1116 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZEITE P" 
-- T rtt for | recommended, it may be induc 
riations, crosses, and sports; these if carefu px ought y o modii 
„crosses, forms | t tent. I have still SES 
std subjected to pibe cultivation, annually se ting o some extent. ave sti puel faith ; 
e Corresponden promising special excellence, , would pce UE atten- lagathis, and believe is destined m ne B є 
Colton Arcem ^ India.—My story is now n 
„= 
PS 
it 8 
as the ver vit vari Pedigree Wheat excels the other|portant part at the exhibiti 
varieties of that me cereal now in gonn culti- | year. I have reason too for my fait 
vation. Hitherto the тегу TER al у ку imd some of the plants grown dur 
ч f the most valu 
coy t of the care 2 nurture bestowed че equa very fine, yet the foliage 
undreds 
PALME uou A to our national garden it has b 
ls f trusting to any one country for | to our national garden it has been ey 
ereat "е 1 the айдо, wl sappiles of this indispensable | of the Dutch nurserymen, an : 
I article, and has taught beer the — trim ndn i eady spread through the country. It has ааб 
fi av: 
ет, | world at go wi ed p pena dent on British ud " с уел the catalogues of all our le eading m | 
clo ЖОАН. pris йд Аз » the Cotton zones to furn: C. C. ^ j 
material уны the чое fabricated, and doubtle i "their Sea-side PPlanting.—'There is 
ake as well for ours, the appeal ү e ' heartily Noster of November 23, b 
encouragemen 
No doubt many dificulties ^ and етс Ва lie ah matos а Nd а g is pr ope rm 
s|the wa at first starting, for though the Со оноп р ап ations in exposed situa Xx whi a тү 
ma 
ing 
backward state," was actaslly in REN of the 
e 
о 
3 
LE 
а 
1 lant is the plants to cultivate, yet the staple ecause 
under whi " E MM E EUN DAE of Келу and costly article to prepare and send to market. | Э interested in 
h the octo Titti PUE WIU E E 25 | But that difficulty will doubtless soon give way befor great hat th ht to bé sli 
unreasonable, bank t Pacis 8 оез th nt | mechanical ingenuity of this — especially under the|says that they oug о be allowed to 
that it w. ssible to Marra ше 1 u са b eub: - į stimulus of remunerating prices. I here close my remarks on | t her. I have seen 
ciem tree р ка. сны ал © scribed to tho parties | the Cotton culture of India; imt. development of princi ples, | in exposed of tho east CORE 
portation of intentional mala fides, as e { | drawn from personal experi ot details of practice, which $ of the emer of tr 
engaged in working out the experiment, e a M must be adapted to each locality Бо my object. І һау am convine y 
- = з moine d a proat C OOo ventured to touch on irrigation as applicable to Cotton culti- nent shelter of trees m 
interest" of [ier I Bere Wide ТЕЧ е toton] Y vation, for the simple reason that I have had no personal ex- | cannot t 
Tust perience of its effects or management, and might mislead were 
o better than l'qui 
I to attempt to teach th at which I only know from others, or forester, St. Martin he Scot 
of letters, rather than by ty re diation, or, what ld have have learned from books ai ibletoall Му own im Were the Transactions of t 
2 c e, e es е ај Ун оаа АЙ” МӨ Adr 8 that it is а t. ths. навон M Vario, н that p.212. H , that in belts or c 
dignified replies, Аз I think it must be clear to that body, si min асана razelev | ornament or shelter, th 
if they read these papers, that they do us a great injustice, I EAN @ differently fr 
still expect to see the offensive charge publicly withd Mexican Pines.—How is it we hear so little about | and clumps are very often m great 
са in ае i American Cotton. on at Jide оё О the collection of New Mexican Pines, seeds of which | of trees being planted оп a small area, and al 
