32—1853.] THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. | 
PICEA BRACTEATA. 
ESSRS. VEITCH ND SON, of Exeter, and the 
В Exotic Nursery, Chelsea, have much pleasure in stating 
ortunate enough to raise 247 
given by Dr. Lindley, 
in the leading article of the Gardeners — — 
J 
" 
63s. ea 
at т A, “Messrs. V EITCH'S NEN —Augus t 6. 
PLANTS OF CABBAGE, SAVOY, rT BROCCOLI, 
Kos AND CE LERY. 
TELL, Wes tein, ‘Kan ent, begs respect- 
fully to pos A. ublic c . ue still a Fou pir 
of M v. — Pedir Wis the — be 
forw 
by v isitors, 
— on doux — vil — Post. office 
the following reduced prices, package 
K 
made le pay here, at 
rts АР Early С abbaz ze, 
1 1000. 
ired, P аа of | 
hv rriage to asr ea and to the 
ge Station of the South. Rosters Кау 
SEED of CATTELL’S DWARF BARN 
REL CAB 
' ра ак new bark; and he hence 
fie that wood can produce —.— and that the 
tk th eere y afterwards produce w 
of Dusamen was bur tug in 
o, like 
e new Matter 
essential denis: by Meven and емы. 
that author, thought they observed 
oe rel 
нса tom the [ferm миз 
dwelling upon. the importa 
| naked ed. a coa ay of 
ecte?! — ‘offered of the Fo. wh; ees should 
uf aus old in a f Мей had & had 
nt |to the sum 
anatomical details included in his observati ions, and = 
which belong to pure rather than to applied science, 
we shall confine ourselves to the practical results of 
| his с рр» s. 
8 observations were made upon rings of 
wood —.— of bark, and varying in length from 
inches to 20 inches. To form an effectual g uard 
tty (mastic de Vitrien), 
was laid upon the lipa of the wound, which was then 
covered und a pue of avia] bbe 
‚| was taken perfect join of the two 
upright м а of. the latter, and this pro roved to be so 
ssful t i which 
| suec at in sever; 
оо 
г cloth; care 
roduce being of little presen: value 
expenses considerable, He was, however, ota dinis 
that the income would be, from €— time forward, 
equal to the expenditure, and that in a very few 
years it would exceed i 
We observe i at t the time when Mr. MILNE 
gave his evidence the р had chiefiy consisted of 
vel. 
poles, faggots, ba: 
same 
manage- 
P mestoth of Dere, described ina à former — me > that 
e was 
rk, and g 
The deputy es is ‘Sir Jam 
s charged w 
MES ip nimc the 
or 1100; he waned 
ea was res, not 
e — that the place ar neither been thinned 
1ough nor drained enough—and yet there had been 
bov 
Come) situated, пем N as in the Isle of | profitable 
Wight, consists of about acres. In 1848, Mr. 
Мид reported it to кти по large timber, but | ti 
which was under removal | 1 
some 
“as q vickly as it could be dis disposed ай The soil | . 
— — AGE, may be had in — » sheet o per was then ed round the — expenditure of above 32,000. upon it; some of 
— — — the latter — lag covering, and the — was guarded by the plantations, said, were growing very 4 
ILLIAM NES re y y begs * аспай { | stra others not so well; and he described the land as the 
is Friends and the Publie generally that he has now nay very case new bark and wood were formed on | very worst that could be, stiff yellow clay mixed 
whe appa ome pes his u — «дей  CALCEOLARIA the duos of the wound, and боле ret of either with gravel. We own that s land do 
SERD. moi ime ane eee ee "e CINERA RT A amd the upper or ya lip; excrescences of seem to * 1 bad o uited to growing 
HOLLYHOCK ВЕЕР, saved by himself, from all the best kinds | forms and sizes w up from the face of the Goud Oak, if managed by — [е нм and the 
еа C t. Berea tabs n si the most and eventually ris into plates of new matter. ae Destine vof ( foma r days is most unfavourable to 
cannot fail to give the a n to all those who may | М. TrÉcCUL, wer found the new . formed ^" uns CAMPBELL's р чае f the recital of 
nk proper to purc aid of t пров above described, very арі | е. Act for enclosing P. it is ew 
Luv Sid fom unknown corres —— — P M become — as mig been declared that the reason I Fus so is that 
Camden Nursery, Camberwell, t — ae ean ected from the Аа n of his arran ts. tie was heretofore of great tum, 
THILL’S PRIN EOFW ES AND BLAC he general result of his uiry being such as | derwood cec d 
С" PRIN NCE ВГ STRA EEA — . 5 K we have d — qu — wh ан | nevertheless of opinion that the imber cult neve 
out on the ugust.—I n * е n | may not герго ctive power e wood to of F 
Soh of June tan that, mey har пор Ли к ге Желе, renew cya after having been wound by amputa- | for a jones although he still | pointed to the Boll not 
and in d ы dium ы toe оян rds of one й wi rot as decortication. M. i | good, he fell n the bad q of 
an ett mei there tes m Pe roe pend w bark and wood were formed by the the old: timber still — ors * Parkhurst, whi 
Prince of Wales to be the best late Strawberry, and, like its royal | living алй below them, I would, "eate уте not grow well, gpa a pap got i they lad 
— * N ем ee uch larger, and flavoured, | seem as if wo bark could be renewed where- | because, as he na ively ded, he —— they 
all for Forcing as a late sort, and is ld l5 by di» d cattle ! 
