91848. 
THE GARDEN E R S' 
CHRONICLE. 
137 
care 
evils. Pres o be w 
—— (2ü— 
gare of the cultivator should be 5 guard against those 
the borders 
ell made there 
remain — os prolific serie of e, which 
aot received the attention they deserve. I allude 
e equally e 
hi 
the temperature 
ly so 
dia ost the tops mor for pra nce he 
r 80°. uc 
En fail 
erhaps 
fail “5 be highly i wA urious > the a 
nder 
dise 
organs, and o 
— fi ue pea 3 and yeast l 
eren death. Exposing Vines 
ET ii of e N — 80 ee 
2 practice which cannot be t 
fying 
ay hi 
e ineries, on whic 
The had bee 
being left for = = = of the roots 
inside, in which they w 
part of the hous 
red effect in s 
say When 
wich thee did s very regularly, sate ere 
long, the Vi 
ters and again fed 4 the Those 
the finest Grapes I ha 
flavour, size of bunch 
* ane, of ro oo Ache 
of dead ‘dee 
3 the Boner rn wich 
ir support 
+ 
E 
sun, and moreover hal 
a sun 
=e Ont of it 
to the oe ey for the > a shan 
winter, 
etin ng houses in which 
use in the whup 
me from eld and w 
known, absor 
and therefore the e 
the blood 
me 
= Salie, questio D, 
a high 
1 be: aes to “withsiand 
5 6 scion + 
o frost, for the purpose 
their WUU 
00 soon abandoned 7 5 those 
ned 3 
we 
. — four years, 
e, however, inhabited 
tarding them till the 
he bu ds had M 
ip pary from their alors at. 
borders were composed 
3 rather deep, and made rich 
pal wh 
of it was paved with large 
In the ot 
evident then eet we 
: osure duri ou 
and n cultivators adopt a remedy for these 
the Vines can be 
and when quite 
ga Vines to be forced 
omm 
paat 
advancing crop. 
—henee, 
, Moist atmos- 
with im- 
aly, dies 
u, 10 w 
were 
se bei 3 the 
about an inch 
Vines produced | of its bei 
bot! 
ole 
a 
ad 
she Vines 0 
at disadvantage | 
d 
; * poct bad 
pesa with the other, the former Sols dat mer 
<4 of the Vineries, and consequently shaded f 
rom 
e, the 
sigs be à 
1 
0 a syst 
and t-door 
2 
8 
e av 
[amongst edicts, 1 Lilliputians, Dwarfs, Brob- 
«| even when full 
e | they 
‘exce 
e | ably fair 
oa of mos 
of and N e e, our roo 
very | by t of pigmies 
15 good Mr. Editor, Beane from future insult your 
he Pyr 
fit been quite banishe à from 
bri 
cold (which will be in 15 minu utes 
of the 
of this Pa However, we e may 
at gutta Polley sense ves all that i is said of it. 
s on Quince Stocks. he 
igh ast 
been called 2 ‘inds of names, 
sn stumps, a. 
t last even Pigmies. he two first 
e 3 i 
were intended as complimentar 
po 
we hay 
mos 
painful position. The salie in our veins 
and difficult that our extremities have actz- 
inua idee u VA vaun si 
the garden have bee o gre as clovtaat U 
truuks — become Gigpmporionately large, vb hence 
we suppose our rame of Brobdignag stumps. We 
fess we are quite ashamed of our cushy appearance, 
of tolerably good fruit; rely our 
uzliness under this treatment is our m 1 ortune, on ou 
fault ; for within a se sy feet some of our family ar are 
tented against a west in r e 
their habits of growth, a 
bliy covered ei 
8 and w claim 
your especial protection against a e 
who c: pigmies, We unde: 
nasty, db thin e surely then 
pi Either your correspondent 
oles pigmies are little, 
we cannot be 
has never seen 
for becoming. You know perfectly well 
vias Biy treated i it is diffieult Z decide whether we 
l most i aig At masks reign s in a well 
regulated 2 n, supreme in eth steed — the 
occasional r constant) prunin g nstea 
eing an ir = it is a great benefit, deen each 
eee 5 une hig t cut off, thus pre- 
ted from penetrating in un ton ee some soil, is 
zen or 3 aoe 20 he 
an 
nutritious diet the pier: has kindly supplied us mi 
The e is our leaves an 
ome, ee: our pez without 5 spot or 
ost excellent flav Our fruit is fair 
e w vholesomo food ; sit 
is large oo r roo 5 ave many fibre is per- 
fectly ri are 3 oh 2 su 
erack, a 
ur | closeness 
oik ts 
2 they have the beneit. “of At e genial i n N of the 
and it is fine pie: red becau obtains 
access = the soil in h th e ro eray are ge 
a sree weight a ‘ait, in proportion to o our siz 
n of a any kind whatever, 
8 
injure our eae 
the injurious n ray, 
little friends — T amidal Pears upon Quince 
Stocks. 
