680 THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
Calendar of Operations. 
(For the ensuing week.) 
PLANT DEPARTMENT. 
2 advantage of the present seas 
similar 
operations are 
— all plants which are 
r have 
infested with i with soft — ane n warm 
matter by which the eggs of 
water, as the gummy 
many of these ts 
thereby loosened, and 
The latter part of 
moved. 
g at a temperature o 
about mt or nak — will — destroy any pia. 
about them. Mu 
at this — os ny 
necessary pruning —— imc amongst creepers, 
done before the cleaning 3 as eit is 1 — 
in cleaning shoots w ards | 
Have all dirty a — and i their 
any 
to waste ti 
to be cut away. 
f which | is 
a green or — appearance, whieh i is | as i 
the has 
1 r has been too ly used, 
that drainage is ineficient if et r 
ir should be immediately — doy ed 
are attached to the branches is gro 
urking a ch m 
8 is 7 — yes laea sa —— plants in this rls durin 
season, than many Let 
ust be destroye 
, | mildew, the plants so affected f 
dry morning, dus 
dirt accumulated upon them during the sum 
Nothing conduces more to the health and well — of 
their 
0 encourage them to make a little 
wth, both at top and bottom, before they are har- 
d 
y. 
dened off ; and that more time may be afforded 
latter purpose, the former should effected with al 
consistent s ropa 
ring w pees 
this should t 4 — —.— by k wn them q qu uite cool at 
nig exposing mow pe fully in all dry open wea- 
| ther, when not too cold; taking — to frost 
from the more tender on both by night and day. 
During the hardening process, the very little water — 
thé first signs of 
hould be syringed on a 
over 7 ib ers of ae 
FLORISTS’ FLO 
4 
pees plania as hardy as possible Wa a free circu 
oving the lights every fine 
fully exam 
during tho n next five months, that 
early, as their blossoms ore lasti 
when they are not gay sie ct 
period of bloomin; 
tan Vi olets in 
must 
n The most cong 
eg pits ia a hed of liavas the heat in which is severe m 
i tting at this season . 
Heathery, the plants must be carefully watched and throug 
| gradual 
: Let Cauliflowers, 
— ae ge | them 
cold winds, lig 
e lower 
will re 
If any fibres are out of the ground, eae 
fine soil, or make a cleft in the soil and 
m. r AND eran which have 
osed in during — week, in order 
that on aii ae strike fresh ay air, and 
ly more d more daily ‘ill ‘thoroughly exposed, 
,| Turirs.— Plant Tulips immedia yea 
CHEN GAR. 
ae neee Pa all the air 
fros , and very 
in a —— 
d of air 
8 y 
the wubject of planta for fore! „ 
n 
which, ‘admirably for the s 
them. 1 By q Plugin the the 2 
can canbe gi e » thus s preventing the 
and Wistaria sinensis, grown as standards 
double Sy — double Cherry; Weigela rosea, 
Jasmin nudiflorum, tree Pæo nies, and Forsythia 
FORCING DEPARTMENT. 
ook 
iolated appear- | f 
is an excellent, but by ni 
pas 
the soil bory young pines of any kind, as 
friends have an insuperable objection to miy over it, 
are | The same fine apply to the Endive and Lettuce 
| planted in frames for winter ir Let dead or decaying 
leaves be carefully removed, and the surface of the soil 
loosened, to allow the freo action e the seerne 
mon practice, to 
Hast Garlic and Shallots i in in autumn ; n ; the advan antage is 
continuing 
rature ; | 
Let the centre of | 
to grow below-ground i in all 8 e during 
125 while their d till t 
t 0 
i of this poi yet principle, viz., affording 
the roots of a Nest an oppertunity hity of getting in advance 
in quanti baar the — &e., close 2 the l laps, or 
run down into the of the pl 
of the tops. 
ith 
State of the Weather near London, for the for the week ek ending Oct. 24, 1850, 
as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswick. 
ATURE. | 
|Ofthe Earth 
1 foot 2 feet 
deep. deep. 
Rain. 
Wind 
Ofthe Air. 
