Avevst 22, 1863.] 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
y Peach нария 250 fruit, X bmi 
ө pro 
roun The late 
а 
ЕЯ ос that at stock, | all prove ve this; v why, t then, may be 
797 
| hard, ; Pm di UE finde а great alteration in them, 
таа, jme from the scion to the meis 2 
best being from 7 to 
Nectarine trained against "the back wall ы 
g ood cro 
and which I 
and өе This leads me to suppose that Peaches 
and Nec S grow. orchard- -house in ‚ров, 
n in an 
ERI 
re is 
vm house, 
stock. 
leaves, its 
that the ео? "нона be als in ita tà 
by t the „Оп contrary, it would 
of the sun in consequence of the fruit сан. partially 
the e 
be surprising i 
mee uus idi p ite, how to jo таё by la 
They that haue but small 
now and then to ca) 
doe com 
earn 
в to eet strawe, 
dr in the неше and top (not d ihe sides) of 
the panniers : and dossers. But baskets ог prickles € 
sides and all. 
shaded by the foliage ү и can e that stock or its roots, or their vital force or power of |. 
excellence either of flavo: e, or beauty y which t they 
invariably ds under the ridendo dg amed. ТІ 
garden is — of 150 T north of London le Journal de Ж "Société Tmpériale et Centrale Ф Hor- | 
colù bleak country, - E elevation of а Pet, 80 that едо 
as regards- locality certainly d joy any 
advan 
The first Peach was чое оп ne о € ek | ANCIENT SAN спен ҮІ. 
‚апа the last on the 14th October. (Cont ata 73) ` 
used to. ripen the fruit а an earlier time 3 - етэ coh: Of the diff. рр, ERT 
trar given at the com em кү EA у. 4 
of the plant. M. V. in 
must note that ro b pippins and oth 
e Correspondence: 
separate prep me to 
inary occurrence 
|in the natural history of the honey bee. 
fh 
wage straw hive. Before they had been in it many 
| эй, со mbs whercin to store the honey, they disco 
n empty pun went 2 i " distant ә тры own, 
dixe gre although of опе sort, and grow in one 
orc 
аге over; moreover iens ps 
expensive, and of mee quality. 
Ifin the e present hou: 
LEG 
is more erg y» 
oo small in every respect р 
o hath most aln: or 
bigger, 
for 
and some 3 feet wide in не to give them the elbow 
room they require. 
q 
My objecti in making this communication is to elicit 
an exact account |, 
e. 
of your Correspondents an 
me tree, vpon the lower boughes (which are 
IM 3 water boughes es) or the inner boughes of the 
ireo. , For, the гапе ог шоувіше һе 
о sult of their mea — it ma 
imagine woes а simple statement of the 
fruit vip from ыа ы аге чә isno criteri 
whatever of judicious 
‘almost double the dies 
successful cultivation. We 
ouses h 
— mem 
been 
геаво! 
- uer haue an any good colour, but are alwaies 
soft, and eate very waterish : which causeth them, 
the еу can пепег last long, nor di kindely. Butt 
will last Ъе tter i other 
fru ph of | ver 
er grained, 
а better d. dii =] that grow vpon the | 
clean empty co as not 
the аб: evel with "heir own, but ra inches 
he 'The 
nches to 
patiently s ami onteneliy vithout my aneh con- 
n of th For, generally 
8 in rd the qui t: in 
кафе. qe a whole hive to grief and commotion. 
саи (ав I said) ке haue the warmth of the sunne, 
Esc coloured : bs dos d red 
kindly. 
рле I T UN a Hed P A fine lasting fruite, | 
that they Agde вегиїсе d 
allowed to 
" " Е) 
to do so—but would it ree Jim of the 
— d there have been the same 
The storehouse hive — to qr of wood with 
rough which I вер Ves bees 
and examine the combs day and night, and could thus by 
ocular , both of myself and others, place 
the fact beyond the je range of mere conjecture. I could see 
nj 
the honey in the combs, and the bees clustered between 
them, and coming гоб by hundreds to the glass when 
I held a light to it at night. During the day the bees 
aee: EL t the gatherin 
But Vibe, if бу bee mdi falte, that no aik 
account is to be made of them, they may be layed 
alto, Зери and after that thoy y hane layen, take them 
n space 5 et the most t: 
vpina trey, and вера arate the ripest from the other, 
and 
lers — 
wil 
he Ega rm at the least cost, and many of der | 
informed what 
with j Joy, and ventilated, just as if the 
there. At dusk some of Apu left the rm era and 
flew down t 
е m more 
o their hom 
1 ndant 
e; yet I cannot say that ner 
abu tly t but 
than during the day, 
тий tho largenesse & goodnes kc the fruite, holds | 
syste. 
hecrop зой fruit bere -n tthisseesonis decided] Mores ы 
to that of last, it адары 
propor For, while ye tree 
is in growing to perfection, the fruite groweth sis & ip 
pun bane 2n and , better in taste, & colour, 
it more marked in -the evening, be ^cause 
nt that at time bees had ceased to arrive at both hives 
ork. 
