A crop, an 
g are Potato —— Ke. 
ibat 15 and it will be pgs to — nets certainty 
. of 
und. 
fen $ it. 
oes TE appear 
‘ inang may 
that the produce from“ H. B. s“ Vine 
to be attributed to management, but 
to si tuation, 
be 
; be m 
5 to the depth of 3 feet, lence down at the 
jottom of the trench so formed about a foot in depth of 
the soil taken ou 
x 
d where th 
without ap: an 0 
been * goes 1 will not therefore insist too 
I hay 
l sys em 
: 4 —.— 
ir attention to the growth of the Rapper 
t so, 
4 
and when — bunch is discov: 
EE o 
of} pÈ 
the Woodcut, 
The right hand of ‘the. Vine Presents oa ase a 
— Esty its winter, egg] 
e shoots, as kept during winter. F, th 
r, from cir — spring the summ 
Two years a 
which pleased you; should you wish again to see some 
I have still some few on the Vines 
sed by my . ſor making wine, which 
tell me is quite aue, ay be 
„bat I am say 1 oes not 
me to coineide in — ideas; I mu 
suppose 
bottled in the sprin 
if kept in the barrel until next — it is a still w 
H. S. Watson, Tollington Park, Oct. 30. 
PROPAGATING HOUSE. 
AmoneG the structures nece: 
cultivation, this stands pre-eminent; 
2 — the coun sess one, 
Them 
ecessful plant 
— how few 
o I sent you a few bunches of my Grapes, | certa 
| racter a — 
red ee more es 
e house 
thi 
ropolitan . must be highly amused obj 
in ooking over the pe stru 1 
in gardens in the country, es 
propagation — * on in 
— apai f. 
fatal to which the 
t e faa * small 
pro- 
pagating e therefore (be it ever so small), is cer. 
We 
for the 
Tin a shoot horizontally from each side of a Vine, 
run along the bottom of the wall, say 2 inches 
der, Th 
he annexed sketch w 
the bunches of Gra oe 
ra p themselves, pinch 
te ends of the shoots beating them, leaving one bud 
mb ‘pte Pinch off all lat erais, 
amateur who, after 
Ni beg d o, having 
shoe with i 3 deer 
d, from paring. poaa 
e tho bud Sethe 6 
. 
UK ̃ e e 
Hin 
e temia of very aie ara beri will entire] 
mig the surface of the rie 
i tae the 
ere. As 
Feag rt soon as 
Pointed se; 7 Should 
Se 1 
allowed to 
pon 
any 
oid ‘this nia should be skati over 
# tai nly one 
e- | dinary 3 
e | This, arr is one 0 
roth 
k, jn oe Kage 5 Vines it is su 
ll | south, or 
not yet done. The bunches themselves | 
as the berries 
not, however) to suppose the gardene er to be pro- 
pagating all the — with the . of the nursery. 
man, who a person p No; 
one of the great u uses of aaa a a howe, — applied to or- 
ng affairs, would be n 
but to in the most expedition 8 ste fin stock of all 
kinds, — to keep up a display through the de- 
sired — for = drawing-room, the conservatory, 
or other dress hou 
It is an established fact with regard to the * 
of many that pro fuse as well as precociou 
flo 2 egree on the eutting oe 
seedling be ing grown with ne hell in its nical stages. 
We find it thus with some fruit I have known 
o soil ind in — 
Now, where a — rigid course 
to propagate | gard 
will o 
roan Pa on 
ree, 
obl el ts any of 
— o in six months on — of Vineries or 
houses, 
ecessors 
o, that no wonder the old were rem should 
be found — ent in many res 
by no means many 
— Let us hope that — economy in 
be better understood. N 
ti | close to the wall, pressing against it, it should’ be Sie duation, in the wall-facing — pit, would — 
off by a —— piece of wood, cut with a hollow at one the admission of heat and atmospheric moisture to 
end, to prevent the stalk from pping. The result of | the interior area of the house, Shading to fit the south 
all this will be a well ripened Grapes in t or propagating front, would, if rightly contrived, throw 
ns; at all events this ye 4 Vines of Black | the neeessar amount of shade over the ing stock ; 
. | Hamburgh, planted against a wall only 5 feet high, I | the side sas south would needa light screen 
have ripened 200 bunches o Gra also; this I would down permanently ; the roof 
which would not disgrace any table. shading of course on a „ like an Orchid house. 
Young stock when potted off would be placed or 
plunged under the no . minn and d be found 
to make as much progress there in one month as it would 
practised, and w — goes before principle, 
——ů ioe work to see what would 
mbine w i I can think 
of nothing better ; 
a quarter 
cases, as a matter of 
these things 
Robert Errington, 
„ 
— in the use Of — to give me a little informa- 
inoffensi with — 
* 
ended 
slaught? Is — br 
vely mixed 
tion on the following points: 
injury to the 
the Goose 
ing was ne tt and fou 
that be the proper time to — 
— 
y I use quick-lime 
—ͤ——— — 
Da 
h aside for te —— the great importance 
in —— as in other matters, of attainin 
desired end — the very shortest route, 
As i — oung stock, after being 
— in some out of the way 
zg 
“other objects are to be combined wi 
peer any ot s ow 3 5155 ae ‘fred means 
fre ently co mpulso en 
ee. ar know 5 pretty well amd pede is in 
b us; 
one, — 
icular side sash, 0 f nearly a couple 
: — I would have li Tle — this side 
pit on each side a 
h, veld only require a house 
width, ee, 
y | eham , sme filled about 6 or 8 inches deep wi 
ates, | prep: 
ould be a walk in 
4 or some such plunging material, Of course} 
8 . heavy 
Strip 
| piping, or rather a a tank, would be necessary 
* 
blooms of this re — be, the 
: remarks that 
ran mueh 
preferred. In s — 
— a 
for Oaks — 
