ү 
| 
NovzMsER 21, 1863.] 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
IM though I myself believe it to have been quite 
possible. 
The climate of New Zealand, unpleasant though 
16 makes up 
and also to wintersummers and summer-winters ! ! little to do but plant t 
The en td xt dar with rare exception, from | they stuck i in the eye 4d, fu& di the Bw 
the w climate of Е, hill th 
ET j 
but muffer. front "the ы? more especially glass-| would balk al tho way Ты шшш 
it is, seems wonderfully healthy. 
this one good poi а perfect f dis- | raised, eerie noveltie who, eee b eat n 
comforts. incon that seem quite eternal, о 2. Ѕов ople fail, because they do not get right | and figh suooossfally a against т йош lien Жеме, 
{тош quarte cold and hot various likes and dislikes of Rose d treats them 
the v of all their eee being what we call 
* balm uth winds. iste the South Pole 
the Hose ж, ог they do not ges right stocks, by which | accordingly. 
І me stoc cks which, ei n suitable н the Rose in | and nothing o difficulties and E. erie: i 
n Rosari 
they iia € in bitter 
about 10 o'clock, 
Es 
p 
E 
E 
5 
, are also suita a land. Int 
о 
1 limate, жишш”, d v 
ly mo again the evening pleasa 2-4} any length of time: n these wi 
the twilig| not irae pleasant ngland, 
although for those few hours the days are mostly 2 ked after, which i 
enjoyable. mes 
e l 
Deer and the church ба ЖЕНА with snow. 
ae p е than four months had passed 
Vind any rà и чи dust and the flies were 
becoming a тле 
а rian. 
will aloce last | October test а Rosarian better 
on own roots, and W. F. Ra deluffe. 
on ail stocks prede die, though they be well 
s far from being generally the 
a ч FISH AND FISHING.—No. ХІХ 
. Sr Ocks.—Briars, Manetti, Celine, are all good 
Sio cks. Ofthe ге line stock I know but s а a etn 
as I have upon it grow and bloom pal 
best for moderato growers, aud good also fo stron ax | 
growers in str b land.  Manetti is good chiefly | the 
for stron indispensable E inferior | ance о ite ale and female fish, 
w comers find mem it takes some time to get 
5 
and when 
Тапай it would drive the Rose tables; and that M foundation of ova by the milt 
mi not be convénient. т е гое in nd milt ii 
b 
this Ye dryness о the general er 
ness. At first, however, the colonists have often 
pera re much discomfort in the shape of DUANE 
fingers, headaches, aud во on 
The nor westerly winds are described as by far the 
ant. 
a i^ 
This stock, with suitable Roses on it, is suitable to all [ane хоће was eno: ree 
a 
iallow and worthless lands, where Briars would do Su Ата І would urge, why 
but little. I have many Manetti Dose planted in what ito МР not ia nde e af go fca impregnation have 
as а duck pond, bottomed with chalk ; also many in | suggested itself, where the inducements and necessity 
pointed e 
most unpleas 
land ез ie em solid gravel. Between the chalk in we have out existed, as regarded the 
e gravel in the — I puta b rayling, t dli learned and practically learned 
alf-inch bones, and plant the Manetti Tinde аз those in the days of the “ т of old?" 
nothing, and t Y m this great hoat R da MEAE 
change to es abd УЕ out in - dein оен |ì 
cla hea 
a 
Con sider ing how many are the 
ebudded 
d, and quito oppressed wi ith ‹ 
he intr Атто " 
4 
fire, and piling the bed with bla ы ets. Theni pid: are 
indeed in New жч реч spin more or less cold. 
The heat is at tim ceedingly great. In Australia 
ЗО: dé said to à generally about 
wards graduall 
w 
heat as exceptional, such a seas 
kn 
own uin the fiw settlers жабо, jut 12 y 
before. 
Let бий ch (February 12, 1863) 
speak of the reete erm having reached 130? in the | 
in had fallen for very long, and ће" Y 
memi live with insects. Fires were 
th t emen no 
у, othing but i yos 
he loss of — and g it w 
ry |t the new wood is 
no relatio 
d Roses | pike into S England "epvande of pe 
on the "Maret wa y» rented d my lands, both 
ago (ante, p. 748); and firmly mA ed ае Ia 
of gra 
different x пт ures, 2 might as well газ orrec — attributing the introduc yling to 
hen again: 1 on = put a Briar е 8 the onks of old upwards of 1000 years а, ago, Ї cannot 
Manetti овы In my north-east garden 3 
een any -— han we sf the present day assume it to Under 
| 4, WiNDs.—Roses cannot have too much sir а and - all the ireumstances, I cannot resist tho. ннд 
| little de Those who are exposed as I a ld did 
violent assaults of the W. S. inds, which, by | Cath.: Nor can I. But, den Piscat: hat 
their violence and аан bend the heads of Elms iiie for — ҮЗ шу al d el 1h is Ке 
and othe er trees ] here to th ey were 
BAr N h tain ! ing vani злу ат E E. odi 
Ad injurious wind | us up to p^ eliet that we in i Europe are the greatest 
is in early spring and e ТЬе sap people that ever lived ; and li 
rises, but the тын аге destroyed; wd the effect on Boite Hi 
uch t at of — of 
The ғар is pert Ebai з ч the с^» у ч it — 
bad. ae course good wood and g 
come of bad wood. 
