47—1853. | 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
habits. - 3 thrive in almost any е 
ted in moist —— or placed on the surface o: 
— as fi 
An d there 1 is not a habitation fit cc 
J 
wit h | 
чанг! ад 
— bring its eire ifl spikes 
within - 2 gra of the | 
f the smallest 
ing the culture 
on of whie has, cen 
rsons depend- | 
plants 
p can decorate their ес at Christmas. | 
itten 
wri 
of “this s lovely plant, the greater — 
unfor y, been us gard Mia deter pe 
but 
nely as when planted in the реч ‘sudden! rying s. Inthe 
ing re sitt m dm тет by which they are Ке жие ars e, and the journ 
— je ение 1— and offiei 
a rtually 
5 will be longer in fading here than in most situations; have 
elose e and 
eurrents 
Paes warn the inexperie inst this 
es sors ees I 
BR o the — in last 
— ‘che N sional опса! Society, Гат а 
р r having а 
n urred of | 
| an exhibitor having judged his own productions. In the * 
few MÀ of whi — J have any җеп” in which а | 
r has been at the same time exhibitor, his | 
exhibitions have been invariably, judged m — 
› аз might 
LE — few nue 
ed | 
— ас n | 
se the statemen t to 
m on 
eof m 
чен fallacious — e tions in whie asty persons 
published vi turfy loa 
ng, : ik or clean river FE and 
a bed of the necessary size. 
eep must be formi by those who would tor 
Het Рур rly.” The removal of the natural 
pro 
Ж. 
E. a 
i decayed « cow up 0 
oil, with which 
recenu y 
replacing it with the above 
maleria „ in ould be a work of сне 
xpense, and ger 1 the means of many 
SER of early flowers. now, from experience, 
t well-dra ted garden il i 
of the Hyacinth, 
of a strong adhesive satu, add 2 inches 
erely a liber: 
And it will be found on 
will Beene equally fine spikes of bloss 
planted 
plants, there is stored 
4121 
in the Hyacinth the 
Matter ; and the — of 1 e peus 
f these i 
the. 
of Lat bulbs ds, that: they should be proportion 
hea he and plump, particularly about | 
Size is of hardly any i 
roduce bul 
51 T of flower est bulbs. The 
proper season season for oe plant in beds in the 
Nove air is the last fortnight’ of . and the first of 
ovember, н a dry day for ИНИ) in bd bulbs, 
if the sam osen for the n of the 
‘ чони 
wet. Plant in lines, 
Vy 
between the plants when up, to work a hoe, for the 
destruction of weeds and keeping the surface 
d 
is w. Lo cover ` the be € а. few Уз. of old tan, or 
any lig ce, to exclude This —— 
— h a, —— the p — begin to 
mun it The Hyacinth is also remarkably i 
the assistance of a 
sanie wen anureor tan, to o furnish | 
Chri 
ted for pot culture, and with 
frame, with 
some sta 
а іп RER 
e secre 
p will estimate the value of each by what they 
r of the persons from 
V. 
with pë small bulbs privates equally fine 
with. ges 
inches apart, which will afford space | I 
right 
h has 
ndulge ; the fact being, probably 
that out of the тд list of some two 
a . anm um within a certain 
* 
5 бф 
awards, ou 
—— to the — 
erence to the pa ‘which have obtained awards 
will suffice, at leas bear evidence of the honesty and 
hose who have made 
a 
“explicit denial of the ce 
tracted from “ Glenny’s — 
тай eme гт seco) 
been to Mount Alexander diggings, 
100 miles ибне — which 
winter season 
a month; the 
ost of conveying goods has t bent! as s high as TOOL per ton, 
opinion of some that there 
vtt of md yet, ‘while the —— think it is nearly 
orked out. Many diggers, who have been compelled 
to work all Sia in a wet hae, to subsist on bad pro- 
visions and wa and put up with indifferent tent 
accommodation, — obtained their hard-earned trea- 
: * I 
many m old companions were 
‘although I an n tell ы it is а serious matter for a 
married man with a family to the expenses. 
eho 17 be charged 27, per w of small 
. loaf, 1s. d j beef — ен He 4d. to 6d. 
