| 
| 
JUNE 4, 1864.] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
533 
nsi ington, 
the Royal 
eounty co 
Bilans of dried Scr 
were laid on "the |e 
ou ; fros 
cause | above stated, had prev vailed up to June 
of the Botanical Society 
of Edinburgh, : 
n Mar ed 10. Let us h 
L] 
+} 
table” 
eeting O 
resolution g given in the May Number o xy 
ings of the Royal Horticultural Society Der iv., "PP: 
Wa), has reached Edinburgh by this tim 
there as abundant atin T. lp Ba ar "be 
"Thus i in Babington’s Manual "Sov of Athol, 
94 
ioo wo ead nearly if "not quite extirpated 
Edinburgh Nurse 
on the moun ntain 
becoming e sie: 
These perra iin " that the 
tons, , Berkele ey, Bentham m, and our , Manchest ster 3 
by 
” and i 5 inpren s Hanäbvok 
buc ch 
violent ever ae ‘tha nad a 
iners to ah arrival ziddled diei "ge of all 
ees and plants, f it n battered bv 
from a gun. The 
Mr. Radclyffe in several of his articles at the - me. 
My kind rev. friend felt disappointment. Who 
a true Briton, he did 
some Roses her e b 
evening while 
not des ond. 
^ he to me 
"looking over the Shed: ind 
evidently arising ify f from the 
Black 
w days 
uds of lA 
shot 
Ba ja i ing made alluded to E 
sapp ould 
help feeling it under similar circumstances ? But, Tike 
“We shall "hare 
aid ne 
know for certain that in the v eel = last year 
some o of the fin est e pro oduced | 
a 
xr dri ad i 
foto mode of ornamentation. Fountains, cascades, 
basins are also most valuable ce 
ere 
that ght 
upon rig allocation of ese 
artificial and often beantifal aa effective adorn iments, 
+ 
which they expressed. 
on an and | Cambridge ods ‘alent the. re baron ew 
ürded b im Bebington. Could 
han M salama prev the authorities of their 
Universities, and on the Couneil of the Royal Horticul- 
tural Society, to unite in proposing . examinations and 
f vigour and ‘good managemen 
there were probably — 600 Peaches on pe o Vines |S Society" s Gardens at Chis wick and Sou out 
I me Ho all so round, firm, an 
ight beautiful" to look at. 1 havi 
, had suffered from the hail, nés gt showed 
of advance. Accordingly we have pu ublie gardens— 
Kew, Regents Park, and the renowned Arr ees 
h Kensington. 
ble, tasteful. 
hal Eek 
ve 
pgrang of "Mr. Radclyffe — that the fi 
sa 14 
a dts 1l 
turne * out to be wir one d that T s desired. 
which shall e 
pitiou! o x he "dbitets of Q« rarest leen | 
Roydo 
Om, Orehids. m have read Mr. Bateman’s €: 
and a m bound to say th at I w 
here were pd Strawb E beds; 
full "fruit at the time a 
Laer ption 
hese were in 
isit— T ought to say 
and Kensir singe 1 Gar 
actual institutions "y sore pe 
afforded to the public by suc ve 
jo ine pared yn 
mbellishmen: nts, with 
o 
Rivers 
Eliza, 
a 
B. 60°, is rather warm than cool? B, F, 
; Plants.—Can * Vide, Hull,” (see 
366), e me seeds of Viola 
It is, 
i Const E 
| Trollope e's i Victoria, and Eclipse we were IS dons, for they 
l healthful walks, we are indebted 
ie Com missioners of Woods ds and Forests. The 
Horticultural Society, "uie - Gardens at Chiswick, 
has for many years regarded as the T 
moter of ia eiue ‘tortcultare y „and thes e gar 
ervatori 
pro! 
en ries. 
reer es, and flow e certainly wel adapto as 
s wers, wer 
lous. | school of gardening, being out of A smoke of London, 
t of 
a 
year, and by w — hundreds of 
surface m 
over being calcu- 
lated for the bye et but the gidek 
ei akip ton i 
ast 
chat were seriously affected, there w 
ieff, C. 
holly unsuited for anything beyond a 
until I pay 
ants to so shen Ay the small 
, has, no doubt, a 
reel 
ould l 
Anna Alex brillant ‘of t] 
hardy of the hit pipeta, literally loaded wi ith 
bloom; his Triomphe de Ren and Solfaterre were 
the best I ever Son e new Roles on trial, of whic h 
si 
money, pis probably | r 
way. F. 
n 
Exi sent direct per railwa Roydon 
—It was Tien 
he himself ak given an acco 
f the c 
aver - e d p tem wi thin the gre 
00 circumscribed a nd 
s. cha 
nges, he 
Lo) 
both det “yr ched aud i in ig ranges, sou ‘not to the orna- 
ment o - lace; and while thes 
grac ef trees, they are the most Scis to vegák 
ffe's tion beneath their sadam. d long ranges of Yew 
D 
Flower M. arket. 
