_ THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
ir experience | ye 18 1849), has been about 24 inches | ters into he ground the year before, found that = 
(24.017). The wettest yeat in the above period | hard —.— was the coldest, and the broken ground 
s Mr. Rozerts, the | was that. of 1841, when the amount of rain was the warmest ; but a man may have enough to do if 
his inches. The driest year was 1847, when he is to mind such staf as that. 
t Anprew | there fell only 16.25 inches. The wettest month in | Always roll the lawn ee — ; the Grass {i 
ultivator who. tells | the whole period was October, 1846, when we had | brittle then, * will er the roller; you 
P ir trade, | 5.54 inches; and the driest month. was mber, may see that by the — 7 chat are left wha the 
and who has ound out the ow: Straw- 1829, when only 0.15 was indicated by the rain | roller has passe nih This saves mowing; nev N 
berries, pets Peaches. aon, and other fruits, | gauge. this was exce M — of the | the Grass being black, N 2 get green again in t 
at lee with “ Celery, Asparagus, and other vege- present year, nen there fell only 0.13 in if it doesn't die. If the Grass should die, it will b. Şe 
tables, as. Strawberri a oa Pes, eee Melons, |, The depth of rain which has ‘allen in the garden | easy to — down ain nas, or to buy some more 
Celery Asparagus w rown e— of the Horticultural Society, bet the Ist off turf. Kiroupos 
He oniy just using ~*~ tiles ere pipes, and pots? | January and: the 30th 1 ‘of the present N 
| personage down in. the Directory | season, is as follows HARDY FRUITS IN 1850. 
aS: — Fe 34 Eastcheap, pap ty spice 3 143 a 1.40 ——— Ps es e we of the Gar- 
: 3 ebruary 4 ..-- 0.95 Ju 2,68 | deners’ onicle as the advocate s connected 
Ti — ů—— March LE et 0.13 | August 0.97 | with fruit e British I e on prin- 
. WI have been enabled, through the kindness of a} April. 1.79 | Septe: 2.35 | ciples t the wayfaring man may readily 
“friend near Bristol, to ascertain that the Fuscus May : — understand them; I trust I may, as years roll on; be 
which proved so fatal there was not any species, of ¥ 13.54 | permitted either to bear increased testimony to the facts 
‘Agaric. The boy who ‘survived d that “the Hence it appears t that we ought to have during alluded to, or to my recantation when suc 
Were things as if with pinholes underneath,” which October, November, me December, only 2.71 ine a requisite. As to Ca see A I know not how it is; but 
indicates some e of Boletus, a genus containing | Supposing t is to prove the driest season in pet . ~~ the gardening Li 
some of the most t dangerous as e most | Years; PE 2 inches if it should be the W. ee — = aes p as itis 
delicious of An. Since this fatal occurrence, it is or 10.46 inches if the amount of rain should reach 1 portion * horticultural «dipping in Jordan,” » 
Sy ~ illness has — en place £ rom | the average. such persons cannot comprehend, or do Sot app 
the use o ushrooms pur ristol In looking back on the me days whe 
market, Which perhaps ‘nay be the ay to the query HOW 10 ‘MISMANAGE oA \ GARDEN. & Gardener Magazine,“ condueted by the late hen the 
= submitted to us respecting a sample of appa- Cua ae winter bring many and lamented Mr. was in all its glory; or at 
rentiy good M about which it was said more opportunities of bad Wehe t than some least when hundreds of young aspirants for fata 
that there had been some (controversy in the èigh- fol . more t once | horticultural fame gloried as the period ‘came round 
à od. DO — } frequently arisen recommended to the attention of the learner, so that for devouring We I cannot but re- 
toe dn eti he may think them over. carefully before the time to fleet — that with all the fanf. of certain fruit 
Reeth profit by them shall have passed away. doctors of that day—there has been little advance 
meh rer ourse you will be just now planting out your in of our out-of-door fruits. In ob- 
once | Endive for winter use. True itis rather late, butas we | $° do not y that- nobody 
said hefore, better late than never. Indeed it may, be | but p mi noteng Gf I — — . cast 
BS mete J ae ng | Cough + for of several, in vari 0 
See it, all as possible ; there wil be so much the the, kingdom, who. ‘lia fe mye repudiated the 
ae : less to blanch ; Be may use thumb-pots or the $ 15 L N. mar i in aceon 1 . 
