19—1852. ] 
ial in the 
t allowing it to ran 
r pel po will : st conducive to strong vigoro 
2. and the mene of a me specimen 
The plants should be laced near the glass, so o thai 
they may receive as much light as can be afforded them, 
but it will be foun to slightl em 
culture of this plant; 50° or 60° 
range 10° or 15° “higher ~~ 
— —ñ —é Uä ee 
not be x. es excluding air g. 
otherwise the will assume a sickly, drawn appear- 
ance, and the klage will be thin and ill-coloured. The 
shoots eaj be neatly staked, 1 . as 8 are high 
enough to be liable to be b: 
may be cut to at at the ee ‘of Pl 15 ro 
will the port of the 
THE GARDENERS’ 
tinue ‘ef 
t 
CHRONI 
Peruvian guano, the substances used to sophisticate it 
common salt, and that 3 to 
made fro 
to be about 31. per ton. 
To Messrs. John Clarance 
TRADE MEMORANDA. 
Who is Mr. T. M. Gilbert, who orders plants to 
sent to the Pheasant Inn, Hurst, near Wokingham ? 
Home Correspondence. 
N 9 Although the Dielytra is pro- 
perly classed as a spring-flowering pe yet if pro 
gated by cuttings of the young shoots 
planted ok in June in a sheltered — it will con- 
hit a successi gt blooms till late in the 
h light soil, and should 
sont 
spikes at the jarma Ta leaves, — it will generally | seaso 
specimen in this * Avera if s 
e pe t 
e sporer it 
stop once, when about 4 i i 
i g with 
i 
5° to 50° at night will be necessary during the bloom any support in . 
1g season, if the plants are expec in kes. James gardener to T. Ingle, Es 
| — N or some two ae 5 . 4 Wood Hall, Norfolk. 
en they show tom lecline, water shoul L — kable t i 
j be gradually e, and ie the foliage and — e ee e 
imens o 
very small pieces ; a the dung * 5 — be passed through 
a fine m to h th it almost 3 
contains. I are two v 
2 
8 8 
t of flowers and 70 e 
A during winter TA cinder ashes, but but MoA no . 
p 
ee | very eavy se? 
m- erid or blemish, 104 it oat never ha 
size 
uit . ve 
—_ it which occupying a considerab 
eed not tie broken ap — len 5 
season t thri 
be ae pols with water in the ont eather. 
n I saw a bed so ront of a 
to continue in flower much longer, if frosts 
ew old * should be 
We 
' en- 
ave a plant, 24 ma Tigh showing 17 ee, 
ex pan vered 
5 It is 
on Paces yg a south-east 
wii. 
in ay churchyard of Loose, a romantic looking village 
ear the centre of Kent. et n is now 
n of the 
the middle, t 
The general 
It is 
space in 
otherwise would be. 
9 of the 
its bough 
ve less room 
outline of this tr 
ea 
istances on all si it would seem that 
many years ago the had lost an — spe ont 
mas that defect, sriti A is nearly tre 
e it has on the other sis 80 
variety, which, however, i is not ver 7 
LOW-PRICED GUANO. 
in the 
of Peruvian 
reat ee 
received many eem — from o 
cath 1 
ns | 
pa- 
n the spri ng, and | t 
CLE. 293 
wheelbarrow full of cows’-dung from the pasiure, add 
a sufficient pea Ó of soot until it resembles mortar in 
| consistency ; let it remain unused fi 
n 
ds have been 
Aor which 
e protection ough box 
full of frry for about 5 feet ofits height, Pe remainder 
i ir branches, all of which 
flow wer, an —— even 
S 
® 
pan more a little tinged „ be- 
sides — as buds. The so y. Will the 
seeds ripen T alak diii fa aay w y? On the 
same wall I have an Olive, a Camellia, Ceanothus azureus, 
e 
Myrtle, Ke. We have es in h 
leaf, and Sycamores almost so ae ri Conway’s p 
„den, ryddann, near St. ig- tree in 
Bodryddann saph, 
middle of the garden, 4 feet in circumference, 3 1 
altogether like a considerable Apple A 
Phoenix dactylifera exists, 
— pemadan in aa Pg of the winter. 
