35—1852. ] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
547 
GRAPE VINES FROM EYES, VERY FINE. tation. Whether or not this happens depends upon] is hot and uncomfortable, and the pillow is repeat- 
WEEKS axp Co., King's Road, Che the temperature of soil; if it is too cold the| edly turned over to get tithe e oolest side. Towards 
„a mst splendid collection of VINES, very strong and | roots are unable to act, — the growth of — and | the end of December = violent oan 3 in 
lean, two years old, 8 Byes, all the best sorts leaves is it cannot 8 too |f 
fo PLANTING or FRUITING IN Por ¢ e too | frequency, and with manon of the new 
“also an exfensive and laabi collection as STOVE and | warm the looser soil is er it is; r the north-west sets i — i iate 
GREENHOUSE PLANTS, — — ——.— — the looser it is the deeper will Pe penetrate the |e change follows, The air becomes pure efresh- 
CULTURAL BoiLDIsG and HEATING by by Hora ATER. deeper they penetrate still warmer 8 6 they he. In | ing, the sky blu serene, hardly a cload is to be 
J. Werks and Co., King’s-road, Chels the month o prg p London, the temperature seen, and there being but little moisture in the 
EEE ane ttl POTS, of the soil, at 1 foo „is on an an rage 52.38°,| atmosphere, the heat, though ing between 75° 
ILLIAM WOOD anp SON, W „but at 2 feet deep 1 averages — 74% a gain of 1.367, and 94° Faur., is less felt. — a has ante 
W's ckfiald, Sunes, are now sending ou this hen eve i N 
5 med nd. vigorous “Plan „ in a Ae 2 for 
plantiog out at th ERPETUA tee ý 
nys SRID P e strong, P nissai 
BOURBON, Ditto. n 
TE \ SCENTED, Ditto... me ans „ 128, to 183, 
CHINA — 980, to 123. 
which is very —.— —— nearly comm aced w. 
of May, when — are in full gr 2 
mes averages 34%, a —— to of de 
each A . of 55. 19° (in 1840) — 25 the 
tomperat e of Jun nder such circumstances aws diffuse ar 
time is delivhtfual, bat o of 
VERSCHAPEELE N 2 — 
announce that he will en 
25th th September next, his fine new CAMELLIA, et GENERAL 
DROUOT,” —— foll conditions: 
Plants, high, with bea oon SL 3 0 
0 
Dor, young grafted plant, with two in., 
ases 
N. B. His New General Catalogue enn W. 
a few days. 
FOR PRESENT SOWIN 
898 PERMANENT — — 
The SUPERIOR QUALITY of SUTTON’S GRASS SEEDS 
indicated umerou a 
ting pares fo Land laid down with 
ublished in the G 
March Mth, page 195. 
The pr 
eae ote — best aay e one as under, but for n 
or other here the cost is the 
— —— 8 miætures ** 5 out half the price 
te 
For = beck pemnenen ent Megdow and Pasture, Per acre, 
bagean goed to suit the soil * 248, to 283, 
For bes Pe wéih and Grasses (for one, 
.. ` lis. to 208. 
“Grasses and Clovers, as 
nt on the last page of 
wers, Reading, Berks, 
NEW AND CHOICE PLANTS AND BULBS. 
LOGUE is now ready: it embraces much 1 
u formation. On pe of three st t 
ree, or gratis to purchasers. — am 
other on plants, the NEW G ty ina 2 at — 
prices. a fine stock 
ready. 
Seed and Horticults shment, aii Suffolk. 
CH FLOW ooTs FOR EARLY FORCING. 
pe cin TULIPS, NARCISSUS, CROCUSES, &c. 
ENYE Seepsman and FLorist, 82, 
acechurch-street, London, has just received his large 
and and aamua 2 AA of PEAS Ie: BOBY and — — 
ogue, con 
— — ten at saa es, will — — — — days. 
Copies of the same forwarded on application. 
U 
there is no tense hj Peas should not bear till they 
by frost, and we entertain no doubt that 
= crop ; it onl alway 
exposed to the s 
i preva nly and then by some reptile 
— among the — — of the forest, or by 
Now that Panama has become the high road to the solitary tapping of the er. 
the Pacific, and that multitudes of — ers — 
breath stirs the air, the whole 8 trembles 
its roads, one while in the eager pursuit of wealth, from the excess 4 e heat, and on thermometer of 
— next with the m —— of contente 
short duration. Towards 9 o'clock t 
tae name 
not — for . 
be rain water 
ENERS’ CHRONICLE of b 
75 5. | Ve 
THE NEW AND meets VARIEGATED-LEAVED 
CISSUS DISCOLOR (BLUME.) 
Wige ROLLISSON any SONS 
inform the lung gentry, jand-the vnde, k 
tend sending oat, on a and after the 27th of: September, tneir 
new and beautifully variegated-leaved climbing plan}, Gls 308 
—— of Blum universal mired 
the 
Price 2s, per t. 
—̃ — — Tooting Nursery, near Loa . 
TRE 
— — Park eee 
trade i alrea 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1852. 
MEETINGS PORTR ENSUING WEBK. 
Sep“. 
