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dir she of am Oak which our r lab ourers entertain | skilful hands. == ing is more importan 
— derived from Druidical tradition) many weak down low and to level „Ф stool all rou 
бет lated things are left, g hich never thrive ward cut f. nish, It greatly o aaa very old 
etiolated o^ denly deprived of all their shelter. The | and high stoolings to saw the о 
о = Lo ирей - un the мече ; | them off sm: ith а sh e. 
wo nly by the use of The want of jud which we constantly 
un itself b s frequently dull and | practice of the spring cutting of hedges and underw 
geldom that the stools are own sufficiently near | eu In ye 
wa honaning higher re + те unírequently heard ы айїгшей that late cutting would 
cessive cutting, they produce weaker an shoo cee t wi in ges 
кайне ona aA et ie? | NAM ачи ет черни iea dt Челн 
soon get rotten. : ill too r the * sere and yellow leaf has fallen, our u 
late, and, о nii ча the supplies aeeumulated by the | woods, which are in a fit state for the purpose, are cut | dry for а few days un til they get over any little injuries 
action of the roots are wasted an misappropriated. down, the. more vigorous the shoots of the succeeding | they may have received in travelling, en examine 
"When after being cut down the stools start into new | year will be while, if the Арм is delerred till|the s e and give a moderate shift if 
growth, it is cus гу to leave every bud that pushes | spring, the sap wil have ascended, the buds will be ssnry, using пісе fibry with a small propor. 
into existence, it may be to become a vigorous, straight, | swelling, and the energies of the plan will have been | tion of loam carefully broken up, and well intermixed 
clean growth, but too often to be smothered and die, | ex pe to no purpose. ear, with "m of de sand ; some lumpy bits of 
аЙег having robbed, to no purpose, those which still| Юг. Lindley says, “ Theory of Hor агр Ж 17, | charcoal, to the ion of 
i that m Чч are att m the through г чарча porc tme the pots well 
ts drained, 
.This]is not an overcharged picture of the way in|earth and conveying it into the interior A a wisi or the Maranta requires a free supply of water while 
which this department of Ao economy is conducted. | where it is stored up till it is required by the young іп active wth; but stagnant about the 
ийле proceed to suggest measures for its improve- | shoots of the succeeding season." Read this, ye foresters! | roots is very injurious, spoibng the markings of 
Mark i it, ye woodmen! And remember that you cannot | foliage as well as the general health of the plant. After 
- 2 former paper I proposed the poem of the| practise late cutting with impunity. The vessels * potting, place the plants in а close warm pit or 
of underwood from that of tim and I fully Fi ry pole cut in the spring are full of sap, and there- | where they will not be exposed to bright sunshine, 
»elieve that such a step would be а чанд, one in the | fore they will be less nt for stakes or hurdles, while | water earefully at the root until they get hold of the 
proper direction. Every intelligent practical cultivator by that practice you are abstracting the food prepared | fresh soil; but dew them overhead with the syringe 
idmits the importance of a free access of light, and the | iu Nature's laboratory for the nourishment of a future | every fine afternoon. If a brisk bottom-heat can be 
i i grow commanded, this will greatly assist in promoting aetive 
in the absence of light the wood of trees does not become I believe that there is no one thing * under the sun | growth ; but fine strong specimens will soon be i 
properly constituted and solidified, А it was proved by | оп which wig Rm. cif rar prevails than there із | without it. When dull cloudy weather occurs it will 
lat. great philosopher and vegetable physiologist, the | with regard to pruning, simply because most persons robably be necessary to place the plante.in a light 
ate Thomas deca. те night, Esq., that air in motion | regard it as а remedial art nnda than a preventive one, | Father airy part of the house, in order to prevent the 
me tary уе on the growth of | lt is too often accepted as the practice of amputating foliage being injured by damp; but lam] 
«сар e: мым of timber trees from under. | large branches, which have grown with undue vigour, &ppears inclined to be figg me, they oi 
wood, the генча, would have the а-ы tage of unmiti- | or the removal of mutilated limbs by the saw ; but by be allowed to remain in 
gated light, while the stems of the former would not be good gardeners it is generally understood to be the be ‚л ,Erowing on Чоу. „ушш will of eourse 
wrapped in the gloom of wn. toppy Mg isch and | science of assisting the operations of nature in ће | bè u ssary in winter, e an occasional wipe on 
theair would penetrate among them, its gentle motion | growth of trees for specific purposes, and concentrating а fiac ча morning, to clear the foliage of dust, &e. ; €— 
freely,” ticu 1 
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“enabling their fluids to circulate jeu reely," and|their energies to some parti 1 . For this, the |100 muc water must not given to the soil. At 
ce e^ the formation of woody matter. ti gardener who would induce luxuriant and vigorous in spring as earl m , 
mitted by competent practical authority, that the wood growth, ups the nascent shoots with his finger and | gwing moderate -— 8, which are safer than large ones, 
v 
of those trees which grow on the ex d side of а | thumb, not allowing the superfluous ones to become | ЇЇ scale or insects o 
plantation or forest is of much greater density than large, diria to be removed by cutting ; he prunes, too, as 
that of those nursed in the interior, and itis of course | soon as the leaves have fallen, and wastes not the | Water. 
