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THE SARDENERS Dag Eus M 237 
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Dui plun LN in i EET sheltered place out of | 
me quarters for summer 
winter as 1 Pad dahin 
Se by the qvo where there is no con- | 
е 
énce for for orcing them, t ley may be taken ho once | that the flowers are produced on the young wood of the | and as the former crop under its late gallant deputy 
out of tbe plunging material, and placed in the warmest | i : o 
he aks, 
e sun сап lay 1 full 
with a little water in it, which should be quite used up 
before any more is added. When in bloom, ui. require | 
| not be thought of until after wering. Bu must be | so day of retribution for the Larch is at hand, and 
| at to as soon as the beauty of the ers is over, the Oak shoots will amply avenge the cause 
otherwise the pla ill soon become extre un- | murdered fathers. Indeed, I much doubt whether any 
ome extremely 
sightly. By attending to pruning, and affording the lanted this very dry season will 
н» phus of pot room, specimens of almost any size| to do battle at all, so completely have they taken 
m e obtained in the eum of a few years, and by the “sap”. out of the land with their drains. ab 
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tarving yem, the then gallant deputy surveyor 
eta in 
Keep the same plants in the same pots and never mc | it becomes inconvenient to increase the size з P =ч selected allthe good young Oaks, and filled up the places 
t 1 k 
rries, Asparagus, end 
wberri 
&c.), and always take саге to well mould them be e 
8 
there had been per 
ily Y^ | thi 
ecimen. you lately received | 
east ten years, and al 
thoug 
; 1 been perhaps а doz 
attached еы гда it every year for the last seven or 
eight es it has never been cut over for - 
ДА Sus Мец, Aud never been shaken out 
Tepotted, T, 
when the ubi been pótted threé or four years; 
and ü Е с т y forcing, they 
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in th 
to do 
pot, ыр 29 Spikes of bloom, Some plants I 
as sS. as large 
shifted into larger pots last year i bloomed very 
finely, but they are not so be nam 
PEST! а ые oret to the ri 
РЕЈ 
som 
p over deis every autumn would muc dili 
r season. 
[Mr. Cox's 
removedito a warm part o ооа. je 
t; for if à hi 
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| close moist 
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bottom heat, “їз ше og of а be 
ot freely. As. ey have got 
-Strotig to bear handling, ey should Бә potted singly i 
TM jlacing them in а warm mois x 
lished, 
ttings selected of short Jointed bits of the TER 
ripe 
| they are em e may be duivééted Sufficie ently to pe of the bad ones with Larch, the Oaks would have re- 
the 
^. | their being repotted in same sized pots, thus | covered from the shock, and the Larch might now have 
affording fresh compost, with a view to secure кайгу been taken out. ' Instead of that the ground was left to 
prm growth. right itself, and the young Oaks being deprived of the 
soil, take one-third rather strong turfy loam, one- | yearly increasing warmth the rch would have 
rd rich fib bry peat, and one-third well decayed leaf- afforded them, stood stil, and presented the very 
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et 
erop be 
re an open medium for the roots, and for the per- | Mr. Clutton found when he visited them.. Whether 
Кезш of water ад the decay of the fibre has taken | they were then past recovery is в point upon which 
lpha. I d f 
plac need not. enter; for even if the property was 
— ruined as a forest, there was abundan 
Home Correspondence. trees left, as, with the scattered masses of old Oak, 
Peach Prote Bo —Ёгош the very changeable, and | made Chopwell a most marketable estate for country 
often severely cold state of our climate, at this season | residences, Instead of во converting it, am order was 
of the year, and the consequent failure of our ur erops of | issued for a elean sweep, and in lieu of the well broken 
Peaches and other wall fruits, it becomes a serious Sky line òf a w ч ойноп, we have now a dingy, 
estion how most effectually to protect, not only the | dreary, drain-seored space, looking, for all the-world, 
early blossom of these valuable trees, but our wall|like a piece ofi iteMiag pork, This season the-work 
fruits generally ; and the great desideratum is, not only | destruction is to com er hill; and we 
this effectually, but with м little ehe and as | shall soon have the farm labourer of this very dear dig- 
little expense Sr pen trict enhanced and. de 4 Eg off 
t very desirable v eet, and | to the Ch ll bark-wood—th. really, resent 
дац му, beyond all € gf failure, I basten to make | prices, peeling an РР is is like the penurious exploit 
t known through your. columns, in va + Sind such | of skinning a flea f. e sake of its hide and tallow. 