то rom san I was in hopes that the hive would 
en possession n of the store h ouse, but 
5i but w Ма {тсе 1 
trees. You Shall have dus тасш of "thie produe | moro ана: та о olde, the fi "d eio f. : to ey fron 
- when the time або W., Sheffield, August 15. а bignes, colour, taste & firmenes : & con- | storehouse, 4 longer req Shed p rng an 
uently will not last во long. vhi m fx Un Nec AUSAR AE (KE Гирне] 
THE INFLUENCE OF SCIONS ON THE STOCKS p X ig hem by odation athome. John Worthy, on, Chorley. 
UNAN SE: AA S m ОНА, If th y occasion of sending fruite aA а ouse с vg ача 7-5] recom- 
Maxx good that st way by water, especially such fine fruite, that will keep | ™ а d "аян corresponden э ы ou к е 
їп апу жау dence "d scions; but this opinion | well and worth sending (for summer fruit are not | 0геаг ouses, to visit the well managed one a 
seems to me to be с erroneous, at all events in farro to bo s ) prouide some dry hogsheads, ls, Chiswick. I took the advice to myself and went; no 
the case of D r som caske, use асве they may lye the trees could look e healthy. Now as the trees are 
‚ | {АП persons | who have A to Rose culture may closer (to dais iogging an n D or | 50 well managed, you will, in the course of three weeks, 
have remarked that scions of the Malton, ‚ Celina, and |в g of the сый) they must epis мач ы, be in the position swerthe most important of all 
- many others not only produ g in. For, apes о connected with these ructures, namely, 
of Roses, but also cause the в increase rapidly they wit p^ Мойун, & во be ИИИ with 775 » ^h ii 1 моо. и in them be - д 
and grow vigorously. On the ds scions of some bruising one against anot er, in of 3 igl — и — ^ ора: wi А 
of the older varieties fo f Moss Roses, as bulla the caske: but, being layed in, one = кш Р: wii M vour ns ria judgmen 
cristata, Lucie, c, only. produce poor|caske filled vp, they will not eti € pasty Ne Ши изн 
weak с ома ава prevent, the stock from gum e your (at bot ауы жге t us d пета ре 
The effec rking are "S sweetest straw, you can get: but not the sides of your A 
felt puts stock, but also m" its suckers ; for, as 1 e : for бо eris th will hurt them а —— your M iden а =й e ome pa 
rule, the latter flourish af the expense of "the solons. | c also p holes in both ends, about фе EC y io pan me - = 
То — there are exceptions, as in the Malton == atan ad For, fruite (let them be euer suc pA ood e pon "aol Erk ien imt -— сеч м ~ 
апа entioned above ; -— do not these excep- lasting fruite) if they haue not ayre, they will quickly (р : "s rica infes n 4 i e 
tions prove at апу rate scions affect eate,and so sodainly rot. Haue also I find ety all porem м чег c 3 h 2 
both the stocks the suckers which they send out? a great care that чү! be kept dry in the cariage. ° For are precisely in «r^ same condition. се is it ? : vw] 
I have often seen these suckers as the want of e them to rot: во, being Fraser, Bishop's ord. [Your о feni der es! ^ 
finger, and a yard and s-half -lon g i Pest wit Tot E wit ре parane; т е by ^ c 
of four ог five days. No such thing is du а hé n +: ATKO fruite, ш ans o be carryed by sea, may bee — ту Bir Bur » vem ы аш ч E i 
Moss Roses, Lettuce-lea ‚ бе, are worked | shot under ha v 8 vpon straw, i here [s bo. para e Mic cir dine A >ч тигу Rene учей 
Dog Whatever difficulty meten there | enough to carry them in. Alw ege that cultiva sori ^ дэш»... аз Nae d bx by 
ihe. ente cd ond y ak ZH i e m in А dry p s |Боро areas "id different ere gi te con- 
manifest thak thar A Lain pening tbe | uione it. By some it not 
Ra ite, by land and ^ xd | 
there аге certain frui trees which, Vaf times to петом or carry fruite, by (ата or os о 1040 
do what you will, до not increase in diameter bel ter : and the reason thereof, n S ali its 
the scion at the same as the scion itself. The| . The is stirred, packt, or carryed in frosty | seen nothing equal taking 
ce of the formation of ugly rings where | weather, or in March (if the blow sharp) let eum sen dii 
the scion joins the k. Other scions on the thé be euer so hard at the taking vp, yet Е bed 
rodu thing of the sort. What explanation | come to their да eys end, carried by land land kin aen 
сап given this if ions have ө influence water, they wil th n be so téder (in t: caer Д es — ] 
on the stocks оп which they f the colde ayre: in nor of : - d ез 
Із not this influence, moreover, ve "d mem | Sharpe and bitter winde: and in reason of | man а * 
- and if there is any room for e is it not | heate) that the а at dm ei de Pra ро afford 
- because the influence ot be more frequently | and a great many of them во they к mg туза 
traced! Let us remember that вар гі м cer- | been sodden : во that they й not abide to be towel, — a: 
: tain vessels and descends by certain others, and passes | пог carryed at that time the yeare, by reason еен» е 
upwards from the stock to the scion, and downwards | their tendernes. The hardest & the best lasting fruite, migrat eid 
-from the scion to the stock. We know that the вар | that is, after they layen long, or especiall pa vo ae ns aia nn 
is changed in its passage from the scion, | haue layen till March, or neere the Spring, г? frui тош and becomes 
K erue пот ете ga s coy ud Mf wise vntill July, the weather hotter & hotter, eurer (he beds wi 
duced, according as this or that scion js grafted on | although in the taking vp them they seeme very 
