1106 
remarks on climate in the LINDLEY’S 
e Dr. ] 
addirable ** Theory and Praetio ee т, Hortieu 
ieal Soeieties have been instituted ; an 
Р : in 
have now us eig f the ne 
series of aA * Journal of the Boottish Meteorolo- 
» 
More recently, the British and Scottish M eem ro- |a 
1 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
n the berries were not 
said that in one fine seaso 
a wall 
t| then, the produce of the No orwegi 
Novi эу, 1865, 
a fruit ripe whose kernel would not 1 
less would people continue fo ECT i 
Plums rof whic e fruit was never tte 
thë thinnings of Pe rico b : fia 
this country to make tarts. every dude 
an gardens and 
e in the nor rth ang 
orchards, as compared with those 
same wall the fruit of the common Mulberry is 
brought: to maturity. Ther re are "thousands of 
pur- 
gical Society,” and 
matter i 06 either directly or indirectly both 
i 
January and Jul ». Фобас rom ап average o 
suits who, having d erossed the Tweed, have 
never seen a Mulbe 
Most „дев essert Apples are grown in Scotland on 
presen 
proble em to the studen For ш 
ate, 
at its МЫ. 
н л н ЫЫ 
WE have ма ealled attenti 
which hav Е ^ extre d а 
Ат 
ots which, in England, are 
f the Thames is in Jal e warmest region of the 
by 
| ар, à Lied to stone 2 uits; 
aly ih 
United e er кад that it is опу а pptusdted 
the sea coast vonshire an lornwa 
length equalled at a line running ees wm 
Land's End it 
It str remark able, however, that plants, 
and Ы fruit trees, though they in the 
main obey, do not very m respeot any of the | gro 
isothermal lines we have "Temperature | w 
oniy one of the elements whieh rule its develop- 
ment. his £ographie | Botanique, М. 
AL DOL n remarks that a 
|M 
as | CUu by Bir Халак MACART 
ep о pre 
prevent the ойна of Holi hock 
Sihor я ау injurious to Plu Ы, Wa des b. 
receive Mr. GEORGE "Mae ТА 
Z e following note :— 
walls, abd are not always successful in doing so 
repute than it is now r used to grow, ш 
т 
The old Chaumontel ias I perhaps in higher 8 
-— bea forti ot the titi 
rather 
vera, ыу? y 
- as find, E 
sta мА rès in Ue Hortioaltural Society” 8 Garden 
wie rec we а 
s thia Pai 4 on " young espalier tree, We kne ew 
Hom. кч rower near haia who 
etime to Set t ^s 
ec 
чы А 
instrument, mimi is P on M P exter =s 
mechan ical ea A plant is a € ometer 
which never омда, and iw ue is ever 
onward. ou may cause its growth E stagnate, 
r you may destroy its туйт м т, — 
cannot force it to Maria into itself, о; 
they have expanded. Still 
any respects an adm e index of 
an а 
te. 
die n 
may b 
тА ps а climate of any particular 
region; as such we propose tọ employ them, or at 
st to state some facts which show how they may | t| 
iti kept in mind, that, after all, 
tem re is one o the principal naiari in 
vegetation, and that the effective warmth of th 
EE 
пч 
e Раван he trained it rt 
n | из look 
they ена — ere erops, even in the | Who w 
urh Lon 
‚|а 
‚Ё instrument by which to e 
cou! en of Pears during the whole period. 
In fine seasons, and in the warmest situations near |} 
Edinburgh, such Pears vi ig meh d'Aremberg and 
Marie Louise have bee n to ripen on 
pyramids; but to secure the Жану of the finer 
[and ter sorts, such as Passe Colmar, Winter | w 
1 
Nelis, or Beurré Rance, the trees must be planted 
against the тот pona g walls. 
