Avcvsr 6, 1859.] 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
enongh, while the branch taken from it and rob » 
by the heels has flowered abu — antly. P. Mac 
Roses on the Manetti ti St 
—.— eK — à * say that the de 
vam —The cu nae of 
Manetti sme cp "ofr — kept fo r the purpose any 
time in Novio They should lie strong -— well 
ripened, a about 1 foot aie Á— all buds should be cut out, 
are then inserted deeply 
of 
follow 
ow 
watering till a callus is formed ; the gr: 
turn black if water touches their pith. The plants are 
Mal 
tock.—In reply to ce corre- | t 
beg to tails 
does, he p" wonderir 
see him you gree 
— the gre 
and 
i on Stall stilts, 
a second 
them from childhood ; 
0 scanty 
| 
m 
his 
— kept dark tilla union is e 
occurs in about a 
time of grafting. 
will suit — but i ce admits of Hp van 
they may 
on" vhs uem flowering 2 by 
in the same pots for turnin Ms o April 
ys bearing in md to keep 
an inch — the. surface, If 
out they m fine 
and continuo” p bloom all the 
Park. 
epp 
“Cucumbers nem d for win forcing should be 
ediately, for by gett ing them planted out 
e sun is powerful, iod giving pedr e of air o 
ight temperature of 60°, and vi 
ffected, 
1 d three weeks from, thet 
een Ey penes free from pagnie 
said o 
bushes, 
Lam 
og fe > 
usalem 
pted, are 
na great measure, 
er 
Ma e the 7 
solitude, rarely venturing nea the railway ; 
air of legs, for 
Tobaóoo, yay the topinon 
458 choke, for which the soil is admirably 
nia The impro are, | prietor 
ral 
| gr 
genius, who, having "studied agriculture, and particu- 
when he 
[ise e anght at the bottom of the stem in a little trough, 
ngly at the rushing train 
panera into his ta age ess. 
s, clo - T in sheep skins 
cap, fim him 
been accustomed to | 
knitting 
There he 
he has 
probably 
herbage. 
s pole, a strange sagen looking 
the 
3 
in- 
wil 
‘become, A ay vee habit, like | yo: 
moments from the bark remov ed by 
Weekly the wound is reopened 
the eut. t 
and the operation is rene ewed — unt vil 
widen ed; 
t 
manner 
ow the maimed bole can ES port the 
weig aei But t, stranger st e Pine 
ni qu t e 
e entire 
u wonder h 
superincumbent 
es 
e that after asen ason’ s practice from the 
good hand co! cg 
2400 tr pe the n» olle wh 
rane into 9 — „ with so all 
Ty, the esin to the pits where it is bo 
e 
iron 
el. T saw 
we rési 
Suc 
a T earns 95 francs 3 a ‘igh wage in is 
of France. Indeed the résinier 
now than the small 
1 
off 
who, generally 
f capit: ul, is rained iby a fai sts of Tie crop. 
of th 
s or 
— 
ovements ai 
ultura 
ierre, an agric 
x à Hop-grower ?* asked 
ur Young; and now chat the o Vine is smitten by 
ced we may ask, ‘How can a small landed p 
who is little ab oye an ä labourer with 2 
good wa, 
secure pm —— 
A 
nings succes 
— e difieulty i in getting — of — ing 
rà ie ien on Pane 
“for 
* Pee ia of E or 
the tops of m À 
boi in xe a fortnight, 
— reclaimed distri 
larly 
success; 
"m 
of reclaiming and — which has been very 
ccessful — de 
and, ine is eta, - 
M. Pierre 
| been 
h | his patro! 
io M, Pier 
of the Landes, which 
alaria no — poisons 
enjoy better health, 
a 
of . is "posit ted by the smoke 
a better description is obtained by "Wenhig the 
4 — according to 
his method. "The a M Toe te the east of 
“ Besides e products, the resin of the Pinus 
Pinaster yields common turpentine, and i is us ed exten- 
will 
—— =. may y be’ planted out — fruiting. 
ction before Chris 4 
Chartham D — ts wots 
Notices Ed Books. 
etre. E= ond Bus East. pre R. Weld. 
Rv 
sense of his 
m the spot where the 
Landes.” 
Ad g book ee i dig 2 man 
y travellers? 
journals, m - be read ith undiminishe 
severance, 
“ Pri 1740 4} 
Majesty’s advent 
MN by erecting a pillar, surmounted by a gilt. d 
: first. entered 
Pignndas, exten 2 the Adow 
num 
among them as a land- 
Emperor 
The great Pine forest of the Landes, locally called 
Gironde. 
