vm THE cades CHRONICLE AND i i GAZETTE, 
[SEPTEMBER 24, 1864, 
— in these gardens, as to draw attent 
ci 
m by ns jrid: Te i : 
und, and i inse r12 inches into the soil. some specimens , of- the Indian De 
s t it 
it as 
rods standing 6 feet above | may mention that we observed large and haa bond pikes wt ‘hich a he sy y 
of We li t odar aitean of some idea of the chara ay Mi ut 
Y ing qum gig from the following Lege ars :— 
l dre se trees Me that of the Cryptomer ria japonica d of Abies Do sols 6 feet 6 inches high, eave 
to be an accidental freak; but it is also recorded by 
nt hare 
nto the 
in Prof. REIÓHENBACH (who calls the plan 
umetanoo of he — cm Lowii), aving Sedarid in the case of a 
pret m But we | f 1b 
Quince and 1 Paradiso ane on the Pear and Apple | Nordmanniana, 
nobilis, "eephadonin, , e less than 3 feet Jong, aro s slightly e urve 
th 
that trees | Menziesii, orientalis 0, e 
e ou Pe eon found : “Thuja. Thuj le. ; Reti o phere are three ai edate shoots of 
a All tho qe spikes, seven ii number, are, 
um. 
worked on n the Plu um pee are readily dwarfed by|of Thuja, Thujopsis, em M ndi Betiuosp ra, 
^E a Ty wer ishing i dn a The | h 
n inching y. DUE he f 
winter transplanting as with Pears and Plums, |the nurseries of Knaphill and Bagshot would long, and they are very „Pliant, and hang about i 
r, Rrvers’s words, ‘in two or| seem to have been riis for the finest m praes y graco coful m Wen De Sing 
ee to u VER 
three years the most Meroen fruit trees ever | of the Rhododendron, all of which rs pues 
a 
of flow 
ries from 30 to 35, the lowermost risa 
seen, for in spring f perfect nosegays of | luxuriantly in = kia irk g se sr 
hey apart, the 
fen; and in summer clusters A fruit—if | spare red | diair of the trees s to which | apai cun on td iic ailin 
jm have ally ded m ^ Evergreens, ri p they | buff marked with reddish brown bars and spots, bu 
on the landscape hr g the winter | already observed, the two lower flowers, that is 
ust "s evi bon more triking than they | the two nearest the stem, on each spike, are of a pile 
ll > 
Nc: spring frosts? As v rtical cordons, too, 
ang 
months 
s to frequency of removal, Mr. Rivers lays! were at the time of ow 
as to nehes gentlemen of Falkirk will Dy aps gen followed i L4 
ong in on they be iradrpistited other parts ind eg € are that m fresh as ever 
may 
annually till this: "t s eher is checked. Ifthey | has been a this mr in n Perthshire e, and e 
| t by the | d blunt 
i a tho te data. me the the soil b be ——À peni so) Wem ay hope that it pees now set by M vie dedo ut 
e an 
gees 
only make a growth of 6 or 8 inches, they may be | some fut à Vn may have the pleasure o 
h 
ag By 
transplanted Revially. "t soil is such that visiting Mio pases in that part ri the countr $y sought after Pis Or Mid g 
: We 
bo trees grow bs very slowly, root-pruning is to which we alluded when drawing the attention — we have Pelaio. b. is PIX figured 
antageou: removal, as they sustain | of our ege to the Pj E of hn sortias 
£ Mr. WARNER'S Orehidaceous Plants. 
ndersta 
in the new 
The 
adya! th 
less s cheok than by "the latter operatio ion. qisela b wink ed to illustra. 
popit to Pears; and this is the history w hs saltival odlety ak South Kens 
i£ ion budding and — Pears on vet — their pipi ens 
that some varieties did not grow freely on pant orb fiot imd hd 
especially Gansel’s Bergamot, Knigh 7 Mouh xi M ote Gete ad er rta 
and others. I found that the Beurré d'Amanlis T. 
formed a most perfect union with the stock, and |; of w bow: NS E WA [ow "pt diim » ingly bid 
seemed most gested for ad seen trees in charms The thousands of tourists who, at this 
Ti delivered i the Roy al Horti- appear to affect the — organs of the flow 
in the specimens ned by ROR te: ihe 
are to be 
‘í I observed,” he remarks, | The Scotch are naturally dud kot proud of|pollen masses and “the plac 
That | equally developed in both form 
—— At the last idit. à of the 
R.H.S. Flora 
itte d TrLLERY, of Miei invited attention 
=h eh, d kno - 
the HOLLYEOCK, W. 
|to 'a pro rty in 
the in nitiateð, does not appea a Wë only k 
ed amongst Meran d goneraliy, It is, “that 
des the "e 
or pra 
[eie may be had to bloom satis 
. Mr. Tir 
of the 
oh en 
stated 
1 
n| 
i yea 
periment, and had. thrifty trees ite hills and válleys, - ill return to their hom 
freu old m the bud, grafted with Gansel's pleased with the scenery thr rou gh whieh | 
1 ae But taking 
am. e 
go prolific that when three or four years old they | ¿pey 25 z 
Tore from í ozens AES. there is no country eus - world which 
|» Kov r viu E a eapable of being enriched and. improve ed. ze y the 
uoh productions of other pm eec Bootland. Pus 
d "t inter 
flowers — & fac 
ho have not convenience for vin 
of plants. These 
es c of Hollyhoeks sow ee et 
gorous flowering plants the "following September. nd f 
grow! 
