THE GARDENS CERONGIE AND ATIS GAZETTE, [Jury 9 
530 = 
TM UE INT ETO TE tinguished British and foreign natur: lists 2m 
ed over d a g alists, upon ec 
fthe Vine, the stock 7 tied ma clay , scientific botany. I shall — fone 
is distended, ni one Pah dae ghe to all hole for t ve Ms howey r, that in the number of young men ted e report 
N as if it 3 it ead Vs I caused 8 whip- “grafting T aut A ell, oag ir many | naturalists or ollectors to Govorimo t mum 
s is to erre D England, the Colonies, aud on the Cont 
wat Jig b well Mes be Yn AS Mr ve pla an 11045 of Eds pa OWANS adds, What 1 | Thus it is only within these six years that ¢ the R. 
an ut neit us nor an ean be considered as becoming a mearl 
the ant, 7 still think of 5 importance bx establishment. Till 1853, they ere but rie completa 
eal 
i i d the sap from thought, and arl 
LE cea Mie Ped ip * vii y much EM in this mode, is to leave eye or young | whereas they now approach that condition whey a, 
ERE de badder in At shoot the top of the stock, and E pes it to grow | able extension would, in the state of our prese 
force as urst the bla abou ours shoo go ? top Ban tt PH be eut off, leavin ng | ahaa scientifi c relations, be unadvisable; and w 
$ : s : ew days, when it shou desire " — 5 ry once completed) wi 
e operation was performed; the weather fora ys, We Te e 6d d (he e ed * Cons once completed) we dally 
d one leaf to y to enlarge 
|m ust not bi o forgotten that, 18 years ago, England 
" ic 
ivate individuals, and of man, provin cial 
4 0 0 N i i: h I new woo For in- = had attained an excellence d towns: in the 
s rong waxed t ine from just under inva made 12 0 or 15 ind es i ingdom, had à s du MN 
the an M — t to 6 inches cst in stock. stance, the grafts which I I ma ade on „the gris it E have been discreditable to the Royal iui id 
The sap, ing now no to eseape, was February this year hav y, 
na 
n my Annual Reports, I have classed the imp ; 
be Gardens, &, under ed heads, o of the in 
Supporting them, 
x 
E 
objects of Gov ernment in establis hing and 
The; 1 are 1 
As a place for the healthy recreation of the 
E “the national love of gardening, aud aff 
information as to the appearance, ie 
countries, &c., of an extensive series of 
cA from all 2 15 and climates, 
oe whethe food, Aker W 
cabi i Te. 
e; 
shoot with se oin soon beca: me, st 
evident that a eh had taken place betwee In the Reports of the — eee of the 
the graft and the stock, as the shoot of the former. MORES Society,” there is an account of a 
pi sh sickly, ind. pers odbi e having been f 3 Fee after | ^? 
e RY, 0 1 8 
5 d he 
t season I took a healthy growing Vine dens Brights . The artieulars of thi 
B a T3 and carefully ma kober it w with a se edling | were given n the Binder ronicle of this; des 
growing in t or a Trebbiana in a bearing state a 
tiore "t inarch at toget her, and bound a bladder Muscat was desired Te su stituted on the 
of using cement. Upon Ist of April, 1858, the Egit being at that 
in fu Fr cut off r 
tani: 
ions, 
bees cmq and cep gt also by. trainin, 
collectors and gardeners, for hom me, colon iie Ut foreign 
ue 
se manifold objects are not attain supporting a 
number of —— 2 branches of the pros iei Kew; | 
d vide that 
with. 
as 
E 
E 
EE 
8 
RE 
Ri 
en 
B 
un 
oe, 
but are the ult of a sys! tem, ed t 
n the other ^5 
oming more glutinous, The Pointe grew to ne MM of 18 feet i in the me 
"t consequently no now oceurred 2 me that the same season; its red very nearly 
time for cutting off t veg races 31 inches; and it also 8 5 
af E M cem the — rin From what we have state ted a cause of failure i 
h bl. , Was whe n they had ed that Vine grafting will be fully understood, and there- 
ig dad al hich the sap fore can be mir avoide T 
any 
7 0 »y e 
„and no other covering was used | disappoi 
of bast s surrande with graft- pons ng to where eh Mey 
? 