and next size for that f purpose, instead of the great heavy | and constitutions of the 
species, ensive covers Wh a Endive requires rybody knows that — — 50 has been 
>a gt 97 own intelligence will tell you that 20 small very much ne in the fruit e least in our 
A e plants, cove a square foot of ground, are quite as northern parts; and evi ws also, that tl 
Ww 7 ich as one plaut occupying the same space; Just | appears some plea for this ungentlemanly pr r 
bott as a Vine w d bunches of Grapes is | inasmuch as in the last f March we had a ther- 
ini et quite arkable a specimen of gardening as if it rene of 16° in this part of F other per- 
Milan a hore five 27 5 of 5 Ibs ns quote: much lower, buto f thi is room for 
onde 95 ef you: tie up Endive for blanching, or if you doubt, s Ihave found that those ao tir, 
Lethe Tiber do not tie it up, when you cover it take care that it 
d hê ` Y is wel Ol Pet ae 1 pe people pi refer dry weather was however: areal Nona Gi faet; and I have testimony 
$ ory li — lud de if or this operation, and endeavour to ve EE: been 
is state 1 large . led Maak but you will not imitate them, To be nA it 20 e iy be exp — ae ae oe 
* ch bse in taly, passes under the rot from wet, t, but then it may not; and if it does | it; and wet ‘have, in at of the 
to 810 Aar 1 lists, rot, it wall be more dender a A ‘to ig more soft. | gardens within half a panded 155 Knee T write ; 
‘ ri E metely neeide rere to dne of eme en vou are earthi ry, don't and not nag around in our more southern 
te pae against our common Mushroom trouble, e i do it gently, ee with care ; chuck | counties, if half the complai g — correct. 
air egal ‘extent in some eee ‘of! E Bwin 8 aa ar Pa ea TRE 7 0 PU EL | nates riny be pelea S|" pina ec 
3 3 e J4 1 La ave been a com > ! 
0 het ee e getting in am 7 the Bei i iste, whieh. esn Be e — * this 12 n 
lay es A1 5 e ep t Sound. be athe gritty, in wonder at; ; for last year a hy wate — 
artiflcially in It s of no consequence 1 . is well dee i * us 
A Tabs ast Te oy season. ums, . * 
„Vinten on Harting 2 vas i ts ag put. your pee eee e. and black e 
i i atte! es, w ‚whi : 
— ant — of bed of the ts. The och er sure to prune out the produced full crops ; so full indeed, that 1 may. pro: 
nobler 0 passing bya fen few days after inquired young canes instead of the old ones ; of. course the | bably never witriess euch a fructiferous season, 
Whether Apt bad Been of the: horses and bearing woo is what you ‘want, and you may see | taking them both dee aa collectively. 
se ; * aru of flowers that ay A e are What i . — for ace Do 2 y 1 
1 ely ee 1 TE or A merae yer grear — 2 2 fully under- 
Fefe 8 of e tn wad! rit t Her ie the real gist 
A ! eae whey we i of 
mpestres, Sy 8 rs Say ; [Som hended, 50 ri yr 
personatus” has not escape ed slander. Dr. fest y ʻi ; 10 0 ; 1 ext — a al th 
PRLE! informs: ús "ghat in passing through are Dat i 25 e Will | evils, for the erimes and de ns of 
) ave the = et The Be ` 4 
Nievre he saved a whole family from immi- h th s satisfaction of “Tookin ng, to the ok a a broad is always left in the fruit 
peek N “who rere on the point of dressing a crop the ter. nother. thing you. may — ia wel known what a fus I 
quantity OF a large form of A. ch zg, Which attend to; dig well about the roots 0 vering or 1 of 
Had been taken for „ and A. Mae is anoth b Ss TO 18 ve. t Ing, as vou Drs. Tweedledum an 
dangerdus sper o Which it bears à close resem- w by its being so much recommended by 
a “We eam therefore fot give fall credit to the Rivers ; and what is good for a Pear must be good 
reports of fatal eff arising from = use of that or a No. doubt, there is a difference 
“Tgpedi 1 101 j between them ; for Pear-roots are coarse, and 5 8 
gest yis however, after all; possible that all the’ eseu- and naturally go down. into the subsoil,.. 
| dër pate! dene 0e un- bang, rate aaiae mi and Aton gad lie near the 
olesome it is ‘equally possible ‘that some Surface. But what then! All mismanagers of. an 
# e malter may tave aoe RGR KA adt Most i, . i just as a hand 
eee p: AARNA ' pilak up the | i 
: ms Meleth Zu 8.55 aan, bad manage u i 
tial ‘aeeotmt is lpüblishad 0 eat | Surface of Sera ia wikis ë Se Sica 
ş deleterious effects of the common 8, in letting the frost in; Why then take the 
ajuolo), and Cnotca’ has given a de. Kane ? especially when it makes a place untidy.” 
— j 3 affected slugs and other nuisances wi ich a hard 
personal iio: Sof igh ori’ 8 H was ‘may Kill, he can catch them, in the summer 
least apr commen Mushroom. time ; it is good Wie c for a boy or two. He 
kak | Sees no use in soil br oka Gove by. fkost, 
aie 15 85 
an, he will weed up | in 
ve the groun BS an 075 saii 
and 
| inch N 8 
ind who put his thermome- | fruit-trees 
