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^IBHARY 
 
 OFTHw 
 
 
THE EHODODENDRON 
 
 "AMERICAN PLANTS." 
 
THE RHODODENDRON 
 
 '- AMERICAN PLANTS." 
 
 A TREATISE ON THE CULTURE, PROPAGATION, AND 
 SPECIES OF THE RHODODENDRON; 
 
 OCLTORAL XOTES UPON OTHER PLANTS WHICH THRIVE UXDER 
 
 LIKE TREATMENT, AND DESCBIPTIONS OF SPECIES AND 
 
 VAKIETIES; WITH A CHAPTER UPON HERBACEOUS 
 
 PLANTS REQUIRING SIMILAR CULTURR. 
 
 EDWARD SPRAGUE RAND, JR., 
 
 ADTHOK OF "FLOWERS FOR THE PAHLOK AND GARDEN;" "GARDEN FL0WEE3;' 
 "BLLBSi" " SEVE.NTV-FIVE FLOWERS." 
 
 NEW YORK: 
 
 PUBLISIIKD r.Y IIURD AND IIOUGriTOX. 
 
 €ambriOgc : C^e lUfacriSitfc i3rc^«f. 
 
 1876. 
 
Entered accoramg to Act ot Congress, in the year 1871, by 
 
 EDWAHD SPEAGUB RAND, JR. 
 
 Ill the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. 
 
 RIVERSIDE, Cambridge: 
 
 PRINTED BT H. 0. nOUGHTOX AND COMPAST 
 
HENRY AYINTHROP SARGENT 
 
 H. HOLLIS HUNNEWELL, 
 
 ro WHOM A5LERICAN HORTICULTUEK IS SO LARGELY INDEBTED, 
 XSD TTUO FOLLY APPRECIATE THE BEAUTIES OF 
 
 " Jimcritau IJlants," 
 
 THIS VOLUME IS CORDIALLY INSCRIBED. 
 
 /^^J 
 
PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. 
 
 T~\URING the five years which have elapsod 
 -*— ^ since the publication of the first edition of 
 " Rhododendrons," increased attention has been 
 paid to the cultivation of American Plants. A few 
 years since we seldom found rhododendrons and 
 azaleas in the garden as shrubbery ; now they are 
 often seen and greatly appreciated. The culture of 
 these plants is, however, still in its infancy, and each 
 year is witnessing increasing interest in the subject. 
 
 While a new edition of '" Rhododendrons " is de- 
 manded, there is, however, little the author can add 
 to the subject matter. 
 
 or new varieties, we find in the catalogues of 
 English and continental growers the usual abun- 
 dance, but we have yet to see any which' are de- 
 cidedly better for general culture than those we 
 have already recommended. 
 
 The greater part of those which have attracted 
 attention abroad are seedlings, with a strong ad- 
 
 If^d 
 
viii PEEFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. 
 
 mixture of the blood of the Asiatic species and 
 varieties ; to this they owe their vivid color, but 
 this same cause unfits them for open air culture in 
 our climate, as they are of too delicate a constitution 
 to withstand the severity of our winters, or flower 
 too early for our uncertain springs. In greenhouse 
 varieties, some fine hybrids have been raised in the 
 Sikkim class. These are well worthy of cultiva- 
 tion where there is sufficient room under glass, and 
 require only the general culture given camellias, 
 thriving in the same temperature. In this country, 
 while many seedHngs have been produced, we have 
 seen none superior in form or color to the old varie- 
 ties. This superiority we can hardly hope for, but 
 we may attain by judicious hybridization increased 
 hardiness, larger foliage, and greater substance of 
 flower. 
 
 It is as yet too early to decide whether in these 
 respects American seedlings are acquisitions. 
 
 In Azaleas there has been some progress. Many 
 seedlings liave been raised from Azalea mollis, a 
 well known Japanese species, which for size and 
 color of flower and floriferous quality are decided 
 acquisitions. These seedlings will probably prove 
 hardy, though there is danger of the flower-buds 
 being killed in severe winters. As far as tried, the 
 plants seem to have a good constitution, although it 
 is yet too soon to speak confidently as to their hardi- 
 
PRKFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. IX 
 
 ness. Some of these varieties are beautifully figured 
 in " Flore des Serres," vol. 19, plates 177 to 180. 
 Perhaps the great value of these seedlings will be for 
 forcing for conservatory decoration, where their 
 bright color and free flowering habit will render 
 them favorites. 
 
 The winter of 1871-2, will long be remembered 
 by horticulturists, for the unparalleled destruction of 
 vegetable life. The causes which led to this, must 
 forever remain a mystery, though the facts of cli- 
 matic temperature, drought, and rain-fall for that 
 season, are well set forth in the elaborate report of 
 a committee of the Massachusetts Horticultural 
 Society, printed with the transactions of 1872. 
 
 The enumeration of plants appended to this re- 
 port, with statements of how they were affected in 
 different localities, is of great value in determining 
 the comparative hardiness of varieties. 
 