Farpar — 
Counrar Fugws. ay, August 31 * 
and „ ree Daba. — Wednesday 2 7 pt. it iv bangion, 
Sept 2: Liverpaol.— 
Eciday, Sept. 3: Kirkheaton,.Newbury,and Ashi heals 
Awonc the prizes which the Horticultural Society 
fons jast t offered is one for Gren Peas at th m 
October. -Some of our correspondents appear to 
sc = tries A of obtaining them at that | ; 
season. efore reprint Mr. Kxionr's ant 
a from which it wi 
to have his table as wei 
this . in September and 
as in June and Jul 
FAHRENHEIT, W. 
xposed e full rere of 
e nature of the country and its natural history | the scorchi ray frequent] — the height of 
— acquired far greater interest than they 124° 1 ruoon ess 
efore possessed, There is not a family that may oppressi — the cool air of the 
ot have some acquaintance whose fortunes direct — — — S new — 2 
0 he forest: 
the El Dorado of the West, and who may have | glitte of 23 crickets are 
i 2 i — their — —.— — —— d are 
— ea aps of people chatti sing 
ee nanam its vegetation has therefore become a Ku n nothing can —— — of the scene aghiie, 
pean t that must be satisfied; especially since, till | the fall moon rises, shedding its are light over 
hin’ a few years, — were all but oa on the — broad foliage opies 
subject. was known, indeed, from the slight have been the fati of * ay whatovor the body 
—— ee. by M 5 in 1829, that the may have — languor, all is 
lant in many instigos eculi iar; as ae oo 2 this spe R) oie itself. Such 
Sarwar shown by the of the Dove a night cription, it is the quintessence of 
Lae a some- yi ial life,” 
Y, Hinos — ast line and the tracts within the — 
rs have found | of — tides are little better than swamps, in w 
— — che traveller finds nothing of mes tee . interest — 
Far different is the vegetation of the nas 
similar flora, were most] — — our knowledge g r 
oa —ͤ— — be: meagre in the ao A goya e or “oath is 
till the return of H.M.S. Herald, which had been e 0 9 f 
lo for six years under command of Capt. t, turi diy 8 
ETT, in ci era the lobe, a large part | * ore 
of which time was pas: 
N 2 happened Tortunately that thats was parhad a| Pa 
e impo 
— a — ring country 
CEL 
to give varie ety t 
ims and Tree | 
naturals 25 8 — — and e and 
eat power of o — — 
t is 
2 amon 
— of the He 
tion. 
for publication in difere 
“The Botany of the Vo 
dy been favourably no tial vy us.* 
second part of this important work, of which — 
ve Sai received a copy, an an account will be fad f 
of Pana “ge graphic and ample a ° 
e is most desirable for the 
8 rs me and draws 80 ——— of 
the beauty of the vegetation, that we ted to 
ay Mr. Sexmann’s statement before — —— at ‘Ge 
some lengt 
n the first er we have the following account 
of the climate 
“With — exception. of the higher mountains, | 
where t See is comparatively low, the | 
climate is hot and rainy. The seasons are distri- 
buted into wet and 2. The rains 5 with 
d 
3 Aristolochie, gee 
r climbing or twini 
chides are A in the vicinity of * rivers, 
wher e literally loaded with them. 
ad Vainilla vanilla sp.) stake in abandanc eup 
f young trees, and often increases so 
as to cause the “downfall of its 
p , 
The Espiritu Santo or — Ghost Plant (Peris- 
teria elata, Hoox.) bears a flower resembling a dove. 
* r of ge ski poneis and are au 6, F = anhi 
ini? lly increase, and it established Orebidea, Seat he in religious ve an 
| ao the end of May, when fall — eagerly Rar 
es Se ety the main feature of the plan * | charm vig o — V 
y NIGHT consisted in ing th with: the racemes eper; 
gonad en deeply trenched, so ae ys aap of — we * bist 8 258 5 — —— — aii alm lo The Pabo de buba 
i 11 ave em e STOR ts on the Atlantic side, they last almost Cacn acaranda filicifolia, Ae 
pa oh evn oe to. the . of ought, 1 3 1 se the e aring this K 5 — fous tal Pegi — which poets W iy at pa their pen, and painters 
W e= Venture is pr ie ang y copious — 5 light . winds prevail, and the i ed omy ee je dark foliage of a luxu- 
cultivation will panie. 
the key of the sora ae ere with lunar arrested, and one 
much need with in won and admiration. ere 
ee ont it . ‘which exhale on 
. that deep trenchi | ma of them could ci ut it 
that ha have bes re boen Pe rtance to. aa eropa reas i = pA to Ei the Flor al orm 2 a i 
0 Na esiana irabilis 
it has ten given, In n late Peas, | hi couch, but no sleep closes his 2 Everything À a ek Lixx.), the different e Dan 
3 y. to. be ovyerlo = The plates, which ey Copecillo olorosà pia 8 ama de 
roots of the P E? ings: Scheer ngs the mize Father . in the first tre > nom — — } Ces a am TAN Guavito 
ne in aratata of great activity “4 exquisite examples of botanical | ™ ( pant 4 : 
So as to iy ons of vigorous peed | 3 Fiton, and are ex cansaboca (Pitheeolebinm), 3 de monte (Taber- 
