_IHl_£^RDENERS^j p H R N I C L E. 



^iNSrcs]..-ctful!vai-. 1 uaint 







ot creating new varieties, or of impr 

 possess, may prove acceptable ( „ tb 

 ticularly as all th< - 



! . 

 ■ : 

 '-■■"■ 

 especially the tuberous kinds. 



colour. Others might 



this is not impossible, f 

 the late Mr. Colvill 

 cent Cape species, wit 

 yellow flowers : but tl 



SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1847. 





ther that such i 

 awn is possible 



me contrary we have repeatedly urged the vast 

 importance of the processes of hybridising, and have 

 pointed out the advantages already gained or such 

 • re to be unti. ip stod '.ore dier. There is not a 

 more fertile field of action in husbandry, by which 

 gardening, 



PlUEGOSIUM, 



breeding. Take, for 



»11 have had the sa 



jxample, the 



ted. But if the 

 id 1847 ai 



md that twenty years 

 ieties produced 



irso/pelargo - 



, st " lte en years should 



. l4st Ave. Yet the reaso 



■we direction followed 



ed its li 



1 



n you should now sail on a 



^- Put your ship about; it is of no use tc 



^longer in these seas ; you have done i 



n can do in this , lUa r , r , and ii \c u arc wi 



pk altered the 



discovered new land, or, 



Poured by the 



^ofthft!!?^ 1 ' J 



mmonly called " Fancies." Uihers 

 that no reasonable hope can be 

 Xcelling or equalling the varieties 

 school of which Mr. Beck mav now 

 be head, and, like the Clare gentle- 



•J5 w? harVCSt that * h ™& be"he'hT. t 

 ^beastri^ P ersuade d that English gan 



^S r 61 **^'™^ behave 1 



»^ur n r b ;vt li9hingth h fo11 



^inted 



wiih.: ;( . 



!'!■''. ei '! 



e »> aud still may be done, in 



xpeTienced gardeners 

 of those Pelargoni 



turning t 



perished. Now 

 ;as and Dimacrias, 

 ., a Cape species, ■ 



• as they passed thr 



cria, Campylia, Phymatanthu?, and Pelargonium. 

 Hoareas cross freely with Pelargoniums and Dima- 

 crias, and as Hoarea corydaliflora, carinata, and 

 yellow flowers, there i 



