_THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONIC 
z 349 
P ai: 
nn continuing 
prune close 
th) of b 
most tier 4. ware ) Pe vis o! š he 
cut off a tier 7 till ar 
Now 
er and larger n on neglected tre 
system is considered by Q us as unscientific, and 
forth; the word science, however, is o used ve 
improperly, and put down in the meaning of theoretical 
conjecture. At present knowledge suits our purp 
more plainly, and my knowledge of the subject in hand 
been acquired long experience; a 
bran ches 
mi 
made is always injurious, an 
ar pith, ae destroys the bell the plant. The 
ture of ood (besides the ath hd of the stem) 
is ton delicate în — very young trees for this operation. 
I may obse: rees may be too severely sh 
nks from that Society oe ri & lucubra- 
tion to me fro t quarter, 
however, zem have Siena = relief t et s “Queren; 1 
the pe Wh referred was one who ad 
d, 
wanted to ascertain the b — 5 of eBid 
and had they thought. ne 8 * that trees were 
er from his noti 
that I 
month of me e to be that in which 
leed. Since 
re isposed t 
then the 3 on planting of Hollies has led me to Y° 
of pier pruce trees, those uring 
ver & in — having shown no indication 
r of your 
er sak e 80 
ht.— G. K. S. Plumbiy, 
on. place, ay 
rish Vegetable 1 Tes have been all — 
and the vege tables are not n 
as 
Irish 
re); 
—. y — 
l ater th the young of snakes or 
u 
juite killed it, and perceiving it to be unusually | 
eeded to 
other 
thong eter floor is each b 
the stove ap eee in one cas 
the wooden box and the re 
Cauliflower” Hyacinth. —My attention * was 
called 8 a friend 5 the eur ce of a 
inth, which e had 
engra — 
88 p 
ut, as matters at pe nt some 
ns of 
ere them, an 
usual, when 2 bear abundantly.— T. S. F. "vi nder- 
full grown adder on the lawn before my bees, oh 
the abdomen 
a 
ckly as possible 
ed 
wed as qui by sev others ; ae | 
killed them all, and r 
und (by measurement) 5 bea 
to 9 in This 
wly born, I ita 
ett bollino that they had ru $ 
i ae to Dan“ I have to 
brick E is p flat as i 
e arch; 
E 
8 
ssity of this would be Aided 
gag A -i new houso by proper fiow and return drai 
the The 
room, 
e 8 
arg a 4 eee, square, is eut 
wnstairs 
place, the chimney a above en stopped up. The iron 
pijo is the flue of the stove ; it bends over the top of 
the arch, to save heat, a E 
There is no u 
nd then enters the chima ene 
m the heated air, 
m 
he room being generally too 
air escaping from the e slight crevices — | 
wall.— T. 
sent up a scape 
resented in 
peara 
It was 
ently a “ Cauliflower 5 
; the latter seems “ht bre for the 
ut 
paea out in the open 
of Feb ary.—T. Dungey, 
Bell, Esq, ""Melling-hall, near 
Lancaster, oad . ae al hy Fo 
any on 
I have observe 8, the 
0 i es 
Motards 
let 
d the espaliers are 
2 
mere, ” Ma 
e ee pe ts’ mouths, 
r assuring you that last summer I 
We 
I take |, 
Sa 
tieties. 
HonricurrunaL, May 20.— The first of the annual 
(series of exhibitions held by the Horticultural Society 
com 
which a was a | 
were also 
— Sd 1 ea of ae Hea — — 
The fru rovem 
tity, on thit exhibited at the ane — 8 ons it. 
e had for 
i 
their fruit — wee or send 
who coul 
much, we will now 
Q 
in the annexed wood- | o 
larg 
of Cytisus miorophylia Epa 
well flowered ; 
; Ste 
folium, a a tins plant 3 — t i ig 
green 
| Sp 
a 
Mr 
asks if n 
served the paleness of e After this 3 
t here on almost 
es 
r garden at „ ie shee took ced on senam f 
Ow was 
remark whi — applies to 0 
and fine assemblage. Cacti 
condition, and . — 
nd Pelargon 
n good e 
some im 
withstanding the unfavourable weather we h. 
' stances, fi 
e gained art eee 
om being r entered, a fa ct whic serve 
o warn exhibito n anaes 
ee 
OSA, 
Lawrence, 
was seco! — Rar a — collection, though 
much inferior to the form e back 
„ and oe ara i plants 
ris gra ndiflora, a bush 
a large Erica Le ta alba; tio Plants 
there ht to be about 5 = dole A meren s coronaria 5 
15 branches to ope d Eriostemon 
tubercle, for each pro- initia, 15 — high by sh N ‘rough, w well grown 
minence in the flower ed. In front were plants ot Selago Gili; 
head evidently repre- wm e yer eee rice i is macrantha 
| sents arate flower, Pimelea a 3 feet by 3, and well bloomed ; 
and the 15 organs might Erica depressa, Pi erer denden, some Choro 
be each supposed to be- Dillwynias, and 
a branch; the Collections of 15 ri AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS were 
bran (a), sel y exhibited by Mr. Green, gr. to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart., 
from about the middle NK of Cheam; Mr. Cole, gr to H. Colyer, Esq., of Dart- 
has som om near this number ; those below have ford ; Wis Slowe, gr. to Baker, Esq., of Bayford- 
many more, those above it less I have added a mag- bury : ; and Mr. Stan gr. to H. Berens, Esq., Sideup, 
nified branchlet . =f show 1 the aeg nee processes | Kent, Of these, Mr. Green’s plants were the best. 
which clothe ea t quite clear Among them were specimens of Erica Caven- 
about the species, biri — i = pon vei piik a leaf for | dishii ; —— propendens, dom leath; Epaeris 
hi —— thro 
a handsome violet-purple 
no phasis the beautiful yellow Gom 
lendens ; Sphen 
white heads of which rane very suitable for beogutsand 
beautiful plant of the blue Leschenaultia. 
8 * large 
a tall Clerodendron n Kiompferi the blue Lesche- 
crocata, Sphenotoma 
us tricolor, and Erica 
cua nana. 
— of 10 STOVE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS 
the Tabernæmontan 
robust health, but not sufficiently in — ; Aphelexis 
humilis, well-flowered Azalea lateritia, Gompholobium - 