Ob pu Nau 17 
Arcachon — erm the bed x 1 Sève de Pin 
arit recommandée contre les 
catarrhes, bronchi e Ko., r^ 
—a revival, by the way, in another for 
tolled 1 um "Berkeley 
H 
rto the 
ment of man's skill and. per- 
4 4. 4 
rior to 1789 this 
read w 
pleasure. No one knows better m Mr. Weld how to 
* upon EE Do ints of what he sees s and hears, 
A bai —— 
Of hillocks heaped tis ever- "shift and, 
Batted. with Thistles and 8 weet. 
from guts gab 00 
brace the salt 8 
trei very fe 
He is thus enabled to carry th ed 
so completely that we rise from the perusal of 
If belief that we hav really be heen 
present at the scenes described. j 
On this orien MR proceeds by way of Rouen 
Tours, tes we and Bordeanx, thence crosses p 
Landes Bayonne, sees Biaritz, Orthez, and 
After here describing the m the 
he Aree and 
o: pubs 
1 pe being tak 
blown a 
5 S 
D 1 cf. 
y. na even now 
. — 80 the Frenchman 
hen he asserted that ‘résine est J 
a 
not 
— 
riques.” 
ig 
country aroun 
and the small Landais 
Lan 3 
reac on 18 
rt 
rms; and sowing im narrow -— may be useful to tourists en entering Spain to 
en angles to the prevailing | know how to comport themselves with the oF a 
r and common Broom, | N pes S gene the frontier we add Mr. Weld's 
of "n former to 1 bs. of the account of w 1 him on bis road to Puicerda 
was then covered or | without a p 
away M^ pinning them to the 
en to pre- | 
ane 
“We had ri aden e six miles when our guides, 
pointing to 5 paga stone pillar on the - of our path, 
we had entered Spa Exce E 
pillar, winch might easily be over! bd there. is 
to . 
at the close of the year. 
shelter to the Pine plan 
ngs, and under their 
nts, 
fostering protection the 
"These now forded —— 
Pines 
strip- | dom: 
poing to mark the boundary between the two king- 
How different to the grand dividing natural 
walls oem awe by ther sublimity, at the Brache de 
and ae cong Suc! 
ueg; of such a route, and Pyrenean travellers 
if they follow exactly in Mr. Weld's foot- |. 
most interesting of the author's 3 
=i mot, , unhappily, confined 
suffocated their infantine 
* So ctive was M. 
defiant of the raging sand storms. 
effe 
to the * qp world, they | i 
e protecto 
and r rose high, 
Bremontier’s process, that in 
oho T, W. 
sandy a near called 
Landes, 
One of th 
is that of the 
tion s des We quote his two og: ean 
181 
the Landes reported that 12,500 acres were covered 
who 
for ain. 
P 
had not been i: l had o , by 
, to obtain this at Ba Ryani e 
mia ig. ing more, dreary than these apparently inter- 
i minable wastes. “Your passage across them suggests 
ia of See. with this great di ee dm 
had liv 
dre forests, were 
ess precarious and per 
ed to see their howling wastes clothed with far- | 
some strange negle 
enabled to gain a livelihood 
erilous than that obtained by e 
88 the latter is rarely at rest 
9f the Landes, comprising 600, 
my companion, not purposing ad ente 
. to en that 
? We 
e 
— A 
A - no 
ry Wha o be 
eed of E A B tie 
Puicerda, retrace our step: 
Bourg-Madame within 
1000 he JW. among zou ms CUTS eheu 
à for domestic purposes, La Fontaine says: 
r3, Welt ua - cially. ** *Sera-t-jl Dieu, table, ou cuvette ” 
nk to the — is far more valuable for the grea’ quantity of resin, 
' supply and lam eu whieh it produces, As you ride 
d through * es you will meet the resin 
d adh be DU Pei Ru Wa d Selene 
. The — bs live in the á most part a 
— a a proverb, Londaia of m king ange i fh which, how. 
** * Tant e Lande séra Lande ever, La Some information. When 
id La. pellagre te de; soot Harvie $ t hand the résinier goes forth 
t2 ng a fatal i ia vided with a hort e and a curved axe. 
gs Ami lying to tl fitness of a tree to be tapped is 
ut Mf UM Fite forests the the|by throwing his arms round it. If the trunk be so 
andais, who are, with few exceptions, shepherds, spend i that he cannot u^ his fi ends, the Pine is 
— organe à — : N ks of sheep, each or the operation. A is ee with great 
ig aswell known to them as their dogs. genos and dextri A longi out or groove 
The Landais shepherd is a primitive being, fond of is i — M resin flows, and 
y ) Bp Spanish, 
‘and having provided h 
bold face eae "edo nt be 
425 
por rts, t the oth er — 
guide 
