урулар = 
gnam $ 
Ат@пв® 1, 1863.) THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE ARD; AGBIDUDTUBAL: GAZETE 725 
aar our hee condition. to our friend in- -doors, | ме Obtained; е carefully а the sh Е | which the леу are 
g and arrange el latt to admit дей interested; aud I would suggest that the 
in in his екеп, а ќай. an invitation, “ breakfast light par M of the plant. "When the d S uld m make an application to them to widen 
hou We fished the tim sd у tench, and the ey o le en bin planta y be urage: ed а | the E ; this "would give suffi- 
fed e furiously, though it rained ditto. We caught litte, 8 гыр up qe on bright afternoons, and a | cient ern th for 
enough and to о spare, to send i in to our friend four brace little fire-hea will b y required, but when | wall is only at pre lath d plaster, wou ld ca 
eac ti Occasional waterings | pulling down, and when roofed over with glass, E 
« moist ” condition as an excuse as to breakfast, hurried | with weak liquid wil be beneficial and | be е еей а эе өрү арс 7 Alpha. 
home to an early luncheon gea 0б to be enjoyed (C should be шоу attended /pe.— Your correspondent who 
t was doubtless а s for өйүү н? бз similar treatment, | makes a akn of the To Flowe er and Fruit Exhi- 
ing of great success in tench n carp fishing ; but. the ie n course veria nob w ing во ear p. 654 ), has 
glory of the od of m i contrasting with the | ће others. Those for experience of this Grape, and I 
gloom of the fore oon- retu: ‚ has left а painful | in February, and ens cool as possi ible. WEE the more readily do so, asI have been told b 
impression on my nin nd. E = flower, the blooms should be tied E few days before | erii gardeners who have called at M d gg that 
hey are wanted for the : nnn , аш г во as to | it ів is bei: ing genera lly « Кане 4 in the Nor! th as w 
- as even a mass of blossom as раме. Тһе 
АА MET uld be carefully shaded from the aa bees must be | т consider that it is of fair average quality,a and А valuable 
Тнк Per —No. L anaodai and the house kept as dry as possible. е Grapes are grown to any ex unt of 
Tur class of лети which I intend to bring ir g i us and very distinot colour, ho ‘principal ob- 
into SES in e papar i is that of the large flowering a “ lean-to,” 1 le as light ible ; | jection that I ioc heard raised to 16 is that 
or show = er Begin: Wi with n 1 tt as that 0 ripen, or to keep it even a еу time 
received ken rsery roy the beginning of Novem-| of the roof, а it wide, not be further San 5 feet | | withoue в! Sirene It назе very thin-skinned 
ber (and CT сат. чм botter), I may say jo as soon | from the glass. — Bailey, jun., Shardeloi $ 
аз they arri ots are ркт Tel filled with | Amersham, Buc. ift i 
roots, shift ER Exi 6-inch or 32-sized pots, employ- | andi in a way that I have never seen n adap тч апу 
in Dg а mixture of sound enr: loa д (a ug at least other Grape. They withstand the heat until | approach 
ths before it i 1) and well Home Correspondence. ps 
dung, three parts of the former to one of the latter,|  Ewhibilions and Wet Weather.— It seems to be|become much discoloured, and t e pulp to be con- 
а libe ral admixture im sharp silver sand, and | generally admitted that flowers placed seo canvas | verted veles] insipid liquid. Hs there can 
he ү! тайһег "close are much more iam shown and much better seen | |o Ошу one remedy for this evil, namely, to shade with 
for He "ds after Vobis in} order t than i the t in thisclimate wet weather | a very light елар Shaw's Tiffany is pv I used, 
rooting into the fresh вой, after which abundance of cannot be. о ignored, 9 the Horticu ri ral and Botanic УЫ checks thelevil at once; it admits the sun Ara 
should b y Now, s not Lo ndon an|light partially through it, and if removed as s 
bu уна cold draughts. "The temperature at night obs inis l tl rapes are cut from early houses, no ева to 
ехсее ed 42. As вооп as they have grown spaces. at the онды алеу? Could not an the Vine. will follow. I о АР not fried the G olden 
о them to make › dwarf bushy plants. Keep them to the north of the council | room entrance, say 150 4 to its prop titution d 
i g t appear to me so strong and robust as that of many 
Dai y growth, without which you cannot h for st light fi illar to otlier а $ s doubtless much benefited by a 
for та Success,  Fumigation must T o strie ctly pilar VH t t of heat to the roots while growing 
attended to; and in watering at this Season of the year|I say 150 һу 200 eet, f for 151 feet Ta 1 believe, | an а “ipeni hio. p и would be а ое лиг useless to 
t It ри т amply | plant it except in a Фа well prepared and above all 
tl “th ti 1а 1 i та y be | sufficient 1 ordinar ary exhibitions, and the adjoin- | well drained. .M. 
