52 
—— — ͤ ꝛäʃjœ.—ô Ó——HÓÓÍ— 
Barrar has, however, shown that he was greatly : 
mistaken. 
t was led, е the six last 
— 2851 "to. examine minute ly the water | 
the Observatory at 
and ARAGO, names most cien 
be free from all objection, and to the 
se unte which they could expos 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[JAN. 22, | 
е ages of pos ue luxuriance. | 
u s fat т. 
i = nothing is left for the soci d of flowers, 
even more unfortunate than the loss of|r 
fruit i is the — — sustained by the general 
ank shoots are formed. 
Such sh 
so rapidly that fluids contin 
large quantity of compost is added, to make ronio | 
geq у. ave а ight y u 1 
ourse of two or three са the roots of the tree | 
the trees so docile 
as to be lifted without difficulty 
In order to show the pr. ractical effect of thia 
ccs e we have the following additi 
remar. 
ei live this day (Dec. 12, 1852) removed two 
Plum trees, that have been plant ted six years au 
removed tw wic heir roots are a mass of fibres, 
without one straggling бак е re. 
n classes of frait trees out of the ground every 
: rise m e been 
following su di Фан and are little citet bi evapora- slanted with a barrowful of light iren to 
the il p ы e, from July to December rs badges н “whith. ake r X: ар — Md анаја by the enormous q july 
inclusive, w. Age . of owth ‘lackens. The rate of of gite er they will bear a plentifu 
eve Xy — nt ins aed o na indeed di next on. Th 4 ill receive no "una 
Nitric acid 19.09 5 204 , action of coarse woody roots continues to operate, for cheek, fo abundance of earth adheres to the mass | 
monia . 3.61 x a= 38.7 „ эво roots refuse to be affected by the usual dryness ts. Now, as Peaches, Nectating ad | 
Chiorine ... 227 „ = 35 „ of autumn, but work like forcing pumps w ich know Арноо being budded on ан stocks, are all on 
ine. . 648 „ = 100 „ no repose till the lowering temperature diminishes Plum roots, they will d gas ctly the same rests 
Magnesia 212: 4 = 32, heir vital excitability. When growth is ope ый е same — n callie: neither the size nop 
He did not ascertain whether all these substances | by the last-mentioned cause, the season is too far | favour of the fru t will e affected, and the tr trees 
are in — collected at a distance | advanced for the ripening process to make progress. will always bear tates and be healthy and 
from towns. But Mr. Bence Jones found at least | The branches therefore remain watery during the | flourishing. 1750 plethoric habit of the Moor Park 
nitric acid in rain-water ollect in London, at| winter, like all bodies loaded with дүе, are | and Peach cots, which so often leads to di 
5 n in Surrey, at Melbury in Dorsetshire, and | extremely susceptible of cold, and bec we and death, vill be effectually cured by this simple 
far any town, at Clonakely i in Ireland. If we мао the effect of whic x Casein a b mode of culture, and Peaches and N ines will 
assume "s уча. rage what dry canker which attacks their eise] 8 short аел shoots, which will be always 
on an acre, the quantity of such mods more i 5 not break with | well ripened, so that th ey will be constantly fall of. 
substances deposi sited " that — of ground may regularity, because they are always imperfectly healthy Кае buds." 
