668 THE bie ea CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE [JULY 19, 1862, 
—— кее Е е по опе would suspect that the | р lant is other | a standard 4 or 5 feet high, will earr 
Indoor Garde gr han indigenous, as truly as its companion не big as a carriage umbrella, with its D LL nearly as " 
To continue the subject 
"M that is is say, wit осе artificial heat. 
e Ver seem cie ee and Gera- 
е ted. Mimulus grows 
ng. t 
triking cuttings without 
plant: ca 
of their claims, and аз he speaks so deci 
case, I for. one am ready to accept his conclu usions. 
t | out at the same time, and —- - up fora blooms 
1, 
who n the coun - е 
онт я height "of the poe 
т gar 
of the flow len are capable of 
cept for 
it seems mr worth 
celle jhen room i 
in two additional places, making four in all. This was 
in 1838, „Since which time I have received по fu rther 
flowers it would lbe difficult to find the рети m 
de Chabri] 
of such Roses as Sen ae Vaisse, Comtesse 
ous. 
pn seeds of thi 
Pot of soil, when er every blossom opens unlike 
its nei ghbour. 
of m 
his early in “ө уеаг їп qur But Mr. A E Mor 
.|reasons for believing the 
; p ^ кепру state that our plant has 
had 
e has learned that it exists, or did 
, in s Ls egleeted woo veh in the Isle of 
ig Thi: is is not the e pr e place ter upon the 
discussion of intricate botanical AR I shall not 
therefore trouble the readers of the CINES P hs. 
plant ^ t to be 
e nd Sr 
Wi 
B. 
= 
uch ran € а 
lan, Mrs {ын Їайате Vidot, Wm. Gri 
Leon, Victor Verdier., Gam „des Batai 
and others 6 
es—size, 
ар tien, ram. the delicate rng: to the fep 
cx: the 
ium 
shape, 
the ir a pi Apat soil a ралы mple 
= Ex мы getting ink. of per. r the frost got 
the leaves, but of course the 
din a short time all the о 
soil 
M" smaller flowers, and reda voe dem seeds. It 
agrees more nearly with G. iae unis, but wants че 
уонна flowers, broad leaves, stro: 
part of the еге. vf e capsule, and strongly w 
seeds. ‚Ө. Amb as br ж күү of which the 
l T wi ils ^x they are all narrow and very 
iN AME RET 
called a alone can the 
Rose es А "while | in vadis of. а 
pel meum s of bloom, i in richness of perfume, and 
above all i in vigour of constitution, hey far Ar surpass the 
Hybri 
Infor 
soon with blossoms, The plani trained оп 
trellis, and — scm of pm мм for а wall 
куне placed экы After much consideration I have 
our plant is the 
1860-61, rcely los r Rose, while е the 
Hybrid орен ось А hundreds, Allow 
Summer 
& I have e e house was Vire We so|arrived at the сеча that 
i G. illyricus (Koch). 16 is f the small number of | me to say uch in vindication of the 
йо equi vm рен шей. he PN pana, hoverer plania irk ын their Bie ts from the coasts B x the | Rose. QE v Co urt. 
бош: t be kept also from sharp fro ^ aeg anean Sea, up the petu S des of раї E апі | Archerfield es mer саа ai o the 
rance, until they just reach our southern or western | inquiry o . Rivers i та те 
се they vi will ie deed up E к poti oñon districts. G. vean does not ша п тэу to us|to say that itis not а seedling raised by Ps 
The cu теза to ыа по uld en the south of France. G.s ve far up | into my hands in 1858 while ing a collecti 
depend on the accommodatio at we have to offer|the west coast of that country; d бї catus is | Grapes with which to lant a range of Vineries here— 
them. For d а pis after August I grudge every I think that those аа, „who not one of which was received from any foreign source, 
Ком ges Е th kly condition of the Vine i 
e very wea conditi e Vine in 
M pom to be s = d а ioytent а pand ре Il thi t i tion it was cut d E4 in the maa of 1858, 
ens m w Chinese me or two | combin ake sees. species under two names "о on the follo wing summer and planted in 1860. For 
and a Pres узарар оне рясну б llias, | zs it Ө ши ЗЕЕ ©. a ап ything Iknow а the prn [wes na 
garden: ugh the onation of Palms.—Wi g Vine; is is possi 
T thing Е — mE UNE | of the spathe a Pal de ri xplodre s ош T r GE i Wiebe, it d ptio same S pes pols 
r, if ipa аге | not aware there was any doubt on the su [ок unti lvers—from descriptio: р it to be, 
LM Ex be po mir e arent ^ ав we observed the remarks following Dr. Seemann's com- | yet to be proved, I can conceive o only 
should do Begonias, and as we may do any of the very | munication in Garden ar Chron к Ал) Bon onplandi ia. one way of satisfactorily settling the point, ie, 
soft х оч Many hard-wooded jb even, It] jas pee ^re d in many w be laid be эңе the Pus Tonni 
to strike by other means, will grow in this way | With reference to the "Talipot Palm. (Cory. umbracu- of the „Royal Е бос дуо n at the 
vell lifera) that * "it rus with a loud report. y e st Ta Rin or 
The shoots, taken as short as А зн b. heard at a considerable distance." „Аз far as "my any other Pies, vir 'kindiy le E their a ing 
- having only the lowest [cse 1 led 1 I will be happy, if all goes well, e. ut K 
necessa: ar the stalk (not aye э i. а be Palm, as in all t I have observed, when it cherfie uscat in a ripe state from the mi 
stuck in ДА pias the surface ti y look like a dise, коя only б а КЕ explosive sound, more | April next onwards thr out the season. Is ч 
forest. А common p^ ckery ва rs best, the | or Y less ima, bui каша enis to an attentive o observer. however, if Mr. Rivers destribes it correctly, that the 
largest one can get ; being Eis dy 6 d with pur s I Дау дел н i eciece 1 s well as in the|Smyrna Muscat is not the same as the v. isty grow 
silver sand, the water ha just to be p gently | Coconut alm and the Betel nut tree, | here. According т. Smyrna E M r 
till it has soake vered it, It is always well to t t I bare n no кал, "ut eder in all Palms; yet I do | same time as the Royal Muscadine. Igrow t 6 
Shade these things j n ДЕЕ апа а ‚деб d n t oc curs їп every spathe that opens, as cadine here in the same house with Black т - 
“ hand-glass" is formed of ll of p t m: I find that it ripens at least three 
teboard v t 
a piece of oiled paper or oiled silk DA linen aded 
round the top like a drum-head. Тһе lower 2S mella 
are the better, so that they keep clear of the 
rides 
ted, very poor sandy soil does best | i! 
