RE 
Normrsrm 4, 1865.1 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAT, GAZETTE. 1089 
ll became green, brittle, | know what thi 
i Zn "damp, and the combs sti g »| what this Darlingtonia is like; possibl; , but he never "ys it, or has it 
ү monl . Then we eR eS pie the central Fox ay have raised a weedy i ds m р: that | back lose its Jeaves as the бр! Ч 
aperture ° n п the c : romp of ZB зе wit P arises: zinc, › | name from s eed, as I did; cer rtain it is that many | other people ; D - Ж à tho " nt жу; aiwayg 
and substitutin As I еше 
condensing glass. This we were inclined to believe to | are quite roe е with Darlington ell, it | arises im: фо" fao of. the мео: 6 of his “ү чы never 
be а very great improvement. But as the central| may be described as a Sarracenia vita emi ир pm b icri: ng a particle of P — — A oe. 
portion o of a hive is that in which the first batet aid singular than that very n" lar gen seque: айу never rotting grow 
brood in the spring is almost invariably reared, we {айо to cultiyate, we [ may ` d 
LT o the conclusion that а current & A КР roin ct of its not being in cultivation, t | little 1 it at the bott f — pan, 
b & be n е, though it bes b impor! ei "NS tried by|by ж which ү can draw } 
hrough ing c off all t 
iey injurious; we MA "that it was К the | good cultivators *, These are seedling plants raised | or as often as he Hw inn ы sort t of « wrinkle” 
е ofa portion of the brood becoming chilled and | by Mr, Vair; Zr are little more than an.inch high, | one would - ect to pick up in the College Botanie 
{е 
к! йү: р р Vair tried а -— stream ^t water 
ur next experiment consisted in placing an empty | developed ir apip уау, „Ма quite healt thy. areo trough tho kA Уе на on no di it 
hive below the stock, compelling the bees to „ pass The youngest pitchers eo with an undivided acumi- Plan wit! 
through it in order t id, but they 4 t rest "look like the and ноду 300 “leaves on а Under. "hé ad they 
a great imp. ovement on any plan previously tried, and | of young g unflodgod 1 ids v with the beak pointed against р, waite airy tiles—a capital plan to show the 
„had little reason to complain of the prosperity of the | the g gr ou iddle, and widely ATE nt. hit ork, 
bives во treated, Тһе empty box was removed in the |The GA are grown vv še with n h aspeoi— These ‘iles are also "placed behind the bentifolly 
spring, usually in March. Since then we haye „learned ГӨРЕН 1 HPR X winter RIS of 50, , to 65° ncluding 
that this plan is largely adopted by the Ayrshire bee-| 70° in su oisture abundant; potted in NT good plants of the exquisite trichoideum, Pen many 
keepers, and those who adopt the Stewarton system, | well’ TOM "ike “Orchid e. н sphagnum, sand, | other rare, La рну vu new things in this чну. 
his ів a different style of ventilation, and the same | little peat, and minu The e Xd Pie is good, and contains many 
' objections cannot be urged against it. Air is freely| But what a NAM med "et Sarracenias ! and rariti. age "These delicate Ferns occupy 
mit beam, but there is no perniei ous current | what а treat it must be io: ni rdener f a wi uw t stove, «д4 opposite them on 
through the hive. Ther ёрге, on the whole, i d pro call *'tl the other, forming an admirable contrast, are half a 
of vong СЕ be resorted to, we should be dis- | lities” to get a peep at i ' had 199 de of dozen cases of Anæctochilus "Y dwarf Хеч. Жа 
posed to mend the айе "t the е 4 meeting mga k capitally grown and ful ti Bulleni, and other 
mode as ce rik kely to be advantageous rather than | her 8 вой da most be, egan an to think it на to not often „Seen; but here, as in many o other garı "den: b 
the contrary. gro с, in places not directed ру > 
When the system of bar-and-frame hives became |а Bain а а 'a Baines, and к, agreeably surprised, though the n Duet repeated now fail to pro- 
largely dod out in our peii we {ролй that| Vair grows S. flaya nearly, or qui n» аз hrs duce a good rei 
the side теті s in the large-sized boxes with|as Mr. Bain es, of Bowden, does; Drummondii lar; Against the ү wall of the Orchid house was a 
opriate to such a position— Vanil 
8i 
{еп fram ualy became very NL By|t th an I have seen it elsewhere; purpurea and ihe сгеерег very app 