Calceolaria Fags ee plant is advertised under 
e Chronicle of Satur day last, which is 
. scabioszefolia, that one is tempted to 
only bea reintroduction of that plant, which althou si 
not now so much cultivated as it deserves to be, has 
a specimen of x e 
Chronicle oad exam 
he would o 
he og — 5 disposing of lant as phe, at a high price, 
* een received HA distributed by the Te 
pi 3 ne at various botanic gardens, 
and-twenty years ago.— 4. d, Feb. 21. 
Culture of the Strawberry in Pots.— 
My cul- 
ts from that 
mode of 
iven at page 
bout Sept 
43 foo feet a 
eee d 
2 feet from 9 side of the walks. 
unn 
btain good plants for Prig the ue season. 
any of e throw u ng (and m 
of them ag I pick it of 80 ‘at che * may have |? 
nothing to do but throw out runners, an 
ers, toe whie 
). pare off the edges | they get ag peep! advanced to 
e work | first joint, I 
e 
— — cost aia 
to begin 
get my apne | pny ‘pet filled v with 00d 
55 soil, = lay the pot, which I find 
g, and othe 
Here they Se until 0 the end of October. I 
then stack t ouble row 
to 
he first crop I begin forcing 
9 con: inue until the fruit is set, giv 
n shelves in 
Vinery veasshe ton, of the house. big. in. 
and hum midity 1 i 
best old sorts, in my opinion, are the Grove-end 
Keens’ See edo ng, a ec Br itish Quee en. 
grown for variety where there is plen 
| Keene’ Seedling i is wi all thin gs louse 
rane: und the plants injure 
rah eing plunged. The lea 
eno Ar. to protect aag from that. 
PAN e makes 
d t wege, ones ve ony 
The a lants, when done w 
o well 8 soil, will pro 
the sås ma j then either 
ma 
As to thinning the 
much difference ; and, 
besides, I fin 
kitehen use. 
turned out into 
erop of e fruit = zeri 
be des allow re 
season f 
manure, and e p = in as rough a state 
I employ —J. Stewart, Gardene 
5 bird 
Se 
found near 
ay any “ee 
j Hatfield, near Far gt Baen 
ks.— Pra to 
rect two passages i inia on this e (in p. 1155, 
which 25 ty posraphica errors have been made to imply 
r| the erse what I intended. The first refers 
to the broad w 
in es 
grand entrance he 3 pr of the walk, pull 
down the barracks and vote the present foot entrance 
well enough to bring the 
ee aie be Are 
vi ew 
appear as thoug 
3 . to the new e to Hy N at Kensington- 
f 2 mile the wall of the 
a very slight curve, but 
ack, and the wall to the east 
ornamens 
even as to its BRE taste! 
o| The B ine Pool Apple (see p. 17 7 In pe county, 
„ the h inst., Te 
22 en on the 12th ins 
asion th for 
h 
a 
any others. 
hards at Chilwell, near this place, red m 
z ine year, sold sold the produce of 10 aan Tot 1007! ! 
n hey esteemed in this county for the 
ate gham. 
= Pomm, No a In the plan of a ned Bi heating on this 
nderstand what 
rooves in th 
“hye another some beneath to 
fitted with the greatest nicety, with 
as | proper air-holes te regulate combustion; the castings of one 