 As might be expected, rhododendrons and Ameri- 
 can plants suffered severely. At Glen Ridge, we car- 
 ried off cart-loads of dead plants, and the spring of 
 1872 found us almost ready to abandon the culture 
 of rhododendrons. Yet the loss was soon made good 
 by the vigorous growth of the survivors, and now 
 it is hard to tell where a plant was lost. 
 
 Azaleas had all their flower-buds killed, but the 
 plants were generally uninjured, and bloomed finely 
 the following year. 
 
X PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. 
 
 A great impetus was given to rlKjJodendron 
 culture by the magnificent exliibition made by H. 
 Hollis Hunnewell, Esq., on Boston Common in 
 June, 1873. For those who were fortunate 
 enough to see the masses of azaleas and rhododen- 
 drons then exhibited, no description will be neces- 
 sary, and to others, we cannot give an idea of the 
 beauty of the flowers and the perfection of the ar- 
 rangement. The plants were removed from the 
 garden, carted to Boston Common, planted in 
 masses, remained there until out of bloom, were 
 replanted at Wellesley, and when, in the following 
 autumn, we examined them, we could not distinguish 
 those which had been removed, from those which 
 had flowered where they had grown for years.. 
 
 The success of this first American exhibition of 
 rhododendrons leads us to the conclusion that the 
 plants are of far easier management than we had 
 supposed, and possess a tenacity of life superior to 
 most garden shrubs. 
 
 A collection of rhododendrons is still expensive ; 
 the unjust and oppressive duty is still imposed on 
 importations, and although plants are cheap in 
 England, the addition of freight and duty to first 
 cost, makes them expensive here. It is, however, 
 far better to buy a few good sized plants of hardy 
 varieties, than many small plants ; the former give 
 immediate results, and are just as easily and safely 
 transplanted. 
 
PREFACE TO THE FOURTH KDITIOX. XI 
 
 To cultural directions we have little to add. A 
 well made rhododendron-bed will need no renovat- 
 ing in a score of years : but if the plants seem to 
 lack nourishment, well rotted" cow manure may be 
 applied with beneficial result. 
 
 As we said years ago, so now, when the promise 
 of bloom for the coming year is greater than ever 
 before, we say to all lovers of flowers, " plant rho- 
 dodendrons." 
 
 Glex Hidge, Jaiiuan/, 1876. 
 
 7- ^\c 
 
 ¥ 
 
INTRODUCTION. 
 
 npHE object of the present volume is to introduce 
 to pojmlar notice a class of plants which, in 
 England, forms one of the most attractive orna- 
 ments of the garden. They are commonlj known 
 as " American Plants; " as the earliest known Rho- 
 dodendrons, the Kalmias, and some of the Azaleas, 
 are natives of this continent. The name lias, how- 
 ever, been extended to embrace many other plants 
 that require the same general culture, but which 
 are not indigenous to America. 
 
 It is a singular and most unaccountable fact that 
 these plants are in this country but little known in 
 cultivation. 
 
 The hillsides, from Massachusetts to Virginia, 
 are glorious masses of the Mountain Laurel (Kal- 
 mia) ; and all through the Middle States, and up 
 the slopes of the Alleghanies, we find thousands of 
 acres of the Rose Bay, or " Great Laurel " (Rhodo- 
 
XIV INTRODUCTION. 
 
 denclron). Yet seldom is a plant of either to be 
 found in the garden ! There is a popular belief that 
 these plants " cannot be cultivated." 
 
 In spring -we eagerly buy the spicy blossoms of 
 the May Flower (Epigeea), yet never think we 
 may have it blooming in perfection in our shrub- 
 beries. 
 
 Popular opinion says it " cannot be grown in 
 gardens ; " and there we rest, without trying the 
 .experiment. 
 
 To show that these plants can be grown as easily 
 as any others is the purpose in the following pages. 
 
 The species we may find wild in our woods are 
 beautiful enough to merit every attention, but we 
 .arc by no means limited to these. 
 
 The skill of the hybridist, exercised during a score 
 of years, has created a wealth of floral beauty in 
 Rhododendrons and Azaleas. 
 
 We may have masses of bloom of almost any 
 color and shade, and combinations and contrasts 
 innumerable. 
 
 To those who have seen the magnificent displays 
 of these plants at Wodenethe, the charming resi- 
 dence of H. W. Sargent, or at TVellesley, the magni- 
 ficent estate of H. HoUis Hunhewell, no word of 
 ours in praise of their beauty will be needed. 
 
 In our own culture, at Glen Ridge, we have not 
 been unsuccessful ; and although our experience is 
 
INTRODUCTION. XV 
 
 liinitcd to the past ten years, the results liavc been 
 so eminently satisfactory as to excite most sanguine 
 hopes for the future. 
 
 Our collection of hybrid varieties of Catawbicnse 
 Rhododendrons is probably larger than any in the 
 country, and is yearly largely increased for the pur- 
 pose of experimenting as to their hardiness. 
 
