FERRvCARY 16, 1861. 1 
OTES ON ey BOTANY OF N. 
rom Mr. Fortune {Не Ad owing, which 
n one — = 2 is in bed 
tan all importa: 
apanese field—a circums of no im 
nsidering th he inier w ich. we have p» 
escaped has 
e boo; 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
145 
direction, and here сы there collected into thicker 
se 
masses, "These by degrees assume a pinkish tint, and 
the upper surface sc e арр studded with little 
еб, a brighter red and 
| {еар w үре, gradually be 
10re gated, and ult imately form so many some- 
Lof two worked "M Roses) covered over their roots 
with three tiles August, when the und was 
tolerably healthy, a ar те, w ithout other cov ene all alive 
геа well If wood ів ripe and the з are kept 
Rose Ses, д ишнен "dn. will int. tremendous 
p loured s 
fre e flat-branched threads | 
which are so conspicuous i in | the mr peii genus 
T 
pe ong шу Teas on their own roots are Vicomtesse 
De i ium er "ge Adam, gere Pone 
r d'u Ami. 
, These ar > —- e 
ere 
same manner in ie uer of 1859. Itis is en that 
„Ofc ea sheet о ver head as w ей, 
“R. e could noe dé MER 
ing in the d d or in з west; the earth I bellos à ів | Reticularia. Few 
round, and it is ible to get here either by sailing before i i attai maturity ; ; resembling does in its |} 
westward сій Americ wea viá India. АП1 papillate sur ES ndr uddy “at a rund зябне rry. It occurs | the 
pt is that — or other I find myself at “the |in mcg Willow trees, at the base of Alder st be. gives frost power. 
of the earth,” i ш Islands of the Risin ng wee E nd in pesas situations, occasionally on sticks and straw 
commonly calle Her les ves in woo i та Np help. The bent En 
1 that I To а gardener w Prot e 
and d becomes mature. 
his 
as 1 etimes think I a “I am sitting in th 
"— of a qnam Яну — on r^ n 
about 100 f above th Thi 
es are 
flower-beds or fruit, it is a кт: 
в either 
DE 
to leave Roses alone' that are fre 
object and nothing m iem for it has no properties a bed or frame filled with БЫ stable-dun cov 
fide good or bad toaid or toannoy him. This is not so, how- | with light mould netti — will strike almost 
M ey partially гора by ua friend ES ever, with а яшм ring species, Licea per bears | immediately. І tried some sick ones before the winter 
m мз аш ре rn ik ieu land t in, and planted them out in "e id , and they are 
lake, f ul. bay, looking like an inland | most profuse in its growt doing well. This is one advantage of the easily ri 
Thes um e lisa pear aS LE in all E | comes near. It is a vile imm ofa уж үр ог iog it Manetti s xar wo met old Manetti. Roses 
19 та d are of various heights, the bighest | —— rone bushes) та 1 1 pepe 
ing about 1500 feet above the level of the sen. On Бап of diac kotont vé totally dead bo. wi ERE 
ees Til at — glish py die a" s ог 4 ше ofthe base or point of union ud re 
—Aand a num ber of queer 
t the head of the y^ covering 
f. undulating land, and even 
F 
reaching a. a litt ае чау Ur up the hills 
able size, containing about 70,000 
thi 
г 
inhabitants. 
ions. The differe; 
esidences of the Consuls of those 
nations N ho have now treaties with this extraordinary 
"ш E 
res, and 
d'Orl 
Menoux Gloire к, а 3, and Belle. == 
Bourg la Re olon nt has died m 
and I tremble for the M. Massons and Evéque de 
Nimes.. Six of this last aee жон from Mr. Keynes 
m 
w such good and 
say I m 
arie Рой, ү ио | gem of the same 
ble Rose. Th 
Licea Jragiformis is, when ic 
roundish patch of white slime, rey id E 
.155 are 
not ured at all ч lanted Manetti 
ery Roses are aces Р 
Pot plants (with the exception | W. 
ою Verv-ramatkebl th alive will ya: die, and vice versá. Till March is ou 
of ot the Tittle Pa of Deina ene oue ^ im no = the amount of his ў st 
[эту das te speedy root acti We have yet 
meet the usual six or eight weeks of hoar frost : and 
aeos бер terly. winds., То 
am getting dog Briars. Un less I can see good 
— 2 Я standard Roses with “ my own eyes," I shall not 
like to buy. Those I bought last s died almost 
dox LICEA FRAGIFORMIS, Nees. Же Б ip g 
UN MÀ А Then (Copied by permission from Greville's Cryptogamie Flora.) jo асах, : Hu zie des no {шон xA exe 
В MM vell to ТЕРЕ ow 
about Ый d, extremely difficult | freshi t the and plant 
exceeding 30 T without any interfer rence from us f exti irpation. We have seen it, however, in other dry friable ‘mould үйүү тайт Кеер їп 
Japanese. In my situations, where its presence was far from pleas ing. | a house à and then put a ж Mr table litter over 
upon a largerough pi Durin а e last wet autumn its wide creamy gue e roots, which will оссаві occasion mething like bottom- 
words “ Kæmpfer ” and * Thun appeared on the cut surface of some stumps of trees | heat and promote fresh roo have suffered 
Fa which had been sawed down. Near well as in their branches. 
to see that the Dutch re some young ун 7м whose branches nearly touched In ev ta wh Rose 
al p | the odes my spawn eontrived somehow to | not cut at xen] XE soda suffered to оё. 
a Sw take n of - lower lea tipi reis which it spread | tho wood was ripe, e Rose has suffered ае. 
