THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
n eal uunvitiug appearance. many 
aye tate it is very ps oa and, 
toy „ by far richer than the 
Pr 
adapted. agenboom is from 8 to 14 feet high, 
and supplies, like several other a, the princi pal 
fuel o ardly Ag gees 
treatises hav ve been wri tten. I mus t confess 
a The su mpd iit pes. will require fires —— 
dam 
ture and cultivation so many | a 
sashes may be removed, and the Vines exposed to the 
5 influence a the weather; beyond stopping 
1 5 no a e e prune them should be made for 
some 3 N the leaves should be permitted 
to fa i "off . ad As house is oe ed, 
a sould be taken ha repair t the 
ashes and 3 ao a 
orking gram, 
y t 
work, 
commences, e ing may" abe in good 
dry up 
t operation—and fou 
ing a few inches below the surface, 
uch as 60 feet in 
same 
5 Euro 
of keeping down the loose Shitting sand 
which bo nd nature i 
is the 4 75 Vygen (Mesembryanthemum 
oad between Simon’s Town and | 
a it The 
add, has oc 
2 that of an allied eee, 
inn. Th 
gen 1 8 Fig or pesas 
that termed Zyre e 
sito rme, pe „and not vic 
„as some authors have it. Berthold Seemann, in 
. Journal of Bota: 
n of N 
(For ensuing week.) 
ANT DEPARTMENT. 
S be ia = the one 0 
ce the 
tlie inmates 
likew be 
required ; however, it ee be of a stimulating sas 
to aid the formation of fruitful buds for next season’s 
w ou 
is left re e cu 
other oe ins should be kept 
e n was 
extra 
we 
8 
neing fast; the gr 
red spider, and the greatest care | 
ent its atta 
requi o pre 
have hae acces: 
should be ms that the plant’s energies ma 
too severely taxed Ses a oe when 
a- | stimulants 
vegeta on the declin 
berries for ge | should b be potted forthwith — fall 
time to pe their growth may allowed them. 
After they “in gos = gge new w shif, pa them in 
southern aspect an expos and at the same 
time place them 8 ; they. will Scion the — for not 
being plunged = some time yet, but must be regularly 
supplied with w. 
cba DEN AND SHRUBB 
Where tte on a large scale is eh the 
propagation and preservation of the annual supply of 
plants an im t f the gardener's 
4498 
Sunday 8 
nting time, a careful cale f the numbe: 
required, and means there is of preserving them 
The next thing 
to 
uire immediate attention, 
remove a few 
the lower 
a 
er freely Pom. A es, Cauliflow 
lent-leaved plants, 
STATE OF THE W 
EATHER NE 
For the week ending Aug. 5, 
ee — . at the 
his wick. 
Tur ZIATU xX. 
Bazomaurzn, | 
i Max. 
Wed. EZH 20.338 | 
519 29.4 8 29.439 
Tr 
al 
—— 
. 1 elo: ee! 
and fine; showers: 
Meaa temperature o 
ithe week, 1 deg, below 
— — 
STATE OF THE WEATHER ae 2 
During the last 26 years, for the ensuing 
7 7 xia 
August. 2 E | whi nit ia 
may be treated i in the 
AR LONDON, 
Horticultural Garten, 
-| a a 
ere —E—— 
dry k 
2— Very — — 4 — — pee | 
* overcast ; very fine; a 
light shower a and dey 
beet | overcast, 
the average, 
ers, and ma 
Mon 9 
Tues. 10 
1 
eee 
The highest temperature during the above period occurred on the 
and the lowest on the 13th, 1839—therm, 32 deg, 
1842— therm. 93 deg.; 
Notices to Correspondents, 
Rogie: TE. Babington’s Manual,“ and Hooker's 
Borruixa Fror dmirer, The following 
mode: Fill the | 4 quite full with fruit not 
place them, with the corks put lightly into them, 
p necks, and grad 
temperature of the water to 1605, acey be Fabr, 
with cold water up to the 
Keep them at this temperature hal 
out separately, and fill it up with Poling be 
to within an inch of the ied aoma 
dip it im into 
: á e À inter ; those which ma ee i nth: 
and to any tendency to a second growth which | be deferred nth or so longer ; and, again, what exactly like that of Rhododen hes, Their fodit 
may show itself, and whi an only take place at the | be propagated in sufficient numbers in the spring, pro- Hape * — — ili eoc 2 dut in 
expense of next season's bloom. e have previously | vided a few store pots of each are kept for the purpose en Mv * a ees th eat vegetable 
intimated where a second growth is desirable, as in the | I sa * ay place nearly all the varieties substances. and the clear 
or f young plants growing into specimens; but of fan and beddhes-ont Geraniums (except scarlets and | Lievrp 2 ole — en e treated with 
rever a perfect show of bloom is e pected, every | their Athos, which may wait a short time longer), oo ih ae will e — — As regards ant, 
means oes be taken to prevent Brugmansias, Crassulas, Lantanas, Aloysias, Mesembryanthem ms, P. 424 of this year’s v volume. bodies taken 
Clerodendrons, and other large soft-leaved plants, should Hydrangeas, and plants of similar habits, which require | MELoNs : A Constant Reader. We believe that 22 op 
8 y g. to keep do A be established and have’ their wood mature before out of your Cantaloupe a ee 
suppli iquid manure, to ep them in a winter. Next ma follow Heliotropes, Salvi 1 tis vu 24. 