e ideas ү, deg ‘Towers 
ood flowers cann vui b 
"Whatever. вза дау dem вітоув СА » [Же oonti 
whi ch 
would q nch. T 
pesi vod be very ee the 
ole sky 
at night with the wide-spread flames, iin а Фу the or fungi, at һе early A of the pe! befor: 
— o er ect t br idges of enormous 
whether wind, hail, | gp; wW 
e build a 
e the ood MA +. рау 
to obscure the light, and diminish 
tho à of eee su. 
is ninturéd will do great present Апа 
е de summer dryness the w 
reets =» еп іп Christehuroh ‘bocom | 
iied Sith үне Mn are 
— mud, in which it is hard tó obtain a footing, 
ed н і parts of the meet communications 
he г но farms of course and some of the 
mission stations of the Cio of England lie many 
The e scenery is some of it — pan 
here > чү к from екот descriptiv 
surrounding Christchurch (which |. 6. PLANTING, 
Md 
My home Rosery is as exposed to to tho W. and S. , when ultimately 
wind as Portland or сигису ооз y house mre in "Ask вБатео hs 
- erem пеат I bear th REEN of wind Alani sun Ne regni rio ят d Fa scri = 
pray б 
^ vm qn untaught s — — за the word, they may be workable ultimately ! Я 
Теа vi d IN tionably during rra Jast half century we have 
„5 зынаа болок каз the skock is, ог the 1 ve le " Our "emer discoverios and 
upon v free pi me із absolutely necessary. eme iem tel a tero mere cm e 
ines t, at the base of my мара жом stops the water | 9 
The Manetti cel bear it respectably. а 
ihilai 
e 
Briar Roses were є d in the well-known íi dred ratteri--4]l ебә е may 
winter. b t half t but take heed, oh 
—Ó AND "TyriwaG.— These 
und plants i in highly protected man | for 
important things. “When he thinks, good 4 шап, full surely 
vein in 
Close 
have the Port A Tin in die distance the gnow 
by we situations may md isal к e p “His — 
m ав оше he may find а “Hitherto thou shalt go and по 
иу A — farther 1» He may find that the flood of his 
called the — m Н 
owever, 
Rieearton Bush, close to Christchurch, 
which is a great relief to the landscape." 
and made d | eollar o 
TA оер m мы Manetti | ; 
41 Boses must be nm. "soticoniy tea to cover the 
a 
h al e an vaya z he min it fo llo! ws that which he ought not to have eaten so much ; and 
Eor Tea: udded that the buil “Tower of Babel” may b 
will be too far from ie. iion 96. the sun. А Briar Sof ded ! my friend, at what history 
t m us. а Solomon knew the principle of 
Rose — ече will have 
flow не ood and Ан 
eak wood and bad Firs 
тут and then | 20 
"80у ыз h ties in Mis supply of water to Jerusalem, viz., 
place called Akaroa, on Banks's “Peninsula. “т Ир 
e все 
droi an 
od Sf in 1t в к t соп- that wil would find its ow n level ; while the Romans, 
T. "ATRIDES үс: Рох. ВРЕ (БСЭ ару ак followed long us could onl 
là 
is ——À beyond anything I ever saw. 
pes for gardens and frui 
agine the € of seeing the lovel 
ром, аны the. birds. sing, 
y woods an 
"ve 
me the birds: pira 
concert, and it seems as if 
; some üizds have vi 
нача .4 
—————Є 
gumptive in the world. 
Rape а ting pan and ай ie x inco 
т-у eo We be b 
ET C eit spring z leaves, s, lit 
it trees, and - cannot | them. 
now i nd|them of millions, of 
pe 
each was trying ms ui pur 
а other cedit t woke m m ыа the first morning and 
of th: ery pretty | that a 
ROSES. at an 
` Үнү do not Roses more generally succeed in | ешш dh wood o H, P-a bet before they iet 
"md insuficient protec- 
most es and co 
England is the hyphen 
ШЫ or no балай d be done by water could be conveyed W aqueducts on a 
tle 
Clean water would дено the eb ев pet rid siapio inclined Len 
helpless aphides and of th 
F must be 
gain 
heart" to judge God's са 
Solomon : Because thou hast 
rom are 
There are 
| do not more generally succeed i 
other reasons, which need only summed up, VIZ» 
proper pruning, 
— 
mers, and 
| o алара ча in severe winters. 
on © am ја ооа бот DO ae of Roses dosi noi пес 
к erre imply a Bret rate Бовайап ; nor does бе т 
= {з — M p that they have 
ri- 
des Découvertes ntt 
n, 1769 (An Inquiry into 
buted to the Moderns, &c.) This 
бев дадоа бө чү Lo 
Бр of Discoveries attribu 
work is in the British Museum. 
