THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



[Oct. 



•• nded for felling ; a good i 



made from the underwood, ia set to a con 



B perch of 8 J' ard3 - From , 



branches are cut off ; 

 Sf off at oncOn 



aig-oted, and the pol 



!er to make as mucl 

 nd peeling. The po 



week'iri M ly ■ ill- » -;1 ' ■ •;■ to begin to fell Oak, 



and ranged Ea I bigh and 8 feet 



V. . 



'. . 



kitchen stoves, &e. The faggots should all be clean 

 Off before spring, or before the young shoots from tl 

 old stoo'ri have made n ueh growth, otherwise conside 



them away. About 2 ) of th- stra^h'ti -sfand b< r-t ;..,'■ 

 are usually kit growing on an acre till next fall (t 

 years), being valuable at that age for a variety of pu 

 poses ; again, some may be chosen out of that numb 

 for permament timber trees. It is not desirable 



M-m:; : 



' C.;.| ■ 



200 v ,r , and pro! ably much longer 



very poor. Over Herefordshire and Shropshire i 



nat^? railed the Black Sallow, la tbe moat 



;: V- Mr. Kni-ht, uhen 70 years of age, n 





received torn ul "i^do^nTt^mm ^ ^ ^'^ 

 to supersede any vegetable in common use "l J 



■ 

 ip. 



rring to the pages of the " Bon Jardinier," I fed 



»unt of the French system of gr 



tion sufficiently minute of its pec u'.iarii . ;. . 



be w ,-tu «h. , p. ihaj •. , t 1TOtt the recorded opinio* 



ur neighbours on the Continent respecting this dUmi 



l . . 



iy, mealy or w : .vy, according to its variety ; tnn, 



nade. The, Raspberry will bear limit w! 

 leglected. Odd corners of the garden, a 



tion, the Raspben 

 available advantage of this ki 



the Rose de Mai 



taking of the crop, 



dry before you plat 



: . 

 go yourself and see the plant! 



-ry, with the two objects of 



the ground, as the following s 





xjj 





Tated, and is cut down every nine years ; the best poles 

 are selected, and all the small and underwood are fag- 



years' growth for the next cutting. The best of this wood 

 meets with a ready market for bedsteads, planking for 



r every eight or 



ich as are fit are converted into hoops, hop poles, 

 , wattles, and for firewood. 



many parts of England the farmers plant Willow 

 1 12 feet long, and of from 4 





surrounded by four or five smaller ones. The weak 



has no doubt abundance of fruit will be gathered, and 

 being Bmall, and great a« 



and treading down the roots, the season also being early, 

 it is concluded the canes will have no difficulty in pro- 



Phis plan presupposes that you have an 



let them be firmly tied with some material strong enough 

 to last a year. The thin top should be pruned down to 

 a bud, leaving the canes strong and straight. Son* 

 rotten dung may then be forked in, care being takei 

 not to injure the bunches of roots, which will be fouu. 



Itsc 



e those of the family to which it belongs. The v* 



•: ■■ i. '.: ,;■■■. . . ■ , ■ 



merica— the long red, and long yellow ; Loth h.»v, 



> variety, called PaUte if- 

 variety Watate « cbS 



> of propagation gen 



ts early in the year, in a hotbed; as so.m: 



they too readily do. Slates placec 



In October the soil should be 1 

 ^tubers will be fori 



PUBLIC GARDENS 



. ti-n, are suffered t< 

 for want of energy and perseverai 



themselves be predisposed in favour ot some ^ 

 course. But I feel that I should not ven are i 

 were I to assert that in the co nte ™P 1 ? t,0, j?Ved »t~ the- 



• , ■ :-,.-■,. 



. ■:■-. . .. i. =:■ ■ ■ 



gardens, public, and private, would be si tioQ f pr 



. : ■ - ■-' ■•'. 



the social economy. These reflections i na> ^^ 



sider the present state of botanical "'fj *«"#** 



tore in this country, whether they V°P^vpm 



With respect to theoretiw^ b^tanjMtw ^ j^ 



■ :...,,, ■' ■ ■-.■■■-. 



the seat of the Duke of Northumber^^ 

 to be regretted, also, that some tfP 



H 



Tattributed. gglli* 

 part of the public, ar^»g ^ibl?^ 

 :e , or whether thew ^jy^J* 



