Frsnvanr 23, 1861.] 
THE GARDENERS' 
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL 
GAZETTE. 171 
have — Se also : 
and co h: 
d ndis that hav 
to the r^i of being Queens o Among h 
new noti 
“ doing” Decorated Roses. 
« А few Tu зад a friend, living at Weycliffe, nea 
se (this is, however, in 
s to de private), conspicuously ugly, a and 
over the railw 
gro unds, so 
Аз the carriage- -road ran over the bridge, the gravel ; 
did not seem to offer very happy 
heroe for any plant but Ivy, which ум apum ted to 
ons we can only quote two. Firstly, his way o 
me а Е — built brick bridge lending 
his 
, buds will € om abundant tly, and it will only be neces 
sary to des 1 the young shoots that break out ofl 
the padded pied тлы the buds; those shoots tha : 
eak out above the buds m 
n —€ — 
dotted over - 
r 
brick pits, wh ich are sunk to the за of 4 
space tray 
The plants which are 
bos roug ач from the open} ground and рї апей over а 
oma Е heated by n inch 
pipes. The у із, T er, , obtained from 
three years old a 
ater im 
are » на д 
sed by 
hot 
pud divisional 
vae 
bo iler 
natural graceful, vigorous manner, so that the din 
rated wall or walk has not a stumpy appearance like an 
avenue of standard Roses 
** Evergreen Roses, tra ained to tall pillars or suffered 
to еы їп керы, are capable of most fanciful deco- | 
rati ‚аз buds of v 
ery choice kinds may be ins erte ted at | 
эра es are secur пе Арен егей in with Yo ni ston 
Бей» have a tight fitting somewhat flat 
roof. The soil employ : 
peculiar to the garder 
yg 
Ф 
as being too heavy. I then proposed it 
varieties of Rosa sempervirens, or, as A == Ар ways 
to call them, Eve! us They 
e metn with the 
pick, and some manure wem 
and wi In my annual. 
visits to T friend living in this pore disti rict—for 
no part of England is more so—I wat — heic some 
interest my bridge -Roses. They grev ith great 
rapidity, and soon covered every brick, but when they 
Grass, ed 
iew 
Secondly, Profesor Owen's dodge for making fine | 
р S fiance of h „21. #ho +h. 
and fiavour in Fs durs 
vua that the plants are liberally assisted with 
the ename meld Tin n pure 
gravelly soil to within the surface, and | 
filled i in with loam padi вашта, i. a Rose planted i in 
the centre of each. The soil in the tube was ы {тее | 
was express the monotony o Iw 
pared for thin ad эч my fond ar Un must E 
decorated. ey ed incredulous smile 
Te „ык, for this w тә г 
ith him to the Rose- 
General Jacquemin «бои My eve ЖЬ зз dads not X: for- 
gotten its cunning, А 4... І поё at 20 
as the most dex 
to place 
shoots favourable for the purpose. 
ре т, 
aud the pner much sharper than xu 
used to 
- | len 
weeds, and the running Grass and other 
forced here "— brick pit built 
k of the Cuc MM -house, the heat from 
what passes throughs awdi vall, being suf- 
in purpose All tha is required i is merely 
uce e the roots s when w and t 
is 
along the bac 
which, viz., 
ficient for 
int trod mt à, 
о-ы, жү? ргеуеп үе making AM w ps into 
| good ers. t e the fie 
A ai^ en to Di. 
affect of Roses M 
f nce in a wilderness was y dt 
The i inside joe of these tubes is 16 v» qu their 
кз 
ocensionally in "poe 
e hi Enel 
up with 
of Fern In this way excel 
strong, erisp, d Зоне зоной, and with half 
P канк usu 
y Peas sow 
through the soil. 
in a cool pit are now. coming 
The mould in which they are sown 
gth 30 inches, so that they go below the roots 
Ж, which would otherwise soon devour the rich 
| Ned in which the Roses delight." 
r, 
Garden енини. 
