vi bor 
cold, in fact, some bon ig Wehen ers kreezing Pane 
thoug — water r above them is still at 40°. 
effect can only happen in — wile and ona night 
when there a ate no Dach, for e same circumstances | 
effect, somewhat atu urs 
ants they receive 
nce of anten Bent from the sun , but, u os 
d 
aan 
no effec on N singe 
roe he which it passes, any more than it doe 
ery | running is nota 
is diffi 
are ji it is somewhat oee to pro tha 25 tti 
| when en not. wel mg Pht , Pei cu — 
gular in na 
caused in a very different t manner, is some- n 
tting the sooner it i is “distilled the 
8 ee as, eft t too lon ng, the 
as the surface of the 3 or the leaves of ce 
t 
the 
5 morning, and in 
the 
make 
vantage of planting in poepie y 18 that diseased shoots | of 
may be tl ed. The dise: 
eing there w 
be in a 
* potting, an them 
eee 
8 5 
Bs 
E 
y be ie 
hand-glass, or pee it so that are 
vent dam he: 
nel 
at duri ing next ary. . n as they are 
fairly e they will itok 05 e a ‘ana should be 
shifted into a size s larger pots, and gradually e exposed to 
a freer circulation of air. No . e will be 
ane 
with it, except when I could protect it in this respect; 
and I have also found that sudden expo 
| curr, ‘hed $ ate 5 pie a — re than most plants. W 
attenti espects, an 
ese 
; | plenty ‘of pat fo room, art 105 free from insects, * 
will form nice specimen s by the e nd of the firs 
A 
upon their ha aving been sto opped at the proper 
The "eE plan = should not be stopped at all, 
wd othin ned, as res nper ts * pre 
donn, by stopping even the | 
lants m e e, and non ital be e 
later den the middle of July, or the first week L 
| Au 
hi 
from which 0 
rather 5 or 50 
airy situati 
at intervals of about a familie, tun will ll afford a suc 
t three 
uch of t 
ms are all diele together a pas the first 
llowed to occupy more than two hours 
this, on pa Se of the 1 is to FA all = clearest 
and best; the second run occupies four hou 
last is generally of z ae sherry ‘ol 454 is rather 
than the form 
a * . — ¥ which Lavender 
every one is N but 
ful herb is still a a deside 
ratu il eee London 
1 In No. I., fitth line from bottom, for “hot” read 
“wet 
— LUCULIA ie DE peterr 
Tursi iso one of the most beautiful an 
of all our winter _ flowering plants. Wi 
e Wangen t, it may be i 
tember to March ; ami with the exception 
I am eaten wit 
and 
ve, to 
gett but mistaken ie that 
anage. I must, however, admit that 
the inexperienced _ person 
stage of ripeness ; but practice 
rvation will overcome this difficulty, ise the 5 
vill be found to root in . heat i 
8 is required by many of our favourite plants. Until 
this is the case, however, adop t the following sonar 
which, in slow, has the recom i 
d most deliciously | are 
th a 
rem 
es SO gio artificial heat, and so little i 
cession of flower for at leas e months, While in blos. 
som they will be fi torequi atmosphere; 
and unless this is provided, their beauty will be short 
pag I have found a sitting to suit 
ceedin 
i 
. e will average 
where they can can be pr cm tampa a a 
require. 
When they 1 done flowering, the — — be 
rather sparingly supplied with water for 
previous to their being cut back, and they shi be 5 
away in any spare corner of the gre mea or cold p 
where they will be safe — rom their great 
After being treated r hard pes a forth i 
Aoii be cut back ‘iin ntly to 
hy growth, and no e time Awe a they. can, 
especial fav: 
delicate plants are, and if these pests hav wa a resi 
about i — at all, it may be looked for upon 
the Lue and they should now 
wt during their second season’s gro 
. Non, ng atmosphere, ew they will rece 
ien de of light and protection from the direct ray 
| accommodate. 
also requires 55 prer the house ones . close. — 
| il mot not thrive temperature meere 40° or 2 
w. 