 These plants are attractive at all seasons : in 
 flower they are magnificent, in foliage they excel 
 any evergreen. 
 
 They can be grown as easily as lilacs, and bloom 
 quite as freely. 
 
 In the arrangement of the following pages, Part I. 
 is purely cultural ; Part II. comprises a list of the 
 species of Rhododendron, and also a selection of 
 hybrid Catawbiense varieties. To give a full list of 
 these latter would be almost impossible : some Eng- 
 lish catalogues contain hundreds of varieties, and 
 often but very few of these will be common to any 
 two catalogues. 
 
 We have in every case, where possible, referred to 
 a colored illustration of the flower, where one was 
 to be found in any book generally accessible ; and 
 have, in the list of books quoted, stated where in 
 tliis vicinity they could be found. 
 
 Part III. treats of Azaleas, Kalmias, and other 
 l)lants which resemble Rhododendrons, and thrive 
 under similar culture. This list has been extended 
 
Xvi INTRODUCTION. 
 
 to include many plants not generally known, and 
 seldom found in gardens. Of most of these we 
 write from experience, and can urge their cultiva- 
 tion. Many are low- growing, and suited for an 
 undergrowth in shrubberies, or as a covering for 
 the surface soil in Rhododendron-beds. 
 
 All are very desirable, and, if not to be obtained 
 in this country, can be easily imported with but 
 little expense. 
 
 In Part IV. we have given brief descriptions of 
 plants which grow well in Rhododendron-beds. 
 
 We would strongly urge their cultivation, as they 
 add much to the attractions of the shrubbery ; and 
 thus wc are enabled to grow many botanical treas- 
 ures which never find place in the herbaceous 
 border. 
 
 This chapter is, however, only a condensotion of 
 a portion of a volume on " Herbaceous Plants," 
 which we hope soon to lay before the public. 
 
 To all who would obtain large floral results, with 
 but little effort, we would say : " Grow Rhododen- 
 drons, and other American Plants : they are always 
 beautiful, pleasing alike in evergreen foliage and in 
 gorgeous bloom," 
 
 Glen Ridge, February, 1871. 
 
1?^' 
 
 >»^/ j^a^^^^^ 
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 Dedication v 
 
 Pheface to Fouutii Edition' vii 
 
 Intkoductiox . xiii 
 
 List of Botanical Wohks referkkd to . . . xxi 
 
 P A U T I. 
 
 CULTURE OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 Preparation of Soil. Planting. Mulching. Manuring. Prun- 
 ing. Transplanting. Treatment after Flowering. Diseases. 
 Insect Enemies. Winter Protection. Importing and Pro- 
 curing Plants. Standard Rhododendrons. Dwarf Rhodo- 
 dendrons 3-28 
 
 CHAPTER II. . 
 
 Indoor Culture. Rhododendron Houses. Forcing. As Par- 
 lor Plants 29-32 
 
CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER III. 
 
 Propagation. Layers. Cuttings. Inarching. .Seed. Hybrid- 
 ization 33-39 
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 
 Comparative Hardiness. Houses for Winter Protection. 
 
 Groupi 
 
 39-48 \ 
 
 PART II. 
 
 DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron ponticum and varieties. Rhododendron maxi- 
 mum and varieties. R. daui-icum. R. californicum. R. 
 arboreum and varieties. R. albiflorum. R. anthopogon. 
 R. campanulatum. R. caucasicum and varieties. R. chry- 
 santhum. R. punctatum. R. liirsutum. R. ferrugineum. 
 R. lapponicum. R. kamtschaticum. R. chamsecistus. Sikkim 
 Rhododendrons. R. Dalhousias. R. barbatum. R.. lanci- 
 foliura. R. Wallichii. R. Campbellias. R. Roylii. R. 
 cinnabarinum. R. elteagnoides. R. argenteum. R. Fal- 
 coneri. R. vaccinioides. R. niveum. R. obovatum. R. 
 lepidotum. R. Aucklandii. R. Thomsoni. R. pendukim. 
 R. pumikim. R. nodgsoiii. R. lanatuni. R. glaucum. R. 
 Maddeni. R. triflorum. R. setosum. R. Edgeworthi. R. 
 ajruginosum. R. sahgneum. R. ciliatum. R. fulgens. 
 R. nivale. R. virgatum. R. Wightii. R. camelliajflorum. 
 R. candelabrum. R. campylocarpum. R. Nilagiricum. 
 R. formosum. R. Gibsoni. R. javanicum. R. citrinuin. 
 R. jasminiflorum. R. ChampionaB. R. Farrerse. R. Met- 
 ternichi. R. album. R. Batemani. R. blandfordianum. 
 R. Boothii. R. Brookianum. R. calophyllum. R. graude. 
 
