We have so frequently reverted to the cultivation of the 
Camellia, that we can add but little to that which we have 
before given. They are, in truth, very easy to manage, the 
main points to be careful about being a nice rapid growth 
when they have done flowering, with abundance of syringing, 
and a gradual hardening in the open air, or under tiffany; the 
intrusion of worms into the pot must be carefully guarded 
against, as derangement in the drainage is thereby caused, and 
this will cause the bloom-buds to fall off without coming to 
maturity, a frequent source of disappointment to growers, and 
more generally attributable to this than to any other cause. 
