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хотвивяв 25, 1865.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAI GAZETTE 1103 
Tebbiana n 
SESS sltby P. V how well the Wellingto d this | gath it daily from it for these last six weeks, and 
probably n А ot чн 5 сеў ee yi or 400 c feet above ve the sea "m I beg to fori un aom Ps — € a 22) Mo mna О 
r shingly land, no appearance of ever | which D c hi tage, 
а been "jared by frost, whilst my tree, msan | it was in а 60. cy yes wai эе жел 2 E S Hey 5 ssi Ты ашат -— 
gravelly E. И сүрөө те ve yea xA 40 fe above | height. "E гра А it in dope aoil, Sanit stem en the leaves being of iners йиз charac 
the oam, it which it has attained over 23 | the fruit gets protected from light frost tbat 
irjared. The o effect of: "the difference of soil. on the feet i in height ; ne 4 feet 9 inches at the ist occur wy this season, "Tt d dts distinet fro may 
foliageof d 43 feet in circu "ehe соний the branches. It|others І have ever seen. W. H Mountford, Kinmel 
the entus nches 
op Mr. Ж Dan, P y eod cea С 
n length and 3 inches | Park, St. Asaph. 
in cireumference, two > "which I have sent for your 
, 1037). day 
Pn tik e th - of whioh hes еакв, In another r part 
i 
t 
your Puer (see p. 1037) I perceive the account of ie 
death of а Wellingtonia attributed, ж ud енун 
justice, to root gi. Is 
These seem sma ll, considering that they are | 
es ur tree has bee 
planted 10 years, thus — an increase in height of | us 
2 feet 3 inches each season, It is well furnished with К Royan HonTICULTURAL:' Nov. 21.—J. Bateman 
айе фо death from. this -— ori xi^ on mly li E to 
"qun f soil and climate? I will|to b 
venture. to say that if it is as susceptible .of being 
p sq. in the chair. Опе new Fellow, viz., Mr. Norm 
handsome specimen, W ellin ngtonias I consider ought of Princes Gate, was elected. "Тһе Chairmen of the 
planted i їп every кер» - large Conifers | Floral and Fruit Committees having respectively 
these bodies, the А 
ta 
Ка us, it t would lon ng ago have iE eor red fro; 
the face of the earth, for Mm: aill you find a энд 
orest t ber reb and below 
rw 
in t те his uk ч would dangerous 
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f all tr yis equally | se 
us, Hea 
in height, bott A cen Tos from Mr. Young, gr. to 
Day, Theydon mm е, near cem Essex. [The co == AN in acq one eye had produced agi — 
nt are whak smaller than above A black-coloured fruit of that variety, while a 
There is no у greater discrepancy between the size of the | eye ^ the == shoot, without any imd 
ite : 
to ent a tree down in a plantation for fi t it 
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ts sp ours, and t 
ordinary operation of thinning a zT талабот жаңа 
canse eh death of the whole wi ithin a ver 
pes, w 
i that bears it. й] роп trial was found to possess the same Frontignan 
| — teni n -— under my care а чай ушу that of ке. Маск heir — - it is 
ge hav 
newly-planted Vinery, wherein | ашоп s ойс hee are| well known, are uncommo g Chr nthe- 
rita hnt n th fih 
which it 
dew eny that 
oum the roots of a dead tree to thos ose of 
k 
is desired to replace with varieties more o apted for | novelty attaches to them. Tue remarks on t ше fru 
E Tving mL baj I think that it happens 
ect well worthy of the 
rely. subjec 
sion Е forester; as a relative of mine, MAT at | 
n the ould n 
ral statements о subject, wo 
early forcing, айе! in the latter case, I should be | p quete a ern ven given at p. 1082 " bew "Number 
glad if Mr. Thomson would give me his opinion as to pied attention ; "s " also Thun- 
| the probable | results of the Duchess of "^ — Vine be en | from Mr. Earley, £ Digewell ама was 
the former; and if any other | considered to be a form ri T. терм of Roxburgh. In 
correspondent, could state how the Buckland Sweet- this country, however, it aee perfectly in» 
xe grub 
tended on account of MA expense of the opera- 
would do on the latter. Im may a dd that. the mon. A. seedling lata Ыы, from Mr. Bull, 
Yi 11 as tho npa ак ^ to the same class as the old 
lad in 
tion, vii ch he believed to be элес а sable to th 
interesting to know "that there is 
t May, and this year L “Ао . Bateman favoured the meeting with a 
€ ne crops у. еэ H. J. С. [Тһе | (еж нигаб Р ега the Orchids present, in the 
, | Witte Trong i is à bad stock for А4 Vine, but the | course of which he observed that it would be seen that 
eun celeuch would do on it as well аз would | they formed by far the largest rtion of the 
he Trebbiana will е the Buck-|winter-blooming plants exhibited, constituting one 
seat y 
of Ep прю Compto n Wyn аса Warwickshire. 
