18—1852. ] 
inevitable uence of low foundation walls. 
— has some peculiarity y. One contains the 
in Euro These 
e. — in number, of — size, measuring two yard 
and more in height, and one in diameter. 
for about 1 fro 
—— Sam the 
beautiful leaves. 
is a rept ie 2 1 yard high, and 41 in 
Of the commercial gardens, I 
of M. Henry Bocckmann, . to the 
This gentleman grows all sorts of plants for 
; his 
are well selected, and are sold in quantities ; his 2 
goniums are remarkable, though not perfect. If 
Report. 
WHAT LESCHENAULTIA FORMOSA FIRST 
shelf back of the green 
could have plenty of light and air, the e cove 
— and so brilliant in colour 
nvince the sce 
n 
the house in which the plant 
tia piloti and its varieties are really fine 
things; their graceful wa feathery blue flowers 
make a fine display when the p t is left to grow freely 
and — its natural fi care is, how. 
fit for exhibition, 
to produce a specimen 
2 puig — 3 — 2 of the shoots it 
d formal 
graceful habit. It will, nevertheless, always ran 
in estimation of exhibitors foe that p 
and it cannot fail to oceu place in 
Tassel. 
2. 
Home Correspondence. 
kihe — at Feli x e Hal, 
edon, who nen cee of them m annually, 
nothin t fi 
y 
— with miscellaneous beddi 
these he ean make e at any time hy merely placing | reasonable 
or arranging ly massing over the 
ye between and aro around the sides of — pots. 
antages where old plants of 
—— taken up preserved through 
winter, as they can be moved with the tarf pot 
and stored in a pit or in any si 
frost. R. G. 
— 
at the Royal Gardens, K 
—— Wall., 
form of it called R. 
THE GARDENERS’ 
tropical — ares 
ite | gently w 
ex — á, ont 
r 
esta 
such —— — it * much of its elegant 
in any col- 
of 
wro 
has to be 
in a time of extreme 
Spring. The plan we > adopt’ with best su 
hallo and 
e sow the seeds, 
$d dima it well with wate 
covering them 
with a to 
watering after the —— — 
that ay require most moisture. Hardy and Son, 
Maldon. 
ral Society's Fétes.—There is ot wm — 
—5 whi 
on. If they 
man- 
ffice :—1. 
eve — n 
— = ee stove, and greenho 
plants ; 3. The best Rose garden ; 4. The best flower 
garden for or colour, grouping, — —— effect of her- 
annual, and bedded-out pla s wou 
—1. In 
Th 
to have one 
féte in his grounds, and they . — — — of the 
profits to some chari or purpose, 
named by the proprietor. only one T these fêtes 
anaged it would be aue a great floral treat. 
If the Horticultural Society will arrange this, and issue 
a prospectus, I shall be happy ~ put my name down as 
— in one of the classes. Hortensis, Middlesex, 
Pruning Forest Trees. —There is much truth i in the i 
beg to suggest that — should g 
e growth 
ver move higher up on 
1 
the stem, yet this is — denied in books; and, 
ches 
n the —— which 
to send a sketch 
0 
upon. One — Let it alone.“ 
— “Bb, but of little — ra 
will all be enormous 
istance 
trees, 
they 
of serious injury. We must therefore “prune it.” 
There are three methods of doing so ; we may call them 
the fishing-rod — the mer — — rush —.— and the 
easil 
un 
to — off every — — the leading — which z is is 6s. 
as th nches to bear 
CHRONICLE. 
e drought and — irm like — — —— upon these principles, we may in 
to draw a bole of 8 or ee height. ＋. E. 
Die 
n this e Die 
lightly with ‘ine — . — all say that it has been 
is prefera urface | Bins 
siriy ry ieee has 
e best | cl 
1 2. The best — 
use | an 
greenho 
to be | the 
* 
it 
trees, for, — as who 
off afte 
a size sufficient to make their rotting off | w 
—— 
elytra i in — 
87 
pi 
E 
= 
ch 
= 
5 
Z 
4 
24 
tever. C. D., Bert 
— 1 may add that 
winter here without 
being covered wi i 
ap ce, — trout ts 30 strong stem 
spot, is more forward, 
njured considerably by the ype. Bigs this 
e the plant requires 
p anil 3838 but 
placed in an 
ha ei 
rounded with a sip a 
hed ay apps = t 
— laced in the tre of 
seussion 
this popular belief, univer- 
sally current in the 
Pr ms 8 
at the meetin — of the “ Assoc 
the Promotion of Science,” in 1849, 2 a short — Or 
which will be leak merican “ Annual of 
Scientific Discovery for e a pprt Gould, Ken- 
dall and mee on 1. , W. a 
Labels.— 
Pipe ore in They are sester hy Men er burnt like a pipe, 
ar attached to a branch o by a piece of 
through two holes 3 in ithe middle of the 
This holds 
i owing to this —— 
2 inds of Pears 
— lately committed an extraordinary 
present, i devastation in my garden. — arem A mend 
acting | the som of a beta Moorpark Apricot; the tree was 
