790 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[NOVEMBER 29, 1856, 
as the 20th July, ‘and the nerep 
SLULDE 
dness of the preceding summer, a small quan- } Paradise. What were sent to Mr. Warmington we Maurice Medlane, ak , Sutton Court Lodge, Chiswic) 
rag bir of blosso ER di in the Fpring. Ri bought of an Veitch. It is very opinie Saika Jobn Kir ing Hedges, Esq., Wallingford, a E 
bringing much of the bearing w ontact w many o wou! uld be worth having in England.| Mortimer G. Tho yts, Esq., Sulhamste ad Hi 
the wall, by the means above menti iT have h 0 t, dull, and cold The Kaisha Be om 
Mult is however the best, though the ugliest, of aig Ei rker, Esq., Stanlake Park, k, Ber 
0! er 
ripen, in much pe rfectio: 
continued successively to 
As the blossom buds 2 the 
is my practice to pinch o very barren ste 
which 18s not 
beari oot, under similar circums ‘ances, at the third 
or mea leaf. _ Mr. - Williams has stated that the bu d 
meres 
There aie all are worth trying except the Pom Robert Allpay, Esq., Wokefield Park Berka, 
granate, = is hopeless, even in an a a Joseph Gurney Barel ay, Esq., Knott’s a 
rchard hou: Charles Bag ot Phillimore, Esq., 6,6 t, Gy 
"slat te Walls, and “sis to prevent Damp rising up Stone | venor Sgar 
pee other Walls.—Two years ago I built 48 square of dw. aH Reynard, Esq., Sunderland Wick, n 
one wall, 2 feet thick at the bottom, rising gradually Dail, Yorkshire. 
to 9 usar 3 at to oP, with a coping 13 inches obi the nyon, Esq, Englefield House, n 
nside as faced and 
poreepdienias, teo 
atte: 
immediately | what i alled bi red.” The stone in my part 
ranch is pi a the country is hie rous, and pi ken out of 
i i ha is qanya soft and ea ary worked, it Pacome”, on ex. 
pasay his ap laie in this, as 
rate, If I were 
the e-harden 
Pai our a pee r and segs a are ee of this 
4 
of these, after being planted, mig! ht conveniently b 
trained downwards, and if plants of this hee, ba 
able. . Rev. aii J. Peach, ae Pierrepoint, Notts. 
sandst tone. be ~~ stone v. Thomas Sta nifo sige = torrs, Windermere. 
so that brick has now poes -eh the gris of stone. 9, oe ST ee ana 
yp To counteract this I hit up Mi Hiii cii 
I do not e tertain any doubt but that trait pix p notice of which I maena ja mee eners’ TREE and9, Grafton a ourt, 
obtained in “ie second year after Planting 5 and by | about a year and a cual g ie again refer to it as the Miss Caroli oy “tail aN Ia Park, Ro 
proper Atiention » soorte rten and renew the dependent | exp t roved ‘perfectly Scania, loon Miss Cts ae Bares nd, aoln HLM a Sey (it ston. 
bearing branche: trees might easily be very | b 1 the inside of the wall Mrs. Hen ee P. PC ETET ona ae i e. Haloi 
ksrele in an pede a eq state of "perfection. The | I had | aioe s coal t r poured on evenly from an iro Mrs. William W \de, Suli alh, ATS å Hon T ton, 
ulbe w Mr Wi Niams has re ked, is a much as on this as ae slaked lime as the tar would G By iam Wyl amstead House, Turnl: 
superio i this was left for a few days to harden; the next gta { 
re ae 
me 5s. for a wall 400 feet long and 20 inches — at 
the ground line. These are the re sult ts: 
1 
ag t 
> 
e rough Readi in 
p 
composed of hot grey = and finely- | . 
e Ba 
Seni Huntley, Esq., Whitley Gro: 
Alber t George Sandeman, Esq., Hyde Park Garde 
Prof. Edward Solly, 15, ee im ee 
Sit 
k 
i, Ladut M Middlesex. 
Stre 
iss Frances Margaretta Walpole, 
Mr. Robert Parker, Nurseryman, Hornsey. 