many Jen 
Boyd's Self 1 50 
“a a devi 
reput tion yk 
bought one of these seythes, pry 25 exce 
ance, which was i 
the wo: mower who used it's 
adar the blade nt the right angle 
iad entirely lost its aih e screw was 
o fine, too short, did ten "fit the hole it aes Sean 
<a moreover, the nut was too thin. e had a ne 
nut made by a 2 sit Dy — 4 this 
an now pronounce the 
one. 
guarded — pet Fir 
It has been there 
Boyd ssc .—I think it a pity that so 
oF 
iad 
wn, 
m. My 2 ner plants 
them in mould rather richer than that usually adopted 
. — 
ibbs are the onl 
fhe the Peruvian Government, ssid Tair peih ter 
last two years has remained — — 55. 
quantities. A 
147, Leadenhall hi — 
enhall-street, were s oe no extensivel 
to Scotlan other e made a pur chase a 
inju ry — to the 
geod e Peruvian 
mee and Co., Tim me- street, Tay 1, 1852. 
By sco nm m 2 the Sample of Guano above re- 
{ ‘ at 71. 10s. ton, made b 
Paa Fag can 28th Ap , 1852. ee N 
P t. 
Zed of a ammoni 2 2925 
1 aNG clay) Oe 14.70 
(gypsum)... ... — 24.69 
e ut sod a £08 
100.00 
Nitr GRN a a. 
; to ammonia 8.6 on 100 parts of 
(signed J er 
5 April 28, 1852. 
leads me to believe that 
ve sent me is = ey. eed | 
an 
or the! were berances, recesses—its outer gate 
. surface being e iy smooth and even. Ono of its 
. ing the 
no ugly 
tures the two 
in the warm and when they go to rest they are 
rete nearly ary bat ‘well a sere to the sage fee and s believe 
are to obtain a 
or 6 feet in iait, and, like the . 
uglis were all sound 
i was dug in 
were evidently in immediate otad t wi 
have been told that there are . 
et * no one could inform me of a larger one than 
I saw of the shell of a — — in another 
— ard, but it was quite it had evidently cae 
upwards of 20 feet in circumference. An 018 Gard 
— ee —I observed an merede, riet 27 — * 
trees 
with dhs pris they are ac destructive to the banks 
of our rivers. A few me 
d by their hing $ — sane the 
er 
gi 
stem, just under groun ey w sized stems. 
S. Gurney, jun Sana e ough nobody can 
dislike the Hanoverian than 
rom the Apricot. 
.| of soi 
ving maw with ri Moorpark 
That it will ANAE the 1 — of this valuable tree I had | ex 
and that C th 
but this year the bulbs are mu 
e soil having been enriched ; 
f the plants of C. Wallichii are — th 
10 inches — and e Pe 4 inches broad. Dod 
Mea n the far North of Scotland. —As you ou solicit 
co 
yearly eri nea ere I adopted Mn a and effective 
easures against the intruder. At present, were I to 
offer a reward o f 102, I could not procure an individual 
shrubs in the vicinity of its watery haunts. 
here; and, if I not Barret agra ous approach, 
ros ost 
that have been ex ed here during the b winter 
and spring ; andthese x three times, viz. Janu 
I can see it sittin ing upon a — — — and look- and March 4 and 28 ; on the sce ae the highest 
ing at me w ring its — ymmetry. night temperature up to to the pre 
I always besides — * the light of a pretty title . ceeded 40 t t e tie ve 8 * 
beaver, to which it seem out dry and cold, and frequently 5° or 6° of fro ot hav ve 
to ecu gh still nothing appears hae been 
from — By the way, a paeh miah —— on injured. Apricots had some of their blossom n on 
fruit and forest 8 5 Let your gardener collect a| the 
28th February ; they have set their fruit = and 
