THE G ARDENIRy CH . CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
217 
fore you use the knife to 
, as before hinted, discrimina- | 
blished be DET per un flore 
Ll as are well * cut as hard — [*r full [^ compact, closely 3 rising in 
the middle to a half Slobular 1 P a stiff 1 Jenn 
The ts occupy in; e centre where it lay, and then support it. 
But time - shown — he was wron is sur mise. 
t plant improved in health and st strength: 
75 — 
n his 
tion to 
e on- whether on their own roots 
|t the size of the centre ball, so that * different parts of t 
The young Nut 
an inch, or in propor | till it entirely — the cavity of the — so that, to 
— ing e wood and sto! ed 
Second—the | a t body. 
w some 
ns 12 or 15 feet high, which 
Urg intended for 
A 
he radical measure of c g ba ck to | 
T the groun 
gentleman well|nor 1 
ein the en — habits A the plant | 
| arrangements of the flowers on the spike should — 
the 
distinctly seen, and fully | blown, the u 
r into a co 
nfused m: 
betw 
ng | them ce; and, 
were igorot 
ihe baigh 
y 
colo: 
eal green leaves between the ower which | give dta an 
| elegant thi rd point i is 
over oan even — when 
T the ar winds ‘do blow 
by the name of old Mr. Bull with the national 
ie — min „The 
eck. Facetious — t — 
ffe; l 
1 winter, feeble and ey all tay 
s growth, rmi Mech only w 
a ia d share of over p perm you in 
year, i. e., supposing the plants to be in an 
N ill not be so speedily attain 
1 late I of the Gardeners? Chronicle a cor- 
if Rhododen 1 flowers of 
wer i the autumn 
such wou uld 
given 
moment considering 
Rhodode ndron flowers 
[n mer's blossom the 
ine bey) labour will allow, the icis 
as the flowers fade. Eom 
is much preserved by the practice, 
the ensuing year finer and more 
e allowed to on 
removed wi ion 
of than branch 
is necessary, ca with i 
at shoots. G. Lovell, ^p eti 
(To be continue 
"soil w. trench. 
feet, with plenty of thoroughly 
icumber beds, or 
f the subsoil is wet | 
I" 
HE 
of the season. owers 
ing, 100 set performing the opera- m: 
soon amik: Sr idm ou 
situation ; e if under trees i dh a thick. wood | 
firs 
Stake RR heu 3 * rm o lieh, or ger 
as | well by tying, g they will grow erect. 
al imaginable — 
The most 
ulation. Charles Waterto 
disfigure its appea 
| grown for 
ay he size of the flow 
time shorten its duration of aie 
rance., Chater’s List o, 
robust grower does not require a s take hig of stran; Walton Hol, 
4 feet from “ihe proni, If the vette | is 1 at rch 5. 
this season of the year, they may be watered with a 
cef of guano, or a other 1 ors id p dme Home Correspondence. 
| near the e flow 2 cut off the Grafting Vines.— Having read Mr. Spary’s remarks 
| Mies rero hin: the Bower els, ife rowded together, jon grafting upon ne w wood, I venture to — a 
and take off the top of the spike, accordin t that it 
attention to the usual height orked upon instead of new. In January, Mie 
ere Bod topping it, » you strong plant of West’s St. Peter, the only et ~~ 
but at the uld be spared in an early Vinery, was 
g and pe | within a foot of the front upright sash, At a foot — 
of Hi _ This 
Pork 
or sale in his Nursery, Saffron Walden. ` within 2 inches of the stock ; a piece of 
| barka with a vlady — of wood w. mer clean from the- 
vul as in whip grafting, with this diterene ce, that a cut 
NEW PEARS i made o rse side mu shorter, , leaving 
um pear m s d os re Uk ieee in we — pia T being to fit over the top ins stead of D^ side 
melting Pear, which ri in r and lasts ín wh! * Thi , I believe, called 
sometimes till far in December. It — remarkably e ci T ing m * — 
—.— to fit the stock, the 
claying, &e., being r sorted to. 
usual die P E p 
m ~~" s kept 
[c] 
— 
gra 
eady to open their bu on the graft was 
cight days before it begun | to puch. In the meantime 
VAL Lua en ah m Ng the: 
nio; save the DU — parts 
much moisture by the = the —— while 
ing process was goi ng s soon as 
buds yn ag = pe the bleeding ceased, 
the mL 
to the base — directly er. forming, an nd con- 
tended strongly with an 22 a “<> the- 
f growth ; 
ng season. The 
extraordinary from a- 
greate nd 
growth pep in autumn foreshortening and 
ing were commenced, vene would in ordinary 
carried on with the growth, but 
all the e fruiting eyes on the 
vens oh — stopping 
vire — 
ie rigs prunin 
cut out; ches iota: ‘which 
H 
m 
Hn 
H : 
2 8878.8 
7 
iM. 
H 
& 
i l 
H 
SOY y 
They may 
y icr August, — 
on a Shes a botto; 
24 
EE 
zi 
TREE! 
ed | no — 
t 
torre 
ts | walls. 
A SINGULAR 
INSTANCE OF ARBOREOUS 
there "Seeds 
nt, or driven by the vind, will liter crevices of | 
| d forms ARNIS and with 
— nue pruning a very sein pyram 
qua 
jte thoroughiy ” "ture and fit for propagation 
moon: hundreds. Nearly "sv atn E 
Bs inr 
T rude die 
ting down 
forcing began a e previous year, 
but very — allowing immi of — for the eyes 
ey all broke ed 
h 
— to break; the wel, and show 33 
the 
wa c 
ment. And if the a intent pressure of the »* 
T! 
HT 
HB 
Rw 
10 
spike, den — — of 
hi h 
of thick substance, tn " 
y cunts or the 
stones, and 
Dyer, the des 
Hill, wher he be "descri 
8, e here 
Iti — p = Nut ee u ere a ange — € About 
ago o of a 
save " — 
the grou nd am 
the n: of 
depos 
- of these n 
10 
| the diminutive plant 
edges | 
it will gradually elbow ite. out at the eng of the 
there in tim rescen 
h | face of the ve holding the — in its 
must 
as 
strayed to make w way reme supposed ‘improvements — 
a ee emains to show the spot where 
millstone. a the followi: 
ts puny head odi at the — 
bserved to a naval office 
luck, would, in time, lift 
n the 
MM ich: 
tnessed this at rong the V 
he de vy des pete | the wall. 
wind, 
Aud.“ 
form an exc 
n still more striking. 
t days w: 
e- 
—— im — "id e leader and 
two lai hree canes to have 
very regular], he thre ee li difference in t 
dar et any of them; The grafts Ed 
November and kept t Aerei and messed 
em ^ and je a 
P. 
Bucks. 
va ft lived 
the millstone from 
