pana eee 
= Cam: 
115 
TRUE ASHMEAD’S KERNEL is a very 
APPLE, of a golden russety c colour, and a totally 
é delicious AP to that 3 known by the name of Ash- 
obert Thi 
ba 
rs are neces t 
; orders made payable to a. CHESLIN WHEELER * 
ob ig OF OF on receipt of 5s. worth of posta ge puncte a Dwarf 
ondon, 
Great Western Rallwa ay. 
on — 
e Glouces 
im Nursery, 
TAM MAY, F. H. S., has received from the 
ive Growers, the undermentioned Steed 3 
pes tae EN ses neay Hei w prepared to sen 
out in * pac with paid directions, at the 
quoted ; or the full reolleetion, post free, for 105. Every 
so will ot be Teipit for any of the articles 
gamed not t d. 
Per acket—s. 
LI--Biletson’s “improv ved Welcove "White; this 
Sagmo i in season, wej na ng from 7 to 
idr impr ove Walcher en, warranted 
zoka is u best 3 Broccoli known 
i oe superb early dwarf; vay early, i 
— 
© 
an z delicious > Rae and quality 0 
| curled; is a splendi id va. 
TEn Denu edt extra curled, and very i 
A — 8 impro ored Red and White flat: 
st m crisp, 25 fine flavour, and not sub- pi 
„pemn : 
Line sey’s imperial cri n dwarf; very ‘dwarf, 
med bi 2 h — u er alled i ra 
LON = p echwood „ warranted genuine; the best ð 
MBER . Sion House improved, very 4 
é 0 
other article i in Garden Seeds of the most select qua- 
Broccolies, & have been before the public two 
is, and have given faiver satisfaction to the growers, 
ursery, L Leeming-lane, Bedale, Yorkshire, 
te aa 
; SEEDLING ANTIRRHIN 
W. nee wt to offer the following 3 vå- 
' l he can with co as nce recom: 
— slave white; — ower lips rh 
6 
E HN 152 and lower lips, bright crimson, 
Í 6 
Tube. 1 rose; ; upper and lower lips 
3 28. 6d. 
Tube purple, with a white centre, 2s. 6d 
ube red ; a ‘> hited lips reddish brown, 
Í 1 
inctly marked, 
— ease Stock Plants, of the most ap- 
' ö BEN AS and PET UNIAs, d e de 
Mired Balsam 
Picket, Catalogue will be rea dy early in March. 
— Peek, 2 near London, Feb. 19. 
| ĉie Ga eners Cronicle, 
-= SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1848. 
e FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
= B z 
. 
G —9＋7⁊2L˖̃³ 2222 
Ae the finest double variety, 2s. 6d. per th 
lent correspondent, Mr. Rocers, objects on several 
ree: which we are sure that he wishes us to 
ex 
s that e 
The rst act of a wounded r 
at the junction of wood and ben the 
us, an r 
temporary provision for „absorption until roots 
appear. The callus acts in all respects as cb 
2 5 in ap hysio ene oe is the s 
At a late s fin 
of the Bolg a 
ound February Pan Hollies 
already furnished with roots in ; a fact by 
the much against April ping for t 
must at 4 time be so tender and brittle as to 55 
little nene ta resist so violent an act as that of 
= 
3 
assumed that the period of greatest 
rest is the time to transplant, and April is supposed 
to be that period i in the Holly, because the leaves 
months old, and the new 
that the winter is the period of greatest rest, and 
the s spring the period of greatest excitability i in the 
Holly as in all other trees. The period of rest is| 
ee itera ned by the mere age of 1 s, but by: 
nal aondivions ; by light, moisture, and tempe 
8 especially by its, iet N have their 
feeblest 8 in November ecember: Ar 
by Mar they are aoe ain vel for 
true that! the Holly does not cast its leaves till: May 
or June: but the fall of the leaf in evergreens is 
all e foe te to renewed growth, and is indeed 
A 
pi mere consequence e of it. pri 
e fluids of dhe Holly are in motion, and its buds 
are swelling: the green bark is already losing its 
fluids, and that sricetetitle demand has begun which 
roots or their Feen can alone su suppl 
With regard to the best time at e to trans- 
at 
leaves are 
which they are just 3 
phen, leaves begin t 
— — is A mired for their ownin 
they = little; any power of ith ie —— n that 
re-existent in the plant. 
—— full grown their chief object is 55 in the 
S down near 
dry; 
e I 
An 
o grow they strat fro from the 
t, and | 
ma 
t. But when en ber | 
ome — round the stem; and as far out as the 
oots ex end, to hold water, which should then be 
xpose 
the best plan is to take 
old birch broom, or anything similar, and laying it 
to er to be 
o 
the earth should be levelled — the st 
plant, and as far — as the water has — put — 
but not trod; if the plants are large, a seco 
watering is sotti necessary.” 