prepared for Forcing, a for planting’ that Be’, then а „%%% i ro ap b 
preps reg sey compe ; , , uring the ears which precede 
demons Pamphlet on rr svin ion ng the best way w wore ought to be curable, pro- | the pr ad dy iei there had been a loss 
savoiding the Disease, as well as rrr yu Crops. Tuis nds it is — from the contact of dry air, a of 9851. ; -— of that, 2341 had been incurred in the 
‘Treatise is founded strictly on the laws of Nature. сн ided the vita vitality of is su ly acti é h first f his office, Sir 
Strawberries, Cucumbers, pr vious year. e nrst year of his 
Melons, &c. 2s, or by. 9з. 4d. ro У Germa on | Ít is on that the power of reproduction in all the James CaurnELL produced a . upon the 
go ished. Price d. 2 * A... 2 9 a e kind experiments on recor certained to belon 1 in question; in the year he 
E to be made pa ata а ciui he surface of alburnum, called by the French the netted 91 10s.; in the third year he lost 90 
MM бета, Camberwell, London. at of renovation (couche génératrice) ; and i neas; in 1851-2 he gained 30 
» e as a 7 65 Pv к? accounts for 1852-3 are not yet [E but ма 
- it amount of vitality resi e е [із exp hat 20 as more, or about 
Tie & Gardeners’ Chronicle. restoration of the d wood; but we have поь aero, may be gained. We trust that so grand a 
ntal that it is so. We would there- result will have been arrived alt. "C, 
yore WR TURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1853. fore suggest that the curious inquirer may find some- un of the plantations at Parkh 
te gt eer ye re rr na ah: Long Емба this: abject: upon; wii ppc map Lar now 35 years old; Mr. Cuv 
E anbury, and Wolverhampton.—31st: Colchester, ingenuity ; and that it is worth while to make some | Duncan’s committee that plantatio 
— — * trials, for whi present season, v do pay their way when they are 20 years o 
_WHEN A TRER is extensively BARKED or other- not bleed, may be proper. To those dis thus з of age there ought to be a con 
the injury be repai This to operate, we should recommend, not M. Trovis by this standard Parkhurst 
question has doubtless been asked by almost every а maa which is a a and which brings | „Боша oducing a net i of at 
Who has a garden or chard ; and the on decay in the new granulations, but some one of an aere, instead of 444. 
wer is invariably in the negative, unless he trusts the many pur of grafting wax ‘employed on ће We do not find <a return of the ній, of 
to the slow advance of new matter over the face of | Continent ; warm, it can Meiner over. the | the manager of this forest. 
| A the edges of the БЕ And Lee — which may. then be left without farther 
effect o — ^ after all , merely to h PATO» n parts by weight of ‘black pitch, three| 5лусву Forest is in Northamptonshire. It con- 
the ih — to М шей 1 resia, three of bees-wax, and three of | sists of 1277 а acres of land, described as key to ^ 
Nevertheless, eta re showed, 2 a century tallow, forma heap m mixture, rather too sticky yield a crop of Oak, “ “though not hitherto suffici 
ago, that if such nds are covered with glass pons but easily —— if chat is so, by thinned.” Mr. Cru ох reported it to be adapted 
before the surface has time to dry, re then ex reasing the quantity o me decortica- | to ре A Seid of Жү very best quality of Oak, ui 
«cluded from the action of the atmosphere, a complete tions might - be made by rate of ——— nt, » as evidently dissatisfied with f management, 
cure is effect He 507 in one of his experi- ane paii the same Y ich must n from his талына Fy that it houd —— 
ments an appearance of gelatinous matter oozing not, however, "he hat enough t to о kill tissue with 7 pomo thinned, that trees interfering with te 
out between the longitudinal fibres of thé which it comes in contact. uch | growth of Oak be — — € Me 
alburnum ; small granulations afterwards formed, |? tallow and bees-wax, which melt EY wood 5 LM be allowed to pete with — 
and in ten days after the commencement of the bis dub argk also be em employed. - Such experi- — 
— they had acquired a greenish tint. ments cost little, ан, be tried 5 | getic one-sided h 
Daring the summer теме ago -extended, | s by any pang in. | Song 
_Sicatrised thot the lower lip of bark ha ing | 
Aen It. 2 bark thus. 
Ima i rmed by numerous 
ependent gin ; in — 
манон 
Г. 
Mrrxn stated that xc 
is principally strong clay ; ; mM in 
г. М по reason exist 
mee en timber. — e oldest trees in 
the opinion of v 
ed why it should not 
own ag ‘revo but did ч 
hime Kent ever .ha 
fore 
ei Sead age, th f 
Hais g been ай Vati ini à 
only 
been enclosed for 
of his evidence, Mr. Mune} 
'epo area of this forest | to be 1100 acres, and | 
the deficiency upon it to have"amounted, by 1846-7, 
f 13,8094, which he accounted fo for by 
any m 
of timber before, маф rom nothing sa 
Mr. Мил: saw то | 
Айег 3 
man 
knowledse pa the comm 
est. 
ment to a lange amou 
aedi 
rss FT 
— in Vetrina and — ‘are conflict! 
to him on that a 
the office fai athi years this. geni 
ume. une Memor зырт without - 
pd hasta spot 
surveyor 
nt. 
nin deputy su is Mr. 
tenant of the Duke of Gra 97 
armer, 
