THE GARDENERS’. CHRONICLE. 
Endeavour as pon aes d pro- Nosices to Correspondents. 
tect with cove iets on ienis dy bs can. Keep down the | The Reprint tof ur. PAXTON’S COTYAGERS’ CALENDAR 
temperature in every department to the’ of point ad- | is now ready, price 3d. each Copy. An Index has been added 
t to this Lapa F Edition. “Parties bind ea esi ave Bigs meee for 
can te 
dr: a SAF: this because y 
Moss. But are you right? 
Mo PA T—There is nothing like good farmyar d m: 
Pat on as much as you can afford. But it will be 
pepo RE g taeir tenant 
tes for 5. x 
onicus t Sociery— St Clair—We cannot advocateany | Will be che Ti $ f 
ee an for establishing a i 1 of this kind, for tne shy AE ksa stion to be eee Aa wth prac Veal s 
simple reason that it cannot lead to any practical good. MUSHROOM- seat the pest) cr others. e shall resume — 
Such obj oe as it A poses bave to embrace, if si serious | __ this muig at t iri 435 PE Ce Farase 3, R 
g borers, beds, &c.,to be | attempt were made to carry it oats ead es be effected with | Names o FFR rets AAT ute Paradise nette du 
e favouravie, which is any thing like so ane advantage a: might by sepa- Ca ae arn T „Or af sta e > Zy Worthless and un. 
el a Continue to prane Yate experiments of clever rp a ead sen phe fy pit try R aah at ior Re i nechal Cra pe SE from | 
c Chinese varieties, and otùers | gentlemen, You will'find, at p. 51 of this genr, some remarks 1 is only kite vix use. |—=—-W Ba, Senet 
h must be left till ali danger of severe upon this subject, which has beeu cecasio: y pres ased npon Crofton 3, a labios Pippia; 3, Kin ng of the Pippins 
t y k ; Swe 5 tents.) an only iwo. 4 
is nec ce pora : ar mer for d di wary a a Bo. cal Cultivator. Ben Names or Phanrs—Juponicus, W K—We cannot under aketo $ 
oer ut i ih bb Son | Berunscas samana -Eae AN cnn eprman m | aaas Man verter jc BNE E | 
J A ve ied i 2 eft fi $ tanical 5 nix $ Kt Di ach BS u ; gs ericoj 7 
mer planting be grav i died in 1729, left tunda for a Bota . e De pre aes Sub—Ruocanthe ei. toc a —< š 
‘ the ardy annual. 
mum annuum, na! 
Jae eee ps hie ad S S—Take sulphur vivum, sifted lime, 
F ol e e certain | P 
ind i i i sation ;” h saun equal quantities ors ach; lamp- black, ` 
‘annuals, and pot off all kinds of cuttings as| Changes of the Animal and Vegetable Parts of the Creation ;’ aod Scote! l Peay alt 
soon as they are iiem Y> pa a pote meets with sorts that | and T js shown in Felton’s “Portraits of the Authors on Gar- the quantity 5 m ; mix them to the thickness of paint, with s 
oon as the borders are in aR opes state, sow | dening,” that these sermons continued to be yey atthe | brine and soap. suds, With this ay paint thes wa me 
po begi the century. _ Why ma 
for Mark the e places with small | continued, and how is the fund rorida by Mr. RiT ow 1 
i» ea small ri “eee which will prevent any other thing applied ?—D. [This should be sen to by ihe e parishioners of black causes a upsig ghtl G KITE clay or some other 
b ed wae ewe r ra off Ciintonias, Portulacas,| Shoreditch, some one of whom can perhaps throw e light substance must ‘pe yh tbe to dilute ands increase > the bulk ik 
ho d tender annuals 7 t are fit for the opera-.| upon the inquir, ae 5 hoa itis i f ae the mixtur erwise may be too strong for the 
tion, and kee, peep g in a gentle pen until they are rooted, then | BOTTOM- ABAT. —0 L—70° to 80° is m oo high a temperature . 