CONTENTS. XIX 
 
 R. GrilHtliianum. R. Hookcri. R. Kciidrickii. R. Keysii. 
 R. moulmaynense. R. Slioplieniii. R. Niittallii. R. 
 retusuin. R. Smithii. R. Vcichiamini. R. Windsorii. 
 R. Lobbianum. R. Thibaiulicnse. R. Fortuni. Hybrid 
 varieties. R. Aprilis. R. alstromei-ioides. R. Wilsoni. 
 R. precox. R. Prince of Wales (RoUinson's), R. carneum. 
 R. Cartoni. R. caucasicum arboreuin. R. Denisoni. R. 
 album speciosum. R. Sesterianum. R. Princess Alexandra. 
 R. Princess Helena. R. Princess Alice. R. Madame Van 
 Houtte. R. Othello (Van Houtte). R. Grand Due de 
 Bade. R. Madame Wagner. R. Madame Picouline. R. 
 omniguttatura. R. myrtifolluin. R. I'ragrans. R. bybrldum. 
 R. Govenianum. R. Torlonianum. R. arboreum cinnamo- 
 meum. R. Comtesse Ferdinand Visant. R. dapbnoides. 
 R. ovatum. R. Countess of Haddington. R. aurcum mag- 
 nificum. R. Catawbiense. Catawbiense Hybrids, List of 
 Select Varieties 49-110. 
 
 ^ PART III. 
 
 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 Plants thhiving under Similar Culture with Rhodo- 
 dendrons, COamONLY KNOWN AS " AMERICAN PLANTS."' 
 
 I. The Azalea, culture and species of. — H. The Rhodora. — 
 m. The Loiseleuria. — IV. TheKalniia. — V. The Ledum. 
 — VL The Leiophyllum. — VIL The Menziesia. — VHL 
 The Phyllodoce. — IX. TheCalluna.— X. The Gypsocallis. 
 —•XI. The Cassiope. — XII. The Arctostaphylos. — XIII. 
 The EpigiEa. — XIV. The Gaultheria. — XV. The Chio- 
 genes. — XVL The Linnsea. — XVII. The Mitchella. — 
 XVni. The Empetrum.— XIX. The Vaccineum. — XX. 
 The Leucothoe.— XXI. The Cassandra. — XXIL The 
 Zenobla. — XXIH. The Andromeda. — XXIV. The 
 
X CONTENTS. . 
 
 Daphne. — XXV. The Skhnmla. — XXVI. The Pernettya. 
 — XXVII. The Hypericum.— XXVIIL The Polygala.— 
 XXIX. The Pyrola. — XXX. The Moneses. — XXXI. 
 The Chimaphila 113-150 
 
 PA R T IV. 
 
 HERBACEOUS PLANTS ADAPTED FOR CULTURE 
 IN RHODODENDRON-BEDS. 
 
 I. The Hepatica. — II. The Sanguinaria. — III. The Jeffer- 
 sonia. — IV. The Caltha. — V. The Dentaria. — VI. The 
 Anemone. — Vn. The Claytonia. — VIII. The Scilla. — 
 IX. The Camassia. — X. The Oxalis. — XI. The Erythro- 
 nium. — Xn. The Arisffima. — XIII. The Pachysandra. — 
 XIV. The Dodecatheon.— XV. The Trientalis. — XVI. 
 The Mitella. — XVII. The Tiarella. —XVIII. The Helonias. 
 -XIX. The Clintoma.— XX. The Cornus. — XXI. The 
 Convallaria.— XXII. The Ficaria. —XXIII. The Raniin- 
 cuhis.— XXIV. The Hellebore.— XXV. The Ephnedium, 
 — XXVI. The Cvpripedium.— XXVII. The Trillium.— 
 XXVIII. The Lily 153-176 
 
LIST 
 
 ILLUSTRATED BOTANICAL WORKS REFERRED Ta 
 
 Abbreviations. 
 
 Bos. Atii.e Library of Boston Athen«um. 
 
 Bos. Pub. Lib. , . . Library of City of Boston. 
 
 Bos. Xat. His. Soc. . Library of Boston Society of Natural Histoiy. 
 
 E. S. R. Jr Library of Edw. S. Rand, Jr. 
 
 Mass. Hokt. Soc. . • Library of Jlassachusetts Horticultural Society. 
 
 Har. Col Library of Harvard College. 
 
 And. Rep. . . 
 
 Bartox, Fl. 
 
 Bartox, Med. . . 
 
 ANDREWS, The Botanist's Repository. 
 
 London, 1797-1811. 10 vols. 4to. 
 
 Col. PI. 1-664. 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 Barton, A Flora of North America. 
 
 Philadelphia, 1821-23. 3 vols. 4to. 
 
 Col. PI. 1-106. 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. ; Bos. Athaj. 
 Barton, Medical Botany of the 
 
 United States. Philadelphia, 1817- 
 
 18. 2 vols. 4to. Col. PI. 1-50. 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. ; Lib. E. S. R. 
 
 Jr. ; Bos. Athae. 
 
LIST OF WORKS REFERRED TO. 
 
