2 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND A6 
89 
RICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
[SEPTEMBER 17, 1864, 4 
triangular apertures under the able at each e 
nd. 
apparent is this ingress of cool ax. — sunny iy d among t 
the s8 
| aut in pots m 
Pyramids are n 
till their heads become large, | 
beds — —filling the intersections. The kno 
onsisted of flower ym divided by m wally , 
| with. Thrift and other low. 
out; the sap 
ay yb place them 
that the centre of hou ys agreeable, eligible for planting 
mo the temperature may Md "30" to 95° the 
MY 
be the ka, so that 
vourite width for ho E nig because of | 
y 
will go to 
| unfraitfal and weakly; but cultivated 
young shoots Level a e (n for 
beautiful of all rf es; a 
fruit tree more rn ve d aed 
these houses a are 5 feet high at nd 
—is 24 feet; 
bat from elos 
valthy 
eet to the ridge. ruth i 
extent to which pe Oo rod Alte 
have, = my trees, grown slowly but healthily, an 
can now see no act why a Pea ch tree cannot ate luxuriance of all my stone-fruited 
grown in an orchard house, so as to bear a bushel of howe t m for the YE edlinn 
o1, 
fine fruit. 
Here, all ou ur v variations. "I soil, fi 
s are UR 
: 
VÀ sing ; the 
l life, 
lower bran 
pyramidal Peach — full of fne fruit. 
d urface dre 
r to this ji imputo the greát 1 
pa ever soil, 
latter visa "like 
in pots and| was s 
rm the on 
now of 
well died 
€ m 
three|in ev 
reif em 
With respect to the culture of trees in pots, 
oe in by a — of orchard houses, a few words, 
ul a rience, m 
nutritious food. tö 
Juneis: 
the cwm require some í 
t H +} a 
rit 
p^ best desc ug of trees 
yp: 
ri 
r lean- p — are 
The gx rden like a Ja aiy fai 
pup my. as if abe slumberd i in Bigs 
the open skies her eyes did 
Upona a bill y be nk her 
reslı p aireari 
oe in 
he pith: ink 
e objec- On which the bower of v. abbr was built ; 
ent for forcing or acria pot: 
be disconti nuod.. „The grent tion r pete js is the difculty 
White and d Rosos for in face — e 
And for her s Marigolds spil 
of tog a 
e not fee 
rce any su "wl reg can be too 
powerful, but the best ever m di 
level, and the ^ height t from the groun 
e droppings and malt 
and then saturated wi g liquid re; 
should not be into a ridge o r then | never - na —never less than 1 
fermentation is so violent that the smell is perfectly I have E ood and careful 
u r ib et PS culture in lean-to 
| in 
pos as a sum 
ncing in May, and renewing i it thre 
6 or 8 feet wide, i in oh ord of his utmost care ; it (wou 
nd (18 inch hes) | 
Sights po n conte 
ins paco wit ith the teme, ang thence th 
walks diverged in strai, 
by similar walks paralle 
MA and gravelled e^ turfed—formed 
nes of. the des i i 
jode «ed 
four y till "the end of July 
effect. o trees seem to be gilted with reason, 
A aki 
t Ih 
Abd he failure in “aot culture 
to the nature 
of th 
owin 
- instinctlvely to come upwards ‘and fi 
compost till every Bag of it is full of Pres doing prosper 
und t 
avea strong M that | were filled up w. 
in orchard houses 
e soil; 
and bear annually large crops of fine f ru uit, and 
es ig | and curiou aee or with 
and oroliards, or Grass plots. T 
ing n answering to every feature 
ted. The for 
here, the 
a circular ridge the pot on the surface. To trees, sow some 12 or 14 years old, are more fruitful house, was pres 
every I have found thi ; this s is doubtless owing to our caleareo ous: and | Corre esponded t 9 the ground pla 
surface dressing e; but mark! this g 1 : not, t ierefore, be advis tal detail 
compost brought into immediate cont with the Iti I e loams "non. pbi w | ire ezes, mullions, and carved capitals. The Y 
roots would doubtless injure them to a great extent ; | mix poc chalk - with them; ? I think so, Thos, | geometric tracery which  surmounts so na 
it should be employed solely as a surface-dressing, | Rivers, Nurseries, Sawbridgeworth. | Elizabethan buildi very clo: rrespo! 
while trees are in full g "p rui s in pots are geometric beds ot our Elizabet ens. 
