THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



^^iSd^r^B- ns - to i 3 s°/.' per ,. dozen ' 



■pDWARDDENY*:. 







^,'ILLIAM MAY, F.HS., begs to inform the 





FSS^E L ^BIUD E PERSIAN having 

 Fling's Kew Hybrid Persian, per packet-2,. 6i. 



W^"aM*X PRICED 



A Da? 1 ** 8 ^ctiol^nd 1 A - BLE SEEDS |. 





; ] 







SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 1849. 





;; • _ : 



) make Rockwork ; I am so anxious to have rocl 

 Iants, and a rockery, and all that — Ferns and Mosses 

 i:.l Alpine*." » Indeed, Madam, nothing is easier 

 rovide 100 men, 50 horses, crabs, triangles, blocks 

 nd stout ropes, go to the nearest moor, pick ou 



guide, and De: .' 'But, Mr. 



Editor, you mistake me. I am not tun 



the land ; I only want what my neig 

 | operly done. I do not desii 



ish to gain all 

 that is to be gained without money. Dear Mr. 

 Boabel is very good to me, but he cannot bear 

 expense in his garden : and besides it would not be 

 proper in him (though to be sure he might do it), to 



• YilTfure. m Wh! 



Multiple used to say that tl 



pounds upon his rockwork he only Bi 



.1 to describe rockwork as an imitation 

 of Nature on a great scale, as an adaptation to 

 gardening purposes of the grandest and wildest 



—I daie say that this «.,- a \er_\ just and proper 



-U them, to starve them, to 

 bring them forward, to keep them back, to make 

 them feel that the hand of knowledge is upon them. 

 That is what I want ; pray advise me." 

 ; 



DtUtakd on the part of our 



Ae uses; she means brick- 



ckwork. Of the former we have some 



to construct a good brickwork, or (if 

 stonework, the mode of 



made the floor tnus uescriueu, carry 



the last, and a foot within it, to the her. 

 ■ 



\ ■ 

 be carried up within the second till I 



'■;i } 'tx\:::3:: 



proceeding; but the hori- 



- ■ .--. - 



- . ... 

 should point now to the south or north, now to the 

 tall, others 



■'.... 



carefully cc 





:d; - 









! surf 





















Mateiiu 



tor 

















■ -• 



" Burrs," or Ian. 



lumps to be 



!ll.< 





hnekhel.h, rnnjl 





■hi 



i'VJ.' 



u-ses/lnT"imilar 





1 ti 



l.ohk 



r outlines : the g 



■- : ". 



. 



! proceed 



sequence of which would 

 regards the Potato crop ; 



- 



the end of™ 

 case is that 

 Sussex. Th 



connected with damp or rich soil ; Mr. Hollist, of 

 found one-fourth diseased in some allot- 

 ment ground well limed in the autumn, and of a 

 richer, more loamy, and moister chara. ■:■■ 



d in A mil i and Mr. J. 

 Oliver, gardener, Combe: 



garden ground, with a wet subsoil, mm 



up, although planted in January an rj 