T it, NE Spa 
rom these and various experimen nts which AUS elas allow. er 
have since made I ein t in stating that left to push, say 6 
healthy Vines may be Wessel grafted with | whip grafting pene that shoot, which may at d Oxon 
young wood of the preceding year's growth from | the s time stopped; bind the stock and "E tendence of ofthe iles 
the time that the shoots of eks h the | scion together w 10 0 surround with clay, nme — seer Ma. nsible fort 
grafts are to be put upon have made four or five and over this some Moss which should be kept good keep and efficien t working of every Meh ir 
eyes until Midsummer; with every prospect of the | moist. 1 eut back the shoot left on the top t 1 hich, as regards 
afts gr owing, | and without the least danger of of the stock to one leaf as soon as the e graft begin 
es 8 suffer ering by bleeding. o push 
Some eu! gs of Vines sent from Madeira SS 
which I received from the Horticultural Society | REPORT ON THE PROGRESS AND CONDITION um, Library, 
Se emen on Lo ues of May by me on seed- | OF TEE Bo GARDENS OF KEW, FROM | gardeners fo 
but 
Muse Herbarium. He selects foreme 
es nce wok hein 
mends all r and 'vements, : 
spects and signs the bill sober and accounts of the G en 
blishments. He supplies: 
ar, A ines which wi 5 ging under glass, 1853 2 — 
jut fire heat, with X Hs VAM results:. AN oi Report by. AA nm iis lagged K. H., to the | le T 45 of tho world; ad f Pal 
shot eet, Left pas small | First missione ks, &c., on the pro- | satis requisitions o A applicants who : 
H : ithout drawin y deupa a babaen Ü 08e ap] ; 
bua Gg and 15 50 its wood well. gress and condition — the Royal Gardens of Kew, hat benofltod ri pss gud But it is Tu 
these demands may pee adi adu meronis o 3 
such regulations as were found ot 3 
of living specimens of plants, to which Serr 
rus the A f all the 8 und, tho 
« T'he Ne Molle, grafted on the same dod during a a period of s years, viz, from the c commence- 
he oe 12 feet, oe o fruit, b d. The 
ripen eed 
"O 
i tanic Gard. 
Wn | viz, a Herbarium and a Lap A A 3 only can the 
objects in the Gardens an e 1 d 
and ticketed, Ary thst in 9 — va on afford. 
travellers, and men engaged in the Ex 
— — or horticulture, which is here daily sought. It is also 
since 1853 that the new Museum has been built and its on 
tents arranged ; i 
' he contrary. . ducts has been acquired from the French Exhibition ; hat the 
ad ster the bus tte Vine bt 3 cee 
* | living plants ; ‘he has the supervision of the = em onnertel 
3 and sent away, and of all the 
o hire and discharge 
of the rener, 
at by m 
nits state of pos is 
the conseque 
ni 
e result; and "EM 
er T our T ENDE was first = 
out by aa —Ü in the above eo! 
About the year 1834 Mr. 1 
older: Garde near Glasgow, w 
ful in ines, of vas h he produced a 
th dt; 
Aus -grafting, ex » ata in the Transactions mented to tli TA A 
sergio 5 series, vol. II ; while more li Gard 4 
1 " re liberal and Ge leners’ Library, the have often $ 
114, no api 23 ont of w pes were | garcons E atly increased their efficiency, by rewarding Sundays, and the n oe err iy the ole p : 
fow :dad rious, an is ing the deserving men; and an 3 i E 
m ded wi ee selected for a — fe rene’ A" ance and support has also been * 9 meii. — tends the dou m Propane 
scion a i of the preceding yer s = with 
of ge; a 
one eye, Lu eut it into the. : re Pal 
shoot of Aroidem, — ah and C M n 545 dee raising of 
the middie, and both Pre thinned to fit on man ag, foe Fiant 3 require heat: hf 
 wedge-s io * Till that time these desiderata: Ward-cases, and of tà 
haped ins on of the s which was 1. stone 1 — ie * Pal |S intends the packing of ^W rok What are n 
its eye opposite ‘that on the ln of | refer when describing these departments of ho establishmes i | ene bron abroad, and keeps accurate lists of 