 Bax. Brit. Bot. 
 
 Big. ]\lEr>. 
 
 Bot. ]\Lvg. . . 
 
 Bot. Reg. 
 
 Baxter, British Phaenogamous Bot- 
 any. London, 1834-43. 6 vols. 
 8vo. Col. PI. 1-509. 
 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. E. Jr, 
 
 BiGELOW, American Medical Botany. 
 Boston, 1817-20. 3 vols. 4to. 
 Col. PI. 1-60. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr.; Lib. Bos. Nat. 
 His. Soc. ; Bos. Atbae. 
 
 Curtis, Botanical Magazine. Lon- 
 don, 1783-1871. 96 vols. 8vo. 
 Series I. : vols. 1-53. 
 
 11. : vols. 63-70. • 
 ,, IIL : vols". 71-96 and con. 
 
 Col. PI. 1-5877. 
 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. R. 
 Jr. ; Lib. Bos. Nat. His. Soc. ; 
 Bos. Athaj. ; Bos. Pub. Lib. ; Har. 
 Col. 
 
 Edwards, The Botanical Register. 
 London, 1815-47. 33 vols. Royal 
 8vo. 
 
 Vols. 1-23. Col. PI. 1-2014. 
 
 Vol. 24. 1838. Col. PI. 1-68. 
 
 Vol. 25. 
 
 1839. „ 
 
 „ 1-69. 
 
 Vol. 26. 
 
 1840. „ 
 
 , 1-71. 
 
 Vol. 27. 
 
 1841. „ 
 
 , 1-70. 
 
 Vol. 28. 
 
 1842. „ 
 
 , 1-69. 
 
 Vol. 29. 
 
 1843. „ 
 
 , 1-66. 
 
 Vol. 30. 
 
 1844. „ 
 
 , 1-67. 
 
 Vol. 31. 
 
 1845. „ 
 
 , 1-69. 
 
 Vol. 32. 
 
 1846. „ 
 
 , 1-69. 
 
 Vol. 33. 
 
 1847. „ 
 
 , 1-70. 
 
 In all . . . 2702 plates. 
 Lib. of Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. 
 R. Jr. ; and Bos. Nat. His. Soc. ; 
 Bos. Pub. Lib. 
 
LIST OF WORKS REFERRED TO. XXlH 
 
 Eng. Bot Smith & SowKunv, English Botany. 
 
 London, 1790-1814. 3G vols. 8vo. 
 
 Col. PI. 1-2592. 
 Supplement by Hooker. London, 
 
 1831-55. 5 vols. Col. PI. 2593- 
 
 2995. 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. 
 New Edition, arranged according to 
 
 natural system. London, 1863-70. 
 
 Vols. 1-10, and continued. Royal 
 
 8vo. Col. PI. 1-1545. 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 Fl. pes Ser. . . . V^vx HouTTE, Flore dcs Serres et 
 
 d'is Jardins de TEurope. 18 vols. 
 
 Gand, 1845-1871, and continued. 
 
 Col. PI. 1-1926. 
 Lib. jNIass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. R. Jr. 
 Fl. 'Ma.g Moore, The Floral Magazine. Lon- 
 don, 1861-71. 9 vols. 8vo. Col. 
 
 PL 1-512, and continued. 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. andE. S. R. Jr. 
 Florist The Florist. 1st Series. London, 
 
 1848-62. 14 vols. 12mo. Col. PI.— 
 
 2d Series. London, 1862-67. 6 vols. 
 
 Royal 8vo. 144 Col. PL — 3d 
 
 Series. 1868-71, and continued. 
 
 3 vols. Royal 8vo. 36 Col. PL 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. andE. S. R. Jr. 
 Hen. Lllus. Bou. . Hexdersox, The Illustrated Bou- 
 quet. London, 1857-64. 3 vols. 
 
 4to. CoL PL 1-85. 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. 
 Hook. Ex Hooker, Exotic Flora. Edinburgh, 
 
 1823-27. 3 vols. 8vo. Col. PL 
 
 1-232. 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. ; Bos. Nat. 
 
 His. Soc. ; Bos. Pub. Lib. 
 
LIST OF WORKS REFEKRED TO. 
 
 [Look. Fl. Bor. Aji. 
 
 Hook. Ehod. 
 
 IXLUS. HORT. . 
 
 Lem, Jar. . . 
 
 LODD. C^VB. 
 
 Maud. Box. 
 
 Mich. Arb. . . 
 
 Hooker, Flora Boi-eali-Americana. 
 Loudon, 1833-40. 2- vols. 4to. 
 PI. 1-238. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. ; Bos. Nat. His. 
 Soc. ; Bos. Pub. Lib. ; Bos. Athae. 
 
 Joseph D. Hooker, The Rhododen- 
 drons of Sikkiiu Himalaya. Lon- 
 don, 1849-55. ivol. foUo. PL 1-30. 
 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. E. 
 Jr. ; Bos. Nat. His. Soc. 
 