again our old friend * Hope I d 
ae mera cme 
I must 
confess tha on this ecasion = fear that I hay 
trodden 
nne er as to exclude al 
of 
myself, I tender sincerely. my thanks ^ this à 
Engl ish 
baiso over an elaborate garden Possibly this innovation 
ammo that 
We begin to “know how small a per- centage ny the 
nen “novelties ml sent out are worth having 
[Hear! hear!]; there is room then for something to be 
done in ‘this d, way. Ti ke Mr. Ra adcly ffe, I do not think 
the geometric 
beds, which, however brilliant in rch flowers, and in 
various coloured and glittering 
condemned by lovers of hor 
English garden. | TheR oyal Botanic Garden of Regents 
ong our fri riend Paul, aa ‘he on as active as h 
iul possi Die 
e OS 
not distant when our gardens will be 
its varied onn ite men t glass and botanical col- 
men in the trade that this subject was 
and of course with English names. I do not think that | 
I n rre ae I i or a strong rir ing of desire 
mon "t nglish names to English e 
discu 
cd when the — were being laid out, bat: the 
not then itself ee I must, 
opere he h and want of 
t e 
Of Balie that Paul has this time: had to ado 
Bailey brief—*No case, abuse p 
aster Pry, will you kindly, say fried isit ‘that every 
all has its wandering ied t 
Mr. -— = whom -—- muc 
Riv 
wT OLY 
in the old English style, so that for a small inclosure 
it realises the object of its institution. The botanical 
| collec i Dea nder the present manager, Mr. Robinson, 
1s 1, carefully attend 
dal Iam n Mion g 
Me: mi 
Wood, and ot 
Mr. d ers i 
| ready | to pay 80 opi a tribute of Spect t to the —— 
minstrel wi Mh en) —how is i 
Pd may yet be see eir servants to the 
aforesai is i 
d cart for a litt tle em 
Wh 
Society the oppor 
ie apply the public there, and three 
id th 
will 
enienced, and the Hor 
Imi uu! 
— ^ bang vegetables or fish " the|a Ros 
T | Rose 
plished ; the ps “at be commercially bene- Rad 
e as an nior. of exe exertions as a 
rawn gemere ih interlaced 
tears and originator of the Rose vm but this 
was a Fre nch product ion, and, [ 
has not t wish: di but 
does not ea at ar on Mr. Stan dish. 
suggestion most bec 
T. | (the new pe 
isa potion 
good taste 
introduction of 
Regent’ Park 
science of bardonan and doi "Bat iti 
wheth » d t tby 
lan e gari ie. The freque 
Poplar ^ in many en fases, in 
wall und 
Palace, a 
etch ingley ey. 
e: public will 
Societ, an addition to their 
of his 
eye-witness may most 
e eira recollection of the "pleasure I 
visit to my’worthy 
- npon 
yffe. 
and |1 
own trees, i dem P teothfel t that oo er ^ 
The Want ter.—At ray 
invited to report on the at of the late winter 
Japanese and other my garden 
is 400 feet above the jaia, and fully oe se 
to and N.E, a thermometer niet 
Bii Osennii are 
m 
h , the Elm, 
t are there chiefiy erir bomine they 
E. as 
ow itin a degree o mentioned 
s tated 
e soil is quite dry, and at no 
retentive of wet. Lonicera au e iier im un- 
ie ‘summer of last year, 1 pray being. per- 
d, but is planted on the ice a of the house, 
which i ds the most sheltered side ; 
The 
of Rushton has be me almost a * Perse 
m the fre 
cly du 
dnd no edis The 
M 
Per tie pach months have elapsed since. 
— 
ent sontzi, 
favourably mcm 
ial en ‘of send 
rw house er 
ehold 
bic 
other Si was pie 
out fi rom t men nce. 
e day 
. in the "editorial erate ‘at ae T 
are wide pré eading, and gay in their aspect ; whereas, 
rs, gem pad spire-like columnar form, are least 
ven any architectural structure 
associated. Our most improved 
ng that place of Are s, 
this 
tance 
of pro 
5 Sing treo € the a Ei knowledge i in 
v= marno t icted, 
F: Pr 
Of Conifers, Cupressus 
iaaii piste v -— vas the Ri ^ io tiat en viia 
Lobbii, T. gigantea, mee 
; at the bottom, on 
ON. o ian in rain 
id fadam Ñ 
sis, Juniperus r^ Bedfordian: 
| ciiin antea, now iren to 11 feet -— V wie not in the 
least affected by the low tem The other 
y | Conifers reported after the severe e of 1860—1 are 
all -À tege H. Kent, PPM. 
Style o, Gardens. —In t e current century 
such re Berg perse- 
one who visits the 
ith feelings of Er 
Lr 
the rest ye vender vast dag. New trees, new 
flowers, 
production, propagation, and eren have en- 
riched the archives of horticulture, but th taste for 
Wellingtonin k4 
new esculents, new and improved LM of | Newto 
struction of the public, such paces 
be with rcd since 
cti will spread thi 
evidences of ed taste will stri 
amateurs, whose tendencies are ie o 
p Easti ge Adieu Hyde Par 
Royal Horticultural Society's South ngton.—I 
etd it was the * “Male Fehon aded to » set corre- 
among 
Joseph 
instances 
spondent ‘Paul Pry,” who conceived the “dodge” practised 
