i 
= 
ae made its yield has proved superior by ia = 
Inter ha 2 honey Sihor, ee aud a | art to the saute Wheat of soa half solid The : " 
tist b be be hoped that we have seen nearly the last | is —— 4 ags e ee y 
dni and shreds, which not only deface and he Pe SS Se N h ily distinguishes it from 
the walls, t ut make innumerable lurking places | curved. prieg e ded, bet pg jai 
for all sorts S insect A pecan ror A none ig rece ries 00 pletely when ripe. It is eam ee 
1 | 7 i in 
sting thet io t causes s gumming, training fr t injures | bable that this = en tg as st-vededig | ¥ 
the Sader bark of t rherévet they come in | name, for its har te the northern departments of | 
_ Contact with it n I ir never found this to be oat | een Tt _ : in autumn, at the same time 
case unl A gf e weet a eae too "i ns other winter Wheat ts, and ripens a few days later d 
where occurs gum 
© e tree is teni toan ordinary painted trellis | Flanders Whea chough not a cereal, is the Sarrasin- 
or to one of ised wire. I e seen quiteas | _ Another gain, though n —an absurd title, by the 
much of it in the one case as in the others but always | Seigle, or tment of the Orne, appa- 
re e giiiitia ing, r | way—cultivated in the depar pe sus Tiirin Back 
“goad mam tying Pears to walls I find nothing equal | wea n it fear g berre fer out horizontally its 
: : n into the joints, | wheat. inst > s branches pu 
avig just Na Tein to Hirer a strong piece of | stem is almost re Bi ort shale P 
tar yam through to oo be branches. If it is intended | forth, proceeding cet ved afterwards: with 
to train the trees ntally > staples should be | are pr fan ony tint and elongated form give 
driven in about 18 recan ong every third | , W050 B blance to Rye, whence, probabl; 
ourse, as that be at aRt} near to train ; but | a cera rhis variety is productive, tolerably 
x fan-trained tre it is easy to mark out the direction ; a the great ad oa all 
is intended the branches should take, and put inthe | t the same time. is heavy, 
ly. These save labour and expense | almost a 
DECEMBER 12, 1874.] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
745 
use of cross ties to train the young shoots | of wiring, and are far preferable to oe old system of ted t ve a better” 1 other 
to, involving much loss of time and extra labour. The | nails and shreds, For trees already trained iad esta- Buckwheat, whic woul ~ naa E AA ie 
trellises we have in us here for the papan of train- | blis panty few of these staples sufice e to keep the | climates which necessitate the oal culture of Buckwheat 
ing Peaches a and Nectarines are alike neat and service- | branc ecure in their places, and a good tar yarn | in place of wet r ing better. 
able, and can be easily p by an handy an. | tie will last for years. X. S. The Red-skin F ‘ourball [Wai one? Eps.) is 
The studs us d are galvanised iron about a quarter of | ; and interesting 
| 
ma ger. 
= join t = fap wall “at 8 ‘hates agant other 
pA within a foot or so of the ground, pee up each end 
of ot ae im oa ibe ws rer wa in about 6 inch 
sed, 
es ach other 
r the trellis is itech stiffened and strengthened 
as the wires interlacing in this way form a capital ti 
FIG, 145.—BELSFIELD, WINDERMERE, THE RESIDENCE OF H., 
and i isa ate | 
forsiy jt te 
RIS: The ‘* Bon Ton dini ier’ ' , “i rvelti P 
a Far in ınac Hortic 1875 is ou 
ae it is ethers © find that ron a nfl of the nied 
ties avi e or nem) whi recom s to French 
growers are origin or introductio Fo 
the gridi uitire ‘thats is the Australian Wheat, 
whose principal merit consists in its great vi and 
xtreme hardiness, which cause it to produce very 
abundant and almost certain crops in c , cold, 
et wet soils, where ordinary Whea a 
o fail, In most of the comparative trials that have 
W, 
, with few eyes 
the skin bright ied and a little rough, 
as is the case with the majority of very floury Potatos, 
The flesh, pale y ellow and of good ere Š paar i 
improves with the advance of winter, 
not taniy set ; 
ariety 
reby stale to fa 
is extremely peer and there 
grande er A it is very robust, has little fear of 
disease, = ceeps late without shooting, whi men i 
great 
meri 
a “oy kitchen garden, honourable m is 
ade a green- Sesh +? a brought pe 
notion by the Marquis de Selve, a large landowner in 
the environs of Paris, mca is jern to ig how it 
[e] 
m= & 
~ 
SCHNEIDER, ESQ» 
‘it 
it 
single plant will bat di tort 
elon: ngs oct 
mg ym 
oi d aere À deli 
TOST sre yx = Comte de Lambertye 
n ee excellent and 
he best 
he 
ton’s Supreme, Alpha, and 
or Early Rose p and King of the 
Vilmorr 
H bing = numerous, at 
s, Ghent, to to 
ppe Aene 
Bn 
rieties of I 
| present “existing in at Van 
se catalogue we must | 
