b 
434 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, Dasa d 
age does not) wo ood i is not ripe, but fu 11 of sap, does not, in my , rience at Russelconda, South India" B ж. 
mend the matter much for dh the | Communicated by Dr. Cleghorn. The MA. 
di 
pejor 
заг e го his friend at | attacks of winter. A Six's thermometer g E 
order from the sudden cold on Christmas са а е) the | Orissa, the peculiarities of climate, and i. 
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йе: ч, vage he ышы е Sn p les Р 'aterton, | next morning two common quicksilver thermometers, | his hana ence, which showed how mùch 
"altos pm "May 6, 861 "| hanging LA me nm of it, at eight o'clock sto ood at 2? | by zealous Linn ulturist in а rather wild 
EPI UM лн and 4° belov I find that some Biotas. any Cape and Australi Y 
Э E: chly Juniperus; Thuja gigan ntea, a, Thu- Acacia Б: piss Leguminoste, appear 
bon o cpi өгнү jog borealis, Wellingtonis will stand any weather. well and many British species, a 
orders.— АШ, o E Munro’ 8 DE p nts NOT TOUCHED may nam uniperus Bellis perennis, &c. With a little care mam 
ый үе ДУ to state that it fre agr aus s hispan din dauri ы japonica, hiber- ripened their seeds abundantly, PR 
f August, 1848, that I submitted plans for thechan ibered | niea т s, glauca, chinensis з excelsa, in England, such as Mignonetíe, у 
Vine borders here to my employer for hisapproval; and | old and on ps E touched; Thuja j el variety of English vegetables, as 
r. y ha е work finished by the end hd aurea, aurea vf Lobbii Biota. glauca, excelsa Cabbages, and s ү 
November of that year. The other erections, uch as.| Thujopsis borealis, C Cup ма! а, Bombay Onions fro) ellary seeds 
greenhouse, stoves, pits, &c., were finished in September, &с. Portugal Татев | аге xta: injured, a wi crim e ak epu in Mp and 3 
1849. And on the 10th of June, 1850, I visited Mr. | Laure els, cedi ir &c., cut. down. Jack Frost. [We Tomatos of w 
"Munro at Colney House. e will thus see that all our | are unacqua ted with some of the Junipers named in formed solid — and, stripped a 4 
improvements ere carried out previously to my |this list. m 3 feet 4 inches in 
visiting the south, and that therefore the chambere ine Growing.—l have а Marott мн with Vines | piper r cotiditided with a tabular Г? 
borders here were no imitation. or сору of those at|planted inside, and on the spur of Sanders, | trial of, sbo owing the date of ge 
Colney House. ing Vine borders had | showing now bunches 15 TRG in length before | The seeds were Caen ci from the Nilgi 
been КЕ in the. D bet ot the С Chronicle long БЕЗЕ b "My gardener мора рс shoot, Jeaving $ two инва e n the whole, the au 
before ——— at Trentham the. ery | to be 
and rie et poe ч I could not it approve ef x el of C grower of Vinos statin ug tha mat Ho. p 
the methods adopted or described. ave | for leaving even one joint, I haye had-all t the shoots | made and recorded at the different 
thus 5 eds y hich cannot be aieo stopped to one, and some even wi ithout leaving one at | Indian tgp —1. “Description 
vert t Mr. Munro is гу. wrong in ^m his|all. Now, I do not observe an Cladoph ] 
n of the chambered Mm of the bunches, fion this eid: aer of ee to "the local га i 
borders here, x their кутас, connection with | sto Will you. therefore explain ky Al 
those at Colney House. Although I have no direct Botanica 1 effect these ce stoppings Se. ak 
proof to place against his assertion that it was I who | fruit? for ARER A Sander: A one joint, and Roberts 
saw the Vine roots hanging in the chambers at Colney «опе or n ore than two," r 
ve, tog 1 iction in my practical writers on the Ms ne give ‘the botanical reason | to be co ves reside a em “ 
own mind to the contrary, to state that I kept tice in KT . А Subscriber. Кын Mango Cb а c ind 
journal of ied з dosi I visited in 1851, what E saw, Grapes à e fe d by le hey | By s jue rn. 9 auth 
and w ew or deserving of attentioh, ion init to тейл daid matter which Бау айг. iree most pt on in 
Colney House a AME the as is noticed, but I ha ve 1 wards pour into the Grapes. Remove all the leaves generally те атой throughout ёл 
ne roots or Ee uit tree. es € can neither swell nor ripen. stan, y ur 
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oxhibit ted, 1 
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distinctly deny that I ien P ar any Mee wid она every leaf ábove a Peach, and the Peach | produced in gardens. D 
borders at Colney. Mr. Munro sae he did not mean | will shrivel; le е ое » henlthy, ~ and it will swell, | p. 640) bas given a od deseri] 
to “rob me of any credit I had in bringing the subject | though not so w ves IN is | Sir William Hooker published an 
of chambered Vine borders before the public.” I may Just | subject is fully МНА rs M з of Lin dley’ s ‘Theory the Botanical aA Tab. 4510. - 
state that I did not bring the subject before the publie. | aud А actice of Horticulture, В аа in 1855, by | varieties of the fruit in cultivation, í 
i not to “rob” me of credit, his bringi si — — 1 
forward the matter in the way he di Effects очу ШЙ Winter.—The following are the eff 
for th purge o of е: тет 4 himself. E ie e therefore, | of the winter of — а 1861 оп Conifers, and other 
will m as tender trees and shrubs at Bishopstowe. m сот. 