о that the house. ma ecome tk ira ig Md afford space in any са саве. | Crack ia (Salie fragilis). с] has pois - 
dy bore ло бше whioh ос be done y во ав Ву taking the mer width of the space from the road |a marvel to this tree not been 
to d with fir much as possible. the arcade, it might be arranged so have | gen tally planted, йыз it is, for "p is eon useful iade 
ыран if al im on well, t! large n Exhibiti on Sob d, by which the | immediate effect is concerned. Branches of it of any 
ред п a thriving naho Pith from 5 to 6 A on [pleni could be "lite out of the vans, almost at the UP — into the ground are sure to grow ME Т 
If the x S to exhibit, and I am рге- | very spot at which they are to be shown, thus saving | of its ney v value In OW w ish to spea ak. We hav 
inc g that du. e case, they should now w be the exhibitors of large collections expense of артэ 
shifted into 4-sized | | pots (which b gh | Vis itors „would hav ave o pportunities, the m they almos every year we ү а lot, ver ерме. the planta 
d 1 t ing the dis T from rd high tion " pee ng in a few of the straightest bra Anches, 
level of the реп poa entrance, and also from the and n n 50 fails P Pg AS all know that 
centre arcade. From bein ng u reci it 18 sod that a man plants a tree and lives to 
conid be perman: i „which | see it. come . „but the Willow. in 
b e great ‹ ving to con- | question forms ап exception, for a person who. 
y | tinually put up and. pui do wn the present exhibition Май e ALES EP EMO ears and ten, ma; s aro 
stands ; — eg Озу being protected from wet, E ded market three successive pl кор 5 of this 
as to fo! ework, on which, if I may use the | with m ventilation being provided, the {тее during that period ; ;i Ei Pest ў: by e, that 
expression, ‚фо "build the faturo s specimen ; the shape o of plan gemis а за additional cost, be det on view while e an Oak tree is hn a saddle, a Willow. will buy 
f a dwarf round bush. As the | for Mito days, so all classes outside or the price which 
dayslengthen, water more fien and occasionally а | Society and its инде a зірвав ап орр d the demand for it are som ething 
little weak liquid manure may ^ given; that made | of seeing the marvels of cultivation, say, as at pr med | incredible. $ Т аш н а rer by Willow mer- 
gis the best. Give abundance | Fellows and 7s. 6d. tickets on Wednesday, 2s. 64. | chants € autumħ, who tell me that this ama: of 
of air on all o casions, as nothing spoils the Pelar- | tickets o n Ner ers d Miei d Humżdus. [We | Willow js ge пев ting. e vig tm and yet the e аге many ж. 
