persee 20, 1869.] 
SEEDLING FRUITS, 
Waes at Namur last September, at the Pomologi- 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
EET IL ТБ ПОН pu wy 
Pears ; among the best ибне, between | tron has tho onmo. 
the Gansel’s Bergamot and Seck: 
T have, I think, cane: 4 pointed o out the he peculiari. | 
1195 
same leavesand the 
the ваше large pale flowers 
{в parent the White ene leaving no doubt 
of its origin. I mention this vomer as Monsieur 
наойи, e it il make the trees Meu D in 
qid [to its edi in —Ó 
larger ; my hopes. were 
properties е were 
very sanguine, but "they were 
Y Gregoire ‘who in his kind cordial |: . I will now peculiar traits | doubt if a P -— : terna, оа 
EM him how he raised his seedling Pe: rar ite inthom. Нә g ка а 
zT. them — € by frequent removal, all of | bear fruit like ti allow otour 1 Тону вій — Pens mci 
BENE reuse), anf promised Гага ef | жанна coc Pret 2 zi m zm "Жеў == у» exits Féqas por lour 
: us ^ 
i ye approved of ; One stein n ames э] percer 4 goto ce о ae beyond my tether; rugnons se distini guent des autres Pêches в par leur 
d particularly beautiful Pear, ripening about | keep till Jun " 
wm Й агенте Драгун dll нотун - di rne 5а noyau. Who is to "deside | My next experiment s “ 
ай of October; this was e most exquisite | since I raised a score ^ two of мне че fruit, (four 
farour. I odani Plus | Mouris Pear o flowers not rimi d eye of this very TM 5 sort, , when it was 
фі M. freies dame ct vil. E b succeed in the|to improve it in size and beauty. "The young trees | The stones were sown, and in due f 
dimate of England as it does with him. Amateurs in е всагсе enden mum pine from their parent in | made a renis and were numbered 1 
Lo 0 гм wish to grow a large number of | leav shoots; they all bore fruit, but. no cvm was | all much alike in their habit ; they all bore fruit with 
mall spaee will find annual removal differing 
ei 
exactly ы pes of their parent, but 
No. had m 
slightly. 3 ore colour, - did not seem 
was 
in October, a month in vermes we 
time fruit buds m ing. k lik me No. ойу 
и т presume, the of f Meuris Pears all ripened in "the autumn, and the trees green, ч its fruit were ] m No. once 
dimate, 1 10 n peni elapso b before this. desirable were ы About the жыл! u- I ro one or | raised seedlings without ferülising its flowers, and to 
ad is attained. In хм Ж! oured е keep- y "great. satisfaction I - =. these have departed 
young shoot of а ве 1 or their lea shoots are like those 
ime in bearing on ho Quis, 1 To siue it yb ed ыт эл of € а quiis, but e ripened ot the Elruge Nectarin пе; раш are full of bl 
buds, and will I hope givo геч, mty of 1 fruit next season, 
re surfeited with 
Pears. Some years = йч t peri = a few 
seedlings from Beu: seri ngin f these bore 
fruit in тн з proved like its Miel in the shape 
and size fruit, - it —Á the end of 
August ; it Pte the same icy-cold juice peculiar 
B. d'Aremberg, and was partioularly 4 delicions in iho 
э weather né pay и - and ап Tt was во 
highly in flavo wasps an р flies s, that эч: # 
fruit would have Deen roe if they had not D 
This tendency in late Pears 
hould 1 
n a wi may be potted into 6-inch pots, and in 
or 14- inch sgi they may then be 
th r ke 
this simple m idi 
ha а вові Joly stem, 3 feet in 
naed in season. The follo 
со. ® 
till they hea 
but al e DU E 
den and roo чй іп t autumn of every 
е іп $t orchard house all the winter. 
