ECC ² . ꝛ ] ³ͤP ˙—Ui ˙ wmÄ 
51—1850.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
805 
Unden such circumstances you must place clean water supply until it comes in natural] force Wers eee e e e 
thin their reach, and plenty of food—the — as of the above in the open air Taia aan nition ae rr 
i 7 H i 
— vi as possible, — this variety consists having an impression that the flavour is — Men — ~ —— 5 — 
discuss anon with d imagine that this Dendrobe will soon. become very 
; but when the told pisaa 
ap i — common ey are t ĩt requires three 
lar an el upon the inma at will pre- — E the steaming insider stable — ng sis, perhaps they maybe be ind 8 
; n. My method of cultivating it is as follows : 
aerga 
5 
have been obliged to sacrifice — of biii 05 540 THE d OF THE VINE A REMAR > 
Cr by putting them remature death. The O THE CULTURE OF THE M 
birds usually roost up met ; ki that, » with only moderate ak TWO BIRDS FINED. WITH ONE pel 
anne, the — complained of can ee No. [F ERS.] 
ther terrible annoyan ca a use of alar e e Mo aia one, CULTURE or THE 
your birds, on moonlight nights articularly, will be she pertapa, wil say,“ This is all very well’ Mino, 
cats, which will, * unaka prowl about an but it is a great deal more trouble than 
assembling in numbers it i i 
en ec A very pret 
3 coming down early in the morning, I found a bave nothing better to do; so there's Ihe era 
of glass in the aviary, broken. There was a an end to the matter.” Not so fast, my answereth 
Abe 46 dr R 309 riend l ased t 
recoll 
Round it was a quantity of grey hair, no- ¢ human ; that what is here put down, though it 
W it, something alive, also not h un man, had evi. raf Seem a 2 deal in a + ump, to — i 
dently passed. and a time to 
man read o 
escaped through this aperture, I had no means of 365 days each ; ‘a good deal of time to every purpose 
ng; but I heard many ill-suppressed whispers do a good deal in, nn 
Aap canari 2d i 
ppearan cag i greater is 
and of the welkin ringing with their song. It being will be a living memorial of industry ghia: life, the 
an invariable rule with me to live “out of debt, I pro- and 8 — re useful and lasting and better frui 
ceeded at once to discharge this last outstanding obliga- |% tombsto does it bear, 1 
tion. I was plainly indebted to one of the feline tribe 34d“. Nothing good is given to man a old saw 
for the unsolicited honour of a visit. Too well bred without labo * co rast : 
ý ment. 1 4th . Laboa makes a man; idle- bat tha that it will upon the system which appears to have been carried 
that same 2 p a petit souper for the visitor, | ness fattens a pig. Sepre Victo “ w 
dressed a oer, the paragon of all human excellence.“ O Lord my God, how ma d how * 
The re! was laid for a dozen at least ; for I thought Suan wife's and orks t in wisdom Te ‘hou made | rk a Ajey — 
e 3 > td in. e ear — ev 2 
not “out” in this my calculation. My polite neighbours, 5th 2 —.— — — — d a =H 1 here see ape ror ndod. 2 
i 4 vea higher ni — eness 3 expe in f 
they dank ae and port gars a all th hat T . of — auen u, a pee rinterest Work for those so-called park reminds me what I in forming this 
BI Yor. them, thay aiani the in all the works of Nature; —T— abou! theater ea of Otobe 
“ remove” was needed! Cont to all go 3 manners — wi Wondetfal laws for those that or the beginning of Nov ber last ; this was, four 
I must Senach, the party, before breaking up, had by which God is working at all times, are. mem carrying one ordinary sized evergreen, slung to 
actually licked their p —.— 3 5 eae 8 T a —— 3 
Next mornin — 3 a rumour that 3 5 i niet et 0 
had been mysterion sly seized with sidden and ore hej removing a number of evergreens, and it naturally ex- 
illness.” 7s it possible ?” replied T to my informant, | “ Hisbo aty, following our delightfal ta T ‘Victoria 
8 dell intende e 
the interesting gravity of a Janus, To pru: — — te —— — * flowers, —— pon my next visit 4 % a tate m rei Mr 
2 days subsea ently—a ji most „ remarkable” Which, were it toilsome, yet with thee wee E e process of removing e 
apprised of the very same number en, been a fort- 
3 sally y mysterious ts 1 William Kidd, New 6thly. The recur is at home, it may ont, a ays ** 3 n removal 3 have d led 
Roc — sds the assistanee of wife and | pure urchase ase. money. At that — 1 — R 
e p 
TEES 55 arat koir shines ity Tt mak makes home look cheerful = $ by a cart, a distance Arb prer 3 tote; 3 
ING. and comfortabl 9 „argumens ind the Cost time 
Winter Rhubarb, when produced in paneta is a | „Lastly. Grapes - phe ge. Pleasant jazy man th fore oseupie by N ing — tree 
delicacy which most people enjoy ; much, however, of things to eat; are very w me; nearly; he must have caused it to cost ite n 
that which is forced for Coven Market, under can be made into wine, or turned into yieldeth; he twelve. Such is the system th ‘which pablie.afuae 
the infi of ting beds of stable litter, | orte a ieee either of which are he plan 2 tah ¢ are generally maniged, wid what is e — 
is but flavoured. A strong taste of the | Worth Some Vi i 's business; if i i i 
aang ners parenti io . Jou mow hk it dop ch nk, Bry, man d ee mens . wore tern th 
oe The obtaining the taste which distin — then go and eat = not Grapes), drink — 0 5 he not have troubled you with the above had I not consi- 
