EX. JS 
Ae Ааа. CX mur TERMES 
B Mao bee ud rs c ae ve. 
Га dci We 
AvaGvsr 17, 1861.] 
THE GARDENERS CHI 
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
155 
set a fine crop of fruit, and have made the most 
vigorous and healthy growth I ever ears d. 
о 'в 
ran improvement upon the origi inal, which, of course, 
any — artist could easily have worked out. 
firs of t 
1 he curative processes ascribed 
mes have been aseribed to them. They are bs 4 like 
r London trees; some are good, some bad, or 
to M. Бнр I 5 
noh been fi the fects. 
e 
e 
g If 
e Elm trees die in our Parks agen ecu and I 
to as great an extent, con dt how. much 
younger they are | than those E Hyde Park. Man ny of 
othe ers, аге stag- headed, 
Gr reece, arks, 
not 
» 
Some their ms as large one 
ist, and in short time they will ri 
in thickness the arm of a modera sized тап ; - 
have made shoots from 3 to 5 feet in length; 
now as they stand in their pots 7 feet high, and i in the 
course of a or two they 
of the house, : and then being suffered to bear large 
be arrested. There is nothing, I dare say, new in this, 
but with many orchard- -house cultiva tora, and w ith all 
that when cultivated in p. small qu: — 
only of fruit must midal 
in lm čapital, 
only r 
— had never seen 
die En In the Avenue y» Ma 
pt to 
which 
Hellenie kingdom. 
| tree, ue was he aware of its peculiarities until octor’s hands, 
| Messrs. Balsamaki and Origonk. Inspectors of the | for Fey e been scor top to bottom, and the 
Royal Forests, wed Шаке 1} e | wounds now healing or healed; but I do. not see 
from Tripoli Бес dia, where about that they ‘have gained much by the operation. In 
4 ) feet above s sea, а mm ЫҢ was * scores in others 
баст ече dedi 
rge 
"ү [repoiting my ikkon trees s did p^ take all the 
earth from the roots, but merely loosened the upper 
part of the ball, Which .was full of „young roots, taking | 
rd-house cultivator, to have only pem зась. direction towards. Alonistena. and pedi 
an st | liana 
чече thus having an about 3 lea ague 
extent 
and 1 to 15 Me broad. One Fas the reasons 
| the lips аге still far asunder. What strikes me as most 
| remarkable is that the bark of these old trees does not 
| sound pco nor do I see any of the circular holes in 
it by which the pon. of Elm-bark be 
s | (Scolytus ) is "indicated. All the wounds caused by 
slitting the bark have been covered v vom 
why а forest of such dimensions rem 
is said to be owing to the circ чб аит that 
very localit; y it occupies was, until — a ne ^ 
ball to Semaia nearly in its solid state, removing the | onl 
of e 
— К h wi Eri imbedded in| 
the shake eve 
ide ó of earth fr from t the i solid. шар, ү, reduce ul | 
coiled roo with. the knife, but Th eared to lose 
rie to E "T suppose would = pen g 
ie district been a 
hahu 
з geemag pee and new wood an 
d | bene bs More next week. У, 
kind of aister, АКУ smells ш, Lgs ks ve Ty like e- 
Bei what 
t ma y iti is certainly & 
ound and t quus ü 
e any, having pM карей a awa, n? « a 
d bark form rapidly 
^» Rue Castiglion 
rries.—Mr, Wray’ s article, d must 
n Strawb errie 
e), T 
aei chief, the Fra ео of ihe distr 
e dc that the coun try p 
jence 
be a sort of garden outlaw in repotting large -— 
trees. The compost I used € two-thirds 
зало жа loam and one-third ro manure, 
e compost firmly 
Я m. 
round the 
p and Nectarine trees in orchard-houses. have 
equal to but they have suffered to 
certain nt, for among my trees are several 
blossomed in ion and get апа of 
as А, , Ear and s 
other early kinds s «азак е side by side with о ires rees 
that; „failed, are full of fruit. Some trees planted | 
Р " wing till last 
in frui it culture, “ “Мо 
д A eas the o» 
"ie 
m n ripe "NE Le 
sa э ofa fruit tree must 
ing season to bear а crop о oth Just, 
How nearly y had forgotten а most flens cg 
in the — n of 1 pots. If the 
e cerit in the pot is A with rotten 
manure r^ ее Shoddy—ealled'I think * stercus," 
n parts, 3 to 4 in 
rdiet n most effectually, во 
the trees will do vi water only tice 
but then each time will require Кыйа ЭУ, 
THE NEW ARCADIAN FIR (ABIES Riata 
when the e stump immediately throws out several new 
stems. Thísis not the case with the Abies Apollinis, 
вс 
аз Fais Strawberry growing. Theorists generally 
assert rd in uad to have Strawberries from co 
Cw 11 me often 
whether „е поа, ае M rv or wrong, a LI n a" 
t tbe ere is no more necessity 
AE sedis i tl 
DN ultry yan in or e make y eggs. 
