ТН Е GARDENERS CHRONICLE. [Mamcn 93, 
cultivation thought necessary for England* | en masse в. a beautiful. free flowering gne рене | is not constans, if pna fen, and R. ы ыроо vais 
The dry Grassy hills whieh it LAE ри are preti, d 3000 | plants, at pre een only in ; for we hà do e y m. di че, Tal may р so add that the 
to 4000 feet; the trees are small, gnarled, and very | of beautiful ings spinal iile for UM style melin and ta paN t nass agh чг The чы а 
sparingly leafy, so that the des which grows on their | | eultivation. may, ver, be urged that ares | one bec yes: мат: ог man i нъ е айу to Dr. Thom. 
limbs is fully exposed. to sun, rain, and win 'There is | ferance of P geometric EA Lon glass, is в | son. an myse "d in our studies of the indian Rora, of 
no.moss or liehen.ou the branches with ihe. Vanda i aa] but an ardening ; and indeed, in e eir tate of расме botany, and of 
roots sprawl over the rough. bark. ц mosphere is, : assinpg greenhouse plants, 1 ssity of BENE widely different views of T 9 сала 
on the whole, hanid, han pet e aigu 80 Mi ring ihe certainly don T p dor the Mdpptien. of ofi enel species o аач ts to what obtain in most sie. : 
i but re i amp heat or stagnation of the | that style, but only as an ori ea worthy of being | tiic works. J. Р. і i: 
G 
182 
d ied out. roups Б 
^ уу er i isposed, would have a very imposi pin e » t- 
зс И gps M га there is much sunshine, жы both | dis „would have a very ^ posing арреа f i trees | two or three young шеп in о this Кат... 2 
and; und. 
ummer" ^ d wh ffi erab! i for ; 
3 RUNE ёо, and above v —M i j ighbourhood | sought information on the subject from parties їп 
n country who must, i 
, | pleasant dream but а шеге drea nature of things, meet with d Lc atas here, 
йа tof Young Plantations- si an then their hopes blasted, and spend their days cn earth im 
r the first two o "pena nd toil. The anarket is over-stocked, A gentle- 
y em ted, in order to who lately advertised ee 
imates, кши, эме! аз den rm of rough lisse. Qon &c.; they may even Med and ground, info 
high as 6000 to 7000 in Sikki —Dodma be required to go over them as often as twice a year, hat he 1 1 
Cedar Wood of the Ancients. Pd late she (see depending on the nature i ` of applications.” A friend and brother g 
pp. 148-9), were two interesting articles on the Cedar h annoy. Whe g plantations are not so holding a first-rate situation 
i Le 
tit should have been unknown to 1 
.ancients, w m familiar with its sim aen than down prove very destruetive to young woods 
легате. No mention is made in t ar - » ' 
— чана generally ec mita 9 been cleared of its crop (Oak арӣ Гагеһ) b Чөө States, the average rate of wages m 
соте a tree in Syria ; to Callitris quadrivalvi vermin. It isto- be regretted that mi prerai ph - 01. а year, with boardin some cases 
which is certainly a сей in: en ary. Either of "мя an extent everywhere. Last t harv п In 
may be the-ancient Cedar, and the latter, which isas De! urhood had his erop on one "feld z completely are much ыт but а uem 
2 as the Cypress, is a very fine wood. The | А һе & alone." No par In 
of ime and its.ally, or intr macro- ticular time can specified as t when а m realised by #9 only who heit embarked in 
теру is sometimes а large a smal] 9f Oak and Larch should first be thinned, that must be | as nurserymen, florists, or market gardeners. One mat 
{һе шов favourable climate. “Tho. common dine і Lom: 
Cypress (аргу) is drequently called, in -Greece and able the trees will progress rapidly, and if 
Italy, the male С ; the horizontal is, for distine- Contrary must be expected ; generally, 
tio», ealled the Jom emale—2 popular notion uneonne nnectėd thinning is required i ine y 
with botany. Whether Juniperos s phoenicea and lycia of ‘the necessity of performing the operation w 
Porter i or not, 4 w for the former in apparent, ow ing to the trees becoming close, their | or six years 
Europe: grows rapidly nd un Шаг hiye tight branches meeting and intertwining ; and then is the 
g the horizontal Cypress. I know three | forester's busy and careful time, ..I say careful because 
early 25 years old reat caution is verres to be P aate d ; for the trees this for dade a now duced y^ a 
i due h 
pei. 