forced Rhubarb pie — just alluded to, is a thing (but not wine), sleep (if awa with- mire, the dog to | dered your complaint made against the appearance of 
that 8 deserves the attention of — who culti- out * and be mise * the park n Nan l Wm, Statham, De Beau- 
vate what is required for their own private in be up, ps. — — voir — 
ehe R — poes a a Still achiev „ arden Gee — —Does an any a a or reader 
— p e ground sho wel Lear o labour, and to wait.”—Longfellow. — the Chronicle, bloom Bignonia Tweediana freely? If 
trenched, ew partin — — The com- The compiler su ul cultivator give his mode of treat- 
system of planting sho rows, a — * te r he does not aspire to the maketh a clean — For several years, a plant has been rambling 
4 feet apart, and the plants an a — 3 feet from be — au —— seeing that the breast. 2 the arches of my conservatory, and among the 
each o 1 v e i 
we 
eile 6 ie A o, 
I have m E 
itchell’s Royal Al Albert to — t kinds for winter is desi i 1 2 season, my gardener vigorously root pruned it, which 
and, if the soil is in high tilth, one season will pro- 3 —̃ 4 or gel Mee the proverb that, during the ik summer, 1 it fo Sindee i little 
ace them sufficiently strong for the purpose. The able feeling naturally produces, and Houesty is more freely, but not so as to render it a desirable con- 
roots should be carefully taken up; the less injury in- also by following an ola proverb, to be — mg — servatory climber. Did it flower sana ak it N 4 
flieted upon them in “98 operation the better ; therefore beforehand with any would-be sharp- according zly. be a truly valuable plant, as its 
® 
ie 
ii 
8 
p 
= 
8 
a deep trench first taken out all round each | sighted and benevolent person; an rs a ofits 
‘crown, and the root carefully undermined. I have for po ara readily — that the in- He believeth lass. Two of my ka have 8 seed-pods, in 
Some years had an ample and regular supply, the pro- structions herein contained are not = that though shape like a slender French Bean, one of them about 
duce of a few roots placed under the front stage of an offspring of, tho h proved by his own stolen fruit be 15 inches long, which is not yet ripe. Among con- 
i i They are placed close to each | experience; ro that ty are the “yg 1 gg boone Serva climbers, I should thin 
* ren merely covered with — little light dry gleanin — two excellent books on the engender . . well — din “ Paxton’s Flower Garden,” 
no o care being requisite. The first planting | G: Vin digestion in the t position, if it not prove too 
takes place in November, and this is succeeded by a "The — wee rk w stomach and a age for the e of such stra I 
second in February. These two plantings usually afford nished; and he will feel perie 17 To e honesty make this remark, from the oer i received —_ 
sufficient eee — — 2 the highest perfec- datisfied with ‘the result, * it be is ä the Horticultural Society, cng a very unsa 
‘tion, with the least possible trouble. found generally useful. His readers rvosity. tory appearance, in the same house, and against the 
Seakale is also grown in a similar manner; but this | have hie good — that they also may same pillars, 5 Tacsonia mollissima M ores 
requires a deeper covering, in order that the stalks | receive the fruit of their labours in the tipula grew in wild luxuriance, both of which T die. 
ed Ms See ieee e 7 
y a y en a er a and s sweeter Gra oom a er produce flowers too 
of, a regular supply of Salads, Mushrooms, &c., might be 3 ben hou dost come, give Him the praise sparingly for my satiafaction In this conservatory, 
kept up throughout the winter and spring months at Whose. pply’d thee ; Mike Ghai may suffice, T. manicata has dropped its leaves, and gives evident 
little trouble or expense. The space under a plant stage And then be chan kful; O, admire his ways tokens of not being in a genial climate. Has this been 
an be of little other use, and if thus taken advantage * g~ * work's unempty’d gr — 1 noticed elsewhere? In speaking of climate, I am led to 
of, itis quite astonishing what positive luxuries may be vn — “nn aod hirasslf — V, | make a passing remark on that of South Devon; at the 
I always look upon the under part of my | é | present time we are experiencing tremendously stormy 
— . i + Thus in m tion he wishes He peer — | her; the sq wind, : mpanied by rain, 
avthe| «cot coed ends wih hope that, f ar * - ; 
places are either left unoceu — wura cas ior z = 1 is “ab hak a nothing, —— thunder, and lightning, are carrying off slates and 
kind Pot rubbish bole; whereas at the present z ihs J gainhimfriends. | thatch, blowing down trees, living and dead, and making 
SS EPS WONG RAST ene Oa as en Seapets ee 
d; in et i i ; c 
3 are rising quantities oe ewe nervous invalids tremble ; yet we have searcely had any 
Rhubarb, — a generally 2 maintain a time he bis them all God speed. C frost, such as to injure tender plants in sheltered situa- 
=—_— ——— tio inst wn house, œa ii is as 
* Thecarte, or È fare, was too choice not to be preserved, fresh | 
T have ce copy” oft, and it wil appear in a future chapter, Home Correspondence. eam my hopes in not flowering ; and my . 
prised; fon ny 4 receipt. er not one-quarter its| Dendrobium nobile—A handsome plant in bloom brought me a bouquet a few days since, to send 
usually charged s guinea. of this fine Orchid is at all times a desirable object to relation at a distance, such as would have been com- 
r 