An d'a AT 
1 ond o be distinctly understood, and I 
speak from We that I shou! always watar 
evergreens, when planted, whether the work is don 
in wet we eather, dull ‘weather, or dry; or sain! 
the situation in which they — eee, . wet or 
sheltered or exposed bec tering; as 
have recommended, fills up the =e that may be 
in the earth about the roots, and consolidates the 
whole mass much better than treading could do. 
Wx are authorized to announce that there will be 
HIBITION OF FLOWTRS, Fruits, VEGETABLES, 
Ke, as also of Agricultural and Garden le- 
ments, at Amsterdam, from the 24th to the 27th of 
March next, for pecim ill be received 
un being ded to the Directo 
W ii at es previous to t 
ral Gold and Silver Medals, and ‘other 
rewards will be given for the best specimens: 
e think it desirable to mane this know 5 in the 
1 — ersons in this cou uced 
to contribute specimens, aie compete for tte 
Medals to be awarded on the occasion. 
VINES AND CARRION, 
ALT the carrion- quest 1 
* 1005 as Mr. Roberts r 
er as a most 1 mode of culture 
marks, which, if 
think, barer “his example from 
1 fo Bow 88. 
It is J the Peaeleng sin of both a turists and horti- 
eultarists, tliat t ey are given to sacrifi 
Wet ié oe structure’ the matter. 9 ordinary consumption. In 
; that the statements atements given last week, owl — o et organ are formed, roots inclusive. ‘tis how- like manner the latter have been too anxious to pro- 
g of Mr. M Nan, have shown that ex- ever beds that the conditions of our climate ren large siz forgetting that there are certain 
is in favour of PLANTIXG Hol TiEs in No- der summer tra ting unadvisable—the sities: natural limits which we cannot safely tr 
iin April tions to it being greater t 8 a advantages — the 3 ler e at: all 8 55 at gen 
d practice, which is ut although we cannot admit that the month of ie 1 chat Mod ikd Mrs si ppttes tå the market, 
equi November is bad, and that ny 4 05 good, for trans- — 8 of die tikis 3 und 
: t A l f 3 
al presen planting evergreens, nevertheless we give entire disadvantages, being obliged appearances, and 
ved by a er e e to all t A 3 1 cor ge which | to consult e — and consumers; 
esponden e brought fo =| for it will sometimes happen that the choicest 8 
eave “i ques koliero that their failures in Nove miber fer success in| of the garden may be 9 for noo n than 
for theory is peck April, g to the condition of the mi and to — 22 not accord wit 
— rience, and a re- nothing else. In November all heavy lands are i os 
gs ne har and difficult to work; but in April the frosts Of all fruits, that of the Vine is perhaps t — 7 
ascerta ts and cannot exist | of w and long continued rains have done their easily affected by external agencies, ee Aroha 
15 dan iisi parent. Men some- 4 duty. Ya ak sha and softening the wan of climate, [sey Seer oe 1 debe of 
y the name of theory what is soil. In Noy a i Ugy arth. is — and by the nature of the substrata where it is 
i agination, not o daai out in pec bisa are ~ rtially broken, then a 3 by slight variktiotisin d aspect 
head filled with pre- ee back upon the roots, which are not evenly of the ground; by the vicinity of s and rivers; 
is not theory, but pre upon by soil, but placed among unn number of and, if we may ere dit the reports of the ancients, con- 
in its way, but too — P vitii and spaces, to which air has free access. Seine ak they appear to * observation, by 
‘introduced intoset arpddwyes The result of this is the . not the renewed | the emanations of certai 
ugh weer regard the 2 15 growth, of the wounded roo n April the same | As the roots of the Vive 8 asa edi ily the water of 
gree of care and n sire f nough to ensure a the soil, even when it e substances in s 
uniform pressure of the soil on y the roots, Upon tion, it a sina oh i n dey a quickly absorb iih 
this point we again qu nt a N 
: “tn. al e Wade ai soils, the: plants eee lop the mos soluble 5 
an "foul deks this sup- 
should ~ well 9 ith „as soon as the tions, penetrating 
earth is put about the roots. Where the water is: ga more or less impure flavour 
not at „som that it may be lycarried or fruit. bag have seen that the admixture 
wheeled: by men, a horse water-barrel on seil of so‘apparently innocuous a material even as sea - 
wheels should be used, as I am certain this will be) weed operates injuriously ; and that in the 
11 prep ne a e of the Eee alter whéré’ the Vine is most N cultivated, the 
ards. n'as the plant has t into its use of fresh animal manuré 
: pr 
2 the preference is given to well- Arie "composts, 
