where it is attached to the o the midrib. I nev 
multitudes ir this kind as there mere in 
vany of the wefe as | 
r saw such said to be qui 
the e plantations that degree 
THE GARDENERS’ C HRONICLE, 
n 
te exhausted ; for we aha scarcely attained | 
ayy eminence in the re ree poeni aay ghd 
lly, so mga pa ary for the 
aa aee z fa The object oft thase rem marks 
t attention aan a, if pone to elicit in- 
at Heron Court, in Nov. 184 0: 
round and large ariran les, 5) per 
made them loo fr to the taste; ot n to, 2 
which concern all practi ical 
were 
number had Fad to the kairio with on Oak-leaves to | 
ontaining a small fat 
aap I I found bs “thes 
(Mar. 2 
perate climate, the roots should be so lik ikewise + by 
the branches of plants are — to powe: sb 
pran truth can be more palpably clear, ¢ 
media t atl they derive their pba: trim, 
d app proximate ne; rly toa 
ar’ 
tempera uri in opposition to the lans 
s and conservatories ; 3 and 
are, in ogg, eso ce of the 
to become more 
you ang aren y the ph an ba on dividing another. late 
bt th ral throu, Bo x the counts aac gardener sho 
lend a hai nd i in the solu! tion of oF two problems 
ies after all, yste je: 
over 
whole surface of the glob 
Glendinning. 
(To be continued.) 
HOW TO STRIKE CUTTINGS. 
BY MANN. 
— Cuttings of Monoco otyle: Da e 
n the a n I observed six 
d up b ings 
which peas had lived, pase! to pupe nar pu aa d, | of this kind are much more like ly to be cleare y SN aificalt, if not’ impossible 
escaping through an aperture visible on the outside ; and practical men than by philosophers, lt hai Bs “doubtless, | vinced; from mie dot Sp and repeated pn thal 
f it i © Af tha wall } : ai | of this numerous class are amon 
of some parasite. Ex ony om 
minutely, I d coping down the Bae faith ng cl xper as ti 
pace of another Cynips, — ‘from their ooh size, saith the effect of oo n ie is to wi sthe 3 me that these pra S ‘Monotyednne 
F took to be the males of Cynips Quercus-folii; but six the poe "shoots and effect, on make their that they root Ms when “they el tis l 
ae teren of pee oe ber gig a 4 ag vine ra appearance. This cee t only ruinous | P¥t herbaceous cuttings, as well as c 
a “but the ochreous antenne and legs distinguish | for the time being, re is see the cause of in Dicot nee EOE e ii remarkable, 
m that species, and it described in Curtis's | death. „These effects are soonest abe ye in how es con- l iy tb y h case. 
“ British Ento: ology ” under the name of “ Pallidi t t-ol multiply from ee ranches, Draczna, Freyein 
ie gant and beautiful van pap Sir : 
same e galls a pa rasit 
thus 
in these « oro 
Seated erage re i the Rod Sipe ca 
as vege etation thrives ten tim 
more lux xur antly under 
their leaves, for it 
ne ey are cut off 
itie fly, 
From Se galls found i in November I obtained specimens | 
of the 
HW 
eh of Calli 
Shading | of diffrent kinds has 
there were at that time other pup 
a in the galls, which produced en fe sits 
oe 
in May, at least six weeks after 
Callimomes the middle 
been exten 
the sco orching ra ri of 
; but this at best is a nuisance, and in som 
cases ‘it. is a to remove it wi ith sufficient ease 
ohl 
ong leaves are difficult to Aer under glasses. We: 
remedy thi i inconvenience by turning the leaves 
e | along th e stalk, maintain by ty 
them as ney be requisite, as is ‘shown in Fig, k 
the 
males had hatched 
pew ners edifices with clear and spotless ‘glass. Take, 
for exa mple, 1 a conservatory ye. built to the e large 
arden at Chis- 
ety’s 
wick ; and it will be found in all such erections utterly 
ayo ssible to produce or r maintain luxuriant foliation i in| 
e sun’s rays. The 
r, with every care 
nts growing in 
y, because the 
and may be had i in blia 
PiE eii being so aart 
they are almost sure P AA scorched, Ph 
n this w 
the atmosphere becomes 
foliage is in consequence papan 
moisture, and it eS in an hou 
air t rat 
Fig.7. Branch of Dra- 
rope enue tied 
sg «da for 
temperature — rising very rapidly, is a 
& at eee FO isone- Of the liget Batik ies; point too often overlooked, because it has not been 
and received its name from Linnæus; the ma Te £0 
