34—1853. | THE 
his plaut never flowers with much effect until the pots 
the are 
the plants should occupy a M" 
be kept в suficiently close to induce 
t part of 
e summer wil 
younger — which — be Me * for 
flowering, so as m ready to shift me dear 
blooming pots ea 71 in cm sag " нк in а moist 
8 ple uan the summer. old frame o 
e 
?, and sparingly s supplied with — [n 
—if this should be 
to resort to rapes an 
ts to produce blossoms that hav 
n their flow 
ared, if aff 
orded a light si vi te 
from 55° to 65°, will bloom abundantly throughout cs 
winter and eg months. 
sar y to water with to use 
maintain the — ina ‘health 
if iti is intended to 8 that have demons for 
vid be remove a rather = 
ry position as become at all ——— $ 
cut back rather e — well M out the 
, the balls “should 
them 
moderately filled with roots; but it is better to 
vided with h young plants, and to throw away those 
oí 
portions, broken up 
porated with a free. 
be pro. 
that 
-— ete om and well incor- 
admixture of s nd, 
leaf soil y be used ins 
CULTURE ОЕ PYRAMIDAL e мА 
eal horti 
. they. Зна ne (hers hold, the glass is taken 
or pit in 
e | Planting th 
the plants; yellow eaves are picked off; the bas 
P — slide 
à turfy peat and turfy sandy — * in about equal | y 
orm а di 
к» en for this — but caret peat is scarce, 
tead. Alpha. 1 
GARDENERS’ 
should be care 
fully зутар зт not at md for the 
nights at this season of the 
re frequently cold. 
Pricking out — bell- ei or frames,—The plants 
n pots or pans pay 4 more suscep- 
i 
from strong sun 
is gradually admitted, з when 
off at all 
times when the weather permits, for it is to be remarked 
that it is not employed for for ae a arm bi the merely | ^ 
to protect A: from atmospheric 
.—Between the * and леч of June, eon 
Final p 
—— 2. of cloudy — the — — 
t are taken up with balls, an 
and water is a — times 
—— is hot a 
lantin etween 
CHRONICLE. 
when 
d dry. , Twelve or fifteen days after | 
533 
1 would plant carefully, L would refuse to accept them. 
A Constant Reader. [We by no means acquiesce in the 
ur 
again ormed, and the 
uly. A stick 
s impossible that 
could vis 50 or 100 — a ee 
f flowers in a gne is 
etis re of tall and dwarf 
y mar arkin ing, and 
order accordingly, the planting can 
as abo 
to the light during the day, and the thin can 
is 1 — for protection from the cold at — 
e Correspondence. 
ra at, Tie temperate remarks upon my 
sabe ge e 
епу „да 
ade, I code reasonably be said to 
n acquainted with the 
rest will hesitate to rne — there is re 
ty of timber in it fit for р 
«| d erived from t 
g ace —firstly of aie Clutton’s report in 
1849, that “a considerable annual income” would be 
e forest, independent of f accumulating 
mittee that the ‘alae of the forest had been variously 
estimated at from 400,0007. to 1,300,0007. ; and lastly, 
of — — that 90007. were actually realised in 1851. 2, 
while most competent ju is country es 
mate — hig mn for 1852-3 — ae We 
will — со: l look at 
we 
f| men 
many sixpences | 
toril ly, а 
г 
, that 
| p. 168 of . for 1848, he wi 
witness ` declari 
w 
worth 57,0007. a year. Thus 
that the Mieres mi und manage- 
анаи 90 а year, even that, * 
not i all insisted upon, — forming no material 
eire ase, was not so loose a statement as he imagines | 
Lois ] Weedon Cultivation of Wheat.—I see that Mr. 
Smith still c that only a moiety or 1 “of hi 
with Wheat; this is a pity, because 
isled me ; following his 
onsidered, to the letter, I planted 3 
w 
plan 
having been ms slightly h hoed for 
2 — 
factory if if Mr, Smith same experiments, 
which I shall Ae JI: BL Wittenham, Aug. 16. 
Aerating the —The advantages of the admission 
of air about the 
a та gardener er vil go ove over | his crops, s stirring - ny 
good pr 
published in — e 
Ho rticole,” e дл — a full account of his 
of me g the Chi 
He — sa d, — in — or 
pans under cloches (hell glasses), or or in fra The | a 
sowing in the groun in неу rich well- 
worked soil, in the last fortnight 3 March. The seeds 
ate very thinly with fine decayed leaf-mould, 
— аря watered, then — with bell-glasses or 
‘hese are covered with straw-mats — the 
its are cold, and — shaded from the sun's rays 
з are ht. 
If the wesllerp 
in about | 
they m — ar 
— the 
are the woolen and black spiders, 
from this sowing will commence flowering 
beginnin ng of Ац an 
bri 
үл favourable, the plants will appear 
is then gradually rowan and 
i that 
to guard |i 
6 
essar 
The pla 
m the 
produce the most vigorous plants and the 
Revue | жг 
mode 
are flo 
planted. Will these, 40 
nsects ; those most to be dreaded | cute th 
the whole тату, 6000 acres. 
— 
rs hence, pay their expenses 
Again, your correspondent talks of 40,000 acres of good 
Oak А пі. Su з tobe по “exaggeration 
n has no — to bius it; 6000 acres were ‘al 
e 
acted; so illegally, it 
would have been "the duty of the forest t officers belo 
‚ | gardene 
e езе 
had fallen i in wthe- "night, he replied in 
ur les jardins He added that 
ridges, it goes 
roots i of the plants on den without depriving ‘them of 
will recie vell in almost any 
n 
D 
wn has obtained the right to ine lose 
10,000 acres in 1853, it might as well have done it in 
1803. But this is certai 
all interests to 
the а of t 
ow Е the ter ое 
6, айнда h P past season has been very trying to 
р Багате: sete: and I have lost өзб "fera of the Maiani 
which cate veg in 
of March 
bsar flowers. 
Son in pots or earthenware pans.— These, 
— — are covered with a pane о ы 7 — 
te mors side with сс and w This 
of breaking the rays s of the — and 
0 nimal 
Bir has te ee 
enn 
: tds air 
x by tilting the 
k should be etae. washed we 
mn 
Ё 
һе 
rt er beer g tni и it. 
in the open air.— The ts from the 
or 
| 
і 
ER 
| 
42 
E 
s, 
a 
| 
young plants teens блм as oye light | noi 
iven of glass is 
prod рЫ It is n 
ims е 1 
the inj быб тдан 
events, if "to th ayo been accomplished at 
| 0 
content to spen: 
he would etum wit 
But this would not bea — ues he Crown 
inherited acres of land. It — only inherited 
certain over 
value por e estate ; ; it has only limited coim 
over vem acres, in addition to _ 
Р 
m exercise a great i 
plant, whether it be soft or hard wooded. 1 
upon su — 
т will only aaa, EM from my 
, there ousand 
bebe am not certain I might not my one al the — 
if offered to me as a gift, upon the condition that 
the latter ; Lina 
out in both cases. ia Grain 2 ри care shoal be 
