16 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [JANUARY 28, 1665, 
m nce Consort : the last he planted I believe. 
u 
nt 
Majes ty and other members of the Royal 
family. 
Nothing could be more creditable быв the perfect 
uu shading 
en 
by her |to the Е dull short days of winter, ti o impor ance 
| tight cannot be too highly estimated. 
It 
requisite for promoting the health, and aiiis 
sarson aa uum a TEC E "IK E DORE ГТ ЖИЙ ther їп а greater Е 
planted by her Majesty and the other by tl the | makes үе арреагапсе, if high in A firmament, Mit from sunlight, either ARM 
A оше | 
еза *5 Черте, 
Thi d 
de: о 
h ing tend б; lants of every description. | the propriety of using the most transparent 
keeping of this flower garden and indeed of all parts | t e flowering ten leney p у 4 d pi the | cotum, ЗӨ à М vr Baie a 
family | over tion o 1g ht; 
is the gardener's first erii and : b ou 
e “ wild | architect's first consideration. This is why I have some | 18 required. he mo ass we can have in 
and in | objection to ен rough A c кыз for Orchid | erection, the more suitable for the plants under culture, 
When ouses during wi nter. merous corrugations | as it is an easy matter to roll up and down can 
y th f li and any-|as circumstances demand. > The system of к shading, 
Germans | thing that has a yore to, modify light cya in nen in воще places on the Continent, is a la 
h 8 
UE 
of i 
and her ladyship's deat intry days, tells against the ути" Ат of th t 
um Ee ыы tiné the ptt of v lanta Houses that are glazed with this description he of the sun obliquely on the glass, and 1 dou d it 
circumstance p Ae Lord Carlisle to erect a little | of glass would require to be so low that the pla: г (ho darken the. interior of the house so mu ch as аз thick 
memorial on spot 4-е the Pine had petisbad; а not be more than from 6 to ra Wl from t irmgneno ng during 
with the А а inscription oof. In fact it is observable, in dull f І ү pa E ы ^ Ух omnend it, 
ss Poor (reo ! ago entlo mitta ЖЕ thee here, бигый are affected, in duration of bloom, under g DÀ ames Anderson, Meadowban 
To be the of the zlade around. 
Thy life ам tot y survived one fleeting year, 
And she too sleeps beneath another mound. 
But mark bem your terms your fates allow ! 
Though like the period of your Swift xev 
Thine are the sapless root and wither'd bongi 
the green memory and eme rtal day 
are now, unhappily 
These lin for all thos 
nected with Tibe late Earls piere h soia a touching Mei a Бош! ba A (pig 
memorial of ће writer too; but his pata Trend time when it is most wanted, that is not sufficiently | Mr. Duncan x ts to Lord Wharncliffe, ab Wortl y Hall, 
for and by n presertim at by all the чур advantages to Бе | Sheffield) was passionately fond of winter planting of 
more бео от оаа і n by those most intimately ed. The ы ne d die 28 the victims of Joln 
connected with the оге s "A yt cl t and the 
Phoenix Park, William Robinso 
naturae. 
even of the finest transparency, which i is dead Мә 
to double-glazed houses. m the irm plea. 
wley notifies a his paper rea 
o doubt, all the ben accru im "hat 
^" Ве, жы гай Ь ore. ihe ; Win an Deooration of Ev Gardeni — I can almost 
me Correspondence, 
pow е у уяны tion at Newcastle-on-Tyne, agine mpression made on Mr. Thomson on 
ове con. | €conomy of heat, па tural ETA of moisture л the | seeing e flower gardon he: speaks. of at р. 51, planted 
| plants т Аан night, vw freedom from drip piene there | With „Каі and fro t I have myself seen, І feel 
he sing one. The 
is always the proportionate seclusion {гош 
5 mn b 
one 
dr 
o" x. and the proper арандап 
well m: 
of m r 
ged houses cannot be complained of геу Š titi hl is situated in front of the ыды. Was boo 
id nec fuel, but 
t no | diately fille x: with the following plants, viz, 
able | 20 
other 
uggestion that is likely to prove advantageous to the | japonica, Santolin na, or Cot 
.OQRCHIDS AND THEIR CULTIVATION.—No. 1. | Pa инни of Orchids nid never stand unaccom- | Varieties of plants used sam а. pens bnt with 
Аш exotic Orchids, whether epiphytal or terrestrial, | plished "i ча sake of а few pounds extra expen- judicious шешш. the — a beautiful ro 
they 
an vun osphere somewhat foreign to their nature, even fast into oiy, if under judicious managem 
n best imitated 
w 
scorching sun, The very plants that will thrive 
I 
are a class of plants tim iun during the dull months nter, and I think 
„ but | say, without being xii тө that this чара 
retrograde in value much faster than er grow puc forpren all that I have seen done 
under | if neglected. As the pep n of the wood of the 1862 irec other quarters. In the Wei 
a variety vhere Vine, and other ien ne of th i diti 2 Mr. Dunca hed the basin emptied i ^: Ape 
are indigenous, might succumb to simi ar treatment | for ensuring a cro f frait, and maintaining a sound vith a fountain, which is situated about centre of 
mation is most valuable—the ravge of ice sem del 
the degree of moisture, the exposure, whether 
of һе jit; On. which to place soil, some of the 
infor-| constitution, so is the prier ripening of the pseudo- | ће garden, and having erected a stage "s СА enin 
» x M Orchids essential to the deve lopment different 
Anal fall 
or open, of all as under cultivation ; but it is not implies that a proper mode e treatment 
rs to imitate 
ble th: 
be dis 
e promi inent position 
The 
letter | conducted all through, for to be riy pe^ i the | " this bed, together ith tho surrounding walks 
во desirable for gri imi to the very 
the ces habitat. Тор example, there аге periods of! reme of plants they must no e be too | of a reddish colour, ні the effect produced by it, 
riods of de E bee occur in all| much ex to га or surfei ans рот d EN thest point of sight this bed wa 
койа. п our c way of treatment | That ihe class of plants we are treating of will ost co was most amusing to hear the 
we never attempt to produce imar variation, either | stand more fatigue than any other ed is S Beyond Y уана is conjectures o об visitors as to whata sort of plants 
as л ht, as — takes р question y s their 
ые sm climate. , True, re guided ina » great | to torture them : 80 unnecessarily, t i g near enoug b, to find that 
н t That is | it was нер more nor i than Kail! What, йи _ 
E hy I v vish to my down, as a „principle, ; what I consider | | ге, shall we say respecting a whole flower gard | 
of rest ; bat wers we gl po pm either t the hus pla 
way or ano! 
