а шерын. ы аы ы ера TP Un PUR esi tidie poi 
5—1854.] 
THE GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE. 
69 
viz., 
ends affect that form of scepticism, which may be р. expected. While agriculture and horticulture have en ;" re he roposes to plant the angles 's of 
attractive to enet but uninformed studen adyanced with —— cà SER and the altars of Flora, ws for shelter — am, aca effect. if the sug- 
8. The cases are com ratively rare in vaia и e соп- | Pomona, and Cer not been wanting for offerings | gestion of wood upon the poorest 
tents of an individual el are organised into a multitude | or zenlous priests, ae мален of Sylvanus is agenigr eh лоем рт ed into effect, there would, 
.of. new om without any distin or defini tem vision, | the incense not him, and rut thless e his | I thin k, be less үзү: апа ia principle of open breadth, 
which on the rupture of the parent cell become a multi- | ministers ару: Mi plai the а contrasted with s would improve the general 
Las of new individuals, рг all the ныс жык and mixed plantations (as would be testifie appearance of a. distr 
ofthe parent. Then r of such instances is daily | journey in any direction) is of the most voi ue ii Having thus as brich g glanced at m S d vod 
decreasing under more "рб Т элле The struc- | kind, partly from vt: want of information on ынаа upon the increasing and of large 
ture, for instance, of Protococcus d snow of proprietors, but mainly from de gom know- | population, daily i ing, i or me p offi 
of the Aretic agers, wh аз п ite lege c га on the part o of. those who ip. for t hem; гаге | а few remarks upon the different modes of managing 
example, is now ascertained to be far more complicated, | i f 8 мео ап plantations, pointing ont some of the 
though, in some cases, sueh а mode of reproduction sci egalat the petens: of the vegetable fabric. t popular errors, e means of timely 
seems to ob here is, however, à priori, grea We live in days w n statis as are eoe fas е nable, ptoreabion, rather — а огт for мад is T 
probability of the existence of such organisms, from the irremediable. arly neglect. Henry . Bailey. 
he 
roduction of soi without cara in uà 
asci of qure and ma A er fungals* А n 
approach to takes place qa anis erui of Hy yin. 
dictyon, in which the individual dp pen without 
division in the m ts (protoplasm) of the 
. parent се A become new plants merely by apposition 
and extension. M.J. B 
BARBAROSSA GRAPES. 
THE ens is from the “ Ampelographie Univer- 
selle,” by Coun — 
c» йу or Tribe—BARBAROUX. 
(Ba. unio of the Italians.) 
Uva Barbarossa (Piedmont.) 
Nice, according to Dr. Fodéré.) 
(Vineyards of Liguria.) 
arbaroux Provence, 
This Vine, if not the most remarkable, is, at least, 
one of the most esteemed in the South of France, | г 
where it is extensively ним, as it is — «x 
Italy. Its fruit is valuabl a table Gra Ape; on ace 
„f its good flavour, gia colour, and long keeping ; vm 
Вила 
itisalso an excellent wine Grape. Тһе author of the | those fr h:our largest supplies of bet have 
* Cours Complet I 0 uth been dra e now becoming denuded 
France, thus expresses the value of the Grape for wine | and, wi e present ratio of emigration, each new 
making :—^ The Barbaroux gives а ligh t wine, brisk, | country will, in a few years, eme iyw ere 
and of good Prom. i the Vine is also very productive." | the portentous events which seem to be * looming in the 
їп the * Pomo a Italiana," the merits of this Vine are | future," it appears to me tha t this is a fit juneture to establish the 
iven i still hi х — [t yields a wine a endeavour to arouse the gentle: итне = me country to a 
ралар еар, andi bx even spirituous the sense of t stly improvable of woodlan 
which it is ma ut in order that it| property und bd management, "Th е жаргон 
may mias "all coh ecd scs it is necessary that t > agriculture, ania mne fied in. model farms, má of 
саре: well ripened.” The au —“ e yea ned the. quantity of hedge-row 
the king of table Grapes ; in it is combined all that is саке; with; а injured 
ipe most esteemed те: for this pur- 
with Barbarossa 
rA 
n be compared 
жуы the Та regina and Ње Santo redigo of the 
"uscans, nor the Paradisa gna, nor the ipia 
and the Galella of ps Italians, nor.the. Verdepola 
Genoese, nor : е езса ої Ше Loue M nor the 
no of the арш 
to- ou 
ermentino e 
Chasselas (Royal Muscdine) it is dits 
Touraine, to the Bar which doe in 
Е dlimate that sugary inu which башы à ihe 
asse 
The leaves й the true Barbarossa аге larger than 
rouge, to which'the name of Barbaroux 
the south ; they are also woolly 
hilst those of the Са ме bore у: some hai 
tke ribs. The bunches of the B 
y a long and Rak sul the грр 
suspended b 
Foi dus becoming alm round at their 
Although ей Paine an Italian writer on the 
Vine, said— colore fulgentibus," yet 
eda colour of e Barba not at all brilliant, 
rossa is 
for the эа. of the berry is covered with a bloom which | ү. 
Agriculture,” places, | Y 
arocain asa o M to the Barba- 
black oblong berries. Een 
Суза e above it is evident Pea the Grape 
ig not the Black 
the latter is 
other, eh жт description, is MEA 
00р5 AND PLANTATIONS. эрч I. 
on Trafe a nd the large dunghill Peziza (P. vesicu- 
. The formation of the 
* The com 
Usa) are ү subjects of examin 
; y. be easily 
cytoblasts in the 
— in | 
b 
i unquesionatl а black Grape, whereas the 
wanting to 
e Ift 
nd Eng 
| тут and still annihilating. 
