THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND a GAZETTE. [Marca 26, 1859. 
—— am een each | weigh the cost of a thin 
end to end, leaving spaces between each | weig N * as the amuse. 
p Mes. ded x -— d is ice much | bri ick 2 peres wide—these are for ventilatio rs j On |m ant that can be gotjont gii They disregard 
chan: x. nh real improvement taking place the — i uro ~ 
6 inches wide at bottom, and 15)I afford it?” just as those 0 
as each sloping side of the ridge is 20 they e det ee Idi 
pe at 
A f. ch side will be required. The cording to Mr. RrvErs’s statement the thing ma 
employed fo se eping rs p dens rat arge | ching is — be closed with pari: at one end " pene ae deis er shillings? re: th — 
cessantly exc om a noteh should be cutin the board to admit the ny purposes may such a little seven 
2 a e. - "T m of the Vine, which pit be planted outside, foot ‘span rere applied when the owner is tired 
wants o 1 5 
th bebat dem "e S en rs boilers, 33 a soil the Vine is planted in some; but there are many more. Bringing fo. 
h e we d e war 
themselyes w ; 4 
having no merit except t that of — y, to turn | should b d 3 . 5 £i z 
enriched with rotten manure, line of Asparagus, or spring Onions or 
2 hien is san py beya — le La ed „ 1-inch bones or bo lor sheltering small ace in N such as 
relieved fro ^ m the last great impediment è 0 main- dust.“ The Vine, when . shoul ' W or Lams’s Leltues 
ý introduced and suffered to grow, M in 5 com- A " such hae be the gis c 2 off its 
— till it reaches the en runing Vine trench tter 
robust" health as they enjoy under — eir- mon Vinery, $i ds ee er eser, i CM better tha 
vi 
to ur niy 
b is the point in which all talent and | be followed. To support the Vine in the centre, | 3 55 es we TE already set a carpenter D 
— Here ie Leben It is true that — of m od shoud be plaved. sorote | up some old materials, 
ntilation is improved, that by means of subter- | the furrow, eet apart, resting on 
— flues, or — — in contact with outside; to these the stem of the Vine should be E Em m above 2 typo X la p received 
hoated = m as ge ote arcc a | fastened, so as to be under the centre of the roof. the fo flowing communi on on the subject from 
reat de n done. Perhaps, indeed, in| The bunches of Sig c will thus hang in the | Srema 
tting up a new forcing pt — "atter may 5 centre of the furrow, and, owing to the radiation It was the intention when the Curate's Vinery 
sufficient, But we want other e plan v heat from the siu and tiles, they vil ded was first designed to intr oduce a plan for wing 
plicable to all sorts o of existing buildings, perg s: * à ^ need 8 mention that in ing, Grapes and other fruit under glass 3 and on 
are what we have not yet acquired, or if they exist, either i winter enimi d two liigi c of | a large scale, but ed things pre 
they are unknown qs tite. rid ^ in His mo taken off and | carried into — I am rey Mr, 
It * cud with no small interest that we replaced when the opera itis is fini shed. Owing|Rrvers has brought it before the publie, The 
. HANDS's “ new and to the moisture from the soil, red spider but rarely | system combines sunlight, great heat, perfect yen- 
im vid. yum of heating and ven tilating," Ko., makes its appearance; but it will be a sure pre- tilation, and moisture—which rises through the 
effected b . certain — “Utile " furnaces ventive if flo ?wers ot sulphur are kept thickly brick floor. These we might reasonabl 
a Si Tent | 8p a in t 
supply of humid atmos — - for the purposes of of June and ps Iti is not only for Vines that | ri ned, with health in the foliage; and the con- 
m teni so as to and the necessity oF water- | these, strictly TE ridge- QM urrow, Vineries em d flow of air would prre Probably 
ing.” Fine words and captivating to mind of are adapted—Pears on uince stock, and it might be advisable to shut the side of the 
agardener! The treatise is introduc y eleva- Peaches and b all eultivated as closely exposed to cold winds, an m shut alto 
reperi sectional views of a — a con- pruned pyramids, may be grown in them; the at night, hs, heat absorbed 1 e earth during 
„a forcing- i h- h the 
r. 
m 
letter-press accom: 
that the new an ENTM system " is a system 
7 
— mole, and i ral, that Me its lead. hat bein 
, absolute that Mr, Hanns says of his “ new | Jat one he describes; an di 
and improved system," we are riven to the conclu- No pele ta Log y oa RA row i be dug 1 fd 
ras e . í Han 8 builder. is T 
remarks, i 8 6d. for each 7-feet length; glas 1 
Shot ae int alice mg nt supply of humi | ab about ds. So that a Vinery for one Vine will cost, | trench, in which the operator mig bes 
Mesi Wie ingenious inventar tess E toe -— including slates and bricks, about thinning. : 
humid in the sense To E os ppened to a simple stra ret ido — purposes M hich the —. We are happy to announce that Dr. mant 
s — — 5 i Capensis 
i dan eden gardener, who e = hall fallof 1 ich ae Pam ets See and a 5 " ones Plantarum p „but confined to ee 
and | planta 16 Eire have b pee s | 
new invention, upon his | « UA ng B ads: 5, which will form the first number, m 
B 
PUN 
own showing, and it cannot be denied glazed ridge- roofs are | = 100 plates, forming a volume, 
perfectly now” i in Horticulture, — i p noo ee EE — r à ap & 1 ato reent * 
n ay warm border E ‘surf, 5 f the be p jend's intention to 
F VisgRY! What may that mean ? early Peas, French Be ; dn pe de other "add | however, our — tren dra i in 
€ had been vies the question two or three times | will netat E tanophilists. Dr. 
nor eed | b be useful to = ale neod, hës has already 
: : : hh fe! all 
ded 9 is the province | cases on th should be bladed on bricks, with spaces | ote oe — 
255 * lation is then secured ; and : — ————— 
Nr. aiast the explanation has been found in without ‘the constant attention (o gin RHODODENDRONS.—No. VI 
mentioned last w. in the old garden frame o = 8 air, — or 
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y it at once before our gardens th that are con fined 
16 he andis nexed figure will convey a —_ t id [^ t mel ope dens isi 
of its shape and make. To form x Vin ot this fig E just art t 110 
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ary to secure i + general. 
i A dry — so, it more be well | and € us — ne d Sete HIP Dinos | ean of the ais ien dt ange pori 
} or san tl tgo 
T, gently bly b rmed that i 
pes oe id i ini t a contrivance | After gathering, place the un 
aly — es Le und like this longs to che D and rickety class; paper ba » and store in a cool — of seed of 
well if fully exposed to the sun. own gard yap deri where people are their time. If you have a large qt ee 
* When the site is determined on, a trench | can do — 2 
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should be dug 2 feet wide on the surface and 15|better, Ver Uke! Da 
: ikely. h a but 
viii oct te a id a’ he em e garden isa plaything; Iisa plate of mee ton wil doubtless ' 5 um ean 
inches wide; t z 585 littl ina 
e bottom 3 1 i and wo! to the man who is so il] Will be be of of th á T 5 
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des side es — ed w 3 the slates called Dahe sses, | indeed he is a 
wise. ofa garden Es ists 1 
each side of ai trench, on the surface SR e and pret 85 die D E & 
of must be placed 2 inches be so, The true lovers of f their promise t ^t 
iy 
M 
— — collect from m 
gardens 't spring, as the seed - vesse 
