THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
189 
dance: 
ſormer in ins 
— sad fi 
i 
ar to i then 
system which 
2 and as detail 
return is ve 
wich 
ready for 
time have as many and 
an ultimate 
Mr. ewes goes on 
of this 
Jane, I will show 
sanding “ü only 1 
containing ea 
aa 7 
= 
12 
trees contain 
POM ERAN IAI N 
(Chou coni 
the „Journal“ 
Pada for January 
fe te 
of London. 
Renee conical, 8 
e up from th 
the quarters free 
——— hich 1 on 
wo cases 
be out of the question, for in in an uncongenial soil trees 
wh 
very q 
Sto 10: — anew aad na 3 to 4 Ten 
wil 
16 feet apart, in 
1848, N 
ae aphis —The ve aaah bba 
to this mag from Paris, by the. Hortisaltarel 
18 
4 feet 
811 
nee 
rst E an r or five years the pror: om ae the 
ould be much the same in both e 
of timber ; 5 and 
ntatio 
mää oon course, so as to form both Rt wi A the 
E re proprietors to adopt the system of thin plant- 
ung, no pro- 
i 
ed 24 an in the“ Forester,” 
kly made, and I 2 
fee pay t 
l outlay for penton and fencing, 
rived the ene rent of the 
before Mr. 
and, a considerable 
could 8 a plantation of the 
2 ee — — 
ing; and at the same 
as valuable a left upon the 
crop as 
to say fu “that a young 
as I have advised and left to itself 
ruined almost beyond re covery.” 
oung could not have given a P 
; oe 
g trees from 
ath in perfect 
ea show im tree 
pe 
70 to 100 cubic ia of t 
ining “90 feet of pie . standing : 
16 feet apart.— eye eee ee A 6. d 
iston, Mar 
To be continued.) 
IAN CAI pd AGE, 
que Pom 
market-gar 
rrin. ends a a 
nup when full n 
deep as 
the 5 5 
nd in May for egies 
ee ood-sized firm 
c 
earted 
sharp beg 
it 
agi ghly deserving or cultivation ; ; 
Wada 
apted 
the ers and laid in to the 
1 
together, i winter; u leaving 
for other crops. || 
me e Correspondence. ‘ 
ns placed in a striking point 
ses of this kind, as connected 
Wiser g different systems ; and he is 
plan, and in mbine the merits of 
Mount of such a way, as to escape with the least 
Roberts 0 e 1 ver rmit Mr. 
am We of old-fashioned plan in so jaunty | w 
ee thout venturing a few words in its defence 
Rode of e time ago, in showing the in t 
, Which | ea , that the loss o 
2 occur through this system, is taste 
mend for the planting upon bad 
viz., from Upon h e be pul rane if 
‘etor ‘were ro i the same pie 
3 4 feet apart, the ait 
e be yee different ay ate as Sates 
with 
well 
; but 
s pier 
t he ed and | three 
r 
of 
dir p en culture 
TR istinct 3 excellent pret of Cabbage is 
dstailed by A. Barbet-P. 
— 
EN 
on 
1 
1 of 
is | how expr 
d | gus: 
e, this spring. The 
than compensated by the state the land is lati in after 
a bed of Asparagus has been removed. It will indeed | 
not be easy for those who do not pay! much 5 — to 
the rotation of cro ops, a he 
oceasioned by the very frequent TH agg of the 
rassica families in a modern kitche 
avy extent o 
soil thus prepar Fallow 
of the question in ne gardens, ero 
fore, as the Aspar sp, is, in my TeS the next het 
5 and if any man charges wa 
To judge my pas, 
reference to these things, will p 
most ales „ ng. I he e beg to e 
Mr. R.'s statement of the reer a of 
je requisite | a the suppl yo 
ure the term“ large family“ is capab 
Fiche aaa ay that little argument can be built on such 
e than one- 
n judging this matter, not any 
e do not grow N Asparagus here. I this e 
in peg early part a he 6 es ey 
| usual practice, one be 
This bed has 
up, according to 
ut 40 yards in aae N 
su 3 ae family ( (which is anything bu 
cannot say, but 7 supplied o 
average at least three dishes ‘ap week for a quarter of 
55 this in a 3 way, This 1 1 
ye will 
o particular objection to hot piping for 
things, ety a I strongly suspect that it will not be 
easy to superse oe pen Re Abul it form 
— : hat high 
out. "Hot water ind, 3 
id beds partially sores @ h glass, are indeed 
l afi few country tan at 
things as this, and 3 their ordi- 
ig ges 3 together with hot walls for Peaches, 
n, as to waste of land. R. talks of 
ery day (fror art of May unti 
ason is is closing) ws ‘stout, t esi ee 25 Grass. 
