g.2-1845.] 
NING AND GARD 
ANDSCAPE GARD DENIN ING, since his r 
$ 
x 
and Ni 
near London. 
y BADONAS: PETUNIAS, CHRY- 
TH S, CINER eee, 
tal ots is this day pu ishe 
d other highly aa ap f ill form fa uisi- 
tion to those wh 
atar, 
i a Great Yarmouth Nursery, Feb: 2 
ee SAT 
heres ape: 26 Society of Art: 
8 Entomologic: 
Ma i 
` Fam. 
BY ‘eon ey; Mar 
was not, in 
by the operation Of arse 
ARDEN ARCHITECTURE. | them 
esidence near the 
are e respectfully requested to addre: 
TYs 
anp CO. pes sai ig hb of the newest 
TURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS: 
5. 
iT the whole 
ticles, an impost so oppressive as the glass duty. 
cise 
aeenlat ons the peat st | the 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
co xr occasion for vitreous ‘cloth, an nd all those imperfect 
115 
A fe ple sashes, however rough! y mAs soon as’ the young shoots had grown from 4t 
put vide Diets may reine meat in front of such tree d tied within 
and Nature will do the rest. We shall have no tobe H inches of ‘the glass. The 0 
= wd a a departure from the 
ments ss 
oblemen and Gentlemen desirous eo 
s him at 
nhouse, 
pa — | blac 
ig The ee Chronicle, A 
1845. 
2 ignorance vas 
> 
universal ‘practice, may r xplanation. 
ery cottaser 
vith his hand glass and polio she box.” 
Few 
things are more age Shan the om 
ug mone: a 
sprvu 
co 
ae History, pong we ma 
alte at 
My 
idea is that 7 npon ‘them, ‘unprased till they have 
begun to grow, emoving the super- 
buds, t 
WwW 
par excellen 
“thited a those Rho aon 
he follo owing note i in 
often cea s 
paek: d lite 
a recent article of ‘the e Quare Review :* 
are inclined t: 
to 
useful- m uins, 
nothing = wit is E absolutely t u 
+e skilled 
he Vine is pe a sr 
Seless to it. 
in vég et pes) ‘Physiology © 
e ““ Theory o of 
Sk ur :—" Dir 
he season of rest (winter) a plant continues i“ Pei 4 
‘ood solely from the earth 4 its roots, and if its 
d th e 
n introduced 
$ n Tl +h 
heard it stated that it ss _ y to be found in the nto the syst 
l k 
ower of the Kidne ey e Candolle; or Mr. If late pring is bad recourse to, of course a large por. 
Paxton, might perhaps give sai instanc: ces.” ll jana the'partofthe p z 
a ution of Kidney ht y , 
ve been Kaug, , possibly, toa slip of the pen, were 
if not for the sentence which fo ad Laie pede E nly 
W. “ee Nemes 
that = _ a the par arc 
of _ 
early et pra employed, 
Jld from a pe fs as igno 
an | of Botanical Literature as he. + sa ‘to be unob-| i 
list of excisable 
ce, manufact 
Jess ofall materials, and cos 
er -~ ‘into a materi al which could 
: y those in easy circumstan 
indispensable occasions. 
was necessa h ses of 
bour and skill, was converted by the British Govern- 
o men with h whom 
The pr si bp an however, are doubt- 
less just. l ex en even of the 
eee towards 
of brown. 
important of all things next to fi is ry 
nost a via with fiscal c ey ms beaufifal ts in 
ured out of the most worthless found:a 
ting Tittle except 
only be egere 
ces, on the m 
‘tial o 
be ongst Fungi; a small pie 
n even apparen tly jet- black ae side be obser 
a ond wha 
dur 
i 
notin this case removed by deferring it to a still ‘later 
period than is there contemplat nd 
Keeping the border dr nae ns of the concrete, and 
t | maintaining a bottom-heat of fom 75° to p ue has been 
bon atly in favour of -the Vines her o: sin 
ung the borders of Vineries intended for ie ag pphini (as 
their trade, a 
m who w n he was 
E 
ar 
though it is a very small one ;” a piece o of informa- 
tion which the worthy prelate thought apy = 
He = 
midable n the first expense. 
| ftiufactur was to i 
5 Was SO Fe 
fe administered. a partial re 
a pe ieee in the 
eos an 
n P 
fel 
1 “iran ay the hag 
J: tem ; Pi n glass 
The object af iel, 
nerease to the erelid pos- 
the brittleness of the most fragile com- 
end t 
hly bad e - palliative ed a 
wi has a prbedibiotie: a Cue | 
The excise on 
nesie of Ses 
mode 
s| This-p 
frequently view 6 “ore t taking 
pees ad keep them dry, I cons i 
esume that the 
I pr 
this pore are too wet in winter, and that the rain 
> | being permitted to descend ag soil already too wet and 
ith it ned 
cold, carrying wit bse matter contai in the 
dung, only tends to < roots, and PaSa them 
unfit for the healthy ‘performance of paa functions. I 
am also of opinion September is a better time to 
phe to force Vines eat any time hetwenn that and the 
niddie of December, as the fruit i is set before the middle 
ovember 
ined! 
