NOVEMBER A 1859.] 
ntle pace of Nature,—she 
THE GARDENERS’ 
UR E p 
+h 
AGRICULTURAL 
+) 
GAZETTE. 
Yat * 
barry or — ws 80 — — often, with ve — “ing 
or two seasons t pass 
before results can be known. 
icle ‘Orchards in Cheapside,'* as giv 
Week,’ No. 9, — doubtless brought forth 
It is however a c that 
y or open ine 
rchar 
houses, simply EN keeping out the qm "With the 
woollen netting Mug poma in pp.108, 109 of this — 
e day is So tant, when Peaches, Necta 
rines, and rire at —— far beyond the reach of 
the merchant's clerk, will be to him familiar things, 
iH hay 
+3 
I height of E also been able to proe w speci n from 
ong — own which he — White Beaty betig a 
obtained "ge be - Beaut y. Iti is of the | ced 
d ax then a 
60 feet.“ 
1 
The Octavo Nature-pri inted British F Ferns, 
, 
Ww see —— are bé ng culti tiv P v. but 
170 et "m * can à be sid further than cng e 
to become aA handsome plants, 
very ho pe. 
rr in the United ten: By Tho omas gf ied 
L.S. Nature- ^ oram by Heury Bradbur In | 
— volumes. Vol. I., roya 18v vo. — "ry. & Evans 
Th 
8 we have a 
f this Z plat will be fully er een dy 
visit, one had the we T bee 
and n 
1 
under im of Mr. Henry Bradbury. 
re e beautiful pages — 
Seaweeds when another volume 
pa a 
VOU nk ble 
d have been gn La — for 
thousands E Ln nts lying about the grounds 
ned by the fro: 
rinted 
destro 
n 
s been abun ndantly | pienas he olf the 
rchard houses, in which ti 
feel refreshed i in the pleasant evenings o y 
the mere act of yee: off the — — tender 
ts of his Peach trees, and inhaling t 
CADLANDS, THE SEAT OF Mz. Dx 2 — 2 — Some 
aecount of what the difference of c can do for 
h has 
already ap from the same publishe The 
present work * very similar to the larger die, except 
it reduced 
plants may perhaps not be —— to ir 
shoo their sweet an 8vo size, and ve! readers, Cada i is pleasantly situated on one of the 
a to th of id trees the itis gren ctl — Sie of the — — 
£ ! managing — a mplete e numerous orm e = abe "b lodge from th 
di are given rere nothing to re sre be |e iain 8388 r whatever e ve, they may rd : ding 1 " ice d tise, the ies en sie 
2 — oap ed nna — the Fern re Ako loves to dwell. Tho plants ip ntati 2 
: read cR meme mes ——— — | plan tat I of Firm, Holly, evérgreen Oak, and some fine 
— X nes Le ene th owing to tho dr out the characters — Which the species are to be dis | side of the house, which is the chief entrance; from thie 
Ic e year in which that tree expands its hed, a sot by theie MA — — — — is a fine view of the Isle of Wight, throagh : 
we hei inished si ft " 
* Bi je ma age —. * v g 2 ar bcie ; e mpressions ye. the colour of the leaves are also — ore. side., ——Á rene 
um , » improved, as was to expected from further e on Tue ala la truet f white: brick; 
n her iced ong shot fear of committing herself by |: rience. The plata of Ae e — flexile is one with Portland sae rh amd thence, —— — 
«Py ied z ide in pot NO UEN S of the most beautifu looked on. —— en the fron e to the and n mth, the labter 
séries. They should he e potted i in October e. Toobi — wae f n rs p. Tor ato history n code * 1 : iai —— 
1 pots MTM tay 2 been Proper rly Sanaga Š pe om this, all — the two sr " ial 
they will bear a fine crop of fi 
The fruit sh 
and 
views across 
potting. ould be thinned y as recom E Lists — — — Lawson & Son's the hampton, in the distance, 
mended for bush trees, and as as the trees put (oti List o se i A with. "the 2 — sun, and the bay 
h&heir qus shoots in May p e find one of the — coletion in the Kingdom | b with numerous steamers, yachts, and 
menced. hat a pleasing D it ist Every s shoot. — in so peculiar a that eprint its 
as soon as it t has m ade fou ur Dres mosb b ble of ts :“ Seedlin — Forest ing in m sun, Pu 2 movements adding life and 