Several times 1 "n plantel the os me dir aa d 
some of t 
bed es ba y so. Аз 
Scarlet Атей Strawberries, none сап be com 
as to beauty о өн of flavour with our good 
English, Fr td r Belgian ep. pe there are 
g 
some, БИИ, fins or pistillates, that come in 
early a 
urbe | in into every garden апі. 
eg to D that nte— 
T to Mr. De Jonghe oss. between My att’s 
$5 | Prolific and Wilmot's [td PE cnr —is decidedly of 
unquestionable merit, and i dote will soon find its way 
dispel the pr 'ejudice. many 
Heldr.). а fact according to Mr. Bayer well known - des 
BY BERTHOLD SEEMANN, PH.D., F.L.S. pene. m on yore account term 
9 it ; а æ Amalize “ Hémeron ” (i.e. tame Pine „їп 
Arcadiá a forest rinm, sers — бтртне | a p ction to the Pinus Apollinis, hcc йк 7 
entirely com of Да eres when ent down, say call dece vui (wild Pine). When left undi 
а foot or two above ground, would invariably throw out Re nd w iru dur favo осна, "ыа 
stump а number у fo | vr а attains e ger 118 | height and 2 to ‚8 
not branches—and ndisturbed, its| fecti йа meter. In 
E new stems attain 18 to 20 E "P in height and 14 foot in 
diameter. They of very unequal size, some 
are 
assuming greater dimensions "i the expense 
I E ve observed this sort in 20 different soils and situa- 
tioi - n A: found it in fa x Ferdin m Tw 
Les Sa s, Moret-sur- Loing, 
Dou api rop of Grapes.—* i asper бышын” ’ oos 
no; nr whether his double crops occur еы year, о 
е 
o the 
е | others. There are usually 3 or 4 stems on old stumps 
originating around its summit. We are still viti iout 
a good te hi ical description of t Abi 
hem itis said to differ chiefly from. Abies Apollinis, inde- | 15 
pendent of its peculia d 
obtuse and lea 
much sm "orbi 
М hout ha: утс: ing more pret 5 to р 
o erer assures me in a letter recer 
i en of ers ho havo y iste last expedition has brought home a 
inci r be proud of their discovery, ére nob imens, both flowering and fruiting, and that all 
SM иь. Achievements to be è doubted, a|donbt as to Abies næ Amaliæ being а 
"e Чаш ошо : ipe Athens and Muni t species can now be а 
- whic! that the opinion prevalent | ,, The plant is to be had in sev 
t Greek ums is was thought to correct, ; and 
veral 
it is «а to be planted on the continent on a 
anale. and it m тала. eå 
re pa ffi e 
| two сда. to Arcadia, the last of 
z : 
ойшы rather 
kr of 
t questions 
т Te I send дюр оЁ опе Ф several — 
of Sweetwa 
large | the berries 
base of 
iw dur ing 
ia y. 
ода a а В» 
"ле eginn 
= d (is n crop 9% "which 
ep orth а fresh bunch 
ificially uced or ftm. 
double crop келк буй for your 
bout three ул мтч 
rned dirty "n rple, became 
of the stom, and fell off; the stem itself нына 
Su ulpl iu used, 
up. 
the stems of the то уйсу, к now ' shrivelling, а 
th 
е berries dry this ow ing? 
ondence. up. is 
—Iintend to go the tour | [Probably to unripeness somew ei in thesystem.] The 
on the 
is G. ks. 
Paris, tir Жо some at least of|other bunches ame tree are in goo | health and 
the x ree you make, and begin with the trees in the | beginning to ripen . Wesiwood, Henley House, 
here, Don't believe all t ignoran t | Oxford, ust 12 Em what has been said re- 
Persius o or self-complacent gardeners. 
trees have 
rapes, I am induced to for- 
but 
e of the merit and little of the faults! ward ус you a shoot "Puri not only two crops, 