With "wo onderfully uniform rying | Were sent out іп 1858 and 1859 by Messrs. Roezl & Co., | erow up a dense mass, under the 
о verme - “ть but саго "ратор нцу! m the quality of Mexico, m" their agents? Out of the lot I had I|the o yw rocure shelter, while, on th 
of the s EA s I have geri plant із far | ha 10 cent. now alive; and as regards | + ы oe Ia du 
oir fi remet ТН t v pee Be of sol though ue kien novelty, I ha the opinion, that with few, if any at the 
difference of American and In rops under precisely the | exceptions, they 'are neither more nor less than old ir timed generally pons cke mi 
кур rnm mew diets va a on the circumstance uaintances with new names; not a few of them е lter, hie] should 
er our having found it a most exhausting cro , requirin s 
eareful rotation ne маш its successful cultur which rotatio PET. than o one. Perhaps some f| S0 as the bra h 
n practice has led to the отара йалан your Correspondents who have. been fortunate enough least o - n tho branches of another, this hee d 
Cotto 
essi 
fields, while its regular adoption in India has “pre rved experience respecting them. Senilis. dre nie intervening between each thi 
those of the Ryot tively uninjured—dedu ү; ye g thinning, T 
these facts *he conclusion. that by combinin ining pute Phyllagathis ма ауа "Th R Melasto. | treated thus the trees will accommodate thenni 
practice of judicious manuring with H age and | mad, which was eir position, and produce the eq 
Le Кечи Era er ка ны dap аста A Number of the etus m Му was sent fom: кч where the branches are allowed to 
Modi rtionate cro ен hope to improve | Botanic Garden at үче ei a Jes to the. Roya al | the roots will пес аты Mie andi 
БРА Cokton in India, but i think 25 "Маву ern at vues ме; Му т, 1859. The hold of the soil, t enabling th m to 
that by such a course of both the h storms to which. her ition e s 
qual Es MM. ot tne native mA IK he роты fmm нн їеһ 1 d war eie ш онгун t = posi 
eness of the Cotton plant and the Y YA онан ак has so eg through the garden urope ; | superior to any quantity of bare e poles, lio 
рони oved in Бу Ti| and, by an accident in the docks, both of. Dv really | grown”: In these views of Mr. im Г 
е абтт ` wo have, belórd pohe рта mo lost. "Phe sailors | concur, seen 
Seo the true import of the ter in landing the сазе dropped it i places, а р eath, or pedir "d L 
en. T "peace pas the Exo на фо? 4 and most of the pasta had floated out; wee | destroyed, from no m cause than i 
Ü О wW. 
purposely withheld as being injurious, or vue Eur cir the e two were among t he number recove red, but more | le = thick upon the o ет and I b 
poverty. If the former, then high farming as applicable to only to obtain durable s 
Cotton must be very different from what we understand it to 2 possessed only two or three broken | posed places, is in the first place nev 
на qun. we apply it to our root crops. But ЗЫП it may 
n Et j 
Re etm ve me i Pech тар иеа т maddy Nx ту the stem of the е em Mr. Brown says in * The Fo: 
ean the h Жылу 
whole rotation of -tha farm. Be that as it may, an application | "49 le and there was mot 1 lantation in IT 1 be 
it m gi mias Cotton though not, particularly у dainty likes a | but w maged. aren raje often teaches | hundred. yards wide in the narrowesi "й 
80! surely can, throug e combined operati t ; 
guten, dagricultiral skill andis ias combined operations of | us Seed co and it was so in this case, Asa far wrong; and secondly, eep 
по 4 
xpe р ME forlorn hope I took one of these De = laid it upon | apart that their branches shall ey 
occas ed th ve p eir branches s Те pd 
А climate, diferent СТЯ doo aes а рап of very sandy peat, plunged it bottom. | another, ns Mr. Darling advises, i 
