& 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 
([Nov.<12,; 
iene Marseilles, . Two sam- 
in She peies me results, proving 7 value to be 
ara 
a table of hisionont ie 
Dry. FresuH. 
ee] 8 \e¢| 3 
‘ Behe) | eps 
of o = 3 OBSERVATIONS, 
SuBsTANCE. . es 4 BE a : 
os F om & 
| cack B eh cagt 
me (ae Pes | a | 
Taken for com- 
Farm-yard dung +| 4-95} 109° 194 {100 |{ parison. 
: 4 
oots, stems, 
in the wh sores 
Refuse contain- 
ing 0° 73 ‘of water 
46 
{eure employ- 
ve ed for burning. 
English 
Sifted. 
French. 
foe public 
ap , dried. 
Liquid (the am- 
{ ‘monia included) 
From i sib eal. 
40 |Used about Lyon: 
Blood, lime, & soot 
Mixed with blood. 
{ Mixed on ani- 
ae dung 
0 
{Fromhorse du ous 
dried & 
; From the a 
¢ shore at Dunkirk 
dance of fratehich it produces, amply repays any trouble 
may occasion. ..Undoubtedly, the best, but at the 
same Le the most ex j 
Lo-quat would be, to 
like ys ad seyret it nish either be grown as a stan 
train ar the glass—the latter would perhaps 
prove the. Seehe of ae two. t sand hic 
Light y loam, h is 
naturally rich, suits t st Honea plants may, 
I believe, be purchased o urserymen ; but 
they should be re: afted on 
rejecte ed if if they ha have not et 
Méspil or some other nearly 
one difficult to manage ;. being of arobust, healthy habit, 
English horticulturists 
uit-tree asmall house upon 
trial, ae good Ereneryes, © tay become more generally 
kno and I doubt not but : will be more extensively 
pi arta Observa re Presco . 
TRELLIS FOR CLIMBING-PLANTS. 
ON THE CULTIVATION OF THE H¥ACINTH. 
[Directions furnished by Mr. Theodore Storm, of Haarlem, to an 
English gentleman ee 
( 
Taxine Buss bss hould be taken up as 
soon as the leaves ren lost their sbdare and begin to 
elevated, a 
wither. If the garden is muc nd free from 
moist hey may be left in the gro fein until the 
leaves quite crisp. custom. with the flo- 
ee by seeds or layers; but if so e bulbs, they make the beds even; it after 
raved; they must be afterwards grafted. The ey may be eating off the leaves (not too mae they place 
planted wd eight feet apart in the house ; but that they j ch other, in. a 
they become too crowded, every alternate plant ses be be th ah aspect, and cover caper with aie earth to the 
a5 should recommend be planted on | thickness of one inch. In situation they e ros 
small hillocks of earth, corresponding with the size of | about three weeks, the mould being removed from 
the plants; which as they advance in grow m | t ed, if it should be blown about oe ‘the 
time to time, have | fresh earth added to their | aca do 
the bord 
out. Care must be eee whilst the 
ite 
the plants. The 
in yma be conan at the command 
They ma: into bloom in fe atmo, or ce 
the cool in winter or by keepin 
psi wnt. spring. 
ele 
period they take up the 
, clean them, re! ‘ada offsets, and place them 
upon their Propet sh feta 
This plan is of great sak vice, and highly favourable to 
their Sraporation ; ; it renders them dry and co mpact, and 
: it likewise pre- 
contrary, those o 
ortunate must wait till the leaves ecaioy lose their 
verdure. 
=? full of sap; which ee? the réason ee nag from 2 ge want 
of due evaporation, it easily putrifies, a misfortune whi 
must be guarded we frites: as much as possible. 
the ‘abound with sap, pick out eight or ten 
aisioiepeasmeds ‘are takén _ They will then, per- 
but 
1h, fat 
a 
mperature du ring th e growing 
a as 4 that which isgiven to the 
Me, a 3 
hel jut aft 
ch w é 
When the a = baa oy more air should be iene on 
the. house. n the sashes might be perei. re- 
moved. for a ss sie, so 
frost. Though a separate house is highly sccomgpets to moms 
tivate no means follows that it w 
not grow and 806 elsewhere. If it snicbeae sci moda ted 
with the back wall of a Pine or Pina stove, - -. border 
of two or three tet th to grow in, it succeed 
is far from being # tense 
— 
h oniv 
g as there is no danger of 
tmey wel Be omy 
that they wil. be 
condensed either 
place 
tree, or | taken up phere: to be 
ee 
For this reaso 
y | line 
ient | f 
er they have lain On | he 
pres «sameness 
fourth. rte dino wo opt in that tiene, The vapour | P 
or in the | drawers in | 
the bulbs’ in after they are 
reason green: | 
houses which face the south are peeks to any other 
lac all sides, in order 
su 
happens to those made of w 
In r. r, the sap of the bulbs begins 
and it thee cee necessary to pay particular 
which the uly and 
August, if proper care has not been taken to keep them in 
dry and airy rooms remark will appear to many 
people absurd, but expe erience has taught me the truth of 
; and the s I haves ed from want due care 
s ave confir t. Amateurs, to prevent 
al : 
n the. dr 
without exceptio 
renew previously to replan 
It is a far better plan to place 
nee basi separately on shelves, and in order to distin- 
uish ifferent sorts, ve ee small marked slips of 
fend m4 m, them into a dee} 
awer, whose depth pietekta the air from havi pas- 
ge amongst them. The bulb should also be placed on 
its side for the first three or four weeks, to facilitate the 
evap n: sea n its base, t re accu- 
mulates between the old roots, and is then difficult to get 
rid of ; or if allowed to remain, it causes their destruction 
from want of evapor rati ion. 
hiuihe + Wall 33s FH) OR 
months of August or Seiteeabe?: because at that ae or 
have undergone the proper evaporation, and c 
endure mgt carriage. 
If the rules in this small treatise, which is only 
int out those things that are indispentably 
successful a aa of the Hyacinth, 
wed and 
intended to poi 
may fl atter himself - 
he” ae rseyeres, that he. will brin is id Hyacin 
great perfection cr done in Ho ance he exp vee 
will, without doubt, cost ‘him so ulbs at first 
Hyacinth is still a difficult flow 
arises in somé measure from the 
during that time well 
before planting, with some old co we danke especially if the 
wn is light or sandy, as Hyacinths are very fond of that 
othe gat rules will ae ‘foreign amateurs some 
idea of the points in whic ey may improve their 
method of eaten: Many soils may be found in Eng- 
land which, with ‘a few additions, will answer eatin 
AMATEUR’S byobesiet be ae ALYVI. 
er Greenhouse Plants are some- 
5 
a 
is the best and cleanest 
medy, since it enters in tt é crevices, and does not 
s of procuring & a supply 
res it, sn ought now to save 
In sw 
raking them up, they must not be mixed with stones and 
as is commonly don, but should be cleared away 
by themselvés, and laid u ome ‘corner out of the w. a 
until they wie or use 
will recollect that I B pire out to him, 
eason in sprin. yt shea 
sitet 
Se stad 
iia i a tie: 
iy 
Bait 
= 