the уб y the health ot у (этч 
н К. ^ wo 
in, there are somo epiphytes which, doubtless, the less obstacle to its diffasion the ucc more | especially n viewed from a distance. The plan of | 
un tty ue ba omoi for established eria gr 
e 
eat, as witness for 
named, eie 
dn all its. stages. . Light, then f, 
цен 
s 
Plants, however, that are i 
state, в 
vane € n poor soil (as s Mr. Thom omson has stated) $ 
exposed ample, R. a drie 
Eae ав, р. Han m Broughtonia yerim as those imported, and апу that are ikiyi in soles should. they’ e too robust, а cut round their roots with 
ed 1 light. - 
Jamaica, “ obl v o light t and heni 
of t 
Bring these | home however, tie them өн D un 
in | tions, subdu 
bz 
them close 
to the 
sun, in; the neni >; ze y^" bor Pe 
what is the v prom Evaporation g 
aget and m 
rapidly fro om th ves and - peeudobulbs, hat. your less fat , by means 
and h 
assimilation, the pude get scorched, and, if not, the 
chlorophyll is all Med d | out of them, the plant of trade чт ч ге something of this kind 
hen required for planting. W. P. В„ The he 
AI 
a € diable gd em for бте iin epe do ла nd Park. 
ong in г, and w 
Culture of — Aili.—No plants with which Iam 
acquai iind ur re deserving of attention than these 
зе the err be a great deal моне ог һауе pte: Shadat of foliage. I am afraid, how. 
mines the ur ot the avy would undergo | ever, that they are not generally well managed. Lam 
sickens, and unless ri rable for more : 
мо plumping | treatment :—Commence otting тке g 
e may Pa Grawe. of тт never treat | up r^ shrivelled sitienos porie ad never earlier. The най hieh I use is equi 
s аы у they tie is théut ó € i. and hang|leaves—a desideratum which I have always found it|quantities of. chopped 8 — silve d, pent ot 
d с je to the glass, c they take the pre- | judicious to aim à ng as iiri а possibl Bere m refuse. singly in thumb-pots 
shade them дагї Prud for al i a 
other plants propagated in the same way, are 
and disabuse 
t leas 
f veri de raetice, and they | the l routine of 
grow q^ bloom Аный Т0, ар Orchids, Jike | haati viam 
R^ to suppose that mere locali 
an e inner ма | that shade 
such a wond ps Aie as some would | R Saceolab 
htonias | в ris, delight in p peream the growing seas 
a dE from s seven o'clock in the morning to seven o' to 
which | night ; or, more sione € for three m i nough 
those who buy half a dozen of im imported plants can see | in the pt i fresh. 108 rd i 
1 Фа proportionately | keep them fresh. If th kept too wet they 210 
for the тч Not that I am ignoring the. effects of | so in o beginnin an ees eer 0 rai xà id, lial to dem 
effect upon со 
lead us to believe. In our collection of Broug 
we have them varying from a bright copper to 
colour. This is a natural phenomenon, 
light on co 
influence 
B direct sun rays, else even the brigh t 
t sereen mus 
ield such an 
and ihe voten that are тойут Энн а glass Кү» А tly modified tr imer "rat the; that m ii 
the reason for which must be obvious to the 
in horticultura! + 
~ Prudence 
сз with some eaution; for, as we 
alread 5 iti i поа to ithe Ai do, 
short e articular system managem. 
t is of great importance 
) АВ ng, light 
well- “being of many valable Orchi. ginere the powerfu 1 
moment, however, the sun live and t thri 
light of sammer. The 
suggeste, in basing any calculati 
liable data as to лыы that the jte кон E pem 
d suffer without i& for so many hours 
day, we uus peret j 
o lon 
corched, even 
of the ija ures the plan If all һаѕ gone on we 
but not tothe extent that is March they vit be є plants. I o cu! 
as plants are not actually just below the first t, and pot t| 
Lp. 
areer— xs b far the | | рап fill up between tho nis with pe Өе 
largest — of species à produce hes blossoms putting a bell- ce over bcn m, iet — 
a year, and, if under systematic treatment, will | air, 
med similar to one обы and it may | be v well to to söna i 
the minds of t i 
rwent more than 
to admit 
В 
$ S 
* 
vole r as it seem the абас. of the leaf 
i5 
ec 
= 
js 
have if they do not eral m. "yn effects of Strong | light, бы» опе 
кеа n 
or SA all is well ; б т they аге n 
and s кра. autumn et nd wi 
Mes of се rr iens green. 
tot e | lenvas n 
en "the |] ished they are before winter the less 
o Orchid will it t few ot the 
rive ^ the botas we imer forit without | possess аай каў ете pe e A ГЕ s nches 
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