; 9r | to think of these 
e 
sustained by the gentlemen of Englan 
districts by mis m iw the following heads : 
—]nadaptation of ee oil and si — petes 
жеее ыды injury fro of and rabbi 
eglect of pruning, ШЫ na ex д» thinning, a and 
total neglect (a heavy item) ; certain it is - t by re 
ong courses of neglect, the value of woo 
mnes з» gen 
annual o most unfortunately 
а үени э y жеген ма n this ќоріс, if we except 
the valuable compilations of Loudon, in the ** Arboretum 
pose 
and practi , of Arniston, а 
first-rate authority on such mois his ; book s mld be 
nded prop 
his adviee were to be follow 
As population inereases and civilisation pr 
all eountries become cleared of their woods, an me of 
o 
of the farmer, affo. 
purposes and fuel—frequently saving tim 
value, Un T tedly эт эзле ЕЧ of large trees from 
hedge-rows i t to the fence, and also 
the crop, which is mu dh "deieiiorited by the shade, the 
drip, and the all-absorbing masses of foot which are 
emitted from the Ash, Elm, Beech, &e. Whenever а 
ppo м + a sen nsible one or other wise, becomes а 
ashion too frequently carried to excess. It is 
perhaps questionable if this has not бесот оре of 
"i plantations, poe they may give shelter and pro- 
duce ornamental eff: A being prejudicial. 
I would the more у” ention to this ырен 
generally by the sing 
n 
r 
ry | 
р Коса beeause upon all. estates there is some tract of 
r land, be it exposed, bleak, hungry,o pr pris 
if planted » with ае trees, after bein g intersected b 
open drains, might be made to supply the place of the 
rove the fields, and at the same 
$ 
and conduce 
e. Let, then, itae Ё proprietor 3 remem- 
hic 4 аа erity to plant, 
tage. 
efieiat alter." 
That acute ому 
velyn, writi 
ear 1670, says, * nerease 
z shipping alone, the ET E of glass works, i iron 
furnacės, and the like, from which the *impolitiek 
diminution of our timber tree proceeded, but te 
ate krdi of tillage, caused throu 
ad еа, tpe 
be rei 
and eet man, John 
respect) we 
ла to ect up, demolish, peg 
woods 
many goodly and forests, whic 
кай ent ancestors left standing for the ornamen 
their s devastation is now 
Ша (пә repair 0 
glorious and indir vcl bul- 
80 
defect, on the most 
nation will in a short time be t tally 
warks. of үч 
p cause ur ео s alarm, how much 
is there have 
to уг; baene- two centuries em 
унае Че timber are almos 
Surely it behoves us 
Although ege а аге gainers by the i in- 
Eure s f ter cereal s where their hed 
Ow imber p^ f eut d бөгө в in such cases 
leak barre сеч л boit these 
harmonise with our 
notions ма of English home 
pieturesque 
илт Ө It is, however, A wed; P^ Ithink, to make 
" In| promise енвд иба 
ХГС 
пешеп think it not кія a trifling | ТӨ rea € 
a discourse on forest trees," in the | 80 
s 
re 
« ‘Chirk Castle Black Stone ?” 
0.M.H.S., Nuneham, Ozford. 
CYPRIPEDIUM INSIGNE AND VENUSTUM, 
ation for growing plants. 
I pee und, c» to sueceed best has been ree e parts 
€: ne part good turfy loam roken up 
pots, eovering them w 
Propaga ере is effected by division, { i. e. by parting the 
plant into 
Pot in the. first instance in 5-inch Seg and e 
.| the plan 
, 
be k a 
may ri nde 70? or even 80? with advantage. 
Shade in seht 
йыга ы and m 
ts 
time, after which they тау be re some warm 
pa enhouse. Give ay be found 
necessary until the approach of winter, when it should 
beg ll thheld, in order to induce а o 
Soon after they have begun to again, will 
begin to make their appearance. The plants may then be 
oved t if the 
atmosphere is congenia oisture, 
they: will bloom in perfection over а eei of at least 
Bos "rs 8. 
UM. eige просім be wanted, the plants after 
Fach arci repotted mio, pa Reisen the 
same бера -Place them 
ina (er ioa e сач secure а moderately 
high atmospheric te n bright weather, 
ar ga syringe daily to secure 
, and 
eq * When wth is azain eom- 
C. ve 
iusigne are, as I have said, very hardy, and will s 
and bloom freely in a common greenhouse. Alpha. 
Home i Corrésbondenbe 
.—We think it д e that 
d 
consult 
'|gardener would not get ү уте 
of "mn of Broccoli, 14 of Beet, 34 o of Cabbage, 12. ze, 12 of 
h | Carrots, 15 of Celery, 38 of Lettuce, 7 of Parsley, 
кед, of Tarnip | и Even the *: de&eripliou" "will йан. help 
a selection urnips, for instance; who 
e diffe 
Jeli, D and “ Robertso 
uutry to be н, with such à new name 
Why, the Black Tas 
ues years ago. W. Drummond and 
Sen, Stir 
y osten v f Plant Houses.— Permi explain 
somewhat further de е principle of - gine s р in 
my plant-house, a short accoun ic 
р. eut our last. Paper. 1 find imm some who io 
Treatise on Warming and Venti- 
at pp. T d 163; and also in 
СЕЕ is fully explained. Mr. 
ces the draught 
In 
es s een 
ina à common chimney, CNW in the we of lamps, will 
our 
М the same tme thai it 