 Lemaire, L'lUustration Horticole. 
 Gand, 1854-71. 17 vols. 8vo. 
 1st Series, vols. 1-10, 1854-G3. 
 Col. PI. 1-386. 2d Series, vols. 
 11-17, and continued. Col. PI, 
 387-550. 
 
 Lib. Mass. Hoi-t. Soc. and E. S. R. Jr. 
 
 Lemaire, Le Jardin Fleuriste. Gand, 
 1851-54. 4 vols. 8vo. Col. PI. 
 1-430. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 
 LoDDiGE, ' The Botanical Cabinet. 
 London, 1818-33. 20 vols. L. P 
 square Sto. Col. PI. 1-2000. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. ; Lib. Har. Col. ; 
 Bos. Pub. Lib. 
 
 Maund, The Botanist. London, 1839- 
 44. 5 vols. L. P. smaU 4to. Col. 
 PI. 1-250. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 
 MiCHAUX, The North American 
 Sylva. Philadelphia, 1857. 3 vols. 
 L. P. Royal 8vo. Col. PI. 1-156. 
 Continued by Nuttall, 3 vols, uni- 
 form with above. Col. PI. 1-121. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. ; Mass. Hort. Soc. ; 
 Bos. Soc. Nat. His.; Bos. Pub. 
 Lib. : Bos, Athaa. 
 
LIST OF WORKS REFERRED TO. 
 
 -\.\V 
 
 Pvx Fl G ... PaxtOX, The Flower Garden. Lon- 
 tlcn, 1850-53. 3 vols. 4to. Col. 
 ri. 1-lOG. 
 Lib. Mass. Ilort. Soc. aiulE. S. R. Jr. 
 Pvx MvG Paxtox, Magazine of Botany. Lon- 
 don, 1834-19. 16 vols. Svo. Col. 
 Pi. 48 in each vol., in all 7G8. 
 Lib. Mass. Hovt. Soc. and E. S. R. 
 Jr. ; Bos. Atlise. * 
 PuKSii Fl . . . . PuBSii, Flora Americaj Septentrion- 
 alis. London, 1814. 2 vols. Svo. 
 24 plain and colored plates. 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 
 Eev IIout Revue Hortlcole. Paris, 1855-71, 
 
 and continued. 16 vols. 1855-65, 
 24 colored plates in each vol. ; 
 1865-71, 52 colored plates in each 
 vol. 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. R. Jr. 
 SiEB Fl Jap.. . . Siecold, Flora Japonica. 2 vols. 
 
 PI. 1-127. 
 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. R. Jr. 
 
 Vol. II. do. 1870. PI. 128-150. 
 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. 
 Steph. Med. . . • Stephenson, Medical Botany. Lon- 
 don, 1834-36. 3 vols. 8vo. Col. 
 PI. 1-185. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 
 Sweet Fl G. . . Sweet, The British Flower Garden. 
 Sweet. 1l. ^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^_^^^ ^ ^.^j^_ g^^ 
 
 Col. PI. 1-300. — 2d Series. Lon- 
 don, 1831-38. 4 vols. Svo. Col. 
 PI. 1-452. 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. R. 
 Jr. : Bos. Pub. Lib. 
 
LIST OF WOKKS REFERRED TO. 
 
 ToRR. N. Y. . . 
 
 Wight, Ic. 
 
 Sweet, Oex. G. . . Sweet, The Ornamental Flower Gar- 
 den. London, 1854. 4 vols. 8vo. 
 Col. PI. 288. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 
 ToRREY, Flora of the State of New 
 York. Albany, 1843. 2 vols. 4to. 
 Col. PI. 1-161. 
 
 Lib. E. S. E. Jr. 
 
 Wight, Icones Plantarum Indiae 
 Orientalis. Madras, 1838-53. 6 
 vols. 4to. PI. 1-2101. 
 
 Lib. Mass. Hort. Soc. and E. S. R. Jr. 
 Wight, III. , . . Wight, Illustrations of Indian Bot- 
 any. INIadras, 1838-48. 2 vols. 
 4to. Col. PI. 1-182. 
 
 Lib. E. S. R. Jr. 
 Wood. Med. . . . Woodville, Medical Botany. Lon- 
 don, 1832. 5 vols. 4to. Vols. 1-4, 
 Col. PI. 1-274; vol. 5, Col. PI. 
 1-39. 
 
 ^^ 
 
PART 1. 
 
 CULTURE OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
THE EHODODENDEON. 
 
 PART I. 
 
 OULTUIIE OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 PREPARATION OF THE SOIL. 
 
 'T^HE highest aim in the cultivation of a plant is 
 -^ to grow it in such a manner as to attain the 
 most perfect results. Careless culture, though some- 
 times partially successful, in most cases brings dis- 
 appointment. 
 
 To grow a plant well, requires a study of its 
 peculiarities, and adaptations to suit them. 
 