Mr. George H. Rooney Masai ge Stratford, 
Mr. John St andish, Nurseryman, Bagshot. 
Mr. oe Shilling, prvi Joanne N. Warnboro’. 
Mr, Wm. Davidson, 36, Great Russell Street, Bedford 
quare. 
a pi | erop of ra 
Fake 
pine Wila pi a Bat correspondents acquaint me | frost. On On p= outnide o of we yal the ground being here, | 
with the best method of preparing the root for pre- of si e below the tar line ; this 
serving—the root being rough ea ouamea a is sg i Aia "a ft, mortar is 
unsightly? W. Mason, Ni š also soft, and the frost has crumbled it away. I 
ian Fruits.—I feel particularly obliged our | am aware that slate in cement cuts o at- | 
i ring ries so promptly. ay | traction, but it is very expensive w wall i 
ess in answe! y inqui Ma: 
I again refer to Vol. IlI., Part 2 the Horticultural | 
— s — for 1848, regarding A igh in the | 
possess Jobn Barker, Esq., of Suædia 
4 
is x en 
I have lately used the same means 
is} A cro meeting of Fellows and their 
| amembled on this occasion to eke one of the most 
been held 
“Mr. Geor ge Fleming, The ig tig Trentham. 
Mr. Henry Phelps, Bowood, Wilts. 
-o Tho: omas Moo ore, „Physic ‘Gardens, Chelsea. 
of Nantes, as a Foreign 
friends 
din 
wded mee 
h has ever 
ker, o whom a | description of a slate wall I have recently built; it has the auspices of the ociety. The princi 
the introduction | a most workmanlike appearance. is v ai ee penne, of fruit, an as impossible not 
of the alenas P mA Siia e. He says, “I beg leave to | mically built, and J trust, as the north side is nearly as admire the skill with Jeera our "Bog gardeners had 
make the Joriciy my humble poe BE Ets as for the | Warm as the south Sa ray of the sun I don t g n for its production as 
our whic ve pleased to confer o me jI t is sid ig was ever known. his, penamian as on all occasio 
and which I E regard arnest of the distinguis Stone Pines.—W i d h my dl of competition all could not win. But it is not too 
favour I p: o hope to receive at their hands, | Sjon Pine sown in arent but fi h to say that all deserv uch commendatio 
when I shall bare. Snin ta into England ed Mia wher were sown, but ja three came up, En We trust we shall be found to have done justice 
of—l1. A new species ypc nae bison hel hach,’ four large pot where so me cc Ps aed wn. Eee MEO) oops dotio fou’ Mr. alan oe e Richins 
among which are six varie ine, all of | s pe scan gis rom 5 to7 inches h are i on. the Speaker, was pine my amas, poe 
Sauel an and some of superior > “value to the ‘ Stanwick | k the, open garden pares a He rim in the oy Ebey] horeli Krii dxvelionue but’ for’ tie variety of fruit 
A ne f the Apeicot with ads e stood 25° and 20° on Grass with impunity, with no which it inclnded. Among them were Black Jamaal 
sweet tere are «Sheker Pare? (bit of sugar) o “more protection ot sin e Scotch Fir ances over | and Queen Pine ‘Aor her dsomel Black and y 
pples handsomely grown, Bla € 
Ispahan. e large sweet White Mulberry of | the want to leave them oué all win Can I| Dutch Hamburgh Gra beautiful fruit of winter 
Tran, hg which a syrup is extracted hardly to be esis to doso? Our winters are not severe, but Ad Nake: Bch A > Pa set Calli Beurré Diel, Delic 
pairs oy sagt iar syrup made from mer ome is highly pin Coal We seldom have su Ais Ip Parga ae arly as apot p We Plis Meire P ; fine fruit 
urn remember frost urran 
Bokhara.’ ces A Plum, with a he seen called being. so so Ga ppsa the night of Sianha poa i peoien ren some pn d ; 
