N».1 



THE GARDENERS* CHRONICLE. 



^■Shw imporwat article in C 



*^SToently found elsewhere as they deserve to be, 



ffrf^-^^^ssi; SHiof an] 



£l! fa Coleworts, ought by this time to be coming 

 l^t unless the bed is kept const 



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^1* ^.- a shady spot should be selected. The 

 *£3*>old te wel1 watered a,ter beiQ g du S' aud the 



*™TIf» Uiinly when the groun 1 is moi>t ; i. po-^iMe, 

 ^ahJit be otherwise until the plants are sufficiently 

 "gj^sd which has been cropped with early Potatoes 



-oil to 1)3 in ■n.vi heart ; in i'act, 

 «i ibandant supply of manure is : 

 ClW ld be well .dug m ; and : !:.-■ .idva-ua.;..- r ,<>^-!f... , 



>:UTj! 



ired for table, p 



then pre IdberaTj 



as soon as I see the fruit changing colour. By 



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,d some as fine fruit as I have ever seen. John 



niss, Bentham Hill, Tunbrxdge Wells. 



for years, aud is now G or 7 fa 

 e partial shade of some Larch tr 



■ardy shrubs, for near it in the 



Society, including some bulbous plants, &c, among 

 them, the old, but shy flowering Iris susiana. My 

 Banksian. Roses were also thought worthy of a prize ; 

 but alas ! the plants have suffered much tromthe spring 

 frosts, aud the blighting green fly, v> hi h is a >iuu \ m 



tting rid of these 





perpetual, Geant « 





■ Pourpre de Tyre 



I do, but I prefer the present tin 

 this year, should be selected. The plant produced 



«*> the pots in which they are to remain ; I use 6-k 



- i 

 rnDK^ ng - 8t0ne L t0 , peg8 ' aSthe former P revent 



pltttawSS V shad * P lace > aQd as 80on as the 

 »»wT^ ar th ? SUQ without flagging, I place them 



^Kit* beatiu ? ™ the sides of the pots. I 

 *'* ^ C^weedJ t a nV Vant ne f rr- ter ' an ioter k a eP 

 ^ e Pots 1] ^ e ° 10v e them to temporary pits, arid p!ua-e 

 80 « P tofS ay be madrby n drivin e g'some P sUk« down 



info'd baCk *° d ISbchefatVont ^o^TlaW 

 S»°!JS K ma .y be Miled 3 , 8 and SatteVbSed round 

 ^^ «rJt °v an >' des «iption. Rafters should be 



S ^ of It**™™' w * ch »«* be , made in 



1** forcin 6 ; n be Dearer the P lattt8 «™ t0 the lf i 

 %"* »wS ff qUarters ^e more easily will the fi 

 fc^tiot J . rthi8r , ea8On ' J P roflT pi:Ht ° 



? k ee them S wo«h u8e of r f ?" 



' ' 0Ue ™y construct a pit suited to th* 





Messrs. Veitch from Patagonia and Chiloe, 



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if decaying. They really appear as if t 

 disease to the Potato ; others, in the sa 

 the same bed, are healthy and doing « 



: 



young Peach-trees are each producing from 4 to 6 dozen 

 fruit. The garden, though only made about two years 

 and four months, is well cropped. The young Gooseberry 



r ranges of glass stand 



ie whole garden. The Pine-apples are strong, 



. 



of Growth of Trees.— It may not be un'mter- 



r . [It is not hardy 

 AgSnstTinth w3 



folium, I conclude, would succeed equally w< 



quTltky^oT WalEers being raised for filling thi 

 flower beds, when the Geranium?, Verbenas, and Pe 

 tunias, &c, are exhausted and injured by frost. A 

 geometric flower garden under my drawing-roon 



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plants* of German Wallflowers, which answered ad 



. v 

 : 



a and parallelograms. For the 



'- 



Ch™?nktT*™ lis ^re tC 1° had supposed, 

 door, and of which I was ignorant till I was s 



lanci- 1 Tacsonia mol 



blossoms constantly, Dut nas aui, jo, nu.vv.-. .- ™~ 

 iris spinosa stood at the toot ot a 

 wall, flowering most freely for many years, when it was 

 destroyed bv accident. F. H. S. 



bap some of your correspondent 

 who have had experience in cultivating Cape bulbs, wul 



respondent ; auu auj *-» . — • —-• — 

 t will be highly acceptable. K. 11.. & 

 SSS^IS the^ Kerry, 

 I some of the remote parts adjoining the county 

 •k ; it was done for the purpose of giving them to 



id the Potato has rallied. If, as you 



3 as Hitherto all 1 



leaf or twig (though I t 

 W. t Tamworth, July 9. 



:.; we had heav 2 



