27—1850. | 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE, 
421 
8-inch pots will be foun and convenient 
of air, t an opportunity 
g of fally v vowing each plant individually, 
they begin and their bloss 
will 
ve hot and dry, place 
weather suppli ed with liquid to poke Cs them 
eather without injury 
m being a gross feeder, t the soil should be 
Equal parts of loam, rianas and 
t, and by 
an. 
to sustain 
tained in co 
is without — the object | 
‘should more especially aim 
variety in 
Let him bear 
nuals, and. not eee 
permanently on — — aula of his limited spac 
ro. 
Home Correspondenc 
45 3 
ne jt 
them, and no good result can arise from expending in 
2 to be afterwards 5 ‘wha should have 
form A oR t to be r for the next | 
| Seaso cannot è understand the pg 
of topping a — oi induce others w, af 
to be e 
can ogee pe nt rath action beyon 
leading sh only look W lateral 
to grow, rds | u 
n what principle of eee 
nd that of a A 
= shoots cannot be in 
33 pd the destruction of a leader, and allowed | ha 
wish to know the — = plants EA Aeg 
amount of applica quired t i 
those who have little other employment th 
would nosdoubt be hailed pleasu 
to ramble, as 
ene orga oi, oe! P pero 
in a 
hE angi 
1 the powers of the plant into 
3 we should have arrived at the 
could be done 
he Peach on the other, ee = be anything but 
, I shall w vg 
bone eh = plan pro- | 
* to vis 
gradually destroy al “bus ae glee, d for he 205 
and to 
pedantries Aa sae 
nae into one common or oe sdai 
y giving an on ce form 
rom the Latin or Greek. * for example, the wee 
word be 
Summer Pruning the Vine. — Among the Physiologieal water “of almost any size; though if * W. C's 's“ pond i 5 — ieh — become an English 
questions bearing upon horti „ ery small, it will be necessary to feed the bird, at all applied, in the singular n ore ately in 
t than that which involves oe: We nts in winter. Eight swans, four old birds and | man han the word ‘quadruped,’ which seems 
—— the head and roots of a plant. Not that an four eygnets, have done very well here, on about four more vernacular from having been longer in use, and it 
rtant connection is not admitted and appreciated | acres of water. I think a single swan, if pinioned, | can be used with an English plural, mam 
by all g ood gardeners, but because as nature of would rem quietly, for one of mine was “sent to | verted from the Linnzean te: mmalia, given to the 
m desirous of | Coventry’’ by the rest, and remained by him- class.—2642. Do you consider that it be 
ing a t has self on a small stream within sight and reach of the able to exhibit such names as are contained in the list 
— the — in Gom latter lave to draw practical other birds, without attempting to associate with them. which I will now read you: acrop i 
conclusions from ceive to be false p ses. The water here is subject to the “green scum” of | the Se oer aes Acrotemnus Faba, the 
I have chosen the Vine as as the er ot illustration, which ind 3 om mplains ; italways a a surface ee Cutr ; Rh is bra the Bre 
the practice whic! to call in in ve m weather. e sw. t I — the large-eyed 
question is oftener 3 fort that 1 pant than zi useful in keeping down other Soop. but = think th they do | G rene surus the ventail ; 
others, and because not eat “green scum ;” at least, not in any appre- | Ductor ps Seger — impak Guide ; 
ciable quantity, though, con their size * strength, | sicon rge cone Hunchtooth ; De e tri- 
good as 
thousand. The practice — ‘allude tol is that af allowing as 
prem! produced from the effects of “stopping” 
grow to a considerable length, under the — — 
that fd so doing the roots are materially augmented 
and stren — to their being e 
ow I cannot u 
upon on which such a cone 0 
timate connection 
pre 
action in the — 
ing 
the rem otest er 
In your 60 Calendar tengo ” for Jun 
head “ Hardy Fruit Garden,” oc 
ich 
ne 2224 
lowing w ut the 
principle is the same as 
sion: * Stopping will cause 
—— into al 
occurs the fol- m 
as that immediately under discus- som 
o they are able to swim through it, and break it up, when 
by the current If a 
8 
fi a swan has been seen 
1 . from this, that fish is not 
my rvation 
goes, I pan they a Tittle. or no harm to my trout. 