remove th en toa pact ie pomenatcty, sxcoptltg the most | for tue soil of Brazilian Amaryllids. Piunge the em as Pastel as Piawniwo—L M- ard wor Anah exyealia ees recommended 
der kinds, whith should be nursed until milder weather.—B.| they begin to grow; water them plentifully while grow by Mr. Forsyth, pak 36 ; has only as an: eapon Youna 
1V.—PINERIES, VINERIE ES, &c. fast, and give them abundance of light. Full directions pA plants, EA Teolo Da e best to use; but they must be | 
The stock of Pines, considered in three classes, viz., frniters,| to the management of these plant: po hi ne re a good dral kept clean, and bsg ab a ae en plated, November ist 
those required to show shortly, and successions in general, will bed os Some day we may make ro them, In the season for that. i ose Pat te experiment of seede 
$ three distinct modes of treatment, at this period espe- uwbile you will fied useful yo eel aes “ Herbert on} plantin g "o spine ts of little use to uane naeg land othet= 
cially. In get'iug forward those in fruit, take every advantage re maryllidaceae, » and in Sweet’s “ Hothouse and Greenhouse Covent cept n the umn. Mr. Charlwood, Seedsman, _ 
r p: į H a o te: 
of sunshine; give what air 1s necessary early i ay, 80 AS Cultivator.” eee PARE Gos tidachinal 
L CAB 
“the hand: of fabs Bottenet vy it does not rheg anai 
sior winter. liis tender, and seffers by the 
t ary early in the d 
to be enabled to shut up very early in the afternoon with a ther- BrowaLLIas—Beginner—Sow seeds of these in the end of 
mometer at 90°. Keep lively fires carly ia the morniag, letting | March, and piace them in a brisk Soi beak w ban they 
sink towards 10 or J1 o'clock, so as to inclose a pure become sufficiently large, pot them off singly in very small pag seles 
r wi equireit, K k è 
available surfaces, c s s the time you Pe rioni —Hortulanus 4 Depe, to prk X X, who preserves hig 
‘to a sudden gush of steam. Do not syringe too heavily, or too wish to remove them into the gre aid suse, admit air rather mar pen s$ by means of ac opties s end, at what time it i 
frequently, for fear of moisture hanging too long about thë | freely, to harden them. When can wish to flower them in à pla in the frame, where it remains till it is aale of 
k Those req i m in sr pots; but v wh bo’ 
z required to showin April, May, and Jane, for | small state, and early, confine them mail pots; but whe: is antby placing it in “the 
inter fruit uld be kept rather ghort of water, you wish them to attain a large size, give them larger pc =f rame,’—and what the 
a comfortable bottom-heat of 85°, and a drier atmosphere, and take care they are never allowed to get pot-bound, Add refers? He would also be glad to ae whether the ue 
tted and disrooted successions may b€ kept rather close to your Browaihas, Mart gage ames 85 Fu urtulaca splendens ori enweu up to this time, as well as it had up to the 
begin to grow; shading tlie latter on sunny days. and Thellussoni, and Globe A athus.' Q er? 
E Satie pies sender, however you may increase oteiiches OC C—We hav thini say in favour of C—We perfectly agree with opm that if y 
day-heat, do not be tempted to increase that of the night, | these birds, which have the bad’ reputation roe destroying buds SRC Ta Roses, 7 fig best y 
e that your Vines out-of-doors do not begin to bleed; itisa to an enormous ORNA bie doing us no service in return. ha ie pel ts. 
to go over tbem now, and apply thick paint to all the ya Aherat cannot r end them to be included in the cessfully. But the bstorer peat ss should be tong 
ends. Keep the West’s St, chur and Hamburghs which uspension of hastilities like layers—an operatj which, since you are a gard 
produced very late Grapes, c d up, to soften the old LAIAT] = PsA W—Por Piin ng purposes, this may be yon bi of course understand. 
