g tions of the 
nd 
D 
gree: en 
nary sight “of te “plant, appears to be only a thick 
opaque medium 
NN ee Ne eee eee een een 
eee THE 
GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 
LE. 529 
rwise must certainly fall be- 
ind iti 5 Sar aps p a oar PE deal rests with the 
science of aes i ea l skill 
with ady. E If 
S 
r, bu at it is also true, that 
ven at horticultural 
may be made in garden 
14 
Be se den 
me’ ot Bi 
pring we 
ven. There is no more expense in 
0 than in gardening | badly ; but he who 
arouse a spirit of invention on the 
pea thst would produce some useful results. The 
mechan nies of agricultural improvements are generally | am 
t in the interior of the > closed 
ibly. o that. The fact, however, 
va 
> 
R A hak 
flower may ay poss 
deserves inquiring 
i ge ity of the 
ing xia: 
ry.—It is a 
nciers, prom long a canary w 
disputed point 
will live. 
limit. 
nts his gard 
is that of the I Horticultural Society, “damps his oniku 
indus 
logs his try. A man’s talent, u 
pen i “is hid ‘chines 
ing step in their progress to perfection. At an agricul- 
Gabel show dhe inie daal - 1 in the subj } 
+ + 4 $ e hi + 
. = EE - . > 
improvement, The „prize is not so much the object 
that the exhi- 
where their merits would 
a 
same sys stem 
be appreciated, ge “do ae for their sale. if the 
nt ney 
d, is the Marquis of 
sdown orge Warren er’s table 
Chiswick and other Doctiacaeat societies could very 
nth. hav 
mariale fac ot of a cock canary "being i in 
is at the present moment in hi 
him a a few ce, 
herd’s B 
plum nd remarkably tame. 
by no means der fein 3 on the contrary, he was 
sprightly, and uncommonly 
r Sir 
opted wi with “fruit ‘because Mr. Sprer and Mr. Dods 
exhibit tions annually at Chiswick. We 
will venture to say on they are better and more pro 
count 
s | by off 
- | pa counties in which I 
arde: 
ering prizes for any invention 
or 
them that would seem deservin ng of such awards. In 
jka upplied on that very ac 
9 
en tools or in one that ar 
no im immoral tendency in producing a wor 0- 
Pine-apple, or a „collection of eel: -gro ARE pie 
placing for En land's "aristoctacy. to 
look sg 1 We — that this illiberal feeling | is on th he 
hae in another, nowledge of 
+ + 7 i 
5 
improv vement of | him 
e been, I have seen | he 
x; 
Beet: “on How mu 
oe} lo gpa ray main so I cannot say, but he looks so 
well that an insurance might, I think, be seeni = 
Wilkha 
Kidd, 
the tie that i is require a 
mechanical 
skill and invention were set to work there v would be no 
at it m i g 
ot so muc ich for the object of the 
New-road, Hammersm 
Steeping Seeds, — etree seen in your Number of 
May 3d, an — of ries Beans and Peas, &e., 
in chlor ride of lime and water, I b forward the 
re ish of— Duro. 
ur cultivators inte- 
ductions before those who are ‘always ready to reward | 
me had 
been soaked six hoursin one part of the solutam = 
ndicum.—Amate 
pein structure of plants, will fi 
t e e leaves of this rare and 
of a lanceolató; form, 
» to seven parts of water, and sown 
Som e Peas 
= 2d ý came up in 10 days. 
z A 
ture. As farmers are best able to gor fa song 
ments in the construction of farming i 
2 inches in 1 sgt at ahd fro 
of a thick leathery substance, with a smooth, 
dark gree broken by irregular masses 
other crop of Peas, stee ped in the same 
manner, and sown on the 19th of June, came up partially 
The 
ments in the construction of meee to greta: 
Wt thu fant 2 Ter L } $ 
TA IR 
X > E 
£4} Te } 3 1} 
drib being of a 
lea 
} 
t 7 
} PELTA s.e hi + 
ng 
semi- transpar ent 
Crea 
that if +} 
ured at 
mpro 
plements, he rising) saps re- 
x 
hus examined, what, at an ordi- 
d follow. “The drill rake, transplanter, and 
other useful eels for general or particular pur- 
y, were all up on the 7th day. 
hloride of Ta s to have the double effect of pre- 
g the attacks of grubs, slugs, &c., ly 
- | promoting the progress of vegetation. Peas and 
previously sown in the old way, have not come up 
under six or seven week 
The Aerial Resting. oP Plait Som: 
poses, are only rarely to be met ; with. Wh at is the 
eeks ago a 
Why do plants poise throw 
range itself into ‘an extremely beautiful =e geometrical 
The Frcs ase of gardening are not generally of such 
And as the elucida! sio 
question fry a wi of ae ~~ pi ia 
remar rks may not t be uninteresting 
: distribution of the larger nerves, but that a gardener 
} diating ld} l e eines correctly |. 