e dryness their roots in winter and the 
ivi ditate "hey e their vm in in 
ma 
cy this system d 
they howd 
that brings 
e for with M I hav 
e | that late Pears mms late Pears ; ауа ав 
us fac 
produce early varieties is just 1 now illustrated by ме | 
From my 
kind would not vary unless ite f fertilised, 
but it seems ti f time, and 
that fruits and flowers when “(shal we сай € 
io | domesticated v propagated from X now 
t ex! I have med that A Bene 
Neetarine as grown in Syria would be i wild 
state, nk that — » would reproduce itself wi without 
any ша material vari 
E mn to р сирату 
ев from seed. This I 1 
Graham's Autumn Nelis, 
to its — the Winter Nelis, but ripens in Se p| os 
tember and — Е шау ра - an invariable 
rule, fi e г lieve | 
my | 
experience. has | gone, it is a curio 
"TH ri 
From Gregory's Late 
Pond gort, I have a tree 
- Peaches, 
ery fine à free- 
р, А, h 1 
new kinds of Pears vary m ie чан 1 
old ei — have - [om bod г to а race- 
like chara thus seedlin ngs raised from А-д 
of M. е ue vwd 
more than those raised fro 
arie Lou ise—say 
be 
— mr o than facilitating | 
would 1 
tint of ite c and in its very - flowers and 1 ee" "8, 
but it ril month earlier or just before the Late 
From the Salway Peach, very soon after it was i 
mer 
ever, - z bel — БА experience, poe ! th "" Аа duced, I - seedling of the ваше bright ^ vd 
logical experim so into one's lifetime, А | colour as but it has always ripened from 
omes ought t to live twice the three-score-and-ten | fortnight to Ё v pem earlier. І thought it so god 
years са неф in 1858, when the comet was blazing in tle autumn 
„| The de Pene from seed is an in: teresting | | that year, — I named it the Comet Peach; it z 
employment, - А to be compared wit with that arising | reall; , but ri with the crowd of 
from raising of Peaches and Nec If orchard | P " p have i in the course of my experiments met 
with other cases. in which the r-^ of late Peaches 
the raising of esi fruits, i 
11 23. А 
gin of each в 
аб this the interesb in the 
edlings is er o rmt Ihave 
5 5 
Early pes seem to produce. their like, for in 
es and 
the с e ля to the. pene hoe in 
|Pa 
from the Early York Peach 
montionod Dn e fro. 
bly interesting. 
э pips taken хеч two Ad three fine specimens of Mie 
the progress of thi 
o | bear 
| believe it to be?possil 
adheren 
Morceau is Siok f 80, for if you sow -some | u 
re grac dually potted into 10 or 12-inch Dose and placid] 
surface, the y will make trees in -— summ 
height. In South A 
ib! 
n pk I шк, опсе а seedling 
n blossom- pih top of the leading | 
ings from тшу! 
f orchard houses, for being stru 
advent c ы and goodness ‹ of some Early Yo. айч 
a | fruit last 
our | i gate 
| struck мече ue da size 
c e е 
but Dot so enrly as the Early York, andso 
Early Alberi. The tree is remarkable 
for its hardiness free-bearing quies, Its 
parent gives large flowers; the flowers of the Early 
Albert Peach 
gen —]À 
pa 
e small fl and ве: 
of a temet eas pec 
his may be worth nam 
from ааст SOW! 
15 or 20 trees. These Ped all рей [s enin 
"p 
owing 
ne Fi ei dali there are here ps к 
ев ће first shows а marked difference 
are at once of И gres t interest to the Pear raiser, for 
of Nature, he may expect some- 
ew, 
I have hitherto said relates to Pears raised 
iH 
from the experience we 
that аса srenite mode of. dune new Р! 
as not done much Au us, 920. 
һаз Ly much more—for 
Louise, Winter Меш 
ce in habit; | the. 
ish flesh. th | 
Вовода of which hiaai меод zen with уа П, nearly 300 feet in length, but some | " 
the parent in leaves and flowers. 
Шы у Victori 
um additional interest, because one 
ie others p its Кил leaves | 
Nectarines large size ап and 
int va gin 
xacti: xd РАП t th 
N ow 
taken its 
е it is a better grower and m: 
w days earlier, With on o exception, | crim 
t interest, | 
the others rai 
жеште but that exception has pro' great m 
отей of 
t is a large Peach with а silvery white skin. 
d Pd iler gum i th < 
ag dole 
first week in А iquant and excellent. 
| sun fora few days its flavour is pi 