desiccated bark. gop Pp aa opping successional wood, | pared from any kind of refuse wood, even from Bean-stalks an 
v1 —A Sub—The keeping these in a temperature of 40° ag 
on principles formerly laid down. Shift those cramped bs rag! ma nae materials. We can find noth her o good foranexternal ENS wiil induce them to flower early in spring ; but u j 
where necessary; and use abundance of dung-w: the overing of the clamp as sods, which may be TE aat air- th pis seat mene Aerts will not flower so well ity pat out 
latter, taking care that those in borders do not becca dry. tight, and easily removed where rene e ha ad a £ ore. su if they had received thei e se 
Peaches:—Sont up warm eariy iv the afternoon, and let your charcoal furnace constructed, but w nnot Sait it ana 
sink to 50° or 55° maximam at night. Nothing is more The softer the wood the better. . It w pond take a long time to | M: IEE, on injury done by worms to plants in pots is 
us to Peaches than a high night temperature. Strengthen ae the question about the feathers, and we cannot spare they stop up the drainage, ban atA roe 4 the free circulatio 
of air and water through | the s and the pi lant in co a 
<p a story ping the syoune shoots; saree often.—v. | it just n 
FRUIT D KICHE: EDEN, E al and A may train, against the sides and pillars qnence becomes un: J P— —It is 
EN reg lg i far eat. rey is yet, asin of your summer-house, Clematis azurea grandifiora, Bignonia keep Liked fa Tigridias a through winter, 
the de of winter, almostiy Onanie arrested by! Spee pee radian at i ene ale: Li: ae and Bougainville suffici ARE ange im this country; and t 
snow. Few out-door operations erefore be Bole Caprifolium gratum mpervirens, Cle aatia ot if. ak 
with advantage. As pee as ELA Sot ther sets in, Flom s can sonii, and "Ampelopsis auingusols Mates? sgue pter be 
bould be grafted; and, for various reasons, the foll Diin are handsome hardy climbers, which grow jaena 
-mode hip-gra ratting is veer the it desc oue. In cleft- | under favourable circumstances — Clematis montana, flowers 
grafting the divided portions of old wood never reunite; in| ‘in May, white ; C. Sieboldi, flowers in June, purple and white ; 
saddle-grafting the flow of sap is limited to two tapering strips C. PrE ,» August and Se eptember, white; Caprifolium 
all rin ting i ide of gri gro: 
Jant, in the Hes but in the cases of Heath: s, and m 
hard-wooded plants, it is indispensable to have ea he di 
thesoi oal to be place aa Ge 
M ti 
the inserted portion of the scion, In gratting, it should be Scarlet; Jasminum officinale, in July, white; with Glycine 
kept in mind that sections of wood already formed never unite; sinenass Solanum crispum, and Bignonia radicans To Nisi 
they are seen, if divested of all subsequent formations, in mere | ada som $ good climbing Noisette and other Roses that bloo: 
S; al 
mechanical contact after a la) T of many y ; and the scion | in October. under proper Rass 
and stock will then readily f all asunaer, Nor do the outer | CLERODENDRON SPLE: —W F C—This will bae cutting E Seedling Ga dene 
-barks form a vital poign, But when newly-formed tissues of | down totarahiy well pied in a state of rest; you had j eam but it will soon rut 
Doth stock and scion come in contact, they coalesce, -and an better train it to'a wire trellis, or round ‘alone gs os ds ini 
organised growth pieri e takes place. This organisable green, as it tis alialf climbing plant. It requires a rich, light, 
tissne siege npr meg n the wood and inner bark. The sandy loam, and should be grown in a damp-stove.{ 
inner ias the scion and stock shou re! be pa de n F H TRAMPERS.—H Y W—Much obli P re 
coincide iy as eni and without the least regard bein; cf exposing these people, If buyers are so simple as to 
paid to the positions of the outer barks, the nicely fitting PS believe in the existence of white Roses edged with blue, why 
which has been too long recommended. For fruit.trees, graft- then they must pay for their credulity. We say of these tain fom rhet plants the out des Arabes is prepared 
y is better ti pitchy co paperez on. Kitchen French lists that “ What is true is not new, and what is new —— ayd Labourer wil fn sane the place he wal 
having killed most of the Broccoli) is not true.” We should not, however, think that Yorkshire- U VZ_Wed ot kno anical Meetings you mean, 
ccupied ma. rat pete for the} men are exactly the ple SrH jat on pE on will do for wat 
Tn trenching ‘Ine wef Carrots | Fucusias —Sus—The follow: 'e good, V: 
below the s be mi on ensis, Formosa. Seem » Epps’s EIE Geis Srait? A one, 