While upon the nya I may inea another | 9er the ашк 5 ns and weighing | whatever, even at "the in the of winter. 
distinguished German well known in- Europe, | Оё! down with its disgu ing, homn ing masses, which | The falling off of € first flowers is the ripening of 
namely, Dr. Siebold. This v VN How lives Lees ntes y mee Jae re e fren ite Bath, N.E. aspect Н 
in ; n a situation it wi 0! that the whole 
"i: "—— € à a rus to c north of Naga- | je the n triment must, be derived from the falling rain ҮЗ Pr on — - 3 feet 6 inches 
Н or the moisture in the air without th 
has an z р bis Day yt E Meu He | Jightest dependence on the matrix. Any ina matter |, То а true t n be no solace to 
which he showed me with ide; and also led | 1У'08 in the way would have been equally covered with know, that every Кое correspondent I have speaks 
me ovet Ms garden, whirh is pe 0 161 ё, and, ав the growth of these plants mely own and neighbours’ disásters. Nurserymen cry 
many of which are new to E An регине ut = rapid, we need not think that the report of Schweinitz | 91» “ nine-tenths dead. I have lost many sorts 
with the others about init е i ulous, lat nofoand-atallied а ак рю | altogether, and I do not know whether the others are 
Substance of another article. On taking my leave of Dr. | Оё жей, had.been red hot a feir hours ог alive.” Amateurs cry, «АШ my Roses are 
Up E E тп the hill, | We ourselves possess part of the original specimen, and | 10,” “ Mine are mostly dead or done for." 
- Japanese like a native, and | have implicit confidence in his report, having far grea have done well At 
a great favourite | оп his veracity than on his power of Лу | 107 would stand the "n but I find to my joy 111 
Do amongst whom he has »| r — pa another|are perfectly good, and 17 dóubtful. ey were 
I said to him m, "you appear to be quite a prin amongst ев, we can nothing, as ave never e pire the. T ere ти of July, and pei broke аё 
the people in this part of the country." „Не smiled, the good fortune to meet with it, buta онг, ED ы е а € them bloomed 
and said he liked the Japanese, and that e believed | 22? , occurs not unfrequently upon old e ean in | beautiful га am x appy t the Eugéne 
de md utual, with P cast оё #®гЧе is К t once by its thinner stratum | Apperts, x eniron h he le, Ec Peabodys, 
countenance continued — It is not neces- and clay-coloured spores inclining to reddish. Ther ATLAS Gloire de Er Portemers (a free - 
ЫКЫ тышка л pat, Ml pairo Тыш 
M. J. B CEN ON МЫ credit: 
Y toa pa and Мт. Helyar, who cut 
COLOGY.—No. riars for me ioi to buddi 
pres P^ ао S 1 € d ROSES AND THE LATE cannot conclude without giving & tgiMóm to 
verted er Æthalium ve ready ad- so many wet and sunless months (294 wet i If Roses die don't cut into the . 
"id: ESSE e peculiar q estiohs дау» Бе неа ти, 1859 and Sept. 1860) s is not to| quick. . The will bleed unless leave a. 
"csl Qu, р hermosa c T ripe wood should suffer so | portion of the dead on, which will act as a seal ; a little. 
aea yoong må Me g "iere аб Бове t rubbed on to the cut will do good. Never eut 
containing in their стт а when mature, | symptoms of great i injury. The Me on the — era ds eye. When you remove the 
edes wir ore amorphous sub- | 23d of December marked 15^ below zero. This wood of ve died back nearly to the , put 
epotés. m gro pay a dusty | lasted for one month and five days at least, and had lightly over rie та Rose а little em to Pe 
Am ra thes Qm ac ied "renes w i y ред threads. поб the snow gina the ground plants much p by the sun. 
ibis dus froin the а аге most con- ; eran ve ensued. The ground plants, ip. rably in че spring of 1859, as respects s the Duci of 
banti loris mi Pins c en еше, occasionally 10 this, though ee нанс n above snow iow mak, ме y | Orleans mte de Nanteuil. They bloomed 
айз apum ае eb ош "dli n point or no means dead. Th done e tis nobly til w winter setin. І never knew a Manetti Rose 
enlónr-far ihe —— ifulis n t of severe frost that followed ге — yos before А. hen first, planted, ог that 
са subject of our pre- trees were dry. Standard Autu Roses have suf- | was not tolerably covered with earth over the point 
; fered most; Half-standard and 1 foot Summer Roses, Lof union. etti iae should treated much as 
were hybrid Chiua or hybrid Bourbon bushes 
Radelüfe, Rushton, Уб» 99. 
PR 