"Hartleys ‘Rough Plate Glass (see p. 165)—Mr. as the permanent crop, фе. . ага abonid | Ru 
weit ' инем gradually removed, giving the former all possible у in this country, and that he could afford to buya 
the. rough plate glass he used in“ 1850," was not pur- ее оны both among themselves and the nurses, and | piece of ground large е enough to build a rr od 
i) í d have at least 150% а 
chased of эы but of-another London house. After our | 68 y great point to-be secured, both as regards | make a garden, keep a cow, an 
fi let we have tbought it might be as well | she health of the trees. in o that.the wind ma i . He mentions, however, that 
explain this to о you, as we have also done to Mr. Rivers. not be permitted to play too roughly upon th ye | people only s America, as th 
з РМШрз ж бо., бе. Байерди Street. Without. [Mr. | seen many trees- blo inattention to regu- | Ше rarely like it, while young folks ikely "t 
Rim ые the naintention А] larity., In the blue-books are to be ples of | aeclimatised, and, e, 4yankeeisel? І 
remite е "3 -€— ih glass o of inferior Al | thinn ning in the а то forests. In some eases that opera- | make other extracts of an encouraging nature ^ 
nufacture referred to was not purchased of tion has been delayed for a period of. 20 years, an i will | letter fromiScotland ; but I hasteri to notice the cases oË. 
Phillips.] ; the publie a aias it in others until the trees had become | two of шу wife's brothers, who were ploughmen or farm 
^ isi 1 of Pl der. йс "This being, nearly matured ! Did the surveyors UE a great | servants in Holderness, in Yorkshire, before 
excellence, the age e of re glass, а allow meto Wir demand for fishing-rods and whip handles! It would to America. course they knew nothing 
ЕЕ KEN о the, desirability of а reform in our certainly appear во. But what-could be expected of men | gardening than other farm men, but th 
m І tbink t high tin time. Hak oie oi who.had never studied their.profession! For your | situations as gardeners on their arrival in Ай 
С 3, their trim stages and (€ n true, that ^ forest management isa | John, the eldest, crossed the Atlantic 12 or 14 year: 
théatre, to YEY t art; it. де long experience, great | He kept his first situation 2 or 3 years, then 
asc ане o. ж for м дез, рам я acquaintanee with trees their nature, and a perfect | it prim a "a “ Enfield, Hartf ^ 
ef the i йт диме , with ilii рү енка еар all that bes: the ее of m of ^ il рес un e us. г 500 
specimens, is an but 
beragam Ай eye of taste, how perfeet soe ves dedi ri нысын anthopogon.— It may interest some of Mrs and went to the town of Urbana, in 
| pants may be аз specimens of god enitivation. Why ihe sbove namo rs to know that the plant which has borne of Ohio ; there he iH cote 
— -more to a natura] style кунан "YS ép tle to be con ge es peculiarly an Indian mountain | to Ainexies In 
: "s aecount тойы асі ^ | plant has, I believe, never. hitherto реа, етта to 
—* Th proves to be the Osmothamnus. eniin Hc „of vh eria 
: егу мыйы үкү: This, under ie name of А as di 
over little hills, covered 100 years ago, and described and [onus gs ear,and went to the state of 
ү һе (ойыр ы ыда, Ун * Flora Sibirica.” Subseq жаы ermination of his twelvemontbs engag 
urs of the | Azalea P 2n, in his" Flora Reti" › by Pallas, as his situation, in order to go to Ilinois; 
i à lappon eii R ан published 1784; considerable difficulty i in gurne m away, wi 
— the blooming j rgh. Academy," as Azalea fragrans oe е pd 
-groves of Italy." | with а. T Aie А , also | 1 he wrote D m н Ра е" 
Бажані N at тт fiin dd, pilars o of pcs TUE й а figure | he second Aherivaapecies, О. pallidus, | where he is now working on a farm. His | 
geme 
&pntittitso. 
Новтісоіловаг, March 21.—Dr. Henderson со, 
hair, Sir J. Davis, Bart., T. F Baily, Eeg 
Mp qao 1 Esa. and 
„рева; чей нч. load to E he ‹ i 
From mmu 27 and а comminsion, | Himalayan ones. Най I ри etm о пране 
\ from 
o> — 