Suckers are bei ата tiken from them, hnd for 
Vin 
land С o well; but itis поса good stock | among other claims to our attention which they pos- 
for any Vine that is to be for ced l par. It in this| sess. In connection with the Bird’s-beak Oncid 
hi. 
pres cimi ies own of ht. that 
си. fruit. at berah short, Sion — never ' heard of 
s 4 
there are Black Hamburgh Vines in the. house | it would is figu in Humboldt's e — » ден he 
the reverse saa place, Geo. & 9 be better to cut out the two took the opportunity of allud е mis 
Arundo conspicua does well in pee southern counties | and to inarch on the Ha n as side ее а s takes into which paten not тезе ы, When 
and i "9 а more extended trial there than it has|of the Duchess о? Buccleu ch and Buckland Sweet. |t the ey come to arrange 
yet had, but good is not likely to result from | water. In this m “ would have the|hastily obtained on tbeir journee. Пейто Tatto: 
planting it in the north, or in cold or exp KI varieties he desires stocks whereon they would be | niauum, found by Mr. J. Ө. Veitc n the coasi 
e t and flower freely in Surrey, and ILC frequent д " ve: E wih. to to|North Australia (see p. 890), e named br. Me. 
. Pinee's beautiful rock-garden at Exeter. However, | increase the varieties n the .| Bateman in compliment to Lord Egerton of Tatton, 
thongh well worth growing where it does well, it can | W. Thomson. was next mentioned in terms of praise, inasmuch as 
n pete w ampas Grass in the open air| —Chrysobac cirom Hookeri (see р. 1084).—This has though still at first sight tri » the 
in this country. But - is another use for it, and | flowered here every season for these 4 віх years. It is 
that a noble = let it be the Pampas Grass of the | grown in the open border, and is quite unprotected in plant when first exhibited; and as the specimen pro- 
5 rass 
winte: pu моч conservatory. Grown in small 
e E ец рош, richly fed, and freely watered, it will 
E. анау: ix are in ciet (а nd they last | 
р 
„ Rich loam and leaf-mould suit it best, but it duced on this occasion was still small, the beauty 
winter. - j 
| will ag inia in AS и» Upwards of 30 spikes of flowers | of this Dendrobe, which has the additional good 
struc ctures, and prove, when its| were e pected to 
of the p 
golden yellow аш», and far ou -— in beauty any rt r than it is at — „10 was 
н, time) the most алани pe Bestia | border plant in bloom at the same time. 16 ripens seeds | 3 ted, moreover, to lent drawing-room 
ng o lac. 
uld select to plac ong со rd 
nts of the usual type. I о, тесо! Zik it 
such of your readers as have to furnish were dard ев, 
ter gard or 
burgh. 
win ens, even a large show-house. Wm. |і 
Rob w 
inson, 
Conifers in New Zealand.—Your correspondent (see 
stating in reference to the new garden 
abundance, from which young plants are freely pro- | plant, as АП илеш, to: that kind even for w 
