0—1855-] 
THE AIRE 
. 
149 
m handsome specimens of — 
o from the 
shou ld be in 
adu omo 
- | cutting out 
Иш 
ea Alp 
d 
r | spondent shows 
akly ones 
others, and dee buds start into growth a moderate 
shift LANE e given 
soil tee thre окка rich turfy peat, 
fourth Б fy sandy loam ; break these i 
add about one-quarter sharp silver sand, an 
h 
of clean potsherds, and intimately mix the whole 
ha. 
Home — талира 
The Deodar — -— ar of L Min 
eum i that the Cedar 0 
Lebanon a 
— by a 
- my fixed in LM ground at ea 
‚аге a little pliant, should be bent over - pes and 
ach end, ese should 
e to s about a foot or 18 1 apart. A 
—— should — be ай along the top (the whole 
length) of these, taking a turn or two round each stick, 
means they will be held steadily in their 
places, and will then constitute an excellent support T 
t nd. In 
very cautiously — grea a e n тоа of many known varieties, р 
the fresh soil. t eantime, however, a moist | gen e from see The hor арбан JU any r reasonable hop of success in ns ; and in 
atmosphere, and a — overhead with the syringe vari ty a СЯ Italian Cypress may perhaps be ta taken as some localities I very ат v doubt its practicability at 
ing and evening, be beneficial. othin a goo 1 is ish Yew is, I think, a all. Chas. Lue 
more injurious to this Ros А pk allowing it wlien ne stros — ome true from seed but Our Calendarial Dire ect - In your No. for Feb. 19, 
suffer for want of oom; but beginners must avoid | the chiet иу чё =! the Deodar, by which iti is dis- | I observe in the “Calendar of Dana that your 
the one· shift system, otherwise they will probably find | tinguis of Lebanon E is its drooping | readers are directed to “ take ad nt 
thisextreme more ruinous than the o iving a | habit of grow ur ont Tor which many other Hima- у — to renew old worn-out beds, &c., with 
shift as early in n as it — toe be ape À to do | layan Centers have a tendency, schen d when young. | fresh ;". and, юз ргосеей ас actively 
re liberal o ust be regulated 
ert =m to do very well for several season 
shifting 
r potting means ^ be used to 
eit habit o 
the more prominent b 
€— n n 
so that the buds be on 
the highest — E — €— ; лө with attention 
te the growth b 
will 
re the night temperature 
may average about 50°, ase 10% feed 15? —— by day; 
and where a moist atmosphere n be m ined, and 
eb reely on every smijao opportunity, 
osing the D to cold curre 
zc 
$5 
— 5 
tive зи grow 
but some аена will be 
chan, 
hour or two, after 
be well attended to 
Р 
evening, un 
Er. » moire оп "iilum occasioned by 
syringing is very apt to деге persons much 
accustomed to ent of plants, "i the ball 
is thus unknowingly allowed to become much too 
must exercis 
8 pen 
t “tied ne 
f 
— se o and often 
; it should, eH bg says be 
' the ‘soil requires | 
Has ап эй» one yet attempted to give - ex 
the young plants of the Abies Smithia 
Gerardinns, Abies br —— and Cup 5818 
all turn their heads down more than — nearest allied 
to them from other —— of the wor ny plants 
that have sometimes been called distinct species are 
— kind Lev черү altered in habit from 
ing in e peculiar locali many 
nstances ‘amongst 1 27 "ants in which pa owing 
near the induce ucculent habit, with 
planation why 
s Pi — — 
d la 
nd largor f f this kind on the growth of these 
Cu G. St ellen, тн не А Halton. еа 
ence between the n your | article | 
at p. 121, — purely a botanical 9 vil induce | 
most folk 8 to keep qui the rn their 
botan — ba mselves sling te differ 
that no 
to Wee pre 
2 ach, 3 feet hi 
aq will guarantee that a 
r I will take 
ig h [p oen ly, a em 
any bricklayer’ Боне will 
shall be told 
they differ as much fr 
metals, ; gold, ide. ind copper. They ar 
n the seedling state as at 4 feet high, 
oses part: 
as the atlantica neither becomes injured | 
y. Now, 
folia 
bee ctorily е 8, to be 
hardier than either of ре others i rin th the north, I have 
ig. 
ment of "Bedding Meet .—I € to add 
plan 
Pe ут эң for о ing “s 
diee д ants” cy in the spring, as I h 
ractised, wit method somewhat similar, 
0 
nths. : Ww 
i, Plane thus ane would phy НЩ gestus 
in spring, but al allowing them to do so would be a 
siderable loss of time, and those who aim at making 
handsome specimens in the shortest ре 
Period vni eut back the 
to remove th. е Ó— and this xin springs done at 
vious to removing them to a situa- 
This will a allow den ae oe 
have 
the young plants in, composed 
beat odd, one of ‘sand Gt n matters not 
e of | and 
with greater 
success. Mr. Pettigrew's 
advantage ov mine 
8 
be treated in every wi 
goes on w 
"n 
on, 
or mats or Steed 
or 
plants naturally 
17 of his trench form a support for 
ring. But, нн is 
ens healthy and 
5 
® 
by Mr. | 1851,1 find Norfol 
pace and ieu les a“ ood end,” o 
s 
A 
again 
during the preset ree weather with wheeling manure, 
e" 
fro 
in another planet, for I should im 
spot of England would it be practicable to 
round this weather. There j^ no notice 
i oge 
ignored. How is this to be explain 
tributions to the " Calendar of Opera epared 
sent some time beforehand? I think shots bald be more 
reality in them tory, Halesworth. 
If Mr 
din, which an — in the weather, either ia 
local (as t esent Mende) ‘might prevent. 
speak falls of 
2 Ф 
nas 
- 
excellence ce.] 
Changing the Names 1 P ruit — Pray, Mr. 
tion in EE e 
all m 
tural Society's UM 
recently looking over “ British Pomology,” pu 
Apple (in old times it ime 
be 
dear old Jennetin or Juneating 
E the favourite ‘of Joan, the 
summers, 
when, ——— in Jus: 
E ned in J 
ves a in June, 
Jenneting ; throw over Joan entirely. 
the King of m mmi is ida t Golden Winter 
s A is used 
the 
English p pomolozists an 
authority, i 
е | there are ^ dew errors in it MA will poer be 
t let e to 
corrected in a future edition, at presen 
it, and our good old names. Pyrus. [We must say that 
such changes as our 8 alludes to, or any any 
dry 
7 when on the — of, or slightly el 
g soi are 33 liable to 
* — in a trench, where they are 
whi eh, whether it is 
27 
As a 
and may be allowed to blossom in 
y 
ecessarily, encom y 
| light or heavy, is invariably eold and damp 
| part of spring. means of protection, stic — 
of the author of © British Pomo! 
calm, during 
the 11th of February, formed a 
