. The Gardeners' Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette . JUL,- m in your columns, were written rather prematurely, par-ticularly as the writers of them had only one seasonsexperienceof the plants. Their season of usefulnesshadnotarrived at the dates of some of them. Their perfectionand usefulness can be best appreciated when other gre< nshave vanished from wet, frost, and hardship of weather—then and then only can the real utility of, and benefitto be derived from this Kale be fully known and C. Jjyons, Ledestown, Mullingar, Ireland. [Theabove representation was engraved from a photo


. The Gardeners' Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette . JUL,- m in your columns, were written rather prematurely, par-ticularly as the writers of them had only one seasonsexperienceof the plants. Their season of usefulnesshadnotarrived at the dates of some of them. Their perfectionand usefulness can be best appreciated when other gre< nshave vanished from wet, frost, and hardship of weather—then and then only can the real utility of, and benefitto be derived from this Kale be fully known and C. Jjyons, Ledestown, Mullingar, Ireland. [Theabove representation was engraved from a photograph ofa fine plant of this Kale shown the other day to the Hor-ticultural Society in Regent Street. It measured 4 feet inheight from the surface of the pot, and was 2 ft. 1 in. in cir-cumference round the stem, sprouts and all. The totalnumber of the latter was 64. This was one of themost perfect specimens of this in all respects excellentwinter green that we have yet seen.] Wonderful Pox Tree.—An explanation of this wonder might have been eas


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecad, booksubjecthorticulture, bookyear1859