vigorous ve of neue which adds,so much to their larias, ye lis, Valua Paini ar * e 70 F 9 eee wry 
8 Me wn for next | Lobelias, &c., of which four latt f 3 Clematis flammula ; 3, 4 crena 
-year’s blooming, should have their shoots neatly staked | is an pew Bag a fe re i K: Y. 2 Bund ns iya ete Gelee 3 518 a 25 
3 ce, and will require Placed in | kept, as, with the assistance of a little heat in the spring, 2 in the Horticultural Society's Garden.—L¥ 
more light, and to be kept somewhat drier, that the a stock is soon obtai and spring struck plants, 11 Geranium pratense,—@ Escallonia rosea, — 
pening of the wood may be d. Remove nicely grown, generally start bette: old nts ro Lest Me leaf of „ ae am 
loxinias, Tuberoses, ts of me The new plants which have been planted out under Achilea. ‘Pearmica ler Targa. The leaf seems 
same habit, from the conservatory when on the wane, | “trial” should likewise have their distinctive hilares to to Aanayris fal indica.—C E . Bransfelsia ene 
and replenish reserve houses to keep up the | noted down (how many possess such we not say), Trapa bicornis.—J C. 2 is Campanula 
display. Passifloras, and in fact the ter of | with their colour and habit, to ascertain if in an 1 lee ae ergs or 1 r stem is 5 
conservatory ming. be growing fast, and will | class a better colour or habit is obtained. Tn. number | above ground instead nf ander ground, Such pail 
require frequent training. Thin out weak and over of new plants is so great that an annu trial is n ex mely common + when Potatoes are not : 72 
strong shoots, rage ng cia 5 ea the | sary to keep what 2 is acquisitions, onsen? e sblige him by W oan from actual expeiai 
desired effect ; the blooms consi ly finer. l j out rabbi 
pae ee oe atl pre 1 of produ ing Every day . the 9 trusting to the ae ge otis 2 — jo ce zm oe 
ee attentions are | Potato as a root crop, and = peri of growing | ,, Wil! — with 
performed 1 ae Various stove clim as | increased breadths of Parsn „ Arti „ Rep dem 
Allamandas, &c., will bloom and whatey 3 wast, and re will probably disa 
for a considerable Pwan of aglia: sum: pea if 475 shoots | fi nai on become a sabia 2 . Noa 
on which the flowers are slightly n when of wa E 5 ot largely the different kinds 5 fey 
the blooms megs as anything W. hich reg the pe opportunity of en Be r joke urs n Waen the | sun-meat: 
of beauty with er favourites is v. uable, t E at this 8 which do not come into e a Ul ie 128° Pa o rmom 
seed. be Epacris inter- | spring, and which are expected to p fie ar i a | indlonsed by a binekened the er, 
flowering a and other things requiring to have through the winter, "the ground should net “ty 5 nari d aked soil of a border, 
wood ri y, may no placed in a su manured, but tren not well] south, or nearly close to the n it does above the 
i ched to a considerable iiih Bhat ¢ the mom meter tare much higher than If you 
ure; ; is alre formed, apama rains and snows of winter may quick] be. d th exceeds 136°, the degree you ey el 
remains but to get it well ripened ; and althou er | reach of their 8 and that a e . Daniel s Meteorological Essays,” p. $9: Slowing da) 
= be given equal to th demand pg warmth may ainina creat thet Spel EO 2 N — — gepe ge yg 11 the e mch bor 
i $ : t n 3 i 
10 "agate pony am he perfec hg a ts. Th ho have observed low analy | ‘os covered a with, binek woal, and eee 
-i N ee S on of | snow a = f f il of a border. death 
bloom buds, e ee, of Epiphyllum (it eee w yee; m 5 engra Vine Laa Leaves: d 275 Movs apr — 
i weir growth is lerently advanced) should have the above conditio are to : ; 
dme treatment; give a ob to Chinese Pri „make way in the de 8 5 expected +o tar wh JSIW. It is all 1 
Cinerarias, and and Chrysanthem S 423 i way in epth of winter. These remarks will 8 iil always colour, if they have 2 
autumn Ne 3 of which a plot of the true] cough, unless shoy shank, which they 
ers for ter use may now sown ; as may two] bor N e 
or yela Cos and Cabbage Lettuce the] table Marrows is also 
for erring to frames in tell what you have done wit great age 
be sown for Feb and i — Eier eee, 
+ p ” we do not ; 
Onions 1 130 years, 
sol Wich |" a 72 have no — 
n De bana aaa er 
e 
i an 
is an 
take each 
wun 