rh often asked for, and, I hope, those more | Now tbat the еу bave ruined our scenery, the e on ly 
immediately interes ре in time to secure their те ever 
Y revent а repetition of the | I think, may fairly complain of An Ж» аду with de. 
loss and Pues rip eed 80 generally felt last year. beet this pro per ty pa рти fore мее the 
~d this very simple, yet most сасе method, I attain | Cro к AE S. T ye ley Hall, à April 10. 
mion ) пе i an account of the suc- 
vel? 
. security — Can 
нб frosts“ during the sensi ii ee" ^x plants in pure grav 1 have 
been informed that 
du 24 zm ќе e re У of the Roses of. some sorts, and 
а tz dede r 
САП obstruction ча shadow 'or shade, either on | like to know about. кил and. abest the subject gene- 
the wall. моор робигоррбейрь no эй neither | rally. А. Н. ^ mab eif 
кае the protector; 4th.| ее ceping Seeds.—The. germination of senda in a thing 
facility of shuttin, Y^ at night ptm opening 3n | which many: "m кел, in, and any A qe insure 
a dozen trees may thus be protected, their pushing into growth more speedily than usual 
ex cd in less than five minutes; 5th. | would doubtless x ceived by many with delight. I 
isk or chanee of either the blossom or fruit being | have found the бы plan of quce d or e to be of 
i injured; and last, not least, "arsi in my own Whe 80 
а kii case, 
into a forcing pit, where they |a lock may be so pla on each as to effectively |'such as Peas, Broad Beans, French uci Гк ‚1 collect 
soon come finely in bloom ; they may then be |peovem the fruit being vtl. Each protector, for a | some shieep-droppings beforehand d, and put them into a 
ве! of the to this 
al size, may be made at an average price of | vessel with water, en ough to moisten them. In 
and, as it се last for а — years, the general eost | I put my seeds, bui o of eourse into something by means 
d. a 
у soi rie | wii: thus be abo t 6d. ason for each tree; while the | of which they may be conveniently withdrawn when 
ass, | construction i is so о simple hat it may be made by any | requi Thus situated I let them remain till well 
ked aru handy gardener country mechanie. While the |soaked, when they will be in a fit state for sowing. I 
l be gr Migh during their season | ean 
is maintained while 
they will be devoured 
mas spring as it may be convenient | 
g atm 
ell in, and attend to | 
ry 
n most mide made жа. a neat appearance, they may | have found that for Beans about 36 hours are required, 
t situation, near | yet be во construeted as to prove decidedly ornamental | an or Peas about 24 hours, Steeping, however, does 
And Rd Њен from is t тутур till | to the garden, while i jn use; and they can removed | not apply to the above-mentioned seeds alone; it may 
em or 
ad vigorous as n be; and those x e have never 
tried it would be quite surprised to see the difference it 
m 
I made a trial with Freneh Beans,—a small quan tity 
was pl dem the soil, and А. the same time а small 
quantit wbere the 
Тери rem 44 hours ; Mr were then taken up and 
former the resul 
put in soil near the , and was sur- 
prising ; but at the time the former were about 8 inches 
high, the lat to the best o b 
early double that height, and their foliage testified as 
to the state of nit Y w since 
praeting ны bey 
the most se 
canvass front will = 4 inches from the insun or rait, lari y aame p. Divers, di one. [Would the 
thus preventing all chance or risk of rubbing off, or — grown just as well if you had steeped them in. 
rain Ч 
other rinjury. | trust that the above deseription will be water 
Coni Trees—ihe Deodar, Douglas Zir, Дию 
io jour gorre- 
iferous 
and man p y prineiples ; and Һа һеу may be өе Pine, &с.-1 should be much oblige 
well satisfied. as myself with the result. Æ., Surrey. po ondent “J. R, ар if P vm 
the C. finds 
Mr, and, ll Woods.— "Mr. Billing-| hat kind of soil it is that he 
ton having favoured me with à сору of his letter to Mr. han the Douglas Fir. I have seen some 
