— 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[Nov. 30, 
A 2 for cuttings than for alder r plants. 
en 
pri which they grow all winter. In the ee a of 
rch they have andther shift, and receiv 
f May. In the end of May they 
ors in an east aspect, where they 
i 
and ‘half Wa 
room dust, at d'it, Aung it in a finer 
atment to all my large Fuchsias en om 
of the e Nee are all thrown wn away, a 
stock is very spring ; observe, e, that F. 
spectabilis pakes A splendid winter plant for the con- 
rvatory, pur * N the side * es 
back i in Stark dnd do not e o muc 
his of the sun 
ed soot. D. Kidd, Garnstone 
e rein and multiflorum.—l beg to 
hat these plants are rien! Ae 1 vr 
n 
Tours may possibly be a grea om oe ch upon its 
parent, which I recommend cause it is the best 
early Plum 
very. 
desideratum to a gentleman’s gardener who has to fur- 
be sop Mar to the et wee ecoce de, 
the same period ; 
e 
1 3 so 0 feels i in England, as 
warrant “ oR ” in stating so confidently, that „south 
f the Trent it ripens ti 2 as e A Sherine for 
iation o s, from the midd nd 
of September, T should imh have noticed it 
ot ae which must have been 
79 
hates up iserepaney, I 
uiries to be made concerning the ha time of ripen- 
ing « oft this Plum, from the-person who-sent the fruit a 
assure “ „K, however, that I have no desire to jones 
on a better ac- 
find that = 
under that i erroneous name. It is 
more in athe way of the Red * Bonum, 
a shoot of each (provided I ge 
in London he will r I culti- 
en 
teness ; in 
not worthy of as his 
Golden Drop. The “ Zwetsche’”’ pact an awful name ) 
Iam uainted wi I have recurred to this sub 
ject, I because T consider the Plum. one of the most use- 
In 
is valuable for dessert and for tarts; 
state, i it ‘takes 
an e aeh confection when dried; an for j 
” complains (p. 741) 
27 his Cucu 3 plants 
teeped in 
eh 
ave e if he 
moment on ee een eh which he em- 
m that I am D vith ne great | three parts Wim 
-| Gra 1555 
n | the following trates on the Jargonelle Pear. 
I. get them), 
a fresh i| 
moist stove, a e 
it has broken t ete a liberal potting into 
e part leaf-mould, 
with a 
| OVET-W: 
Ghigetiiotis young friend has grafted | —— 
T believe 
Ribston Pippin Apple, 
with Bon Chretien 
ear l upon it. Pear grafted upon it. 
eS m 
——— Siberian Crab. 
4 
8 — Medlar. 
J 1 Three sorts of Apples 
ia (names unknown), 
+ Bishop's Thumb Pear. 
Siberian Grab, 
Hawthorn. 
Redstreak Apple. 
i 
Black Taunton do. 
Beurré Pear. Quince. 
Flanders Pippin Apple, —— Scarlet Nonpareil 
Apple. 
18 
* — Jargonelle Pear. 
rn 
while on the others 
1 be — seh i advice that mig 
to remedy the evil nex 2 
[ possi 
Blenheim Orange Do, 
Downton Pippin Do. 
Jargonelle Pear, 
hl 
ton 
ster 
8 opinion without tag! 
more * the —— 
But although rd rly all 
points, e means employed to obtain 
almo rs 4 to each: other. 
mple testimony. 
e first A should be to obtain a 
prevent’ the roots from going into the — 
for 
La 2 It was known to our 
is destructive 
— ae 
L., Ham 
Fue ai pte stated 
A week con nis pl oe have thought — 
a point of no small importance. 
method, in all iiititations, would be to dig out the 
My 
border to the depth of 1 foot, shovelling out the loose 
soil so as ottom. On this Iv 
e final th 
may be allow 
1 apply the 
je o the | shou 
In last cb Nute the Wurd 80 
k off 
u follow these instructions your | i 
ben vil reward joa wi a profusion of flowers and 
- | fine fo to 
ede ee — 
but, in making a border, it should be borne i in 
opin 
of far more importance than any other eer pn it may 
possess, 7 hear] Let turf be taken off some 
ure, F 
uti 
9 it ie oul 
7 200 with a trig spade from — 
e heap, ea utting being about 4 or 5 Pes 
; by this bee the border will be more 
the turf was 
sad 
in texture than 
he soil. 
nches'to 2 feet of this an tea put prt it in, in layers 
about 8 inches thick, a er as it is 
Tt done 
naging Vine borders propounded 
by T. W: Motherwell ug A 709, contains nothing new. 
It has been longer period wa the 
ther 
pee moll forked i in 10 keep the top of 
porous, and to preveni the frost from injuring the roots. 
re ‘the forkin of the ‘was not only at- 
ended to in Ar autumn, but through the 
merely stirring in 
whith is 0 importance than 
autumn. Great 'advanta pe also derived ant — 
when the 
e always avoided * 
were in a Forig Sib 
water —.—— ink W 
of Spits “tint if the 
(| upon them, frost will 
r ai — 
easure 
j gaily 
drai greatest i 
— warmth would be secured, at least minatel: 
b i Si 
ner of liquid m 
ell. 1 Have ‘followed the above 
any years, an t success, I 
practice and wit 
roots have not 6 inches ó: 
warm d 
en rl J > for 
red with 
* 
borders, Me oul ng at Tynem 
(see p. 47), and Having followed out the same 
resent give some 
Ss 
nted to 250, 1 3 to 4 ibs, 
eneh ; — à many of the Black Hamburgh b 
u fronti; 
2} to 3 inches in 
bent whe 3 Muscats did not swell off so well ode 
Le 
5 
ht 
eiers are have been wished, having allowed re many bun 
remain ree thinning, n verte if eut- 
oe 
T 
ue 
readers ‘shoul 8 that an g impenetrable 
artificial or natural, for of Vines, ‘is 
consequence whether the wry of 
the common level o 
as far as they cou 
roots ‘would not — through ‘ 
any e detrimental to them. Though to many m 
the 
extent 
method may not different 
qn 
appear from common 
— of kier a m with loose rubble, such as broken Grapes, 
rubbish, &e., * — its effects are y dis- | times 
Hamburgh, but gen 
Black een = which, I have no 
Do however, let me be 
often uce ‘badi, 