removing afora dC a frame on either side, to|others very fine. They are grown exactly as are the | lutescens, with de 8 vel 
be open ond in the Spring, much of the evil Darlingtonias—the same house, вой, and temperature. | fatter and larger than е, common Vanilla, and pro- 
was 0] В lled t holl of the pot, | ducing large flowers occasionally. Tt is not — ran 
the LM that, as a rule, туе aumeddled with in | cast with it, and holding about an inch ОЁ water. m a private garden p possesses per HC plants, 
this way have usually made a more forward start in | outer edge is a little lower ев an that of the pot, of | тегу publie ones, but. беу Lo 
rari angstein, and in faci стот a 
ts, wanti u 
sprin g,2 and 
to take có оў the 4 int Chak which | It is useful to keep 43 А9 moisture round the 
ra ы - т Bo seta in the south of Eng land. plants, and seems on the whole, a very sane improve: | the ve—an м 
Inn s been mor Suppose one wante ата; cult ting to lay hands on. The 
off, what mode of | curator "i some [mes garden in a hot region would 
"For Fern grow- confer т a grea at boon оп nis British TA wis 
such t т 
t, 
the зер when E eh had remained e irely a plant they were fond of rapping o 
wndistnrbe d, ch more forward a gud 80 doing so g 
than others which Кад” ү, faken їр саге of, that | ing, &c., Mr. Vai 
we have almost been iuduced to alter our whole system | and an inch o x. two 1 , » 1 
of practice, m of our stocks inh had not been|big enough to hold a iude. же ae оп hich o grow Fruit, Mahogany, Cinchonas, &c., or in fact of an; 
disturbed since the previous autumn, eith ai the | Selaginellas, and therewith hide the pots. | va ЖУ) M fruit or medicinal plant. Perhaps it 
tter t n 
4} һай 
e pot , | Clove, “Nutmeg Strychnos nux изд Dread Fru 
i 
wa I do not propose to give pia reader vi ў known | would be be 
of floor-boards, &c., were снет popnlops t to com to gardeners as “ a good look round"—only a peep in | w hey wo iti 
ons in pra supers, у for Fro m daylight, DM viu Ae Sarra-| Ihave lately had а саве of plants from Mauritius, 
positio A we will transfer ourselves ush of|with young Clove plant 24 others - { 
Bees will, if left e their own Werte sedulou usly might with that рта oli plan Ios м» А уй ох, | died on their ы: (almost the only ld tbat did 
close eup with propolis, all crevices in their hives; even | which is expanding iis transcendently beautiful pure | not come in 
placed over the peus s | white flowers, 6 inches and more in diameter, with : sub-eurator of the Mau 
in their erowns, are generally совре filled up. Jal; р sending the саве, кодын а ; fov seeds of th 
з more particularly noticeable after. tha close of air, for several persons h to look at it tl i Clove here and ter in ў" soil, and in thi 
i mn, а n. they t thi i Bamb in Мс other plants un" 
he necessity for making everything as snug and air- | else Te ие night reete Cactus, а теры is a sg ial ET. "ent eyery ою of them, well, 
tight as possible ба the comin, pop We all kno ow | poor r thin| mpated to this wer кае к keeps ex- а doz en nice young planta, which iti is 
i fon mos 
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тат lt must E^ for fen to Чо s the requisite year r An) What pity it flo wers си ” said | ат P the carriage of plants, ‚ there is here а 
ount ор internal. heat to prevent their succumbing " of. the party. a greater which was 
li Wike t should flower during the day! (except in public sent from КОЕ АТ] India, to Dangstein, England, 
в possessing а very abundant population, | gardens locked up at dusk or 6 o'clock), for then it | in a letter to Mr. Y 
LT Yentilitian ui not "a to be productiva о, вич not be i a its opening beauty to grace the| Over the medicinal and je зит plants 
much injury as where L. ровага із La or | drawing-room just when the ladies enter it, and to | hangs Ше Granadilla, with 9 vs of ha „To 
: ht ктеу в{топ t remarkable | delight and astonish—not voip e ut the visitors. | attain this enc necessary to ii : 
stance hiş in the а, of » fr (CH last |I sweet as in| the blossoms-—not, stra ap w e polien oi 
rng, ii ecome р a oodbury frame which it grows. the Granadilla ond "ц? Y m of pom 
цуе, he set his carpenter to work to manufacture some |, m this we will emerge again into daylight and ecrulea, which more effecti 
ista! is Wm. Robinson. 