udin ity of air ed within, for I do 
quai contai 
m explosive power to result fro 
eeks before the Hamburghs, while according to to my 
experience of the Archerfield Muscat it ; requires б". b t 
eat, but 
the occurs 
e, aud 
Pea 
ans, 
as I һате Jooo stated in your colum: Т кам 
that а е ELE з 
х аѕ Я Arch herfield Muscat 
When transplan 
for the winter, аа 5^ the quee. for Ape gar 
deners, perha а pe cuttings | 
raised in I their TUN filled | 
round rst removed. 
Опе of th xs Mf DR plants I have | 80 
ever геа Ag a ctu ena they have ды without 
[ndian Pink. Som 
any | heat i is the little red I ears ago 
р in which e sat, 
and w contained seve: This Pink nid 
always blossom the whole winter, and was delightful] 
| expanding w 
| The reason s is doubted e 
p eguminous eom when а artificially, e EE 
sive nd being emitted in them (according to the 
ressed air within) greater or lesser FAR ee, an: 
metimes ao at all. 
Bs of t 
mphocarpus 
nbl. ofthe Portuguese vein Bladder 8 
(Colutea), and many o the pods oft. ke 
а ар шч», when ripo, m еф? з be heard 
h a slight noise а shedding their seeds, 
babini that few aipa 
have vows much attention to i 
c 
who pc dier 
i b bees weeks ear 
it to A а là, 
Diseased Р Pine Apples (see p. 621).— met with 
the amd esie HR in м Pines L2 на = 
years espondent, 
£ Dal келее 
a Islands, «е, ‚ Or 
w 
tings of this should b m struck pi^ E. вооп ав 
possible 
for тене i in the spring. Е, 4. M. 
Hom сл 
Is the, repe the New ич. e зе ovs 
else.— business 
se ttle this question Lue belare it, secured | 
i e Chronicle. 
has have now growin 
had ie patience танней to mah the result. As we 
r being opened, al 
3 bserved rene the result vonid 
not be decisive from a few solitary examples. Geor, 
du Mops i —In speaking of the late Rose Show at 
Botanie Gardens | your 
respon G. 
ma wet, peer 
Г, —1 have tried both Gree 
е | machines of oth bie and I find Green's the 
sider his machine for 1862 equ all 
said i in favour. ofi it. I have tried it on di 
Ы 
"8 
Society в Gardens, you say, “ 
and new. varieties „the exhibition of the 26th ult, 
old 
Engli ish 
Mr. Borrer, who 
of British gei than 
s coles paratis ae that 
Perpetuals is the dominant one, if it be not indeed 
Gardener, M el Денов Най, Le 
Killarney. eyes 
Killarney needs aboum ding | 
destined to esee dee the С. ри d our | 
put must 
it 
visited ihis emen penes D) 
TNT ed Nat nd co in а must have 
e (an 
reat 
Gladiolus had been а е ild іп the а in Fore 
Ro sarium." atron o: of t the Rosar m, as a pat not | ad 
pti |е 
it 1 rith the. "works of Koch ыа 
chenbac! 
P me say a Lee words for the 2 e bs нура р 
Lim ааш, ps noticed several points in which our | 
disagreed from that ор those German authors. 
^Y remarks that ees .plant is in every p at much | 
er than G. i (asi it grows in our gardens 
, and Hybrid Bourbons, for those sorts that 
under the name of “summ 5 
a 
арке from 
нй) ; иа for tis ioni ei with 
Kenmare property des eserv 
all classes, and мока 
He informed me that the discoverer 
1857, was the Rev. W. H. L 
grows scattered on dry ground amongst 
грона, бона отир к before it н. о 
The situation is 
rid Peta rd - its half dozen 
гаа v nl 
m 
. Where 
A R en 
es left. Ине аге Fot to e 
to 
is the Hybrid | meed 
н which b on | visible ior pria in "the taste displayed 
jn honour of the gront a arrange- 
T 
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