munieated by the Right Hor. ке Pme Bishop e T arenis : 
CONIFERA i — жер бу sh secl e ro 1 
Abies Pindrow, leaves mostly | Sican: killed delineated by Walter ый ; 
one, ` partly Pru Us ated not ie kig parts o f South India, was 
n MM mot | bosh obtained 
acie facts a he has o 
Yester. | Here we think 
from 
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сд "shaped, "while oa 
ast АДУ ummer, and winter wou "оша be 
gran z ru 
ье this spring. "т үш already been generall » morinda & varieties - ground, ао not 
exemplified, ascertained, and fre that vyl | т шшш s. nd pot 
many seeds, plants, shrubs, Roses, &e., of various жены (?) robusta, kill 
denominations are killed either by the frosts or wet. -— M 
I believe has been chiefly occasioned the ЖАСА 29 Бы 
ess of the earth and atmosphere, the abs det AMT Quid; 
ОЁ sun in summer а umn no enabling the lateral рона au ^ E —— бИ Уг 
seeds, wood, or sho germinate or ripen sufficiently | cjr perc me. Rep son fie 
to endure the cold, for I can remember many winters C Goveniama — 4 айын rosmarini! 
and springs more severe than the present 1861, not » гоовтра pS injured — 
proving near so fatal; but no sucli sunless summers thurifera pae сс not injured |р 
and autumns as . The chief cause of the bad pem e [Mp maah ez RE X Dy ft ч s 
of late "e ери -corn and seeds Taxodium distichum, points of e obilia ( 1:4. тапу а The | М: 
iy be safely attributed to the too eoldness of the | 5hoots injured uch injured; previously | p me their honey fl 
er to admit of their en ed This circum- сватив" Поб Ае - — ^ oe із distin 
added t6 other Rus isnt milicie Mets force of vind, but not by Myrtles, Talbot cut тез; с берән which is c 
А 
being "planted {оо €— in drills at so А а wWellingtonia, browned by Ncc Mo alb c dm os md qoem e d. m the i 
соат, ied n hi t g more cautiously surface- fec cen iq by ned zo asc bee энкейе” from Bombay га, | 
Н H " n 1n, H 
in порын of vites кеше: id ынна баа Ший орны bore not injured Pittosporum т. Petre, Other kinds y 
в аге seriously injured, and that there will be but| j ured AERE health; н rema дош, ече i ~ өйү: Rama), ud King) : 
little to ыле ч of in the — агу ent this seasOn,| Arundo species, ty 1 vn пече slight acid - perm mesocarp 
especial y аррагеп у * А 
write, is only partial, and. Tem difta SEU а iof. = Ран аан 70m 7 нт п бе! 
ocular demonstration of Pers and Apples being ушей ger | Тн ©, попа quality are ricis of the Madras Ри 
p. = © а по! pper injured m mi А 
Weinuts t to such an extent that there will Pl eme ndi ч) a KE quis heterophylla, (points | The following тороо бов 
fev of the year, d Ue ome, as but | Ceanothus divaricatus; more "ыле эре injured peng ре» h tm ev Castle N (iss 
To remain е ieis ы rc i xim wo p » sen, and. 
1 being so m [t level of the Se ^^, 
by the recent frosts of S pas "uà I enclose you —€ russ of an Auricula an ini ig case of nying Although in a highly g Чот, B 
specimens such as e gener: 3 at least in poss ыз нана change, ut very much the buie A дейем ^ Mirage 
ve gea level, i 
and Suffolk. A. He Kd, Maldon, mde disap t. | abo vel, t 
Effect of Frost on. Autumn Tran nspla. anted Roses. rcha sed the variety four years ago is “ Bone's of it, at the foot of 
have been amused at the various aecounts published i n ! lis [Бом в) Perfection," - Have now tiree f fall grown another hill 1300 feet É 
your е respect to Roses not dying, &c., if ва it, е o i which have ever served me Bro" nds where the a part of the 3 : 
rémovec e antumm. 1 made two large beds and y- i s м хац : all its progeny — said to —— en: pe 
ink Ue must be sligh from eas 
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Cem gie the 2 others were bought Ае 5 d ундей; he speci ward b T заан and sh eris 
сна P чт cte Тһе жа rofa ar Pen UM et n ing A ing to retur 
walls are dead, some 13 à simplicity throm e E e t 
Roses killed; th years : enis have at least 200 | We fear that "e bus d d st лу па мании. u 
ies, undoubtedly more hardy than the can be imparted to saei a floral Caliban а.) y (on 
^ &e, cannot gi th 
A dH Lala a S. ua 
з riet 
others. Probably “ ! 
кын oi his one X as he did Boite iiie | 
ago ч йт, columns, аё бет have died off-since his жщ, 
— л know plants are not safe from their L ОР EDIN : March 14,— Prof. Bal Р 
ВотАмт 
d of April 
жы ыз die en pril or beginning of | four, аг, V.P, i the cli m 
y К des up and shifting them when the tions в were мез "s 9, otes мынын 
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nd e "= IM S0 1 Loa АИЛЭ "MU M uu L4 amm Bas siééné mé 3а БА a SA Bus 4o am ы 
PRAES UM 
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