THE GARDENERS’ 
eae 
H 
ew crocks may be 2 
ces, for no 1 on 
objec 
, cumstances. 
| perty a great deal of en 
ecessary, i n- | garden ren 
ly put into each hole under the no Caleu- 
tageous'y p op disian 
2. s0 that, reel full- own, a "ihe 5 
shoald te : Taller should spe 
wn the trailers, and putting neat 
emember that it is 
loom ene 
— 
rag Occasional stopping, by 
Facing off the . of the 1 e induce a more 
compaet wth a d re egular b 
The time for placing the plats h in the open air should 
ed. 
a little —— you ca rry the gro 
k i per — that ben will aot after all be a 
Da by s Sages Agm se you m some 
and forward re f none get  pot-bound, and 
that is prevente — per supply of water. 
A Trame fal o — plants demands much wake hing i in this 
respect, o e bright warm 
pots of their — and injure 
Where your be now occupied “nd Tulips and 
other bulbs, your plan of operations must vary accord- 
‘ing to the treatment you propose to give the bulbs. 
you intend to allow them to remain in the ground, you 
can insert your summer plants among the — 2 re- 
moving the latter as it d 
move the bulbs, it will not do to hurry 
ground again in re 
will still do their — 2 and th 
beds So, y occupied 7 may receive their su 
Ho ome Corres pond aer. 
Allotments.—I have been very glad to observe that, 
within the last year or two, publie attention has been 
much directed to the sys kay allotments for 
that now, not onl 
great object i *. rg a 
with a small p 
his extra — | Ao the labour of 
members of h 
use 
which 
eke out 
any unemployed 
his family, in cultivating for their own 
and perhaps, extent, grain, 
may wate apply to his own use or to help to| 
the rent of his cottage, as 
method o; 
conceiy 
at a low, or at — a fair and 8 table value, and then 
some persons at 
sangre mr idea, as they 
ent, i 
it has been pretty well proved to them 
holdings being very sm has not 
result, and that the 
As 
Lo 
roper principle to gap put the land bei 
be given | 
i of d 
Tse | =a I ege made my furn furn 
chief thing t that it does | house 
of spending | B 
as small parcels o of land 
y placed for the pur- 
them out in allot- 
3 „ a fair rent 
„and a better t is among 
I Salons I cave at present as many 
di of ground. 
pend upon the judgment of the 
. F F. N. „ Wiltshire. 
Cutting ad Flowers off Spring Bulbs.—Can you 
cide this 
oom in = Jar b fol- 
mee atin is 
your 
1 75. 
spondents on this matter? I think i in Holland — is 
a prejudice against cutting the flowers of bul 
Dodman, [It w will in all probability have the effect of 
bones | w 
tages of mix 
Vines are 1 
disa 
e with the soil in l whic 
the foll 
much longer in the vic 
pee —— 
ech 
e boiler yin the 
rpose of conveying the heated air i ide the house. 
Tete 
R ES. End elevat B, N 
e of porous Saks: 05 6. o Denki inside of 2 
pa ae a — k 
nyen =e 
m= 
ooze 
sa. Would ox this a plan of damping 
the air ie he ps usr = e accompanying 
plans will, I hope, p e sufficient tly clear to be under - 
stood. John Foy, Oatlands Palace — “eybridge. 
the mr | 
system, in njunction with $ a tank, — it draw 
the air vim whi ch it is supplied from 2 four by a 
drain, an warmed through an aperture 
over the top of the —— 1 be green- 
into the outer shed, in which my boiler is fixed. 
and shutting at ps I 5 — admit 
verm 
mischief ? And if so, wherefore! For food! or 
the rodent 
varying according to cir- | 
-] 
has been said 14 | 
es size o 
d | Pince 
cent piece 
i Pince’s — In general 
ls, when hig on 
nests 
| found, 8 — 
6 feet — 
by ve 
for the diffusion of 8 at the 
and I ventured to that amon, 
realised 
work wonders.” This year my holiday was 
Devonshire, and my first object was to see 
8 nurseries of Lucombe 
eite 
’ other step. 
res thing was growing in the most vigorous state, but 
te 
at struck me most was the e 
— — plants; and I thin 
f the collecti 
specimens—so muc 
aber the cimen plants of 2 
nursery even surpassed those a 
whilst 1 think the Orchids 7 Mr. Veitch’ s exceeded in 
bea e nursery. Mr. 2 loaves 
f| his gates open—all walk at free 
* and collections, and I understand that the pr 
specimens of 
with reference to the 
sotii har Sn re ree 
. Gidley, in Exeter. Tis wall 
n 
the eastern part of England is 
in “the b beauty of the Gan in 88 
From the large stoc 
Rhododendron at Mr. Veita 
practi Phe sen I mention a 
of rockwork which was in progress in Mr. 
these matters are but poor 
er that now in course construction 
eS eee This plan can, 
2 — O” 
each Trees. — At a 
aap 
will —— a su 
quality under the most skil 
y 
fiato by them, The roots were so 
‘because the climate of Cornwall is most snitable to 