Radishes 
ficient — to vm vegetation. rye 
and n beds similarly constru 
| heat of "— 
R X. в, FRoGMO: гур ү +. +h g 4 
ины д highly ein t any time | 
of the year, pe ка ely less so at the present —1 
o n sAr te mmer; an opportunity is eria 
g the bw s forcin ng houses in operation. о" 
її Appl alone the quantity grow here is reso 
d of е ехсеПе епсе e of the frui 
year, jus nths абе ы 
т I прада the чу I felt full of intere 
my buds. What a glorious sight met my t mid | 
2 masses of flowers of the pale climbing Roses shone 
forth large clusters of the Géant, Gen eral Jaequemino 
] -Jules 
e bridge was a Рау avenue, 
, and others; the 
ing w: was the effoct. 
June of t 
udding — | 
about 
uckers not put into pots, but are ta 
stools and planted out thickly at m 2 до. over beds 
of leaves. It шау beremarke а i HE plants 
on and. 
1 management ; not a "kon ord or deed leaf nor 
t or the health of the | 
The оте 
tet | jo 
e plan 
weather set in аавд the pits have to be kept cove! 
— together, the plants get drawn, blanched, тас 
ained. 
Neapolitan — were beautifull M in bloom in 
land had been in that condition ever since 
ment mist in Plais t the 
о April, and allowing them 
to remain there until scs when - are removed 
to pam жу їп "M лым E are to flower. Те the в summer 
ust 
watered Wille. fer are out o 
neouraged to make strong plants previously to trans- 
n g 
planting them under glass. 
m house -— "m he just 
in The beds ar э. дуб 
shelves. the 
fruit room: Means of f чере чи bob weder айе 
ushroo 
for 
im eec e ct om one of th m, and they 
E; lh — а = апа ай belief tha 
t ere long, banks 
and aver 
will be in every Rose- 
ЖОЛ. Фе their culture will be carried to an 
, in the course of a year or two, will be | t 
upright walls of ‹ Yon мындык санны and 
—— imagine an 
beautiful. It must be borne in po ыг по » sie, 
oyed, 
t usually sufficiently high уро, 
БЕТ; spawn, «m она to. be excellent, is all 
| made in 
In the principal stove Bignonia venusta is still in. 
is | bises Iis] X voies ended à festoon ap. from the 
nes are extremely h зану. "e the crops wonder 
emer 
| fragrant > Luculia | gratissima 
n the greenhouse 
e choice 
paerises, and Heaths are. in ower, as are al 
stated to have 
e considering the se which they | 
j 
house are inside. d th 
дыны е 15 feet а апа по 
ъ сей ovor а one ll ог avene of disi 
finer kinds Roses require all th. 
air they can have. - ч 
s | Vin 
in the nd 
is only covered with : 
satisfactori 
s ose top 
e 8 feet in height, and as much in 
^. Both this. aid the Va iaa: T Loma out in 
peat апа lonm—the form warm greens 
9 
painted over with the usua! of so: 
and sulphur ; they are, cines саге в scra 
ча 
егу s mple. 
very rapid growth be required, the adis in which they 
ЕСЕ planted should be well stirred to a dep 
with which all crevices are thoroughly clea ned. This 
h the earth, and tmb 
of such sorts as | Félicité, Princesse Louise, 
esse Marie, and Spectabile (all varieties of Rosa 
dores n Novem 
ede 
motel or eric cc | of 
equal] vell with the clay 
mixture, and the buds run less risk of injury than from 
the last named application. 
Early Peaches заре ea: 
and Plums and Chen 
e Pine 
n the floors of the быш. Vineriós, wl Silk 
supplies of man In me instances 
of 
are per- 
— plan by which all бага аге 
obviated, а па. aique rows kept uniform and free e from | 
here | g 
soap, без, L 
ped and |r 
h, | P 
ly of 
"UN he Tatter 
romise fair to rank s some day as 
g & 
n the. open p e there i i de in bod bes of 
vegetables to ai ode on, the t her 
little 
or|to be in better condition thi aid have often 
inters. 
after lm ve Vea 
е} hardy 
still ban | Tar: ven pe 
in the form of Standards, 
north-east a cirenmstance attri- 
Piae pera to the « excessive amount of wet we 
Roses on walls have 
heated chambers, апа the plants are trained over the 
roof of the Mind im: шла, pes з» of skilful ее: | 
ment of the botto: kept. up steady 
warm air, 
Asparagus has been “in cut” here for the last two 
yaken s and Snowdrops arein full bloom in open 
borde a in му 5 of the glass houses, and now аб fine 
| weather has fairly set in, and like ely to continue, 
cropping and other spring work is being pushed for 
ward. with activity. 
