Остовув 5, 1861.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZEME _ 887 
m receiving the 
e 
ramas ans. ыз до ьс us, and the high 
price of fuel will always be a great obstacle to 
their general cultivation for the d 
thus planted very "p, these har- | sume, be ditlicult t 
tems h| 
being 
ome d shoots are M ч to form mu 
e 
fit to eat, while if "the strictures of а mà vires 
more healthy, vi and pr Ta re nd tr 
much more мн Hi ‘resisting - - disease КЕ 
those grown from еуез wh e lain dormant | 
ome tion of Gardeners Chro- 
h o be lie ed, the 
Б ез г а. are іп апу hing а ап prc or 
thriving state of luxuri: ance, „The fin jest examples of 
d 
of each, wei was told about |thro à the winter un жт d of plantin 
5 1Ьз. to 6lbs., well-grown specimens, but still | besides that they may taken up before the | n to the present time were not grown in pot 
with ch crown. Among fancy fruits I|period when the disease most generally declares ined anii My. Porson i Athai. is Em livin i өч iind 
observed a large dish of the favourite French |itself to any extent. M. Gauthier says that he |е] him of a gar Ardón many miles from Chilwell, 
— A, omni the rms d'Api, in which each plants in March, and that by the beginning - es ere they were grown for the regular supply of a 
arked wi letter, а crest, or other | August Potatoes are ripe. Those he exhi- t and with all 
ra= MC duis u a piece of paper or |bited were round Potatoes, of a large size. our майа progress I tar there is not a garden in 
the side next to the 
to remain un- 
pro 
e cim the ied E s 
a corres 
ойсатеф 400 splendi 
n diameter and said to weigh 200 lbs. ; two 
Кас e б басе, trie of Vanilla 
Mente malit. 
collections of 
' there was nothing superior to o 
and s and some others were quite Rice 
pom ы, 
ize of one's fist, 
г 
doux (large i. nh 
Abelmo ам, rm eould only 
without iere y: 
were exhibited, is is 
said to: be gain 
вро 
сән. one very nearly a | пат 
te Mr. 
been | for 
time which could show a collec- 
TM 1 have never seen 5 б рев of j^ duly 
3rdl 
own, | planting, all very green, арр eren aae goo рей, | ment. 
А covered with shoots most ly of -— 5. os 
gov ii aae — the small Tangerine variety, and 
attain the de Due еу 
"m attain ries а more liberal system of manage- 
Given a fruit, tree in e? health, it is ip of 
Take 
tis “maturing power at say 5 dozen, bs x 600 
fruits, 1f уоп take double the quantity numerically, 
inch. М. Gauthier also insists that w 
are large and have e cut for ig, it 
increases very mu eir еч апа рго дин etive- 
ness if they are eut in autu 
ORCHARD HOUSES. 
te circumstance that some of the 
varie are specified, sup re is n 
saying it. Tt is however singular, that here in 
Wales, at the foot of the sea boundary of S 
now. 
Will be mueh deteriorated; but redue 
еле or one-fifth, and the chan en аге you w 
still have хад е weight of fruit, while the qualit; 
size, colou: flav: will be decide dly superior. 