 There are, in plant culture, certain general rules 
 which can never be transgressed: these are usu- 
 ally understood. There are also many lesser points 
 to be observed, too often wholly ignored, but they 
 contribute greatly to success, which is often in direct 
 ratio with their observance. 
 
 The Rhododendron requires careful culture. To 
 those who are not willing to give it, we say, Do not 
 
4 THE RHODODENDEON. 
 
 attempt to grow Ehododendrons ; yet, so doing, you 
 give up one of the most beautiful of plants, one of 
 the most glorious ornaments of the garden, which 
 more richly repays the care it requires than any 
 plant we can mention. Let us not, however, be 
 misunderstood. After the first planting, that being 
 well done, the Klwdodendron requires less attention 
 than any other plant ; but this preparation of the 
 soil is of primary importance. 
 
 We are aware that in this we differ from some 
 cultivators, who maintain that Rhododendrons will 
 do well in any garden soil. This is true in a degree ; 
 for the plants will live, grow, and bloom in any deep 
 loam not containing lime ; but they will not, under 
 this culture, attain the highest perfection, either of 
 foliage or flower. 
 
 The Rhododendron is a native of swamps, of 
 shady mountain sides, or of deep ravines, usually 
 on the banks of mountain streams. In these situa- 
 tions it forms impenetrable thickets or jungles, the 
 plant attaining great size, the boughs bending down 
 and rooting by natural layers, producing in the 
 Middle and Southern States the nearest approach 
 our flora can make to a tropical jungle. 
 
 Some species are found in mountain swamps, 
 occasionally in high latitudes, but always in moist 
 situations. 
 
 The natural habitat of the plants gives us the first 
 requisite for their successful culture, — a moist soil. 
 The roots of all the species, except perhaps some 
 of the epiphytal kinds of the Himalaya Momitains, 
 are fine and hair-like ; and drought is certain death. 
 
PIIKPARATION OF THE SOIL. . O 
 
 In a wild state, tlicy grow most luxuriantly in a 
 peaty loam, formed by the debris of decayed vege- 
 table matter, such as wood and leaves, wdth an 
 admixture of disintegrated rocks, and generally in 
 a shady situation. These conditions we must, in a 
 measure, imitate in cultivation. 
 
 It is a singular fact that cultivation has in some 
 plants produced greater abundance of bloom and 
 luxuriance of growth than they ever exhibit. in their 
 native haunts. This has especially been shown with 
 some of the orchids of India and South America. 
 
 The fact is, to some extent, true of Rhododendrons ; 
 many species producing in our gardens larger and 
 finer flowers than in their wdld state. 
 
 In preparing for Rhododendrons, the situation of 
 the bed is of primary importance. The plants will do 
 well in any exposure, but they naturally love shade ; 
 and a northern hill-side is the best place for the bed. 
 Our largest plantations are on a steep hill, sloping to 
 the north-west, and exposed to the full fury of the 
 winter storms. In such a situation not only do the 
 hardy varieties do well, but even some kinds, con- 
 sidered tender in Eugland, stand the winter unin- 
 jured. 
 
 In a southern exposure the foliage is seldom as 
 fine as where the plants are sheltered from the full 
 sun, though they sometimes set more bloom. A 
 large bed on our lawn stood uninjured the parch- 
 ing summer of 1870, and is now in fine health, with a 
 promise of abundant bloom for the coming year. 
 The roots, however, never Ijccame dry, as the bed 
 was kept moist by heavy mulching. 
 
t) THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 The test was, nevertheless, a very severe one, as 
 the bed was made by filjing in an old gravel pit ; 
 and the location "was so hot and dry, that large 
 white pines, growing naturally close by, perished 
 from drought. 
 
 The fact that the Rhododendron thrives on a 
 northern exposure should of itself be a great incen- 
 tive to its cultivation. What country place is there 
 which has not a bare northern slope, some cold 
 exposure where " nothing will grow " ? Yet in 
 such a situation Rhododendrons will thrive ; change 
 it to a gorgeous mass of bloom in June, and give a 
 glorious show of rich evergreen foliage all the rest of 
 the year. Who will say the result is not worth the 
 necessary labor of preparation? And if we wish 
 flowers after the Rhododendrons, plant a few moun- 
 tain-laurel (Kalmia latifolia) for succession, and 
 here and there dot in bulbs of our noble American 
 lilies (^Lilium siiperbum and canadense} , ^it\\ a few 
 clumps of the purple martagon, all of which bloom 
 magnificently ; and around the edges of the clumps 
 cultivate a host of the more dwarf-growing species 
 of our native plants which love a peat soil, such as 
 cypripediums, trilliums, and others, even to the 
 Christmas rose {Helleborus niger~), to bloom often 
 to the dawn of New Year's morning. 
 