e could in t, however, 
eads to 
3 eber, 
p 
we Selen ore 2 5 a 
May, contra 1277 to m 
uce t the best e carly G f the ing yea must 
ess a hope that d before the poor old aii ng bed is 
bove facts will 
uly * — Robert Errington, 
k. As s of ae ng pon es 
e hitherto thet fou e sufficient reason 
abandon the old mode of using fermenting Meare bi 
purpose, we 5 is e doubtful whether the ex- 
r pit ence of its supe- 
E 
limited s 
n garden of covered wit 
bs | the extent of ground required to allow for breaking u 
every ſor a supply. is by taking out the pest af 
| the oil from the gr paragus ‘alleys, and fi p the 
space g and le av ves, the beds 1 — 
ee wich either wall thatched hurdles, or a frame 
filling 
al is net 
of the alleys “gy the following season, when 
fo cing bezins aes es o feed the Asparagus 
after 3 H., March 11 
ble of Fach varied | ever 
ave t 
r these wil 
to observe that about the 20t 
tained a . Fer from Messrs. * *, which whe 
it w ed, 
wet. 
the same stage 
communication from Messrs, * * * 
tate that, owing to some disease that 
their 4 — the 
to supply a single order, having 
ad. 
f, other 
* th 
ak from experience d hope 
ed its efficiency. . 
gg of its nts — Hydrange 
Sudden Chang enperature in . 
reply 2 jai gy if there no mistake 
re I sent i, Ti have to caplet tas that 
rdener. 
50 made a Series 
when calm there 
as there was 
nsidera 
the e Jan., ‘hans is consequently no mistake in the 
statement made at p. 117. Imay mention that at a 
place ‘we sels distant ae * the thermome 
„ on the 29th, w ° below zero.— 
Calculations e eigir Timber.— -Nothing 
as e 
taining the usual pe productions of the firs 
As i apt 3 were 
the doi ng bed; had the 
e -e oi pits for 
1 bare had a goo 
en 
due re rea 
ing than for e, the — of bed 
broken up, I find, was 50 feet in in length, 33 fee t in 
supplied ample | 
wt 
> 
0 55 1007. they 4 were now worth 160/. 
1 ee been eu since, W 
an 3 
which are in the i 
ged old stumps had increased 6 per c 
in bulk dosing d the whole 10 years, or, rather, 
more accurately, 3 had increased — 2 am 
n the 1 that, assuming their 
2 The 1001, 
would by va 
cent. per annum 
to speak 
cent. in bulk 
value to 
they 
is time have 
moun at 3 compound in only to 
1431, w which cing T. I should have e = 174 
in the value of the land to be 
n the t 
17 1 
t 10 
= 
obtained pi om e cutting 3 
rees. Su 4 that 
-| Oak timber, with its top tnd bark sells a 1 2 low 
width; an equal vt will be pla 
chief objeetion to ph plan i is ‘the 
of i itni of old beds, but certainly to 
no great exte One of the bes ra be however, of | 
i 8 As, 3 without either the expense of a pit or 
ý oot ; then 100“. worth o 
ipt N that the 8 contain 3 feet 
each ; then we have 61 trees, The the 
land lies, the more tans ie and conse e more 
a ei ‘ous to it, will be the tr then, into 
a square of 
100 acres, one side whereof will be 
| long 5 and put these trees southern 
