22 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jaxvan 11, 1862. 
— HÀ 
[Up cA Rem S түттү? label f the flower spike 28, i the amount of industr 
in a miswriting of Fr 2 qn 26 roy. cripta wh in the relative size of the par dh He flowers, and in | and perseverance which the Ja apanese must pw. 
could have no|their colour. The flower iiie w spring from аана to the онон of. these plants, There 
ionship; and i the base ‘the pseudo-bulbs, vary Pon about a RN mum. e —— re no 6 — rane a foot in 
re- | to nearly 2 feet in height, and in the majority, whic eight, and yet I counted upwards of 50 ties by meang 
аа: аге оЁ tle dwarfer stature, terminate in a close well- | of which the shoots were bent backward and forward 
u are not of id rapid |f furnished spik eo of abo ut two dozen flowers. In these in a zig-zag way. ese little Pines must have 
many years must 
s 
et 
E: 
05 
B 
@ 
BE 
B 
о 
5, 
4 
& 
et 
E 
б 
= 
‚Б 
ü ia o 
i i f the plant Гум Low call SUPERBA the flower is quite as muc 
>ч ба EN сорт T wit] d Р їп colour. andi in form, the colour being a dee еер bri ght that” an old narrow- Четей Podocarpus, with e 
be 
uced 
М. Beaucarye, a notary of Eename, near -tha ] place. p en taken up, pre ee en 
AIRE. 
а new genus pe] b de spike - 5. ев уыс Төгө аге s of the va and deri tho smal 
Darren кора iat i should ! emm n C t in чы кке colour i ів а pot as To е The stem.had [oed cut off hori. 
of BEAUCARNEA, in honour the i cultivator | intermediate, Ф. їп denis the lip is rath circle P nds of the ovalleaved 
whom its flowers were at т t first made known. о. Of the d of the ovem а {айг notion | species. pow between the bark and the wood, 
. LEMAIRE proposes the Поло ba. may be formed when we state, that some of the spikes | Most of these һай grown, and as they grew the shoot 
в. RECURVATA — Pincene -upofoulota : this which commenced "bloomi ing towards "Ве middle 0: » re bent ргы апа twisted in and out, so tha 
e a se mass 
pg“ €— e 
| "- i^ 6 ibis: Limaiodes | gard Osb Th the 
es straiter and more erect, plane, а ben bd The те colour of the flowers of this Limatodes | garden at sborne. ere were many o 
м он r ун d ose spikes are somewhat — e | plants which proved that the Japanese gardeners 
== Pincenectilia gracilis: this has the | of Hya cin inths the long persistence of the flowers|are very clever in grafting and employ many 
Ce a quite gnare and very straight рд sharp, rounded themselves, and the facility with which the нера шау modes of performing the operation. There wa 
behind, and slight channelled in g а Ret: pen cie the branches of which 
EM. i arranged without inconvenience in drawing-ro ог | were bent bed and forwards as usual, and these 
v" elegant олен of the сомона foliaged ‹ p conservatory flower-stands, prove it to be in д branches һай been ted with dozens of scions, at 
w 80 fashion which they of the best of winter decorative plants instead of | intervals of about an inch apart. It was only one hem 
. The еше, P them were to have|being worthless or nearly so, as it has been considered. | and there which had failed; nearly all had grown well 
introduced about 1845 ; in ii d p ibat they | When cultivated for this purpose single bulbs will pro- | and made little tufts of shoots. Unfortunately this 
were first received on the con establish- | bably be found preferable; these may be quite success- | plant had died upon its voyage to England, and it is 
ment of VAN DER Манин, ot [onim fully g rown = i be depe e у кзы good manage- now seen with some other interesting b 
REL ment may ү epended on for t| 
Poggi: GLABRA peer be soir a ostnblishod, spike of flow at the Royal Botanie Gardens а . Som 
ta will be recollected that the species was bloomed and decur essful cultivation, as explained to which КАЛСА sent home at the ее, "пле cm that Y 
exhibi p-f ы Wer of Swyncombe House, mm а xor ^ partially drying and restoring the | Japanese чан and sometimes practise 
as mentioned in our previous pl th 
р 
pd ants as e leat-growth а s off, but con- уь. at plan 
during tinuing wig кт mount of moisture е росе E ficial dea is very popular in 
Volume ( ше (p Кы, 1). “4 that as there stated it suem through the growing season, -until after the i carried out among be ue i-o 
previousl been spo itg period. The failures which have ан and which | seems to „be а i dier fashionable mode of cultivati 
в; besides which i5 had bloo med i in the autumn have gained for the plant an undeserved "bad name, | plants to introduce а conical piece of rough sands 
© za 
ЁРЕ. Ё 
have — from starving the plants just ^ the time ith d t — ihe plant over a 
of 1 of ттевро! arving piants Jui green with mosses, and to e p 
"redis ardens v leone, ACE: 810) when e flow er-scapes were forming. a is is by all around it. In фе“ way we have seen some examples 
Within tbe last week ог two, Mr. Eyres has hani 3 Mte а р 
ia edd aha т is to - the plants after their w 1 d 
by “6. Ru e и mp зг T Ар, ап — then to repot as mn and start hem R. уа ату it will рн to wr ^ fre. 
