THE GARDENERS’ 
$ 
CHRONICLE. 
[Marcy 18, 
apes in a = sagga degree ot both these 
kinds of be et it is no doubt true that the 
effect is more re sa d ber either the one or 
redominatts.” this correct? Ma 
ndsca 
the other om 
not both be well united i in the same La 
EXTRACTS 1 “FROM MY NOTE-BOOK. 
d A 
pote Tooke em ot other meii fro s 3 
i d tee has also nothing but its 
i i . mmend it. It should be grown 
in pots, in and, and charcoal, and place 
peat, 
shaded situation nt alpines. 
by dividing it in 
ring. 
Cotyledon aten L on an ele- 
vated 
succeeds well 
j 
more 
It may be Mvi 
the 
0 
ork in “sandy loam, mixed with | j 
moist situations | 
wn in for 
account ; as I think I could ena in 3 it 
good ac 
here, if the ‘silk is approved of, I red this 
species on the 7th May, 1842, on some Mul boè y trees 
ing at an elevation of about 6500 feet ares. tg the 
_ slowly increased by 
ceeds on rockwork or in 
situations it requires to hó. skanilo in ans weather, 
in order to fev its roots in the soil, if they have been 
thrown 
eh in . 
had 
ta 
ed t bed, in which 
out by frost. 
1 . 2 C., NN 5 
and ely ; it may b used 
freely by GA u in 5 ; it will also do eh potted 
in peat and loa and placed among the alpines. 
r a local plant, ex 
aces of which it is 
argins of 
way 
ret 
L., grows in ean similar 
n found intermixed w It 
be kep 
winter. It may eA dividing 
ing 
ments a up into a hump 
A th 
B. Mo 
soaring fe fades 
pale livid grey ; 
about 23 inches i in act 
in May. ey are double broo 
hatched in June, and ie osited the 
which produced caterpillars that year, but the N 
umber 
remained until the ‘following spring.” 
ein the ex 
The ‘ L 191 
pansion of ka fore 1 9 5 ee are falosted at the “wad 
and of a ish buff e with t 
Being a showy plant‘witen in flower, it is 
* ve 2 ation ; 
Koch, is a rather rare Umbel- 
en en, even in botanic gardens; it 
er also 
pea 
dwarf, com be, Prostrate- 
ing and free flowering shrub seldom pn in 
ay 
borders, this is one of t 
to whether it might not be 3 
ixture of ae on ear | 
io 
a tion of the he 
indistinet er 3 “pelore the ls end * 
straighter Poe the - 
marginal paler sp ares wh 
ye towards ia 
hin 
d with a 12 
anal margin is oiana strea _ with white me wee a 
— of da ik soa t the anal angle. ody is of 
use-brow: ark Baa across, behind the 
0 
A wings 
Wrong in prin 
, expensive to pro- 
that 
u! Fore 
elem wee ruinous to — All 1 kuow 
of Mr. Voung i A that he is an advocate 
we Q 
= 
— f 
- Young to prove hated 
recommend in “The Fo r in the ‘system 
expensive to pro prietors, 
and I be x, Shag to say am h 
into 
proprietor puts all the Tand that may be under 
tions upon his estate 
for that land far exceeding hee which he 
from his land steward or tenant ie 
: em in eS ae 2 Now 
vident to me, that if Mr. Youn ng werd 
situation “of forester, or wood geese 
estate, he would, oP allowed to a 
make 5 
cade 
t appears ven 
Pz 
va 
ery fair the 
8 but the Practical fore 
produce the reali 
says relative p plan tog at 6 or 8 feet apang t 
8 — . 5 thing it is 5 by the test pe 
tical e s theor 
Ej 
nce of sav 
85 my ns 
which might be expected j 
ma nd 1 will hers briely endeavour to dos, 
is decidedly the bat 
In the management of woods, he i 
perma anent 
5 
8S 
splanted) any gina 
. high lying are A one | 
7 feet diets mee, or, 1117 1 e acre, what would 
a * 
e 
anting, 
grow 
seattering of Paas 
e iy 
or its size — 5 cultivation. E ; i 
G. a glica, Hoag another 1 plant which pl. vei igt deut given above we ha — Snit 130 fei f d spread ou i 
Jamas handsome buss of aL DEA feet in height, and | represented the female moth, together with the cocoon 3 ue a 3 l p ura of ihe heath, im onder 
flowers freely in common garden soil; both species are OPened, Shewing the empty chrysalis, from which the | ander branches, upon te S the effects of the stom 
readily increased by layers, which "ought Ot: 10 be moth has e scaped through the upper end o cocoon Su] t themselves f. 7 N 7 in aeh —5 
removed for ak Tahi ew VAN (a thereby e the silk), and also the cast skin of the (this is always a provision di Mares ding 
L as hoi los Hock. C Dilie a iia aterpillar but they would not make — 
side plant, does not s vi r winters out ot ers not fail to be observed that there are four 8 1 8 hen l 
it requires frame eee Hani that deen wh ik circumstances which will probably render the cultiva- 99 th r site, both as caidas th would become 