| Hower admirable subjects for garden RA ‘tn 
he Que 
a 
sent to show 
ruary will 
to 
- 
yild a 
improved 7 ouble grafting. With A s eee ae 
plan is of mportance, the Paradise aint beautiful than it is now b | 
securing Shot health and fertility in foreign hardy trees and shrubs whi joh Y de -—- s js 
rdy 
een des otin: ‘and therefore we hail w 
lively satisfaction ie movement which pem A 
THe Pra or TRE e 
Scotland, with a r^ exeeptio =f mis beni gti There is & another m atter which came under 0 
behind those who live in the southern part of the | notice during our visit to these Falkirk gardens |i 
United Kingdom in appreciating the value of new | The Falkirk people are also most successf ful in 
r foreign countri Whil intrans- 
ornamental or useful hardy plants are eagerly porting them from um part ‘of the seat to 
sought for and planted in the parks and gardens of | another. Mr. SORLEY, a gardener in the to 
England, bat pm encoura shietit is itherto|is quite famous Wie his Met i 
L > wes bé 
to incur a little extra expense in the purchase of number of trees and shrubs Ties mf of Pa reat size 
ay, ae excee ingly w ell at ate 
hat i 
of these gorgeous autumnal flowers, for which 
x course, seedlings of a *'good strain, 
It was 
pape 
? as the florists 
explai 
4 
8 
E 
t al he ease in qui mati 
solid: in 2 beginning of Feb 
nih into flower. It is 
s may | ber 
Pa he seede 
ings were planted singly in small pota and ey grow. i 
E that severe or We Sitios di cau e the 
dai € rot, án n not protected by famoss 
md etn every year, a suppl 
kept with Tene trouble, It is also Parr: 
ie in kinds of ui lyhocks prod 
P 
some te d 
p Aere Aii but = t probably has arisen either from ajand in brin nging them safely hom Falkir 
want of | Je 
"matter altogether. | people ev even say that he is so nta in this 
rys of rapid communication by tele 
graph and railroad, the indifference to which we eye upon every fine — he meets with away | 
— We have not yet got to the end of the NEW 
Gen , for which, in the form of seedlings or * 
| lings, tbe last few JA have been remarkable. y 
the other day, at South Kensington, Mr. Wass 
ts to adopt T 
and such are of course very desirable „parent 
I 
Nm 
r fount 
Onl 
allude could scarely | have ode dn lasting. | And we | from home, and that he doe 
are aoe to sta 
ce already, ee flats of eos are | beli tof Mr. S 4 ply 
visible in several parts o untry. Within | this: le Feri tbe best season for iacent and 
greatest | is 
„the last few years we T. pen f| each 
S Du P > hear . deal o MA res Ue prese vilia uf. i Una In 
Fr ? 
were beeoming remarkable for their beat and | more especially in cases where the ~ dee Fro’ 
interes, owing to the nu umber and size of the | es o be 
ling 
lar arge ones. confir 
Before closing thane gem - upon the introduc- | 
During a recent tour in pr we took "ecd tios of foreign hardy tr ees and 
to pay a visit to Falkirk, and we must say that| m may we ask what p Togreté the -- expedition to Ae pir with: the: Mutens eb it 
akin formerly called, the Champion Hamburgh Muscat, which 
indeed it sor eren aspect. 
what we saw there far exceeded the expbotatialie North-west America is m ? It was stated for 
e 
e 
us, The gardens visited ASA. belonged to Mr.|heard anything of it lately. There is, surely, 
RussELL, Mr. Garr, Mr. Nretson, and to a sister | still a fertile “field in that quarter of the wor rld, 
rs of the same kind in the neigh- | for our woods and gardens. 
gardens eontained goodly-sized 
ens of most of the 
which 
new Pines and other trees | 
been Stoat within understand that Mr. ROBERT WARNER has 
at reh s hb time in flower at Broomfield, a magni- 
ficer nt plant of Tanpi Lowi, a very fine species, pre- 
senting some curious points of structure. One of the 
I cannot conclude m: 
discovery of el eak" 
equivalence of. heat a órce— 
i eiae upon th 
p of biological inde without alluding ^. 
theory of hea 
it somewhat resembles in its outw: 
We believe this, like the variety just 
originates in the north, 
INFLUENCE OF ug (Sang ON VEGETABLE — 
wonderful 
dered pi 
grow, and they are Pel | most iik : Ud ütTéheó 
: remarkable of these is the oceurrence 
beautiful effect upon the pike apparently—of two flowers totally unlike all the 
ard ae valet Th t the example ori riginally flow: ered 
E HITCH, by 
| we met A d Borneo about 1858, and was then earn 
clear even to the eer mind, but which, 
theless, it is difficult to follow in all its details 
feeling a certain bewildecinant 
refer to Dr. Carpenter’s article “ 
ie an 
Wi di 
Beano m7 wo 
ids 
novè- — 
Without 
