THE LADIES MAGAZINE OF GARDENING. 1 77 
eighty to the cast, which are called thumbs, and are one and a half inches 
in diameter and two inches deep. 
The other kinds of flower-pot are the store-pot, which is broad and 
flat-bottomed, and is used for striking cuttings, or raising seedlings in ; 
the bulb-pot, which is narrower and deeper than usual; the aquatic 
pot, which has no holes in the bottom or sides; the pot for marsh 
plants, which has three or four small holes in the sides, about one-third 
of the depth from its bottom, this depth being filled with gravel, and the 
Fi g- 49 - Fig. 50. 
DOUBLE FLOWER-POT. PLAN OF DOUBLE FLOWER-POT. 
remainder with soil, and the pot plunged in a deep saucer, kept full of 
water; and the double pot {Jigs. 49 and 50), which is used for plants in 
TWO FLOWER-POTS JOINED 
WITH CEMENT. 
Fig. 52. 
LANDSCAPE FLOWER-POT, 
balconies, and which may be imitated by one pot being placed within 
another, and the two joined together with cement (see jig. 51) ; the 
interstices in both cases being filled with moss. 
VOL. i.—NO. VI. 
A A 