far less read RE tian the: females that they have hitherto | °° clearly understood by th who build houses for| The operation consists in cutting pire toed 
waded my search ; indeed, this i lirics as zá those who grow with which i the em. Alm ost | 1- -th of an inch from their poinks af attechmni a | 
n the econom of t gall-flies, i K if 
the most a ecies of stich 1 p $ Plate-glass and which a is to be buried. It is = po ne 
ii e ch rag ve ea Sy The heal E ae oe — sash-bars offer little ol : a 
folii is generally black, and clothed St as it (oe n of light and heat meee from on sun, and on | [f o pieces they succeed nearly pa 
izzly hairs, ex ting the omen: tl Sates gies | this account, anomalous ryote their value in | js sh us eat Imu eae the Vanilla, in cutting the b 
F than’ the: thorax. slender, filiform composed | Horticulture is estimate and $ it should be, because | into pieces having two eyes each, as would be thi 
13 joints: basal one is he secon minu è if the h divided aE i 
ao Af he ve a } mead: 2 ate, | ti n to the | ma of them; pe then they should be a a9 Arem aes pone of atta 
they beci come \ very short towards the apex: the head is | PT***™” = ae fe and fiki g care urt 
a Dona istama in in size to the head a and thorax, and 
is like polished ebon es 
colour, especia y at the J chai ~ 
being the longest; the tarsi Steg ta d and teri 
= claws. Fig. he crose-lines eabititing a 
iral 'aimensioo 
“The females pears the central or 
on the underside 
minent, by mean 
di + 
of the tent, as x r some other fibri 
eaf, where te e t S 
of that z hora ray $ rig are mos Pee. 
e gall ferria rrido in omnes pt egg 
p and the little maggot lives upon the cellular 
disde, “which often “raed harden ning around | it until iti is 
as 
te ovipositor, : and |. 
flow, n 
AENA 
countries, where ve tation is d il 
Jai to h magma a a sab- 
oat the leat has been cut, and the appearance 0 
THE ACCUMULATIVE SYSTEM oF 
CULTIVATION. 
In May, ; e greenhouse 
5-inch pots, including Kennedya inopbyll 
K villosa 
ne 
, P. gracile, &e., 
eath-mo aid (Wi mbled pma tf poy 
ee inches thini were piled upon a ‘ane mp 
he hot- s, fi 
apoa after which they w 
e to four inches square, and slightly spr A 
previously brok 
A uantity of heath-mould, 
a 7 through & 4 
ordinary take ge was then passed 
two eight ast nch s 
makin ng the rt 
ose in our conserva tories, 
scarcely credible in ‘this cou o much so, 
jecting SRR coarse fi 
ad potsne 
addin ixth of ¢ 
stanced at the roots fro rom 
The ‘soil i which ie grow becomes heated to an extent 
try; 
80° 
ful Ug rown, when 
fly 
s no un- 
ung Epi ap Sea = ne of thes ese, 
peste st 
ma Coi ooperi,ț is black = Depa 
hed 
ig = 
AND CONSERVATORIES. 
v“ written on heating an 
gs. thatimportant subject canno 
r|the wood c 
ice! 
and ventilating 
ot be den 
the tempe eratur 
s the case in our wie conservatorier, 
ae a e on th 
Sew, different 
„ Place, fo r ex- | 
| Were mixed wit th nearly am sà pa 
th l Bea 
ma E 
"Beren = twelve-inch pots were then prepr 
pla ing t sas bo et d 
SE 
t, a bu ury an other in far soil abo hesin 
— snd. thi : a disparity will prove quite atartli al 
e solar calorific transmissions in the tr 
aie infiuence on the = arth from ‘= ae ste seat 
in which were placed the largest of th 
us: which were gradually built up with t the Tes 
fillin; ing the interstices between with the siftings 
and crocks, _ the latter being "firmly re 
Each | 
plant i 
othouse ever can have, 
| 
| nee ie Pies p 
ture o 
heat in the inter © case to Sas uch 
= vey ren e for the pity 
ailibe rium of aip 
hi ree and ime 
tenden ney of bodies to 
pera when 
plant, therefor, 
long continue in ‘tt 
’ , 
Placed in 
iti is quite 
Such ci reum- 
2 m ranaently ps each P anit 
H Hes old pan a 
sage eth as 
ee with the roots A or asit i nly 
mpna of | the plant ; and pe Bg it w 
face soil of each ball was reduced, so 
ine 
he igh attainment in the art of gar- 
<* Pol. 688. Guide Gen., 564, 12. 
sate, pl. and fol. 345, 
and comple ple tely at all times bottom. 
aa 
coy 
many i 
started a little above th 
t Tb., pl, and fol. 552, [itat c plant breathes ; that is, if the branches are in a tem 
Various opinions have been offered 
