sit] 
E FOLLOW! 
wo at the prices annexed, a 
sag ew: CANTERBURY — 
THE GARDENERS’ 
NG NEW AND RARE — put cse Y and sigs — Cea Vines were selected ; | 
ne: ied. 
CHRONICLE, 
687 
Jas reco mended by Mr. Hoane, and filled as he 
| states i in a his book, 
“The 
riedia um, At ove reed that in these instances, | thet 
Bharata yah PR e tke not a ques- f to the eo but now a very weak sh 
bsod Habrothamnus ‘cyaneus 5 ig | "ORO a or less suceess—of more or less vigor- ja few inches es (6 inches) long, and not thicker than 
Gastro lobin spinosum 2 6 |OUS growth—of bearing, npea so on—that |a . That he middle 
Jasmin um lig nee has to be considered. e is one of total column has back, bat is yet alive and 
‘aan waiter 6 Lychnis viscaria alba aes Ẹ “ie al WH eal yi sible. The Vine in the 
| Mus nda ma om iads, a1 0 panei of growth, has not been obtained ; | bottom colam d, never having broken at all. 
3 Phlox aa 1 A the 2 ma Rect is tha The Vines appear to have been very strong when 
0 pees Yetida...........5 0 Mr. Hoa n his taco at pages 545 and 641, Paeti p the columns. 
E fR Rhexia, anor chin iho ei} has s given his own explanation of what he haras umns Taenia: are said to have been 
ely ee spay i Boas ae f this total pits. To oar] built Sey three years, but how long the “Vines 
China. --rasnrnrcsrees 5 0 | Stigmaphyllon, of 2sp. 3 6 | minds nothing opi. “be Jess satis sfac He as-| have pee d saha could not learn. The V 
Caprioli jum Brownii. . - 3 6 | Veronica,fromN.Zealand3 6 | symes that this thing ve been | have on aai sila: Clase tc. the 
Mr. Masrezs has oari a large collection of Dutch named done, and pri E t - uch m e se to 
BYACINTHS NARCISSUS, DOUBLE ANEMONES, RA- A po S to reason upon such assump- aoe ; situation seems rather an exposed 
g ewes: a ere oem &c., for which: he nee arly tio one, , But it so a, erg svn none of the sone es | one, and “7 appear to have — a 
jursery, Canterbury, Oct, 
ASTRAL OCTOBER 14, 44 
Ar ae 
845. 
7 of our last volume, in directing at- 
ur. "oases plan of Growrne Vines in 
4 | hollow rata ns, we j Supreened, ont doubt of the ope- 
She Gardeners’ Chronicie, ae 
FS tT 
existence says, 
t the cites which veda been used > not 
y 
nts, $ 
| recommends, old by himself, w the ex- 
| press purpose of nating planted i in colum e 
in 
| cultural 
Soden” 
It will have been reich marks 
we have confined ourselyes ‘strictly to the question 
of growing Y Vines he hollow cl Setonin ad 
s giy book. Her 
Rape ong 
used in the Garden of the Horticaltural Society 
were Pasty Popa ue ma "ath grant cane ior 
the purpos e of th ie e ru 
the be iree om. = 
a oaii upon the 
Oe tte o with ate vb pikas by 
him for Vine -borde 
neee 
rations pernele; h mended the ex 
t to be 
— xte Tı 
experiment to be tried; because thi 
value of the objections to the practice whi 
+} 
ap- 
oe 
do with 
ol ae holly Pr 
© us open all of 
Sar Pg Prd be aed 
ast 2 
Aes h was 
| the omaa Ay pe ta then, nar i an ex- 
feracent te ight have had some nek “but it is 
ie BE 
tea a 
ae word more este h he Porato DISEASE, 
is observed by some of our correspondents 
that the water in which Potatoes are re boi led has an 
ant to an inquiry into the cause of 
the 
Hoare assumes that raw | 
xt place, Mr. 
ut s 
low Mr. Hoarr’s own ve 
bat Fe equi to Soon man in experience alone 
pte ~ Cone gained, and we n 
At vas a oF his book on Vine-roots, per Sow 
very oe a account of the m 
ich Ried va 
he 
à d (p. 76), and which is of “ such 
 €asy practical apilicafiom sp ast number of per. 
p fens who phy thitherto t e means of | 
single Vine, may now, 
ny description of bones 
e | pose it were otherwise, we pe y only aie iot 
ed di ns. | sho 
to proceed 
in ooh cases. Wou too, must oe a word of 
sel, 
AN Potatoes which render se a the water in 
“ provided they are those of 
- | maturity, and are therefore of a 
Such as have marrow in oon 
e | broken asunder at the fis surface (ma 
the interior where th mar 
k? 