Nn should also be kep rather dry. It likes a licht tion of this newly-discovered s ies eminently service- During the sixth and ph in would not le Bebel 
sandy loam, mixed with mage ec aud should be placed able as an article of commerce; namely, Istly, the | trong, pc aes P a ‘ preadth of branches; 
among alpines, in a su may $ n during summe Species i3 an indigenous native, instead of being an im- w so much to height as to r uld continue to 
Tt admits pecasionally of in * „ported species, as is the h B. Mori; 2dly, the the same are er T one another as tt 
Hutchinsia petet, R. a very humble Cruci. species com close in the natural ao to the row until they had got s branches by ome another, 
ferous piant, a to ke ‘ted 1 peat sand and old known species ang mentioned, whene vay con- be a little confined in the side jer pric to breadth; 
chare d kept among alpine t ripen 982505 PRY thas its si ilk wil o that | When they would begin to grow oe bl upon a big 
freely, by N it tg perpetuated, ag 8 | aes Mori in its qualities ~~ the silk ef from and this state of the trees, very a attained de g 
; but I have often found it, under She ation, to the Kolisurra and other India moths whieh be- | Site, Seed 1 pe orps ver ne 
1 : two or three years. — Davi d Uam d 1 a distinct genus; adly, t the new species of 20 ; and if the soil were ao t 100, they very kr 
8 (To be continue a double-brooded ; a 4thly, ee: its food is growth of the e kinds of wie Pepe e they wen 
5 i i ; : bly w not be in a healthy sta oy, bel 
ENTO identical with that of the caterpillar of B. Mori, which shelter, ben 
Tus New OMOLON 15 Morr. is a further r W ts silk should er e to theage stated, but would, from the we 
E recent d scovery of a new speci moth in at of that species—Professor Royle having shown that 3 and altogether worthles 1 75 e the soil to} 
Ind dia, closely allied o the well known 7 8 silk. the silk bears an pap ate relation to the nature of the produc of shelter; and © wo 
moth, Bombyx Mori, capable of produci lk, is of plant N e We seets feed. fe vourable to th growth orth wees 
cient importance (in connexion with the question of we ntly received Sat ape of the cing long exposed, and aip 
derivable Kon otini pan silk from Cape Hutson reared on the wild Mulberry at | ene an ther f long time, bec 
resources of our Indian territ tories), 5 Mussooree, in the Himal in me of these | Side branches with an extremely eo 
lepart from our usual practice, in these articles, ‘of ltoe- specimens consisted of skeins of the single or natural en the 
trating the insect ou kik ha . THI aoe fibre, and others with silk, th ads formed re. branches, and had begun to sho 
ooo lh Biesvared th Ind dia by Captain b spectively of 3, 6, 9, 12 fibres. Those with 9 and ever after be trees of a 
hu: we 2 ecompa. 12 fibres had been examined by the Delhi shawl workers, | would make bus timber, An 
by the following fieral e on who had pronouneed them to be worth per SEM Ye peve Poeh © N 
e the pleasure of sending you a species seer, ‘a is 0 dipe. rate of mas per Ib. at 2s. the rupee. able 5 oe 
which, I think, will prove ~~ It is an Fhe narkably stro ut it possesses a less | Of e to the propri ; mon 
e hills (Mussooree), and tlie cater- ae feel than that of B. Mori, which i be however, pe rail been got from it fee "the pur 
tof B. Mori, feeds on we leaves of the the gum not having been washed o tice which surro nds it. 9 
which grows ieee A dalip it it off the 8 Web have sent portions of beg to say, is no imagin lantations, 
Mori however the present a these several 3 of the silk to the Society of Arts Servation upon thin: parts of Put! 
caterpillar co with long spines in the Adelphi.—J. O. W. mysel d them to exist, 1 aa 
ng and AGEMENT OF WOO oints out the impropriety of t 
ing cig 1 5 ere, mere is x great simi MANAGEMENT OF WO 8 mae 4 aly be ne 
ch is drawn round it; and the pre very fine per of the 26th. of F nae I obse able in one case 2 33 is upon 
ow u É have molio ca 1 as above, and si ee pe Young, of neh of eis E sE 
in older that y i , e goes on to say that the syste | that al an tu ring UP 
our opinion, cat ta ot may, 8 vou Lee Pee and Ee ss recommended y 11 27 am ba oe ce ake he Thao 13 4 
nk or slope at 7 feet istance, mes 
the bo f 
slope, les of the trees when t tt 
side of one another, would be fo und t0 to sand 