more durable and ЖАМБЫ ра pm c само; fact | matter slowly accumulated by the roots. Оп the gets d re t 
-staring us in the face at- it not strange t that | contrary, when he would induce a state of fruitfulness, 9e280n ог two, fine large specimens will tar 
ill persist, most doggodi y, in rin бай the light Ж Һе uses means ite ki ttain his objec 
"heaven from our woods, and guard most effectually lest | he resorts to late pruning, to pinching the summer 
a zephyr should enter ł wood, and other ingenious devices. T | 
As nd bright. sun of scientific discovery cannot too — not а, — qe rn existence“ x E gr yet 
illumine the atmosphere of traditionary ignorant | weakest are destroyed, to the infinite injury of 
ices, or r pel log um the misty xat teret f|survivors, Why, then, are principles whieh are | Where а ur c, capi rion less {һап 55° "is waiutained 
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allowed to suffer from Mili бох will be РЕ home 
they must to 
dh МК | 
ip" Ё "There ean be no doubt that the produce Mr nee 
young Apple : hich i onclusive unde эм үүт ч. y improved if 
A Early i ide; ioo of 1801, | selected айва sh ere, in garden parlance, * di r 
ung аг Apple trees, whose stems were about an | ін more s intelligible language, to be thinned, rubbing о; 95. 
in diameter, and whose he yet between Асе roots | the weakest аз soon as formed, instead of of retain ning all 3 í Lby d idi he old, p 
| first jbrauches was between 6 and 7 feet. These |that are produced to struggle toze together ү а " ET zy Nd nw, pm н yt 
| stood пај, 8 feet from each other, and, of кту pe ei ы, e е i mar Memes — Z xd P potting, Wh Pac э] ye rs шыт, iy i d io 1 
rrt of stakes and demos of hay, nót 60 tighily песевзагу to have covert for ме, Happily A for =: treated as established plants. Alpha. NK adi to 
id'as to impede the npe E А: fluid within the | country thë preservation of game is ЭРГҮҮ 71 : T 
ч, I nearly гети the and lower parts of | less extent than formerly, and gentlemen in in the нн Home S epis 
s Stems of several trees of ali b 666 to the height | day atrach more value to their waving crops of golden| A Collector in the Crimea,—Allow me to suggest 
З feet from the ground, leaving the upper ei of mg grain than to the annual massacre of hares, pheasants, | that it might be E while for some members of the 
stems aud branches in their natural state. — In the suc- | and rabbits which used to take place. Game, too, from | Horticultural Society to send a collector to the Crimea 
ceeding summer much new wood accumula eng in the the facility - purchase, is now within the reach of | and Asia Minor, especially for Acorns, Pom, uil bardy 
arts which were kept in motion by the шй; but the | tradesmen, in mon witl y things | plants. The officers in the have other things to. 
of Ne stems pes roots increased very little | whieh were жч but now аге, within reach of the million, | think of; ; and, alas! тапу are cut off не 
size. Removing the bandages from опе of these |it is less valued by the higher classes. Itis probable | there are in London, rs rt dg young men, 
бы in the foll winter, I fixed a stake in the that in the great progress of population and civilisation | such as gardeners or nursery foremen out of place, who 
0 feet distant from the tree, on the east our wild animals will ere long become extinct, or © few | would i be giad of such an errand ; the. ! would 
ke atthe height | and far between." S ould be obtained in a- 
means of a slender“ йж! about 12 feet ТЕ is essential that а — for game — be thick Government vessel. If а number, say 10 or 20, were to 
Br ein p nid at liberty to ards the bottom, but as our w: we generally r could easily detrayed, 
Tee to south, i ost| There w persons of fortune who do not wish to | man 
feised by the wind, да that of Ср pel i supply of game, so cannot 
ia following autumn, in the proportion of | do better t than follow the advice of Mr. Brown, of 
: 3 мі 
Qe we have а M proof of the advantage of a | spaces, such as Holly, 
certain апош in motion, аз pini by the ang- greatly en 
of the * most exercised." y 
ae Bones of t1 | particular e in о 
in the outside one being mixed, and left thicker Гог tbe | tunately, however, the flowers of most of our mes 
es of sh i matsine-nete, and tus the | varicgated planta are very uninteresting 5 P BOUE 
9f it t'inned and with a view only to | little importance, as the beauty 0 
'eSque effet, ^ It would certainly be better if pro- | always render - — ore useful for decorative 
$, instead: of selling their underwood standing, | Several varieties н 
Were lo-have it MUT allotted by their own ni pres among the finest of our — ew d 
"Ple, selling it by auction when "They would | free growers, with Vo rans ami — is | 
; "A. Mice) emendo оодо bj -un- | pot eo tender and liable to become disfigured by any 