gonium like “ m g"i long igo ended a roof provided with a | wet ifie it would be quite at Deoa 
By the middle of May a slight shade will be neces- | canvas Мен. > sad yielá. а ег return t 84 any tree with rige I 
gary dur uring the heat of the day, but be careful not to ,,Bubus leucodermis (White-stemmed bramble of the | a m acquainted, at least near a good marke! ya ims t, such 
f thi London is, J. Же»; Nine House, 
sappy. There is now little else to be done except aee it is perfe гесу hardy and altogether unlike erberis nepalensis.—We have two siii here 
attending carefully to the watering. Before the tp any other "plant in cultivation. e MM на which аге | which were e out in the open ground in the spring 
if smeared | of 1859. They never have had any protection during 
succession, and exclude all bees. i | over with whitewash, indeed man tQ € » we them for| winter, and were not in the least injured by the severe 
y t the p ime suppose that they have actually under- | frosts of 1860 and 1861. They are sheltered from the 
doors i in „the full sun, and gi th ly d - gone that process (and hence of course the name).|east by the mansion, and from AT north by a large 
that the wood may become | They rise че em к: sec high, even in this compara- | shrubbery behind them. They are also shaded from 
well ripened before сше them down, which may Je tively rigoro ; but I can scarcely doubt that the mid-day sun by a Cedar К; ена and а large 
y. In performing this opera- | in the - чат ad. sunny n nooks of Devonsbire or ey are making strong growths 
tion leave the в ll ti eason, and have pie ior the last two years, 
з рег; bonds са A the plant. They should and rival a specimen which as an pati mare I planted bnt their rieg B eo me to perfection. A. Petti- 
be out some months ago in the orchard house at | grew, Richings Park, Conbrook, Bucks. 
thoy E b токо. m the shoots are ae t s half cn Agencia Here the canes, which were an inc AATA Russo Bias irn 
gth, the soil should be S. from thi ck, „вте 7 уаг rds lin three months, and being For ^ с а 
the poe i ea "atter Should be pru: gian] рсе enc 
the plants ree pa r into pots a sizo вайо, КҮ most елар чина effect, Iwasledto make this|  NURS M. ANDRÉ алг һе 
Р them a pit а Кее еер t them | close well ial, in the hope of ор fruit of better quality interesting t о oie hat Welingemin es is dd 
hich the plant produces out of doors, and | ing con the ce centre sí Fra 1 had lately ап 
morning to e ren di а slight Britan T do which is too acid to be pleasant; ; but although under | opport unit у "of visi зоги, at Angers, and 
good in the evening. Give sufficient water to keep the | g I very | there, on one of M. i $n aen trees of 
вой moist. When коой, dar inure them to | Пе fruit was set, and what there was proved а ма? Wi nia, wereseveralcones, M. 
and air. They be housed by the begin-|insipid, owing no doubt to the temperature of the to me also that above every cone 
А : js Mit реф 
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as possible ; the Seti in view et to obtain a goni 
plant in the оне СЕ т ime. 
As they торго , the $i. 
— the rim 1 of the роь а the shop ia graduall 
TS iss ; in doing this — should be тезй 
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ew w sticks, will this season be n our wild Raspberry,and of the most intensely brilliant t Dy o were 
to support them. Attend in every respect to the |orange ан. Н Birds are especially fond of it; and I |in — BA in y tbe nursery in quein 
routine recommended for the first season. n e think that a d — of this Rubus, which | soi m ы dii Z black GET у; 
When the bloom is over, cut down, Shake out, &c., | would be almost as im а jun us | strong vy els ingon a Roses and Бан berries 
as before, and this being the commencement of the vem might prove of xus кеб 0 Ше preserves Mes fos 1 We were too early for Roses, but were 
season in which you are to exhibit, ev very attention | of l obtained my plants from Mr. Veitch. | flouris! МА : 
will now be amply repaid. J. Ви Biddulph Grange. Res the 
The plants for the May Shows should rece ive their| The al Horticultural Society.—1l quite agree as T "Ro spenks iy of some of the 
final shift л. эб. үч s the first week in n ded to the benefit which would be derived from the altera- Teil ilt gu 
and Td encouraged to make as much | оп y ирон, on the Eastern and Western ms - M. Ande 1 Lov dad venir Е йа Кеги uis de 
ear 
may ч зе а рема ЧЫ a. rest in January, | great, hope бе ty specimens of теп, 
during wisi de Шау ahoald be Барі. as cold аа | Commissioners, for 18617. oui 8 ита 
which AM. АШУ тд ые аруз "dauerte Aster = о [x rx ground, не} їп uh aes, that ít was almost a 
EH 
iie 
Sow 
rawberries w markably fine; 
yan og best Varieties, es, both English 