e, | bat give no manure to the « pieni pan Robusta, Bell’s Queen, Conspicua arborea, Pride of Peckham, 
the contrary, require their food at top:—E. Youell’s Queen Victoria and Count vet s Tyrconnell, Halley’s 
VI.—ARBORICULTURE. San: peninga, an Sirdan Es Candidate.t 
Woods and Coppice.—in consequence of the unfavourable | GARDENERS’ Cu —It is a gratifying fact that we have 
state of the weather for out-door work, planting of most kinds,| again to announce, = Wwe hav ve had to do er ra since 
both here and in the nursery, will be much retarded ; and many the establishment of the Paper, that i essary to reprint 
other operations before peecemenges will be still unaccom- e first for ti Si year, the a having 
lished ; Seen. exertion will, therefore, s to been so much larger than we had anticipated. The reprint, 
as ote as th $ gak t leaves the ground. less the Newspaper part and the Advertisemeats, which we 
Nursery. teat week’s Calendar, and especially atiend to have not thought it necessary to set up again, will be ready 
making young plants see newly- planted trees firm about the in a few days.—— Cirencester.—You can have the volume for 
roots after frost, and before the drying winds in spring.—F. 1844; none of the other years, and but a very few sets of 1814 
remain, so you must be quick if you are anxious for it, 
Ripka Withe Wotter near ior the week ending Mar, 6,1845,as f Grares—J T W jatah aaa in Spain or Minn ot = the 
the Hortiouinura Garden, Chiswick. open air are probably better flavoured than nin 
TT [aout itis 
Feb. | poy Bike ate ae Ainiai British hothouses, but we doubt whe ia. C E, AA 
Pae sa] bap Pe soa —_ e — “i — they are superior in quality for the dessert, ark whieré large 
Bèt. i (| 29929 | 20.001 | 42 | 23 | B50 E bunches and juiciness are also required. The latter wili not 
Sum 2 | 2 |2988 | 9.83 | 43 | sa | a75 | N. .10 | _ produce as manan the former, 
Mom, 3 Ti 29.841 | 29.545 | 44 | 25 314.5 E. 2¢ | Heatine—P A—Some kinds of slate stand moots others. do 
ng $ S apaan pai 45 i E. not. No tank will enable you to withstand such frosts as 
Those s seg igen i these, e freely exposed to the air of the house. 
If thet is done, and your house is only a greenhouse, the 
| loal eas | as | you may trust to a tank 10 feet by 4 feet; but we would not 
recommend a smaller one, unless you can draw curtains 
? {29.957 -| 29.804 | 40.4} 
ene Teast; TE ‘and cold, with ay easterly wind; ana over your roof at night. In that case the size you yourself 
Mar. maa ay dry ai u kei- oe ait t haze; partially overcast mention will do. 
hind ow o ; slight phoan rain pr dpe a hc: Ruricola—The season is over for this dis- 
3-Rain; Fises ppd cw faker; elou wees cussion. It is certain that salt se not to he wank Tas 
5—Snowing; dusky white clouds, aud cold ; i amd ense es Tay aight Tepon why has been fully given by Professor Henslow 
6—Severe frost, dense clouds; frosty thronghont; arctan clouded. p. 86, 1842. 
- Mean es ior on y ‘she Nee kaa eee ang 5 kaer Hate tem» | Insects—Cona: g your Apple and erry. th 
E che n year: 7 arch fọr the | flowers it is impossible to give you any advice; all we cando pi parh fing Pom. amplies. 
x is to refer you to articles in vol, i. p. 312, and yo!. iv, p. 555,| weed g quality; Fiorin ry 
het ions ian vers, tor the ensuing where you will find the histories of two insects, which may pe Rate a 
oH és iene SM BoE ve be the pests you allude to. The best means of arresting their 
Fius ratel Prevailing Winds. ravages are also promulgated. R.—T Davis—You will find the 
siske sted lames aaa oa | quantity |e .{¢ | history of the Musselseale, affecting your Pear-trees, in vol, St 
| Temp. aee which it | of Rain, Eas ia P. 735, and vol, iv. pp. 487 and abo, ‘with the best mode of those numerous Sencar the insertion 
ie Bb ees: wil ceing truit-trees from that and similar species. see teresting communications is still delay ed, 
PTE sai laa) 4 | oavin, 3 onthe scales, and ehere ards brashing with spirits will x 
me | ass | ooo ile See Bo 2] be found the most mene -Ra NG FLOWERS. 
i 5 Lawns.—Sylvan: ss your Grass with sulphate of ai cimen. 
{| a20 | 421 9 0.22 Sn 
a 87.1) | 44.9 9 0 4 2 pra ote bay eater = the rate of 4 Abe to the acre, cogs wili ETA Sad kA aah iI gr an showy reie 
" q A! 
aaj se ims) 9 048 s pparentiy Pon rass, and will certainly destroy the | deficient in its general form, the divisions in the 
Moss. If the Grass revives you will probably not need to do! bein e 
o een nd - No. the same d 
anything more; but if mo suficient effect is produced, then | form, and is inferior to No ein ahs and is too fai 
| you must dig it upand relay it. Is it thoroughly under- | spotted,# i 