hie, frai waha, -~ -Uatiktbon noha, ss | Mr. Same mode of growing which will be found ai 
aoo oktan which ip k y the sa same 
traveller. ripe its 
geet ie ade e 
ate of T 
ae weighing from 50 to 
wned ‘ Quince’ po most ihe parts of Pasik of Th 
ip the sto ore, 
SA with H 
March also, from The A ws se ip si 
near a a 
are by the wide of Rass sig in ee in the i 
| ground. Can I vi nture to le eave them o ut an winter 
The cold severe, 
This teaches aiea of nature, 
ne 8. ch ae BEC go [It is not our oak “th an a 
C outhern European Conifers. bad 
are yearly 
ts by caravan to Bagdad. The Pomegranate 
oie as are the common sorts, but is squeezed 
Nich they cannot ripen their 
doubt genta ‘the Cypress will live out-of-doors at 
Windermere ; but the Stone Pines epi = i ey 
id to 
into a goblet, and drunk off like a draught of sherbet ; 
and the > highip erfumed odour iA ief Quin ce’ is such, 
in Orie f 
E 
xaggeration, as 
P f the fruit in a caravan, every one ~ 
aeoonpaniag ies it is conscious of its presence.” Then he 
paan say, “I Reon 
both i 
advise you 
over the seedlings for the parame winter, and in 
separately, 
ee Mr. Warmington, 100 small seedling 
| the ensuing summi 
er.] 
„„ Welli aA —Should not the scientific men of 
f Scotland. We mon 
io pss an old box or some such covering | 
the | 
> or to plant them out for gro 
r. Ingram, gr. rM Ape 
re were Black Hamb Mats “West's Peter’s and 
Musee Grapes a very good Cayenne Pine, a Queen an e 
mE — g like an Env: 
ro! Mo erea Pears 
Court pane rst, aad arc ad Cox’s Orange | 
Fee Apples, fruit as yet 2 ot 
Of frui 
specime: 
Mulberries, » budded with ‘the large white sweet t Mal- 
At the same 
alar Dwarf A 
uch past the age of 
puberty, though only gip 8 inches “high. I received them 
fe ak: rae a 
of a weer of the spears world ? 
thin e been (if the 
sad if these giants, trees which i have 
a punnet full of t 
@Api 
Apples of Dio gro awii ‘Ware 
might haye been expected eat 
as 
have grown at all; 5 they i increase slowly | in thickness, 
in the city of Aleppo, ‘of 40 and ms years’ 
ig never exceeding 2 feet in height, nor in the 
ey aai 
their cert growth, ‘should be at the mercy of any 
ng speculator, If the ground on which 
from Mr. Snow, gr. t re, 
Beds. It consisted ot Blenheim “appi O 
Pere 
fos “the nation, in order to preserve them, and to form 
i ge e an arboretum worthy of the Union. 
their ever having been pruned, To test the fact that | O, 7. W., U: 
their aes veness was not caused by their being 
pore be in and at P! t three 
pay s Sorietieg, 
progress. 
pesos lk” R 25 —J. J. Blandy, Esq., V.P. 
i flowing were for elpe > :— 
larien Ta Ryder Bur rto on, K.H., 15, Par 
o ;| Square, and Dunston ewe. Ken 
„Ogain Hagh Berners, R.N., 
n, S 
jy erunk Barchard, Esq., Putney Heath. 
Charlies Wentworth Dilke, Esq., the youngest, 76, 
Sloane Street. 
J. R. Scott, Esq., Crouch End, Hornsey. 
John Deacon, Esq, Turn ham Green. 
odding, 
eo ns Down- | His 
urt Peni 
Plat, Old ee = = 7° Golden Pippins, tha 
Golden Harvey e, Ribston, Cockle, rset 
meee ary er ig of ms Bios Noton S pitz 
Beacham GEA rt of Wic 
ussell 
ydan ae 
ne Mr. 
A ucla for era 
i were Rein vg, Fear! 
Russet; Golden "Kot y 
Aen tch f= ll and Flower ® 
Som Foundling, Dutch Mig : £ 
aL the Rat a collection of App! 
“Matthew Thomas H Esq., 38, Craven Hill | 
| Gardens, Hyde Park, 
eame from Mn, Frost, gr. t iri: L. 
oes cams in i Among 