All this, some will t s quite what might 
have been беребей, га деке of latitude must 
make a vast differenee in climate. Well 
to Peaches. It will not be desied that 
revalence of 
of: The 
| and treated it with his best skill, did not О а | ins 
d 
but let 
fie 
i it i$ sometimes 
s destruetive as it is reported to have been in 
Tus tra p 
scenes have in | consequenee 
та ален аз to its p h cattle 
паса a notion аз С as ди which was 
ard by so e in the Pimes as to the 
whit more certain i put f. on 
verage seasons they ripen there, with the possibility of cholera arising from Phallus otl, 
xeeption of the latest varieties. At Cull den |а x that à iy disgusting Fungus 
House, near Inverness, ion E. ly 2? north hing new гче it may be found wi n 
of o Ne A middle se hes, such as | in т 5 plantations at Kew in almost any quani 
he Noblesse, n perfectly almost «чу year in | and is abundant perd districts E he Britain 
e open air; Аз ваше ained at аз i Aber е Rust has been ME i 
Cromarty House, on the othar side of "the M Moray 
Frith, and at Tarbat House in Eastern Ross, Figs 
may in 
e|and Apricots, too, succeed admirably in all of 
air and soil decreases, in proportion as the latitude | these im 5. The Green üge Plam, which is eaen probablo (^ 
of places and their elevation above the sea inerease arely grown on stand ar Edinburgh, ripens | £angre would ' 
Everyone ow s that further north we go, the | abundantly without the aid of walls at Culloden | Grass = probo with — and dt 
оде. the weat ther comes ; the higher we А and in oth fav. able loealities near | certainly b e advisable to mak ! me experiments, 
cend a mountain, the more the бегелш falls. | Inverness. These facts show plainly enough that | when rust ds agaiu abundant in т our drin МИМ 
Climate, then, may be regar in a sort of PN] is not the only souree of the. climatio to see whether it has any deietorions pu 
verse ratio compounded of the latitude and | in Mr. W. 1х6 called attention to this mat 4 
altitude of the place, M this general rule, how- - The ; same conclusion is still more strongly few years ago, though " 
, there are variou 8 putting it to pr 
interesting to héstioulturipis; butas the phenomena 
are somewhat complicated, we ipee to-day restrict 
ourselves to those that relate to la 
Take тй Vine for an CRAS: di is — in| bis + 
а wi 
great 
id. artistio 
ago under the 
auspices of E Government, that only in 
Creuze, м if we e remember right, Cantal, centr al 
nts of Frames, ies 
Open ai ing Б 
С profitable e бега ot|3 
e Ampélographie Française, 
statistical precision, se - = 
y, publi 3 
e same inference 
The d following: facts are derived from an interest- 
ing chapter on = vegetable productions of that 
ed by the Rev. 
ws wild in lowlands up to Th Ms 
Ж: latitude 63 E из and in a eultivated state п 
= 
varieties in eultiv ation. 
wW 
and Са Catawba, i.e., varieties of Vitis Labruse 
ach ` ripen against t walls up to lat. 6 615 
whi 
er. | mildew after ey A dd 
i elimatie condition. 
DEE 
p ot rust and mildew, 
Iel uidi an observation 
It has e been 
are most 8 M 
As regards the pre 
Lord EvkRsLEY has 1 
ihe 
th popular поза 
m gre to whiski s is the са 
drough. d “es is true indeed that damp 
done үт when the Fungus is 
blished, but in the first instance it is 
P mildew, fo 
certainly at variance 
(ае eot, rding 
the eam of dry no 
EvERsLEY remarks 
d 
y rine de id 
XC rA to which karpi 
тові parasiten., а 
апі 
о enel the old traditions B 
Whatever may ъ the iiy ic бее 
< wel Tid 3 own to a s our oves 
that бга walls and the roofs of cot- 
in the vieinity of London. In the latitude 
rther —" the. 
tages in 
of "—-— ү E. ine 
blossom n the open It is 
Varie ties of 
The , аз а standard 
нема 
dry, or Trim they are im su such а 
ot 
country. Plum (the Greengage 
and against walls, ren as far north as lat. 64°,” 
Toth his last notice it is signifieantl 
sho са гз nd ipen is 
used i 
[peru дері the usually accepted | 
i 
$ 
піса] sense, viz., that the fruit is |! 
ars; an 
"o here is mt^ int 
no ho gus of did injury W 
n 
ripe t this queer would. not | 
perhaps be all that pA be des Still it 
сап hardly be supposed that а зөт, would pt. 
“щщ following extract 
from tho “ British M 
