THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



- 



rf& *SJsii Tthe open air than an; 



.. . ;.. •,, open air; but. at 

 *l lQ abundant supply of seed: 



,r;;::: 



- 

 t^Lof what will be produced in June. Thanks t; 



«, he may, from Vines planted now and treated on 



■ * ; > 





r 



■ : 



toKi...° n lhls subject 



■ 

 JJj* all th^ouK Underthe floo »-» ^ud to 

 ** ^4°t Weake - uedS ' tS a»d y must Cl th™ e ou S o Ule fl °° r 



ato Crop.— The : 



. ' ; - ■- • ■■ 



care or quackery, and indeed are apparently as s 



I depredations of hares a 



t as the Parsnip or not f 



lata New Urunswic 

 name of Chinchah 

 garden vegetable. 



1 be procured ?— A sincere 





\j of plants from mv 



■ 



Ar.em ; ■ n nioiv^i (pale b.ue , 

 enniua. U thi* emmou > 1st 

 e the plant .lo-:- 



t species is not a native of England. 





be made of 









i • [Yes], or doe 









. 







' 









Great M 







out great m 









cultivator <■• 











Locke also 









arh oi i'ramv 





ks. Lord Bacon has an E ■- 1_ 





.r W. Temple, in' his' «*£" ,>>'■'! Vci'.' " ' t ," ': ua.'ni 

 Moor-park, and Temple lived at Moor-park (near 



:he '.1 • 



d his own park, I 



... 



patches.] 1 nearly omitt 



^ThT wlatkerand tto Ct 



. . 



cedlime i • i id M I cut 



my Potatoes 1 sprinkled this mixture over them ; as I 





terry.— Which Come 



Appose 1 it' wo', id'i-i! 

 [Crnus mascula.J 

 Stores in Inverness* 



"n the Highland distric 

 here would be. The 



-As I always ex- 



larger ijuautity of 



r.ing the good Potatoes in his fields, from 



