302 
THE 8 
— Ob: 
[May 6, 
of the Peach. e been convinced by ex 
i of this truth. he summers of Corn — ró 
suficienti 1008 to pata of prs wood being thoroughly 
the avera ature there is 
he river Corve. 
early in autum 
causing the 3 
the duties of their 
and any Tocality — 
must be highly injurious to Peaches, 
to fall before a e discharged 
office, 
the 
the shoots — which they gro 
ela d sap. In sucha ‘state they cannot be ex xpected 
bear with impunity the rigour “of a severe winter. 
alls i tre ous situations, | 
ight be 
unripened 
there were no platy t produces 
en. My object in doing this would ewe 
the roots within the reach of ir; it would 
es 3 heal 
y Too 
f be attached -to drainage ; it 
increases the productive powers of the soil, and, by the 
compose e 
essential to their In order to 
thorough drainage of Peach r 4 would pee down 
a per parallel l with the wall, an t less than 3 feet 
in 
nursery to ones, 
thoroughly prepared for the final pla: 
soil is and fria lant a select trees worked on 
their own — as very stiff, I would gire 
. The grown 
the natural stock is of the best apatite») but smaller pt mas 
that produced on the Plum stock. ust again quo 
= perka of Mr. Knight on this subject he says 
a ein sr contained two trees of the Acton Scott 
—— 8 8 
growing on er on seco 
the Plum stock. The soil being similar, and the aspect | 
on P roduced cal 
lum stock 
variety he not, * 
buds from which both 
1 — rags however, in all 
be most li 
an that "a might have all the the pem a 
t they could get. Roots so situated genera 
duce healthy branches and good fruit, The mos 
proved system of trainin "e is — fan, on —— 
of its allowing the 
he beauty of cd net 
Disbudding and 
y prey 
, and | dis 
grow are green and full of un- and 
solar | usi 
lly = 
as m 
required, a portion 
unti 
nec 
destroyed. All pan 
il only about a tenth m 
essary f 
uld e borders dug with 
ost Yaloatle mare belonging to a tree 
aa os surface, and such roots would be 
ants exhaust ‘soils, therefore. it will 
oroughly 
ur L 
n say that it| of Apri] 22, you give a letter from a on 
o your opinion on his system of 
e 
ates 
probable 
might 1 
dition my 
eyes; 
1} te to 24 ines in girth at 3 fee 
motive in’ writin 
of recovering them. 
be bor enough to say.—Farrant. e 
* — 5 ars ago I was 8 ee M. P 
* 
doubt that the pee of failure 
7 
Im 
the leav. e. 
they e inery. I Po! 
ith 
sed ma nures when the trees an attained a 
t of England, a nd pe 
e from which I should 7 5 $ mpn a good bun 
I learn from 
Vines are they 
— frae kept alive so long, had not the in and 
been in a crazy condition. The Vin 
2 ee which are 150 15 ee F of Lottdot n, 
3 fos in length. was also a 
rs hark aia to break 
yo 
ongest or 8 
this is to elicit i possible the best way 
erhaps some correspondent will 
-A ay year 
n blo ee od my Er 
arth being frosted, though but t slightly, 58 $ think it 
at “J. M.’s” plants 9 from 
p ou cold precedi “The 
n more prote — the re- pott 
ne ae aanita the points of the roots further from 
u 
> 
N 
ey in 
seeing with 
ked eye the flower-buds as ait the top of of 
is from 
1155 
in suspense ee that my Azaleas 
must be satisfied at point before 
till their 
i, selene omer: le 
f 
bout the place that it 
as which, and b tracts ro} 
- | the Council, it Sas 9 arly shown that the Ci 
rfe 
my | his 
ite It 
R. S. Streatfield, Esq., 2 
rade b: i 
emb 
RH in tthe 
J 
| need 15 * Ae 
this In e them to a 
they will not bloom a t bloom = 
ata, edstanesii, do best 
enhouse ae ha ine 
wing te 
heed 
hits: of the 8 i Wiat 
8 
8 
— m 
D o 5 
(=) — 
succe 
room ; ugh 4 
water; Ich, well ripen wood lastly, 
the plan nts out of doors.—J, Ellis Yew T ottage 
Ecoles, 11 72 : taa 
So rtieties. 
Pape Aaya mr May 1.— J. 
The an — au 
ee | 
Branny, Esq. chair. 
th | the Couneil pon * was read. Mr. r. George 
art dee to disavow having, at a former 
a 
acted with per the conduet 75 . 
ani 
ren er inevitable by his own 
ved by Joseph Dobinson, Esq., se 
conded . Streatfield, Esq., and carried unani- 
m the Council, this day read, 
b 
fro 
be adopted. It was BE 
| Seconded by Mr. John Glenny, and carried 
was moved by Mr. George. Glee fess 
s r e 2 2 
bee. 
5 MSE 
HORTICULTURAL; x, Esg, in 
pes — Although ei A 3 be Sahiba on tie 
n chiefly came from the Sosiety’s Garden, y 
e nurseries), the Magic 
Sos a greenhouse shrub o 
beauty. The plant exhibited was however not paraeh 
larly striking in this respect, for it hyper. o> “a — 
s — of Cantua (Periphragmos dependens (bicolor 
of Mani Tree of the ‘he a 
cultivation 
on. of their Ja Java 
colour, but in its native habitats it is mena to form 
a branching shrub, onl of whose shoots 
a cluster of carmine-coloured | 
are 
* gre 
flowered it 3 
the later ban nent A the kind * 
on by a Larg ilver Medal, 
. — recei a Certificate 
new Dendrobium from the Indian ae ies 
mein, It was nearly related to longicornu, b. . 
from that species in the flowers being — 2 
in other partieulars; along with it also came 
Rhododendron, called fla vum, the 
' those of i 
with us in way 
will probably prove a mistake, for no ‘ically 
Per the species it in 
3 
Hi 
$ 
. 
H 
ber 
Ay 
BS 
2 f 
k 
3 
plant of — rosea, 
condition $ but — — latter forces 
too leafy . the 
= 
welly 
. 
82 
@ 
say thete floras lisson, of T. 
anxiety 
i 
ii 
