384 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Arum 28, 1860. 
re — -yi elegans, dealb 
| tk or sheltered in warm corners s they were in | time.—Acacia pen eal ata, | lone 
EE arm a np sige 5 a thick fleshy | full growth, a and therefore ersen sensitive t sima glauca, Bathesiana, ver ticillata, tris bas 
oe aa See Poa ‘a erar seis the ordinary | fro Where on the con mtrary the same kinds | Cyclops, mollissima, n albicans ; Aralia tri 
pileus, very unlike in na los ection we | of Stine were in bleak places, or where the | foliata, aggrifica (?), and 
cultiva ated Mushroom. On ser insp bd li AS 
e slightly excited, and suffered | Araucaria Bidwillii, excelsa, Cunnin h 
as far as = know new in the history of Mash woo! Eey yar) aly ee thi manner that it would glauca, and Braziliensis ; Hakea ibby ip 
cltivati f thi osed vee seem rene e for sucha tree as Cu upressus Lambert- | cristata, Abelia uniflora, Habrotham 
A single —- kee i ad heh k i a to haye remain ned u ntou T in nne cold clay | Aspidistra variegata, Beaufortia 
E (wee Bearing Dral a i PEN a pe Loddatt d y ill ed ta the Burchellia capensis, Brachysema 
Ry tatocted wS waa vi form cate pe p mue h better ‘climat we. rth | Dr: eres a Baoa , ferrea, and fr gran- 
a nte ls biri perron arts rs on apie B inquiring whether all the aeih ng re Sba tissima ; ee ae Sede [ysoreana 
tion that the peo altar appearances are due to the | concerning the wih ie a E inia a spinosa Franeisoea latib 
reais iti | i ith “ ene ese causes. = onta: ; ià 
presence of a parasitic fierar A whose spawn per- | not be cat kee with r “ie a 
. i Oe tana i ed by repeated | geria rosea, Maurandia, Cobæa, Lophos 
are entirely devoid of the ime dere trat i Pia Vh s ia soertained t A oul “have Bignonia jasminoides, capreolata a 
e a gr: and pion nee little s RTA anticipated the oka indiferens, ‘to cold of nsis; Kennedya Marryattæ and co 
mass, in whio d 2 i pa the pro b fruit | Skimmia japonica, a shrub nearly related to the Piian grandiflora, speciosa, and Ke yheri; fi 
saes mili. be As the age saing still oR range and Lemon trees, every one of whose|tospermum bullatum, Myrica e dulis, 
UR NAAA p on wi hat, the young | | kindred is, as far a we know, i incapable of bearing | Bealii and nepaulensis, Pinus longifolia and canat 
condition, pee? i yian it is dypere this climate ? Yet we have no report against t at | riensis, several varieties of Mexican Pines 
a= act but in ‘all probability i yp fal Re Shy shu but every one bears witness | from seed three years old; Grevillea rob ; 
R wabicr yi to i again, how entirely inex- | flexuosa, and Manglesii; Russellia juncea, Sollya 
rarely ‘observed m f p which is caused by this | ie is s the pr ia mentioned by Mr. STANDISH | Drummondi, Swainsona TTE Y trelitzia Teginge 
Sehen ees f the lave enus e Celine Forestier Noisette Face which stood | Plumbago capensis, Templetoni a glauca, Tritoma 
= pet diet = re gto s poten m beata K dives untouched and hale amidst a universal | Uvaria, ome collection fa noeaent ronnie 
3 | destruction of other Noisettes us speci &e. ; Melocactus, Epiphyllum, 
oon cement cite Pernt pied rr to a wi so be found that among Be a ias &o, ; different Sikkim Rhododendrons, such 
dist uae cade & in comparatively moder some will be quite hardy, while others are consti- | Edgeworthii, &e., wit 1 an oe greenhouse 
account of the total obliteration of the ails dated |tutionally tender. To t heart we have often | and hothouse he pr ii a : ; a ates 
by the parasite. Those who are possessed of|referred on former ailai it is now o gardeners un = ee e ig est interest, 
SOWERBY’s work may refer to t. 402, Merulius ascertained that Fortune’s Yalow” is more hardy confirming My T e "e: at we at so often 
helvelloides, and t. 153, Helvella infundibuliformis, | than Hollies and Ae Another eain a he urged as to the folly of keeping up a high tempera- 
bo i owe their origin to the; double c: n 
he e e r 
/ iti i ted, ba been sent us by a pie rre cane plants. Although the thermometer fell to 21° 
same parasite, Hypocrea lateritia, The milky | unacquain t l p 
ae ae in our woods are especially subject to ‘this dent at Aimes Lodge, Asoog, Bute by peterin o in aen E BE afterwards vegetation was covered 
itations, its danger augmented by a rapid thaw 
Th site, however, is not perfectly developed | And what does he write of this Faia visitations, 1 a ray 
ilean | C wince be peculi arly favour, nd| ‘It is the first flower paaa this season from oo right ot yet se fin aes: — 
earache direte i a Calia trog eco et borde [Dunc Coat a 
often concealed. flower garden here It was planted here as a h > 
Ti theo case before us we individual of a large | naira dkoat 15 5 years ago, when it was 3 feet hee BA a great va oa rd 
group seems equally affected, and that from the| high, It is now 10 feet high by 28 feet in circum- | Cape, ty bs iaaa ‘as As rs gr KA peria of 
earliest stage of growth. To attempt any pallia- foxuness and during that time it has never had this kin is solute 7 Ne njured. 