- into grow to be seen, but я 
Кзыл as Hal, 'StokobyeN Nay йш, Satok, who who 1 ЗР ens | growth in the foliage "and E Towards this be t the case it will be a valuable addition m 
of Allam uri боодо. i were "exhibited a. at the collections, whioh had b$ ано aer Taren о Я 
fruit sh f th 10] been trained in o na 
November ad | these latter үт been per kc ted, ia did un у” over a bit of sto 1 
that his | moisture is to be kept up. ра plants require а Les The pots in which some of the Japanese рад wem 
which commenced flowering at the end of|!"E, temperature of from 6 Жы 70°, and about 55° | sent home, were almost as worthy of exam tion @ 
the beginning of riod. ——* th 
is on can h inconvenient and ugly. In some 1 
i zi th HMM абе under the sun iam old Este m lavish of their labour: but in others tey 
the dreary winter months, and this is a property |а охото, and set of which is denied as often as itis are very economical, if not niggardly. Thus, some ú 
which it "e be admitted greatly enhances its value. | zc з yet how often do we find its veracity | m- apicc planis у were Н ар во as to exhibit one sd. 
The plant at Swyncombe was indeed o only stopped in | тосеп Mom A. 256.0 АВ | only e porcelain pot on that side - 
Er arcis m reer by having its Mets stripped of Mo y occurred; with us the passion for plants "Á decorated with Pea. in that peculiar styli, |. 
these wreaths of bracts and blosso Peeters sp proe the growth of the last of which the willow-pattern plate шау be taken s 
Ts fadhe lem fo M Dania UNE Ma ai ей ie epos тенсе Lares beon quite the type, The backs of these pots were left Ше 
experience, vo oir as to è T M ot qm have already been imported | Р V; 
Оч in ту, iti 
tes 
hi 
ugh China. More recently m заг 
dee тыт s in "es Pe had. н bor the foliage of which is clear ЧЕ ti 6 мо Ку аА у Еу 
and ihe blowoms дей Fan Pil fx cu a b nr irt culinar ary vego tables and fruits, and yet : 
" is А 7 an ` the same way; a pretty б і Ё 
5 апа M a M form of Serissa moa with a narrow whi margin n paki re viited Japan agre а тек Ep 
to the leaves, as erning them, eclare that they are all insipi 
stipes cn and 
covered with flowers. 
shoots ` was effected, 
wi Р 
^ 
thi 
until ys plant seemed to h 
ecom 
owing, I pee no F as a line along the mid wevet 
Meis oriog, e no doubt, кало being abk Ed efi gel vüricHes of Osmabthus aqui AME бое Renten. Ойна hara Po 
quantity ber which it ишо нш. X folius, a Holly like shrub, one of which is much pis y eei e i thes d wee Pa | 
now it out in the stove." e goes on to say, кеа» dwarf and wing than the other; a issem: vod throu h the n а ©, 
* I should have no hesitation in stating, that consider- pretty little bushy plant called Damn spinosus;| "The most valuab] poe which bale hitherto beet 
tho facility with which it blooms, together with its | Buses ВОХ, 00 іпігодцсей under the name of introduced from Japen are tho Conifere, of whid 
perfectly distinet habit season of blooming, Bou- Tllic ANA: a variegato witiety of the many distinct kinds, some of them differing 
s x old icium anisatum ; Sedum ES ‹ аге у › 
By sido wi Бо is , quite worthy of being placed side | leaves of which Po dge i ihe A so widely from anything we already possess that үз 
of th 
ea edged with crea : 
magine а plant i n es. 
a Inr Gta nio te E LUE 
it а! ens the pe ue of үм ты Р, and | these Y benefactors to tho 
ы. ег Mn ied trees remarkabl 35 new епеѓас 
being the case I have no beim {” what plant could w 9 | thing, as Thujopsis dolabrata, К Кане etum ed het s E tn Condom hare lare als zum 
blication a few years ago in ыле feo ipod wi тжс lia— the Fern-like s rid - дю M pos | 
: О M a бриге of LIMATODES | beautiful effect. e should per tm be |È Чалы new strains in "this fa Nude flower, 88 
in Eastern Orchid related to the Calanthes, we|eommon kind o г Aula which usan Daisy did a a few years ag o. C. W. C. 
q but "ату of th plant, whie appears ourite ss ed wer 
а amongst culti Japan; all the yt, 
upposed difficult Weird propagated р: dm from 
Urn Ta шешн ШЕ А тст am, quee m Цо а) MR, J. G. VICE ЕТЕ ON TAPAS, 
atifi ge 
E eco TER ne for it as gront а sharo of popular ато аве чаш, тт Mi d agp 
known in our gardens, - this 2o Od) 96 жек ы te ien uU: enjoyed by its predecesso Үокснлма, Jaran, August 15, 1861 
a oabi. who conid MEL as us тойгу by ET me EN; whioh 1 god Swali hein sent to this| No. ХП1.—Аэмтьйт, НорЕ Ford kindly offered 
ыны least, in the nursery of. Messrs. Low & Со, of oF Ботас ае bee Nea om las e^ P state of а passage on board his flag ship the Mem 
ike many other Orchi one. We һай all heard of гав dwarfed ёге It., mor e left for 
yields several varieties se. чет M эчен he China Ан йс en but safe „ОЁ us ever had th s chanso! hir de Жкн. zy ROC mis 1d, vie 
until this last y year. island, and did not make land until th 
AE 
Se 