This is tap ue. of fruit. tree management; it is a law 
f Nature which сап! ш ж contravened without the 
due penalty being pa You a, ay tak 1 
e the qr лапу 
will 
ropes of nipi j E z they? why, 
aratively mere Plum ns in size, а! aor en. to 
E mpared “with the A and Tuscious frut whi ch 
ту 
donian range of mountains, and within a few hundred 
yards of the sea, a standard ie enega ДЕ Е ра d 
leading families in ntry. Ther о greater 
fallacy than that of ретт а crop of fruit numeri- 
- 
what 
rested me most in 
this irtment of 
the ^ Exhibition 
s, fis which wi A 
y, wi ithout at the same time considering. its Size an 
but at the Акун 
quality. this 6 tree, a young Si dicil one, хз 
been left e MN i, itself, and D = D ity to 
thesea may i and {ат 
Mr. Ri 
r. Rivers mould. inf, as "^s said t de 
go, “mild climates are genera iy. amfarourable 
for ripening.” Admitting the fact, it still appear 
арар € ae in pota; under the manage ement of | 
the m 
nager, and regret that Martin's Act. ы the 
taught by pains and penalties 
determined , no 
in the blossom buds before 
f 
they are ex- 
sen 
| su 1 КБ seq has 
ment an ea The truth is е 'сгеазей in strength, and generally far more of them 
is no royal road to frdi agement, and though it|have set t ha necessary for a 
is easy to write, “common а мант а few written | With weakly trees, those recently lir us e 
directions wii € уюш to manage th te Rivers, by | this thinning is necessary, but pow 
and tion ns, shows |few of them get such treatment? On the con 
"a is ias quite up to the exigencies 2 dry e hear of а Xo bloom and not m Rue ced 
persons who have iiie {теев devoid of fruit. Plants of all kinds have two 
Е h lant | fomm culti md whose knowl i нне separate, RFI some y distinct functions to perform; 
m Apes Miles rom Each P mi e OC e t there are scarcely two varieties | the first i is growth, an additi. tion or increase tothe stature 
quires g So со 4 а s year at about die iei Mi P under he same treatment as to potting, growth, by which, nnder dl influence of light, heat and 
Present season, so as to be well established before | water, &c., "require precisely the sam acude ent in | air, the e and growth i and 50 elaborated and s mat; ured 
r2 pruning and eem oem st culture, for w ith p also 
М, Gauthier exhibited in illustration “ЛУ very a tree and seed. When you want owth romote it b 
of a method. ће has peine gi un succession of of "shoots T ike basket rods," while the "other | en sil, manure and liquid applicatio =ч the roo + 
Rag "ect wa ving may be all spurs and blossom buds such as Mr 
deas E s io mave dm "i from the would deli = - ia treat two such trees precisely | but keep the foliage as clean and Беу and as EZ 
MT ce alike, to u e water as Mr. n directs | exposed to light as possible, Stimulatin 
S | without тч "its influence, would be simply to | should not be given to plants durin e vt 
rui n both, the robust one by increasing its ure | process except in th f weak trees or those whi 
habit, and the fruitful y luxuri have borne сг are bearing а heavy crop of fruit; but 
M nure w dri a dan nger s thing | after the blossom buds are for orm ed, then late im the 
| 
nk, is 
ople, and no ru 
us pe 
right in recommending great pa, in | 
ат ne specimen plants have been ruined | 
оа injadicious application. 
w,It 
sinc: Mr : ers iri prom 2 
[t ment in t * Garde егв” арав 
| said o hol ble to rees 
ў buds, and his anticipations have been verified to a much 
| greater extent than y, ever 
the subject of plant: 
PE o eciam planting, prop 
runing, transplanting, 
ot d month east tó the open air and rain, a па | roots of t А 
р Warong the winter infan open shed or g 7 tions, the difficulties of 
or other place where they are protected only from neasiness with the cultivator. 
frost; but not in a dark cellar, and always where and made fruitful before ‹ 
the circulation of air is as free ible. Under | 95 and и MN A rules, m: to all ges i 
this treatment, they soon become quite green, and | 8% т, will make ore uie fruit m 
the eyes wi grow out into short thick б more [eie and profitable than it has b ES up to the 
shoots which must kept with the present time, Indeed, I have never been able to look 
сате from being rubbed off or injured. With thi | проп the pot system of cultivation ав rr more 
view the roots are neyer disturbed in the crate: н me "deed v are cid 8, e A akaa ав | 
poin nge trees ersailles 
Carried ont in them to the planting gr p | evidence of the longevity of pot plants, it would, I pre- 
rehard houses ; 
cause | no question of the a tantae of building them of we 
| of the buds. 
|50 those „who 
These remarks may be some lite guide 
s to ien 
bol o і 
аге ап and to be able to 
, d that which 
ence, . сап be 
EE " T in 
тея 
РЫК, however, to there сап be 
n as Was ed when glazed prom 
to > glass vals, the larger - — of 
ter the resistance to external 
examples 
any 
ples of su he y to need any specific 
iipilHon. Ne either led] L г Аы проп the trouble 
of plants in pots Every gardener knows that h's 