ist owever, devour many of the small 
ones. B., Can 
Botanical ‘Nomenclature —The e and inexact 
when not were { 
requent variation in dif- 
a of indigenous growth, are 
ch might z mae against a | 
names 
co e inconve- 
of aliases, which exist now in 
es, would be in- 
— e7 in e 
mpetent or 
willing to meddle with the dea con ges — feel 
themselves justified in christening pithy Englis 
names, too, = in general po more compound, and 
anba eee, 
employed. “they convey, it 
amounts to nothing without some previous knowledge, 
coul 
ts well Nel in these 
= n the question. 
may 
jects than physiology, i it can excite no raen me e min 
The growth o 
should be so in this. h ofa e shoo 
y be 
8 
wood, and pith, but presenting no distinction of parts, | is to 
rnal organs, and ten 
leaves tendrils, or the 
of Grapes. The 2 leaves possess 
tinn 
eee e xte 
nascent bunch 
no power 
of assimilating, in h 
ar matter of the shoot. in 
i ter, an 
several p om it is com 
the vital energies of the plant are are roused, 
their office, and the whole body of the plant | 
a portion 
short, t nthe idea or form (ot — 
— 
in faet y P what- a 
ever; they = = = err ‘of which I speak, mere ex- really mad of. Thes acts of mi 
tensions of the s to be as easily bronght out i in —— vith 
E oft i 
d — but apron sanm 
if not quite as instruct 5 8 o names ean be suf - 
ficiently deseriptive to b 3 
C. li 
w | dendron arboreu 
to sjt 
omad = but ‘often mislead (asi in the 1 many in- a 
e 
stances w 
has been forestalled by some earlier-named species). 25 
make = 8 
recogni 
otherwise, there e 
di * on y be 3 8 ed one 
with the prta and the t be a distinc 
memory recalling that — eri Tei is in thie les 
gatus, mE ‘Shrubtoo th; Holoptychius ain 
issimus, the noble Allwrinkle ; P. 
ic 
bone — 
glish Deer to — — * 
fishe h equivalents, if e 
would be 
rass. are 
e Himalayas, and es of 
— oy Gd ‘studded with Rhododendrone there is 
not suc drop of water to be foun 
m grows on the Himalayas in 
nite, mica slate, and gneiss, witho 
tegrated 
me approaching to peat. Rhododendron 1 
a speci i — . — 
Rhode 
pate ri the 3 of naten x Bill 10, 000 feet chee in 
n, between Alm gger, on 
Bhaugeruttie river, growing ia pany with Quercus 
roopii, and * pe above the paned 
capable of 
this HES 
anw 
E 
t effort of learning the names of plants to 
; and 
possible produced by 
a mixture of crimson 3 was to be found amongst 
t e one 
7 to be conveyed by kom 
and orm to which the name 
＋ applied must be m recognised ; and the 
the ae and the other must 
be the name 
sade 
connection between 
— — with an Englis indee 
r, from the aan character = the — 
g the 
be likely to follow a more 
d in eo 
parison with the inconveniences 
multiplication of aliases. 
by common be 
wer ; K. till 1 3 . least 5000 feet 
n the EN below. William Munro, Pesi; Belfast, 
př 
oracity of the Pike.— The voracity of the pike is 
proverbial, but perhaps never has thi 
forcibly exemplified than i 
myi 
e dimensions. ad, wh tl 
— “had entered the water till it e his breast, and 
while in the act of moving his arms, in the ude of 
swimming, the right hand and arm were — bitten 
monster fish, and on the lad extricating the! imb it 
was again seized. Foiled in the second 3 it — 