Max. Min. Mean 
ay.. 1818 30.705 Era 
È = 
eee | 
* 
oO 
ee te 
29.668 
8 very fine; slightly cloud: 
19—Fine; i fine. 
20—Fine; eloud; ; fine at at night; 9 large halo round 
21—Fine but la. clear. 
n fine with bright sun in forenoon; cloudy; overcast; 
23—1 e 
3 and — . — 
ean temperature of the week, 5 deg. below the average. 
State of the Weather at Fae Ti dueg s = . 
ess 8 88 
A 
| 
now devoted to L the sashes of the different 
8 and frames included, W ane 
ge 
est 
Avera 
gh 
Temp. 
Average 
Hi 
Lowest 
Temp, 
bbb 
HENA 
Sees 
= 
oung 
As to the soil, you 
ractice — Se en apr rea 
— consult Sweets Hothouse and — Cal. 
vator,“ or Mackintosh’s gt sate Garden.“ — New Sub. We 
never reco! — * ae. oe e Advertisement in last 
week's Nu 
CAYENNE PEPPER : 
= tion of the Ca 
— 
peppe 
— It is grown here for the use o 
but great difficulty is — ced 
as the pepper adheres 80 
eB 
8 
what angle 2 3 arr 
roof of your frame, . it — slope enou 
drip. 
* nnot destroy Plant and any 
by ma e or top-dressing, Any 
388 ons — kin them would ki rass. The 
—— a cheapest, and only effectual plan, is to weed 
th a here o help t.—JM. We 
= — you the i me reply to your inquiry about Mouses 
Sar. 
n your case, however, after removing it, sift some fine 
— soil over the — eeds. 
ço, and add — Grass see 
oung ner. Two hundred pounds! why, it ha a 
fortune, if you are — prudent, economical, and industrious. 
Ask you master to get it invested in 
eet: — — a 
you had better take some other — urity 
NAMES OP oped Cavanensi:. 2, Bes Diel, Nov., Dooz 
St. sri Dec. ; 5, Black fei 100 
e 
leaf 
ike that of Gansel’s Bergamot. In your cli miath ‘all thoes 
that ripen after eee rote — have a south aspect, if you 
can afford it. The late t deserve and most require it. 
bined the 8 feet high wale: — tond. the following 3 
ss — — South aspect: Glout Morceau, 
ter Beurré, Beurré Rance, East as 
— Winter N elis, Seckel, Louise Brite or esir), 
Thompson’s, Suffol 1 eres. — 8 
Ne Passe 
E, Old — k Ne plus Meuris, 
15 daam Comte de Lamy, 
tillac and Bezi d’Heri X 
rceau, 
narius.— 
botanists Physalis ed eduiis; its fruit 
by some pers 
It is best — a . annual, whi 
be 
S 141 3 Tn ‘cand in a hotbed in the spring, 80 as- 
to get it forward, and then be — in the open ground as 
soon as fros gone. Possibly it may bear a Devonshire 
@vinter, bu tender near . 4, Malope 
malacoides, a hardy annual; 5, Kaulfussia amelloides; 10, 
Rudbeckia laciniata; 2, Senecio Cineraria, alias Cineraria 
maritima; 6, Ast bri i umng; 
us 3 
man 
underta aces 1 flowers. 
eL T D. We did not doubt that you 
had accidentally obtained Peaches — leaves byes 
e fru Mn different obtaining them 
VERONICA LINDLEYAN A M. It is arly hardy. 
VINE _Borpes -R an Gover it with stable litter 
Mise — uda will not bear frost, aud 
— be c t the 
— i Plan oes 18 inches 
from row to msi and 9 $ laches in i 
aoo apie the i is 
yeium Dar tti, nor of that of the Sumach ; the. latter of 
poisonous, Jute, we believe, is a substance of the ni 
Hemp.t 
EEDLING 1 
FUCHSIA : 2 Box a wers crushed to pieces in 
post.“ 
ons W G. Not equal to many of the light hinds nom 
* G M M'I. Your seedling is of a — in which 
abound, A erimson to ba vainable E be very superior it i 
fn e a, oniy Pa So ng ond B 
x useful for the purposes of 
exhibiti on. ne 
Pi 