_ towards the E and surrounded thy fica h they were likely 
maller „ones, extending over ake whole eae the purposes phe ney were intended. 
n 2 
If} 5 
re | they were ae be seen at boxticaltaral shows, where gar- 
den ners in the ha bit of attending, then there would ya 
“of rsel Tey e yet 
that every implement valuable as 
a new invention, or an improvemen nt 0 old, would 
be pena ; that — bat adapted te their speci- 
pas 
Ci 
¿and that, 
stream of, blood, broken 
r their ster i, oe “a 
a 
foun 
that 
worthless — Wa illiam Kea 
As 
omy 
there are some speci esw whie A deren A 
upon this property for their support: 
ve only to examine the Epiphytes of the ‘ropied fo 
rests, or the Pandanus of the adj acent plain „mt the 
former 
9 pe that of imbibing ae ae frog = moist 
mosphere, in ose singular 
eae delight; but in the Jette Saaiiace, sae 
h they : 
us.—I am a fellow sufferer with your 
n | ponent “I. F. M.” (p. 489). I bedewed a PTE 
reshly on Asparagus plai 
oh ee pee tissue.— IV. Wood, Pine- 
ick Shows 
came up, an 
to sia row downwards, perform a è fun _ 
upper part assumes the appease per- 
forms the functions of a stem 3 the low er part _ branches 
S roots. 
oy ¢ 
= wither ana 
then 
= Agen the ae has av red shabby 
Deam e plants do not appear 
the Chisw: 
Teading te 489. sad 511) your = pemarl on the fru 
A Chiswick Spleen and I hope they will ast 
disregarded by the exhibitors in Ta 
at the qua 
to hes the frequent instances of 
g bad things with good, and thereby 
ich cy eek algae might ens gained. 
t | Vinery on the plan recommen 
Hoare’s” System e Cu mard “perce 
«C.—Seotla nd,” states ome Vines in a | 
ed in a work on the} 
roots of Vines, and that they have not grown ; and in 
consequence he calls age me to account for mier 
_ This I will endea 
failure. 
p 
Weall grow indifferent articles 
own s; ver 
o be quite -n 
FV 
a late Number, that a correspondent, seni himself | 
that he plan fabric 
d the parent plant affords a beautiful i 
of the — eae ny of every plant to the 
Gdn 
seats Shiah i o fill, and of the unison 
of its several ases in po oe of the parting 
, as the nature of the plant requires the fi 
of new stems around the porta; one. The roots of the 
Pandan fore they reach the soil are furnished with 
peculiar organs a llecti the nourish- 
ment of t soon as the roots reach the 
rth, these e organs, “disappear, being then useless, as 
we neyer should expos a n these publie | He states that he has follo at my see oe in every th di substances ca abis of 
I lately noticed at Chiswick : Bee E of 10 Tepee and as those directions extend no further a bein ri d for “a : ga the plant. p? Now, 
which were þad, and two common ly | to the completion o of the act of planting, I have J is part of the general eco- 
d ones alone had _been n they nom A, the plants ee named, those instances can 
3 x ; y nending the | by letter or ‘throngh the "Chron what means he ouly De sai ee d as exceptions to the general rule. it 
Bitor ETE A “tose s a 
bcs grower, fat Sr at Ta my land I shall theni abled, Ihave no do explain ee saga contrary to tie pos pron 
wrongly if they had awar ne ap of his ae Your correspondent ao A trom the stem ? We kn pw thet suc uch i in- 
lared intention of the society in o the non- ok of the Vines in the Horti- | Pr? 
to reward the skilful gardener.” ciate ‘Society’ s Gardens at Chiswick, teh = been he V Tbes r000 "do not at all times issue from the 
exhibitor was already noticed in the Chronicle. This not tice, ver, | the i de ak 
e kept his K ines ome, and 5 : the | joints. ape rom s 4 —— not ayi n ara 
cutting: t from a Q e stem į 
aly for 3 eriwer o Dan “ones facts: of the case, I geet that I was not t thereby sion ge; baht =e sn dots th ant is of 
3g Partienlar: rly good, and fee asn 
Spri kinds, each of first-rate 
of makin up a collecti 
PREIS S 
I 
had not got at easi 
Serot I never 
with t 
for a more suitable op 
now been afforded me, 
without hesitation, 
therefore reserved m myse 
tunity. That opp portunity m 
and I will, Doe, embrace it, 
t Hoa 
paii with eee 
oing I haye seldom missed 
if brother exhibitors 
smy would be equally 
S 
et but contented m 
PS rest fade : 
Ta ink that 
Facesta th similar cautio; 
dn Exhibitor We p 
llent articles on 
wit Me. P. Mackenzie œ: 433 and 
J E 
En 
re. 
Dendrobium Jorka tum.—A flower spike of this 
adva sey so far towards a ae I expected it 
of roo 
scone orii; = aan in a ‘mo 
a plan Pe the pete matter 
roots mixes with the 
the 
would have eet next day d it ss 
as if fla for want of vater, alihoagh both the plant 
bundanti 
I 
and no more notice the ci 
essels wi 
gement Seya the 
al g y 
of im implements i is aj 
The 
in the 
. ope : 
fe et £ the other, at the sante time. 
inde i treatment 
moschatum 
Sand L throe s mat on 
the back part of the 
was, that | ti 
from about 2 o’clock 
| of D. best a ddan withering. 2 “Brander. [It is not 
Z prizes to those 
thea ENER ra el 
pale i Ia ihe 
lutel ssary for an Orehid or any o other plant 
a fruit. The point | great 
hor is co Santy: acting on the 
Erat expansive f 