Ib. ; Jb aed ү, bacon, 15. б bem ib. The pation iho 
1 in the colony, charge 1s. per pint 
1l soon be cheaper, as өйө? аге 
springing up like cee; thousands are buil 
and thousands of ＋ are daily flocking to our ge 
regret to sa not recommend this 
pleasant country to ire in, as the dust is very trouble. 
sometimes 
per tie to by you in your las 
the formation of the Nat ional Floricultural Society, up 
no flower has ever been adjudicated 
this subjeet. 
to assertion, and the 
whom they. proceed. | 
SEEDLING FLOWERS. 
ErrPHYLLUMS: A R S. Both extremely handsome, and well worth 
— king с i t 
LARGO : J H. Very much shrivelled up before it reached 
ni but: — 922 on Lady Holmesdale.— 
G W. Not different — kinds — in RM. Copen- 
hagen is not identical with Wilmore's Surpris 
Miscellaneous. 
r to 
wood, has just re 
which the following. are extracts, * Kawat. етй, 
a young man, formerly — at the abov 
place, w bed to Aus since 
giae — Philip Victoria, 
Au stralia, M 53. 
ce 
= the country most unpromising, nat on: 
wn I found immense -of business The 
i 
angles,and there.a 
ung colony.” “Everything was v 
„from I have spent man 5 dae hours. 
A 
en planted about 10 years as large 
ears’ growth in England. On the hn ot April 
I rens oe 2 bushels of the finest Quinces I ever 
indeed this is a fine ruit coun’ 
p and m 
"wo 
setting in temi 
on many le eee to us 
the ‘vicarage: 
thin 
and nt 1 K 6 
The are worse than in 
birds, and consequently a * ат 
nd * — The weeds 
week.) 
PLANT DEPARTME NT, 
— инини. of — 
(For 
y dear, 
rted, da; like Ace fred 
"d 
+11 23 
gently“ — 
i let them. 
the lay may be kept u laser — lodgi ging is not-easy to get, |t the buds begin opening, "— 
pra ар y bulbs 3 d house-rent is very dear e. Many of the old all ithe n" ible; and if the — full of 
er, to flower in spring set rs who bought ground: and er on it before the | roots, w. given -— — 
ier mended for beds. making rapid f —— 
1 as © 6-inch Hyacinth — suburban -— are selling, e: еу —— TEES о. 
E n, re|in some instances as foot, so o at eee ШШ 
space for the roots. But where these cannot be con- a a dame seals * ce bus plant, dictae б 
ently 6 or 7-inch pots, шау | with; but if he ean only make a start there ively, for t 1 
к hand, and answer perfectly, The soil fear success, as anything will sell here. My part of с dii aue 
used for potting should be as rich as possible; such as | employer's garden is well stocked h young. ———— joa soon bloom 
о 1 sh loam, eut from a pasture, with the turf trees, whieh pr heavy crops this ‘season—the | nir e ior. or two to produce | 
| in it, an Pea pry ciere ne n nc t ipt | nen i m E 
a small ortion ч, clean sand. Fill the lightly | Melons flouri out artifi | ‹ res ee s ** 
EE р ей soil, and place the КК E he | brought from Van Diemen's маф and judging —— | Jasminum is —— — "^ - 
audio 2 slightly sable it into the soil, pots | immense quan bod of fruit t 8 i — 1 — 
dry surface, and cover with about 3 inches of old tan. might well term it бесен the southern wo — it ve — А idm pat om 
Ikter 8 here „ ks, the bulbs The soil here varies very considerably, but is is generally Perpe — : 3 6 ET. dil 
gehe Roof An meet mde ам to toremove them of a light sandy loam, with clay bottom — Б оне» ae a 2. 0-62 чач 
o2 o: 1045 0 К ‘ VW T ing at this ` 
орак —n the surface, while in others it is very в mpy“ prevent fire ара 70 sy 
Чү = de D ке, { stage of Т roots { 
the 0 2 1 
wonderful how th the р live; we siave; howev 
| very fine beasts d sheep from 
Ж is | mark inferior 
kinds to be thrown s a y when ou 
ЕАН 
wonders siesta The Pompone 
some | bloom, 
yearly 
