420 THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[Јо 2; 
was that while 43 tons of bark had heen sold in 
1838, e had been M in 1841, 1842, and | 
18 843, nor in 1845, nor 847, No timber for 
either з Ф. ог other аба had ever been ob- 
tained - Chopwell. 
d what better could have been geri crum vus | 
the appointment of a lieutenant i milit 
ment, totally unacquainted “with the management of 
woodland property, to the eod of a royal for 
But too much e has been already сни. 
with this property. We shall only add, in жаши 
sion, ey the deputy surveyor, whose managem 
n thus rec соз 
that the reps eed 
March 31 last we vis ect 
with 24s. a- 
a farmer, in Devonshire, persa been a 
He was ecu. ear - 1 ске on the 6t ech ay, 1816, 
and was transferri in October, 1821. 
He has andes had very de experience, the 
value of which we shall learn hereafter. 
та 
onger holds his office, oar met 
e for i year ending р 
of July to the end of September. Indeed the хуу Ee fault 
is 
qu ires a very trong mo 
while it is growi 
The plant may be in 
iuge; ; the ] dos freel 
young wi тунау about April 
peat, 8 with a bell-glass, an 
heat of about 80° 
will be ready to pot singly ina six weeks, and will 
form nice little plan i inter. The usual 
hod, however, of obtaining a stock of young 
lants is from , and probably seedlings are more 
vigorous than plants obtained from cuttings. 
s should be sow ly in February asa tempera 
ture of 70° is at comm ut unle e 
nee for. ot nicely to a bell- 
glass, ri alt air the — ‘with a and fill up лебед 
to the surface with rather fine peaty т; апа ргезз 1 
га!һег fi rmly, making the surface ay er ‘he 
latter with a thin stratu um of silve 
od 
face, and prevent ein eep 
Sprinkle the seeds upon dia poer in кача, and 
mue situation n gei od for raisi 
communicated from the neighbourhood of Cov 
the 
Not only are the leaves botehed and defo rbd with 
but a position wa 4 rom the syringe w. vll ы 
liable i fall on the on “this will be dangerous in ca 
le discoloured rugged spots, which € ing seeds beyo 0 e depth at whi ich they Si 
e black, but the fruit itself, as in the acc and in this case the bell-glass should be large enough to 
panying gure, is covered with irregular warts, which throw off whatever water may fall o W 
in some cases, where impregna — the seedlings are fairly up, remove the Ba, and |n 
has been perfectly accomplished, inure them to the air of the house, or pit, giving 
gradually soften down, so as to pre- plenty of water the saucer, and also over-head 
sent a somewhat less unpleasing A s геу strong x wei handling pot them 
e en the fruit has arrived at е Te 2 then x * баа until 
maturity ; but where the ovules ре they get established in their pots, with a em l supply 
t abortive, of water. ring summe hem y a posi- 
either rendering the uce utterly tion near the glass, but fr he direct |c 
useless, or, after a time, са sing — rays of the sun; top the be 
e under side i 
turely. 
e leaves is carefully examined, 
egular, minute, circular 
0 
cells between w «зове large inter- 
air has a f $ 
ants 
p do 
d go on properly they 4 probably vay well 
eginning or middle | and, on 
s by the b 
ould be shifted into the 
led their pots A. 
ugust, aud such next 
8 rays, giving 
soil than is . to keep the 
plants from be g 
anthus is a som 
he Lisi 3 subjeet to 
winter, — eget 
inners wil 
lia m to 1. off at the neck, an 
reenhouse, very sparingly 
peo Ne Ar pes бес. 0 the pots ares) be placed in 
$ eee t will be unnecessary as 
well as dangerous to Water о ым Seah may be 8 
e pe mode 
Maintain a night temperature o! 
50°, which will be sufficien e high for the winter. Earl 
n February remove the plants to a sharp, moist heat of 
вы, de it dus not go iei far, ma root 
ven be beneficia 
from 70? to 75°, or 85° will do no injury, provided a 
ined. As 
pruning, e If w + ate correc t in 
supposing ‘the — due to the presen 
acarus, the methods may be used онака its 
repression as in attacks red spider; and nothing 
ps may ely to give relief than 
ent syrin; аел pure water or with 
s solution —— diluted. bere disease 
t affecting our Pear trees, characteri 
arger and more swollen 
derneath wi 
een in- 
lium. 
has nothing dede with the malady i 
— LISIANTHUS RUSSELLIANUS. 
me Isaw my first specimen 
ustules, which are | to 
f white spor 
away as 
аз can be done without i эм 6 ки 
roots. Keep them the glass 
moist as is convenient, э overhead f 
with the syringe. Stop 
branches, to secu 
ciently 
— ы = out the 
ic may be 10, 
еу аге геа 
Hr 
at-| form a suitable 
. | state and well intermi 
r | with a moderate proportion of sand. 
y 
or kele жии that the Exh 
. | fully ripe n see 
necessary 
. А a 
useu 
- | whole ; but the la 
those, never ns the | 
ti 
e them |o 
12, or 15-inch 
ing n at y|t 
or their final shift, and the convenience p ccm ag | 
ersons who ca 
Good fibry гое and rt in about equal 
comp the growth of 
rough — 5 - char 
Alpha 
Home Correspondence, 
Grapes.—Considering the ve! backwardness 
the present season, and the small allowangs which we 
have had of yag 1 — with you 
the display of Grapes at our late Chi wick k Exhibition i 
have been highly creditable to the skill and in 
the growe t the 
e aim of o о attain, 
cation of good fruit is, — it shall be 
E 
qe 
otley sa 
mple 
a half ‘yellow, for тае, if I pas not, a large medal 
t show ; : the — small bn 
was given at our 
M vi “es э зг of a 
at tran 
y to merit 
Perhaps they may both have — 
s for market ;” but I cannot 
ibition ГА would 
satisfactory criterion of perfection in our 
fruits ; ed in the article of Grapes, at least, I know, to 
mark of distinction. 
deemed * sufficientl 
rs by кыды Ше 
rapes аге 
п has become thin, fine, and 
= die. cordc of the з 
o grey, red to violet, from black 
to a more intense hue; when the pips come out black, 
naked, е Ags 1 of p matter, nothing whatever 
Pim them." (Théatre d'Agriculture, Liv. 9, 
began aren 
dull, white Aemet to 
or Lawns.—I have a little z which I am 
rfect possi was 
lower extremities of the-blad 
in a in 
x tes its a ce ; the 
he ground, and not to stand 
G 
straw, or 
rass also run along 
poate and end thick, like that 
every 
ua !] 
Paper (p. 360) аа 
3 8 Journal,” in 
stem is th 
e outer leaves, the elabo 
which it it 3 ы roots B this time not 
in action, because it ose of a long to 
t|of dryness. If, — he уг veratom is — 
the leaves pars 1 
m I semis xam сешепіз for the 5 
larger 
the old 
article in question will try the experimen 
should state th ks apply to the Aloe а 
my remarks spply ile a ШЕ 
pare with the L regards the 
ng in perfection ll grown specimens will 1 55 in 
fall em. from Ж ‘male of July а the "o of 
September, if 4 tended with wate: 
the blossoms will 32 b injured |0 
decoration 
the consery: tory or the ioris house from the beginn А P — me 
by 
елше cwm d a 8 on ret rays of | canno 
se of m 