t pinched or cut off with Trees Firs for Tir "Trees. Transplanted Fruit tree | interest m oni iew; further up tlie AAR is Netléy 
a penknife, leaving three young E EN leading | Stocks— Plants for Shru — — Underwood Extra Abbey, nestling among the trees, the Royal. Military 
Lm onl jog be pinched leave six | strong Bushy Trees Sele f H Plants of the Hospital, “and p shore. as far as the eye can reach is 
Tea Two or three shoots will break ros all but Fir Tribe—New Pines 8 or Weeping with fine villas and tr v € — — 
one eot —2 ^ should be ao down s. ee leaves, | Or namental Trees and ‘Shrabe "ri ; se Se see Po er aly — best iom d — and k 
and w n the young , leadin shoot ade seven Vines-- — Vr B emat age — Roses-— these views, as the trees par — — high : 
iS will As o be done for ew ra^ The whole occupies | render this necessary. e lawn is o cms e, 
two or three times Sg the summer, the tree 24 quarto aes MS Godal: 1 
gradually i increasing in height. All the e pin nche d shoots 
— — an 
rri Ohw g A New or ers, de; awn are various designs ibm — 
Rare Pla 
with the beet. of this | 
ts; all these 
ing will put forth numerous young shoo 
m — — to — leaves 
till the trees 
spo dl tase Gok, 
ge 
— iid: rt vcra s to the beds, and such other 
—— which is well worth the attention of bay variations a e admits. of; among o others a 
ea one — — — virer i. account o 
is be: 
1 S 
1 the : 
ai occasioned by hot dry w 
is;| kinds of Roses were alw € the greatest sufferers. 
t yellow w th a rie 
five 
. 
acres of 
out in 
suffered to 
ker gio 
rcd 
— will fe 2 — . maß rmx they 
TERIEN em 
The beds near the house were mostly filled. with 
^ the Bean loo iums, with e nerally used ; penne 
— Bs e; 
SEIS eB Pei; 
rg 
sects, Gor 
If and obtained a frm reci asa new and 
h which is a sufficient guarantee or amaie 
fades anl ctio for T ars in pots for 
iE M ecu diat. bibas un. E Qu 
rarely in 
y, — yet yield : a 
e growers deni. each-Apri cot is N only 
for this pr mode of cultur 
fortune to 
kind adapted 
e have the following interestin ng =“ 
"und the Potato in Peru so cire 
d that it is rea cA 51 55 wild in e ca | 
-Chilian Aips art it has hitherto 
br. — for — m impatien 
e 
Tous of shrubs, and other varieties, 
an 
1 N 
have too great a require any further 
notico than the — of their appearance. 
abound in novelties — — eager and 
teur. 
ing to t 
of the lawn, whieh suddenly term 
Garden Me da. —.— side at the top of a deep dan 
Mn. BInb's Nursery, STOKE NEWINGTON.—At the to Nature's —— — of 
present time of year, when but little is to be found to — with Furze up ie Opposite hill mixéd with 
decorate the town and suburban — RES the stuxtod Firs, cae is quite startling. In sikaming to the 
now 
th lo 
When we nsider that on the arid 
Indians o: 
5 
rv nd: 
fix their pat 
;with a large fountain i 
dem bade ‘all and — = back border — 
mossed 
— 
1 rm low a 
a vis 
ong "s abandoned, 
here. But 
pes reading 
we almi 
farmers, it casy to 
one of lies stations w 
and 8 55 the — 
it mu 
in 
E MTM 
he (o oe 75 MIB ch 
s 
temperate portion W. 
America from Chili to New Grenada and even Mexico, 
and I am rey much inclined to think that it — 
own on 2175 l; of Peru — 
A e high pl ains o 
we ity, and resis - ts frost-better ES 
does not 
characters that it cam be 
rather than a sim 
the summit of 
+h "1 
| was filled with — and 
eds a conservatory 
— with the rooms 
nishing m of all colours, — — 
| “Amongst some admira 
known to 
col 
— lia; a handsome’) found little 
Boy, nearly ja very — 
— — 
a 
;of this — with a 
from the flower, I t 
; some of the stems at the ground were like a 
died fo orest tree, At the top of this pond ig a fine 
E] 