be safely estimated as follow: med upon maturation of the} Consider ing how many gardens ce х; 1 over 
e average depth of rain ge falls in the bul, so — to its future healthy development, the country in which the ranknes ne- fruit 
neighbourhood of егей is well ascertained to Бе | being the result of a vital organisation connected | trees is difficult to check successfully, X. recom- 
about 24 inches per annu This is at the rate of | with the маме здал which in watery shoots | mendations e generally known, 
87,120 cubic feet, or 2466 cubic metres of rain- | never occur That they will answer the purpose proposed there 
er per acre ; and this, povording to the propor-| It was to prevent these consequences, and to is по room for doubt; however, as well to 
tions per — metre in the preceding table, would | throw trees into a bearing state, by de troying t nw. dry land, with a dry bottom, rot, 
afford annually of— subterranean forcing pumps hich impart debility pruning, biens lifting, and all such practices, are 
Ni PTS 45} Ibs, der the Spurious vigour, culiar circumstances which cal 
Nitrieaeid — ... ... 103 „ vERS originally und the advantages of root- for them Kalad alive 
Ammonia... ... .‚ 194 „ pruning. We M with what success. But 
" eem Mp. ap was not unattended by disadvantages; and CC я 
Time... . 85 „ t has been so тн found that rank trees cannot degno OF CAMELLIAS. di 
price e M ear what among animals would be call Some extracts from an TA on this subject by the 
tial ioiai shock to the system c. aped y ata 155 severe Comte Pur rine ,in 2559 y *. ES. 
utation. 0 een especia e case | useful, er roe y to нб ners. e 
TU e e the се ~ ars will treet HERE. а apt to gum “AT dider to meet | of these plan i choice of —.— the Comte st ш 
d is of the first im 
-— into thé indispensable constituents of 1 — е ата ene be ote чы сутей ae sh ould be used. portanco best is æ a б кста em col 
y which vegeta 
and i po lad near zi i Е M years," he says, “I have felt a: 
150 lbs, of — also sdited to rly growing conviction that Pea ch 0 trained against 
Mt of our crops. walls in ual manner, without careful root 
: ltivation, cannot, 
re gives us 
hard ill-tilled land, 
polished furrow slices, 8 thus highly charged 
with tl tious ingredients either ru 
is so ill- — hat i 
wb 
tural sceptic ; for 
— 
mans, at,” 
ast add t thai 
urrow-trenches, 
» exhibited 
of t 
spectato 
for Root Pruning, &с, 
nd we improvidently waste 
food, 
it. What with ve d on the one hand, 
dre ig Е as — 1 
a if two-thirds of the crop grew 
ат 
№ wonder that Lots- Weedon s0 astonishes the} 
1 there the soil is mad 
, Cabbages, 
it were 
this was also the secret of 
manured soil, m 
with rapidity, 
om Miniaturo cae © irden, ог — Cuiture of Pyramidal | 
trueti»ns Long- 
two years, and thus, by a system of gentle pruning, 
to avoid the grand operation of root — utation. 
years. 
an d tarine 
{very little, is 
he 
B 
£o 
moderately sandy, and soft to the touch ; that which 
of a black MOMS colour, without sand, or containing but 
wall covered My healthy Peach and Nec 
trees of a goo i 
off | Crops and bli hted 
an allusion to the trees on the w. 
2 Hall. I разе reason to believe that all the |! 
uccess ры ыс the te Mr. Sillett ha 
g 
n the 
pipe — 
es, SS obe and Plum: 
removal UR There foutd a ый 
0 
have been a border well prep 
of тень it ma 
e wall as usual, and s 
w t i 
er in it any light compost, if the soil be heav 
| nüre 
gar 
me 
the wateri: 
uld ; 
flow of sap, an ond push, еы 
venting the г ado of flower r-buds, D 
place 
but at all unes, even when the 
it is ne to keep the soil, moist, for d 
injurious to the health of the plant, and 
ower-buds to drop, 
“Supposing а 8 tree, of the usual size, to 
planted i 
pared, | possible of the same 
also re 
| low —— or pits are 
solution нй 
years, two 
passe ed, from three 
э о six ies 
rom 70 
ма old, i: pe p Scott tree. 
0 
man ny barrowsful; when six years have 
to four СЕ 1, p v nl 
earth from the border must be MET i. 
most elegant, and at the same time the 
requires abundance of light, an 
more suitable for it Ten those 0 
scree’ 
y painted yya with white 
ey shit) 2 with lime and milk, or with a 
or shifting i is not absolutely necessary 
etely fill the pot. The operation 1$ 
o push vigorous sl 
Varieties not E toting to 
t have pot-room than those that 
flowet | 
S 
D. 
readily must 
profusel 
impose 
кз сы to it; 