often seen in a state of semi-starvation, owing to n he gardener of the peri inati 
lack of food—their fruit small, their leaves and shoots BELUGA ETHAN. "PA a the importance of producing a rich effect of colour in 
weakly; rich surface fi ill remedy all these defects, (Cont eme di ecd bhi his garde en. His practice was | 
and make potted trees a great source of pleasure tothe! V i “of 
vie : to a taste for flowers and ornamental tnrdening during |‘as Nature does herself’ in vs wild banks, moors, 
eit MM amateurs there is still an open quest: ion | the reign of Eliz un. Am T thes y be enume- and woodlands. This necessarily ensued from the 
ap in the Hae i.e, petens them ‘the improved cosditio on of on d mida e asses; the | other - diffe seasons FEE 
For e fow w years I have kem watched security : and i int ternal peace the ki xdg and the sin a Teri ARES yeh eoloured hue, 
both. modes of culture, and it mn feel t persecuted He re see we mstobet deeper d. with a "9 
have po tt dea . In| Huguenots, who brought with them the cre a dark tawny, with a purple ir! . 
large span- -roofed hous es, 2. e, in houses 18 feet E wite os for which Holland was alre: ready, 2m Re frr flame, pocos. es rof groen betwixt 
or upwards, with a central walk and a Andends still with the pe ie h begun; 
each side, trees may be planted in the borders with | Cole, John Tradescant, and Mr. Nicholas Lete, * Drawing the deeper to a lighter stain, 
saraga i the only condition required is pe worthy merchant and. lover of all fair flowe p Bringing the lightest to the deep'st again; 
of soil—a Peach tree would grow and boar ja ee en M tM 
in the purs of a turnpike-road, than in the dé correspond in distant countries ; and some of ike to the changes which we daily 
round the dove’s neck with variet; 
pet Wl p^ out, at the ir pes 
ecially 
S Sed be , persons 
and dam ve 
from 
n 
nin 
"s wa MU rder in an pee America. Thee tuc were M Ned with 5b much mi 
shou repared, e soil on which m success that at the be; f i d 
houses are built is a stiff calcareous | lay; is 1 unu stocked with i eae With Binks 5 et Wiliams that faro 
has be nder nursery culture for ards of a|variety of flowers for all seasons than is s usually foun uld not the eir 
VIT, an and not made rich by vegan: ari in the best gardens cultivated in the fashion of the |, 
Well, aft er the houses ig juil the surface of the | present day. the PE e of colours here indicated ki- 
soil looked very solid from the trampling of the work-| The - tanical works of the period were chiefly d of al 
men; dt w not stirred or dur n any way, but some | Herbals, which, fi pictorial, ed ng 
and 18 inches deep, were ra very popular ; but this was probably rather on account Where none can say (though he it strict attends} 
Hite one WAR and there the other ends. 
olanted these some standard and half-standa rd P 
anted, ith the soil ti l uses; f k blending 
in filling it in; some five or six gallons of water w miatea dean nae m aA idi ti eet aiara ataei» adain Amagin rer w e 
give n to each tree, when the Toots Were cover ed with Several works however, on Fine as an art, were contrasts, siideri ing each tite F more i 
ihe water had soaked in; the m oe each tree | ‘ The Gardener's Lab; rinth ; dull t > 
pe. red em : 4 
en ed trodden “down, d the work con T -|the om Life, in the yearly arire to - 2 purple; yellow and flame end 
the ree is swelling, à | gardons; afterwards 
swel and spread over circle a TEER 2: 
«LA of rotten dung, merely to sor and prevent le hed cond eon 
water ould d milar ides fo ths of g 
They have no water from the end of f Septe 1 by § x e Hagh P vm Thoma Hl Willia 
others. The ow 
do, 
mber til 
early in March, when the blossom "wu are swelling, 
and then i ho 
water is PN n onc 
when a 
e 
synod inson. It wa 
plant in d Parkinson —who 
standard, with a stem about 4 fee 
antage, thei can 
ve fairly cient 
ud heva kc s ad 
1t works 
E information and 
* Garden 
an avenne, a 
y, for 
his Peach aed tall vw: Pus qm that which 
they are e à i 
` tin 1 
è proved are | Act I. 
knots, * meanders and m 
may — planted from! walks—with 
the plot of inti for the use 
orth divers DN, 
the kitch 
krderibg were 
8 a pa "et er id, is 
567, t 
ular amusement, and aan the | 
the f Flow: 
proprietor, whi prevailed | | 
ha. 
peare 
seats ords, 
Love's Labouty ia tere be rendered 
) composed nM" ’— stra: 
EE 
VEN 
This mode of d 
them is qui 
garden ere and an 
ublished | | ^ a a ARG 
epu 
m Lawson, | picturesque andi interes; 
| the sam 
John | you go to an eminence bait a mile 
geam What we De" to imi 
mecs am e Wk i 
end vd 
that gardeni d hern o e UR Yi Boge 
carpet 
| French 
instruction in | Nature than the | 
wers’” 
armon 
the | next, nd any ations 
other. planting 
scenes Winging all the flowers well into, view by 