ever country worker in wood did not seem to think it in ag that curiosity is well and regularly grown. 
all necessary to clamp or frame the top-boards. Misc «Павее 
of the hi plaats that sent leaves to the edges o The Laurels of ihe Ancien: m m Laurus Wi 
0c With a fine swarm the previous summer, lined pod 4 feet in diameter, €: dem: m a employed by. the ancients Em the same degree | of 
ed ue A " A LT x the greater Ma ng of ther lea y 
ly rested for about half an weeks ago, but now they ar ing л. no Аад nthus Y^ Aog об, 6 зай the like, just as that, with 
Mag raised raised about three inches at pii PC во that фе даш to make fine gea by next у Their culture | regard t which is admitted into the 
: pursued here was а few weeks ago (see popular phraseology. of а present day e speak 
light w а case, wiih ample means of ventilation, ^d 892). In one rb ane respect Mr. Vair gains a few common Laurel, the Bay, the 22s ], the Alex- 
covered the entire hive, The bees were во very |points as regards the cleanness уе look of the plants. Mr rian, the Laurustinus, &c., 8 shrubs no у= related 
merous that no injuri еї ad resulted. dioec immediately г round ha neck 9: each plant the than i in the one биг wir of being evergreen shrubs, 
bore A ы ime to inspect е үш the bees warmly | gravel and sma; р e soil, int ses in ornamental gardening. 
d Xposure, Mar чр къыр y "ау Which it would sink, p - which it m gei half | То like manner Püny enumerates the Tinus, a plant 
CE sir of great ir Mon: ds other 'vered—dir g washed up in a cloud at every | which must have been the Viburnum Tinus, the 
War 1 fi м: bets мр tko watering, but on slates which rest on brickbats placed m 
ping k FW cover Ху free admission of air, being Ae il, ad u Y Ф Я 
pz gs куле e рок: ЕБ Б mcs 
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ns enabled it t i ill effi d | believes be ial to lant. i 
хел i$ to resis ping Lo о My of Dublin, eA certainly no doubt upon e point, ard d known 
ondi lon. Not so, how: I F bara не јод foun pans,containing the | enci TO i 
К ы А of the weaker with а lunas. d and that covered with an | {һе Вау, or Laurus nobilis of Linnzas, belonging to 
wner, in the way either o bL rs or ya рег, ө Vair, er рм, the family of Laurinem, and possessing something 
—————— me: hat it Merlin th ) remar n certain tropica! 
агй € "ime аро two o E ihe 7 +, І "have the same family, namely, in tbe Cinnamon and Cassia, 
ts noticed by T astus а: ішу, but not as 
also P OBTRIN, 8 ыш тед i 
it iş ар - x sue inm im of them, e in fall and ү иин etg | pe, 
L fall ot, those places th "a oe: iut "ы it can be grown well in hot bu even iny semg to speak of it as though it were 
fall of variety P aces that are perenniall ing | нех Y 
abro. and life, cannot а doubt, as Mr. Berry, | of sakraohion, pel he alludes to the care with 
m it mA 4. ira ate The i immo die cause Т A. 1 A Dalay. i Moo used to grow энчи ‚ аз was the сара in the Villa of 
s Subjects, n w standing witi fine batch of | it а н "d sdi it feri in water heated to from the Cæsars, at thi p 
eight jii grown wn due I C in ue fpe l to вее | 80? to 10 Mr. Bain it does not grow so larg m the veneration felt hat particular branch of 
b 
i ; эҳ hich, as the stor кош m was held in the b 
E LVS аза EIE et rer ic EO d of tip ban thst an eagle had le ll om a it unhurt 
Isles, ^ Poggib] y many of your readers do not | КЕ by Messrs. Jackson & Son, оѓ Kingston. into the lap of the Empress Livia; and at any rate the 