is ple 
d seem inclined to spread, we G ave th SA 
‘vic eye valde only the complete destruction of the | in. succession till the middle of June, It is quite lof pee plants; for it must 
be 
i i f the survivors 
as possible, but should s sngee t that/ as hardy with me as the Portugal Laurel or Sweet | that in the Cannes garden many 0 
the swhole sh houl at once burnt, ie to | Bay, perhaps more so, as I have never lost a shoot | Were What are called s fi wore Se e 
prevent if possible the contamination of thir crops. | either from the frost or from the north-east wind | Abutilons, Dracænas, heal a dal ens would 
The effect of the spawn of parasitic hes in| to which one side of it is epee blowing for 4|@nd even Cobæa scandens, the sear 
ing the tissues of a. srai ó and | miles‘ unbroken across sea. Its flowering | ¢xpect to bear such inclement 
me distorted is well exhibited in the rere seems to depend more on the heat of the =— us 
Anemone, where the Ab which will ultimately | summer than n upon the UAL Menrtrne of the HORTICULTURA 
bear the pretty Æcidium, which is so destructive | new in general, Camellia flowers rs produced it in the 
ifi 
to these plants, may be distinguished from their | open. air insignificant, however healthy the 
earliest stage of growth. The distortion, however, foliage Such however was by no means the case | Theatre of the sae Mi amet re Tuesday 
produced in this case is nothing to what takes with ibe Rothesay specimen ür o'clock NESFIELD n, 
place in the United States in branches of Elder| © While writing upon t this s ubj ect, a letter reached i 
7 i rls the tii fromm 1 sf Llanover o r, containing | p 
ap and causes them to swell, till they have not| some very- interesting informatión oradeni ing the | , 
the Apua resemblance to their normal con - | effects of the winter upon the large collection of | ® ee ‘the e meeting room urse 
ditio exotics cultivated in the garden at se Chateau St. | The models of ia a size of those 
"We trust th that the ss toate an isolated Géo es, at Cannes in the — aiio he rated he Haw M azesty's Comm mmissioners, 
case, and he we shall hear no more of it, for | residence origiiätly bu uilt by Sir Her fiat Taylor. | ill also be open y nto: inspertion. iw he grounds of 
sst e present proprietor, a French gentleman oe | the Depar: all 
es iakon, growers would be enormo i en, has i lan The orig of ae new garden will be 0 to 
fr Fellows, Debenture holders, and ivory ti 
m 
egg A judge froits the epselauana Bofors NA 7 
er we may judge from the specimens before but owing ti 
ts, they would be absolutely intolerable M. J.-B. EURIE 
‘ giaa New Plants. 4 
ata ao EEES tits 7a i Eia m rek which you desiro 236. Vacorsrom moGosua. | Hooker fet T, Thomsos 
' foliosis, 
A sum ; ramulis tomentosis squa atis interra Pa sarati 
neral facts of some importance n | souti in C er ule a 
elicited. ayo has been more especially made | and o1 ight the st pn ter fell to 4° eampanulato laciniis ov: í ok ovario 
ol same species of plant, exposed to the mtr o veer ro (21° Fahr.); hoavyrain immediately a sfabinflata 5-den tad 
ry irade of o soo Tg m rished in some parca followed, rae” freezing as it fe ll, covered the hrs oculari polyspermo 
An survive in oth 
to the 
, although the dead and folia e with i , and this was again saosoodo dMi A beautiful shrub exhibited t piin aT 
living grew within a few yards of one another. | | -i ie 'a ee pw, car and bright sun, Tink A So PET. 
atoning to complete the T of destruction. | from the Khas n tes: ay a 
e. ; } i all the ts | Drs, er Mar 
immediately | that, in a yer arden neve p een killed ‘ietely down | at an elevation of from 
rt Day by ie po into fotti b w again prons se Nee it occupied stations a thousand fee! 
oe e influence of a north wall and o x Bes green bush, wi 
hance the nort their constitution was | Lis thie lea li j >, triangula! 
Depen, aine. In ree ae ow a Jaune | greater — of many I had considered tender, | € changing to deep red, with cross een 
to re- | “No. 1. List of Plants killed back by sea rm like those of Thibaudia macrantha ofthe 
a aah the ett Dinata is said | but now seine up x Thibeudi # 
aes Neither in Fo gh ae place e | Gesneras, a hard ean ignea, aliio: | pe ibaudia 
ate Sree although’ in E in alleen ieee 
was half kille 
z 
a 
$ 
2: 
= 
| 
© 
3 
2 
a 
ES 
E 
BE 
o 
2§ 
de a ru nd a 
s| gata, Hexacentris koaia ea, Piik Im compe oe | ding veo e mic ie 
Bugén nie, Buddlea nepalensis, and Plum inted out. It i-t true that the name Ag®P pist 
| been p the Thibaudias of East Indian rinctic® 
u No. 2, Plants perfectly uninjured up to this 