X the Baid Lampiro 
€ Boa e the bones was in 
leave it to the common sense tony aad 
sap would think that 
expense, ion ae very great lu uxury of having at 
e Aal 
in which ma 
© 
Grapes.” These are Mr. Hoare’ s 
~ 
f 
fluid recommen tet and allowe 
thi 
4 eee dey 
aci tow i, Pah m. es 
s f ay were, hororon on reading these assertions 
4 instructions, struck with the fact that Mr. 
unt 
did 
y be. 
case, after announcing ~~ a tr 
practice, say that a given thi 
ral by 
is ae the „fuid was in excess re should 
’ Finally, he assumes that th d 
a [had ey ip reality killed by the winter before pod 
re plam E oem ill answer for it that such w. 
‘at the he garden of the Honela | 
et ood wo. de mat believe os 
igis ground for saying that it had 
Were — 
peis p- 641? 
to our corresponde: 
_ Such being t the sat of this t. Hoa 
en Koras follos hake the Vine 
was also remarkable that he omitted to | 
Med such columns _ 
nstructed. 
Goan hi himself to saying that it may, ca, pen Twill be 
say 
were 
f 
O he been or ha ad admis 
bat having died, and his own explanatio on of the 
failur a having bere pani oa to 
ible, n on e ape cular, we feel 
d pag t 
her this Bt Ea was not a mere s specie xoa 
calle bo om of 
Beane 
= some evidence 
vite 
public. 
sy a bona relation of facts, and in | therefore, Hoare produce som 
to be erang i the maint, we wrote | instances within eve United Kingdom of his Vine- 
columns havi t gi br underthe di- 
d to the. following pae — given in his meges If be will furnish us with 
to the maa “Ft Bar aye , | the names © of the places where hti are ‘koda ph ese nd, 
all, suc 
aot it 
nek Vine either grow 
in paly | #8 
tof six 
a goes ag 
specs 
oon make such ameen | 
indispensablo ; and H Page wend will not Te-| 
complaint, on |. 
pro oofs of eaccess and to report feihfally the cout | 
by’ 
lasting | can easily 
should be | the condition 
is) may be salable age ough very cony 
such seasons as the present 
to <i parts Ath 
will pit oe or patches of Potatoes, to collec * i 
yw = has | asso eap- in the 
ever seen a bone to judge how far-it is paiibiei ans ‘wiere a spoon.. has has. preige 
happene ml be 
dead Vines which he sold 
O 
of the erop. 
The practice of storing Potatoes in™ pies” is one 
ts of the country, a ecially w 
ug up, into a ntre of the 
iously voen potni 
to receive ; and when whole 
e am Ser toge "i ey wi 
earth pressed nanaii: ‘with the spade on the sides, 
annot too ngly urge on all who are now 
taking up Potat he ag he nce of keeping the 
out of the earth for a few days previously to storing 
them, of drying them as much as possible, and of 
sorting out Í that appea in any way diseased, 
| Considering the infectious na the Potato rot, 
d dity with whieh it sometimes spreads, 
the ay pak ra consumed in doing this 
ecidedly o 
dpn rot in them 
all cases 
manifested we even éan båt toa alight extent; 
-| it is far be stor o, the sou nd Potatoes in a 
separate piece rok ground. If thi not be done 
the risk of danger ma pro we diminished by 
linjag the prsi pe lace dug to 
receive them with vnewig-burat enti toad ept th 
of 3 or 4 inches: it is, howe y tter not to 
store them in the field whe rs a s 
¥ BORDER DER FLOWERS. —No. 
In compliance with the west of A Subueiber” 
Aa have much nee in forwarding a few observatio 
border flowers, , though tam afraid that in 
iaei i cater fal into “ A Subseriber’s” 
state can iy Ne the pes 
or the sake 
“he we must ohh him plainly, that under the > circum- | 
stances of this case, L i 
nothing less. He has stated in his | 
Here of Vine-columns has b uccess- 
e were 
nia iphone: but it eso 
deman 
We now ask 
main Bagi we act statements 
19 | Romer 
po ter le ag Floris 
| Bes bt vim To as a 
howevel 
managed, 2 ey let the 
plant re- 
G ae nag orate 