“We have even he zi of a man g ay oo i 
whether the Daisy was not the flower of Gras 
The writer in the * "Quan," the eave Bishop, | 
: -would have in Jaxnpryj at which time it would be 
| ning t to force for an E i g of Grapes. I stated in 
and the res may all be placed in the same 
categor 
VINE CULTURE AT TRENTHAM HALL 
= the Calendar of Operations, p. 836, 1844, 
sed to give an account of the treatment ‘of a house of 
Vines, ee were started in to fall. The V. 
e 
and The 
one, and i is now fast app proaching maturity 3 “tnd naa the 
it was intended to destro 
Th 
ay, and to top-dress the borde is a good 
eI now proceed to fulfil 
EREN e 
which d have 
Vines at the time had been i ed to 
exubguisned 
of the two previous gre when 
started in November, | 
f the roses 
remain nie would have Seen quite as large as they 
LO Conten. 
ey eners, with all their skill—and no men have more 
thickness, and a iiy 
S cheap a as cotton Tinen and as durable as i iron. The 
r 
all the rain that should fall upon 
carry a 
the concrete. The Vines, as before stated, were started 
Nov T 
20 Possessed their ca ital a 
‘ated as a severe 
Tat fhe endless char 
nd skill 
iscouragement to their liba 
OW was a peers plat p Isleworth, e 
; and as it was, 
ember, g api 
1844. By the h of July the wood was. matured, 
and the leaves fading, I then tied the shoots down close 
to keep them 
middling crop in April of | 
ape wind that I think it may be interesting to some to know the | have — for the last three years. I consider that I 
Plas ba Played A A Lee: particu ars of their treatment, whic h has ep in some fell in an error = rose = beca aha tr e Vin i were 
et repeat 8, for the future sha oer se wi 
is ei gard TaT esentia imp artes hee sees der is deep, and by no and would ra very last as "it ames were to rema ` Ther 
a ance, have — renewed oe Fery but that the’ Vines in the nine Vines 120 bunches “al 
grown utgis; all an other houses were too young t y fi bl 
masthead SER aised by. i of fruit, In October, "1843, e; pbs pe of the situated at the roots as those in question are, the bor 
; been made of very rich materials, 
having apparently 
rig sedges’ and not less than 4 feet in depth.— 
G. F. 
MOSS's PROTECTIVE MATERIAL rrom FR 
ears I have used 
OST. 
encum- 
f his “brittie-roofed 
cool; the border was covered ‘lightly with half decayed 
litter at the | same time, 4 parse 
ssible, giving the 
3 thu Seas pes 
fir 
ashade in keeping pari 
s fai 
roots as well as the branches an artificial winter, 
fuel to eo 
f the Sy eg 
pen ground 
de ner can 
pense ? 
3 wave on the feud 
= can send the ot bi e of his 
to Co straa Aea a soon as ana English 
obtain it by forcing a 
eve that the free trade in fruit has 
ery eg losses bs the aa 
In 
in “the spe of a cone, averaging APE 
leaving the concrete as put omin October, 1843;-the 
h i E E ikt ebetla E aps h ap 
Tina hes e had s any s 
to create a heat of from 75° or 80° in the soil. 
dep pth. We hav a 
here, so that, i i the night of Tuesday, the llth tnt, 
the ie was nearly b of s n Wednesday 
obs 
lish gardeners. 
e glass duties 
5 
I Teien, 
Ve 
ser ving t that m iy thermometer, placed on the 
m th 
about 6 
degree of heat in the border, by 
a matter as many peo ople appear to sippa 
b 
exposed situation, registere ea 2 
Siete respecting t 
agains 
es Std may “ae | 
me had been cut off. 
an i peda tn for them. y made at interyals d uring a paat of e efficacy of my Moss protectives. 
of ‘things will produce a most | “gbt Wecke, that afier the heat had once reached 80°, it To my agreeable surprise I found, that under cones of 
dition of our gardens continued so without any material deviati y merely 
doubt. Glass will be very cheap keepi x Saroia of strawy litter, in which the heat ; the soil was not frozen 
3 for what does it now signify to | 2Y" Meee ee We or he, except for a few days, once the at t haki and Agh young shoots m poai aA the 
er his commodit ich y a fortnight, w turned and a little fresh litter Roses, at the bases of the plants, fresh and vi 
6, or half.a-no VP hi § an ounce | added, wish joven it t heat wef for a short time, | in the mildest weather. ei “we 
+% kable <a v nt and soda pat the i increase was never e -e pe -= bore After | Moss, w e ro 
combine strength | the border was covered, the ied loosely | placed in contact w 
cies, and that is whee the co ves ` F 
tual ch Gadka * Maw sumer wants within 2 feet of the Blase, ani ‘the timporstire of the th effects 
ai ho Ouse pe Ke th man wouid | house was s kept a ay od W k portion of 
ere s a e present cost, if it | admit of, t antl m 
Brits one for the tra oee fr for repent wie fo it ably short space of time. The Vine were ssil i sara nes hase 
removed b 
from damp has re 
promising. From hi 