2 Edin- | to aber aen a pan cise no i vjurious effect upon it. 
Jas “бее ved tue Marge Gord ма | око ( —: f 
w t | rosea 
i i into 
in a tanic garden, an and scarcely there, but I only | had that Orchids consti Royal race 
Robinson.—— | whose es the hybridist would not dare to 
I en m te ipi тозо а б lant | enter, abd that much as he арргес iated his labours in 
after 
m D quantity will not be taken into циа at 
all; but жа y, and that newly-introduced trees, shrubs, 
M" Conifers will always meet with a fair 
has fowere ered freely here for the last five years; < this | other departments of Flora's dominion, he nevertheless 
season e^ sent p seven fine spikes of. flowers, w which felt a kind of i nward satisfaction whenever failure 
l raise 
trial," ue to observe :—" For instance, growing 
а healthy, A are Pinus maritima, P. Pinaster, з moth 
Pum Ye 5 montana, P. iris ris, P. Sapiani 
the Red e Fir”? Is thi 
i: 
5 
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+ 
о, 
ч 
ise crose-b 
admit, 
d nt. The soil in whick. it grows is a heavy the case before him, — he was forced to t 
yow Mei and itlikes shade. James Gray, Gardener, tho M. it nearly choked him to do so, that a magui- 
Newfield, Kilmarnock, N. B.—-—For the last two or|ficent result had been obtained, inasmuc ch as the 
hree seasons Chrysobactron ] Hookeri has flowered ybrid n п question was f the finest 
certaia ol 
Orchids in caltivation, a fact which 
Mr. Rucker's 
h 
Jf veni any өрү attention. bestowed upon it. It Кз гек the good ан е to see 
con 
was planted in iat, E 
from pell ey are, he said, q w 
peat and pag x^ is sir perd ‚ qui! куб 
fine seasons e produced in abundance. of Calanthe Veitehii, из тө дот Аш е, а 
зэ E - T: 
Wages in Nurseries. —AÀ rise of gl унй ө өмү? 
етегу у description of trade i is now w taking place, w with i te Santa zt de s й and, as it is amines 24 - "A 
^ ia gigantea.— 
bei f thi e arranged on 
ight, at the Crystal Palace, will be able to form some 
"ue of the wonderful dimensions at which it arrives in 
"а native climate, The tree from. which the bark 
estion was tak 
in drawing e f trees, w wet or 
still remain at 12s. per week. When on considers | scruple to : T: 
the long рш the gren destruction of clothes i in the tel er, M boars (s0: p Ф: 083, 18 „Жүл 
Med t specimen of this plant sent home by 
ichenbach, 
as taken though d dead. 
feet in height, 140 to the first limb, 15 feet 
е in circumference, measuring outside the bark, 
ich is said to be 18 inches in thickness. Me of 
"ad feet 
diameter, at 100 feet in ight, and has a trunk | w 
^c um's фт» © 
him, on M v perti to Prof. wa 
of provisions and rent, it is ерене how a mau ›› ару lto. Prot Тыныр ОШ 
family can exist on 12s. Sacr he larg i t 
iini of y nursery er seed bi t | from i Bateman's з D. Alexandra оп to merit anothet 
ing, should у sinit TNI better | name, He therefore called his 
We ar 
— «4ч 
s trees, we are informed, vary from 18 to 50 feet | pay- old by » 
n diameter in California, and 5 безл from 200 to | them to obtain situations. x nd e ро Un has el Ale к 
00 feet in hei = and, strange to вау, '|the trade tro themselves magi or вә "e e xand 
hem have Е g One is called - Father | assist us. 1 w of men who have t kept z занасан А nn dim. el 
f the pens and косы it has been blown down |е expectation for "two - тш Barely a» зарна i Кы same species. Мг, Bate is ther 
iti 60 year it still measures 440 feet in lengths but | savings have all been spent. > per ved; it wo 14 be | fore of opinion that he ust fall back — pa Mir 
1 h these pus = | to his К нен for more work would be got from the " к9н есч му tm gita o das y 
Erin а I о be during summer опе of t — d of Bluutii, must T given to 
Шар p placos in the sig and there | is fide "dont Belle de Fontenay Raspberry. EN itis i rene А pner рур T Po od 
Lor uem iti were | шр rem үк imet it s , very | alluding in terms of praise toa fine Атта эел of Lycaste 
anted 0 with W radaras mita f os their вда 
е jas, in a few y e 
*Ppearance would be ^ n order 
lb id. most abundant t bearer, We bave been | Skinneri w which was contributed by Mr, Veitch, which 