у ri i м ] 
кшн ын» je nre uch being the case, | heat, and covered with a bell ac "As muc Wa wc ish in УА А: Б Mr. Darling's > 
place n 
way; but in i 2 CN d X trees уы 15 ог 20 years dd to mark e such o of th 
farms : d ttle rees ill 
m: in e с 
worth 20s. or 30s. the асте. Without аи А. m.|tuberances which were rapidly d véloped- into Ше whole space, and then to keep cutting 7 
mendations being true to the letter, I have по hesitation im d eis „та few weeks: more the forwa rdest down the е йере trees only just 801 
accepting them as near enough the truth to show the high th НАЙ Were injuriously press upon "e 
estimation in which the men spoken Е аге held br their skill == tandards, whilst я" 4 the same time the 
. Тһеѕе then are t d F тузе Ср i 
wanted to initiate the scientific culture of tho Cotton A piat: TIT Thes ндн тер аге тен ffy, and require | possible sh dtr. I have done this with 
India: men able tot ch, but still 1 not too prou toi ke lessons ФЕ, deal of attention, so that a few of them died before | know no other way of obtain ning the 
len something den rcc Matar ouble Ачы study required redto loud | we hit upon the right mode of treating. These young | C. W. тер nd, Hilde 
it from even the despised H Ryot. Hitherto the nature sr nts are соте red on the upper side w nk 
ot Indian 1 land tenures i» een ы to ART a irs; these are lost as the plant advances, and насаа 
her smooth e first, or beco: 
et 
o 
e 
Ni 
Ф 
Юю 
^ 
4 
A 
РА 
$gEE 
Es 
Ф 
= 
E 
c liil adult Jen v are eit from th t, me | therefrom by the Druids of Gaul, 
Uie hat occupation, ddr ES S. ers of the Phyllagathis| better known to the 
| of Euro- | аге vua; and of a bright rose colour; there are во | while it was or their write 
Азас еу 4 many new names for col of this kind, that-I am | account of 1 the habits of one 
chine Europeans can | afraid to give it a name; perhaps ex the |o ther. n 
melled right of | tint of th grin Pretty as they are, - afew|  Sowle —This is more usually called in 
aeq land 
prre rim his pro Operty according to his own taney: of them open: me, mi; rB 
сара зву сар пон Iocaté where he pleases, farm hisown land, | with the Tess gie nce cut away the pen inal | found in yc né 
p machinery ne vi оны! enough to clean sni bale al sre 
1t is the Ulva lactuca 
nd is consid 
the cotton grown within 20 miles of n. éhter into contracts - eed mid head pf flowers. It is possible that if this | some e persons 
e Cotton s " 
Ww 
z per gathering Seaweed.— Can 
during the buds; s far as we have seen at present the plant seems | Co терени define the D of ue erst 
ny hundreds | t0 exhaust itself he ei by flowering, and Bairo to seawee ed? of th 
overs t : : ects of. 
h 
make hi he gardens a 
is Cotton for phyllums, . magnificum ; but the Ас ofthat|is no small privilege ; 
s Indigo, сас is still a character by M it stands unique | doubt as to wbo have the right 
E foliag , Bu he Phyllaga s the colourin ng of | succeeded to an allotment в 
у the detac 
lses, of quick maturity, |1 7 
er 
furnishing am upp } it} talli 1s d ed X 
g өтү enriching the lustre, d a lower side is crimson, med only fault n o gath r 
» m es, t Teque О |. with which the v arp can ty charged, to my himself нй right. Aeg o on t ben 
= nager ent ano wledge, iris dor iti hs E Ue Be not m M xem. but those who Өн ( 
то of а few | stemi enong - va Veientes ч. for view of v 
vam DEP Ex LET i ride r 18 i above the said that a landowner is bounded by Май 
was yearly improving іп ede f . | Surface of the soil. рае by онр pea aste of | all beyond сыч claimed by the ware 
Cotton, like. - — cultivated plants, о wear: strength consequent upon the flowering, as I hav. аайдчбнү all S ik deposited by the 