 We do not appreciate the wealth of our American 
 flora, and have shut our eyes to the riclmess which 
 lies around us. In England, a crowning glory of 
 horticultural exhibitions is the show of " American 
 plants;" and we in America do not know what they 
 
PREPARATION OP THE SOIL. « 
 
 The situation of the bed chosen, the first labor is 
 excavation. If the surface is level, the soil should 
 be removed to a depth of four feet, at least ; if the 
 soil is a dry gravel, another foot may be taken out 
 advantageously. 
 
 Be the shape of the bed what it may, the soil 
 should be picked out underneath the sides, as much 
 as can be done without letting down the surface, in 
 order that the soil around the sides may. not be 
 drained by the surrounding gravel. If the soil is a 
 strong loam, and the subsoil clay, of such a nature 
 that the water will not run off, loose stones to the 
 depth of a few inches should be laid in the bottom 
 of the bed, and a blind drain be laid to carry off 
 surplus water : this, however, will rarely be neces- 
 sary. The primary rule in Rhododendron culture is 
 to keep the bed alivays moist, never very wet, never 
 very dry ; for either extreme is injurious. 
 
 The bed excavated, fill in old litter, pine needles, 
 leaves, or stubble, to the depth of two feet ; spread 
 this, letting it lay loosely ; the soil, in filling, will 
 press it down to a thickness of about six inches. 
 This will keep the bed from draining too rapidly, 
 and will in decaying fornish rich food for the roots, 
 when in the course of years they reach it. 
 
 It must be borne in mind that the Rhododendron 
 is not a deei)-rooting plant, — the upper soil, if kept 
 moist, will supply every need of the roots ; but it is 
 to insure this moisture that so deep a bed is recom- 
 mended. 
 
 In our own experience it has been necessary, for 
 all our Ijeds are dug out of loose gravel hills. 
 
8 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Where the soil is of a different nature such excava- 
 tion may not be necessary, and in this each must be 
 his own judge. 
 
 There is some difference of opinion as to the best 
 compost for the beds. The component parts are 
 peat, loam, and sand: the proportions, however, 
 need not be exact. 
 
 • Probably no two of our beds have been prepared 
 in exactly the same way, and yet in all the plants 
 have done perfectly well. As a general rule, we 
 have found a compost of five loads peat, five loads 
 loam, one load sharp sand, to be the best. 
 
 Where peat is not easily obtained, it will be suf- 
 ficient to fill only the upper two feet of the bed with 
 the compost, the rest of the bed being good loam. 
 
 By peat we mean the dark, black soil, composed 
 of decayed vegetable matter, often fibrous, but never 
 hard. It should be dug out in summer, and spread 
 in thin piles for exposure to the action of the winter's 
 frost. In spring it will be of a loose and crumbling 
 texture, and ready for use. It should not be used 
 fresh, as it is then hard and sour : the more the frost 
 works upon it the better it is. 
 
 If it is difficult to find peat, meadow mud, leaf 
 mould from old woods, or any well-rotted vegetable 
 compost, may be substituted. 
 
 Our first Rhododendron' bed was made wholly of 
 soil obtained from an old wood, where the mountain^ 
 laurel {Kalniia) grew naturally, by scooping it out 
 from among the roots of the trees, and carting it 
 four miles. 
 
 The loam should be good garden soil, free from 
 
PREPARATION OF THE SOIL. 9 
 
 stones. Old sods arc a good filling for the lower 
 part of a bed : care should be taken, however, not to 
 use any containing couch grass, as the roots of this 
 grass find the surface from a great depth, and are 
 eradicated with great difficulty. 
 
 Any good clean sand, if free from stones and salt, 
 is suitable : common building sand will answer every 
 purpose. 
 
 Our mode of filling a bed is as follows : Three 
 heaps of peat, loam, and sand, respectively, are made 
 near the bed ; two men, wath long-handled shovels, 
 fill from them, one throwing from the pile of peat, 
 the other from the pile of loam, and in every eight 
 or ten shovelfuls sprinkling in one of sand. The 
 compost is throwai up against one side of the bed. 
 which is raised to its full height, and the bed is thus 
 gradually filled. Thus we have often planted ono 
 end of a bed before the other was filled. 
 
 This mode insures a thorough mixing of the com 
 ponent parts, and in beds thus made we have founcl 
 the plants succeed much better than wdiere the com 
 post was mixed previously to filling. 
 
 Two of our largest beds are on a very steep hill 
 facing the north-west, and their construction differs 
 somewhat from the mode we have given. 
 
 The bed was first marked out on the surface as a 
 large oval about midway down the hill, the object 
 being to look down upon the plants when in bloom, 
 which is always desirable if possible. The excava- 
 tion w^as begun by digging out the soil to the depth 
 of four feet along the upper side of the bed, and 
 piling it along the lower side. This course was pur- 
 1* 
 
10 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 sued, always pushing the soil out from the upper to 
 the lower side, until an oval plateau was formed, 
 just the size of the proposed bed, but everywhere 
 four feet below the level of the upper line where the 
 excavation was begun. 
 
 The whole bed was then filled in with soil pre- 
 pared as we have described, four feet deep, so that 
 a large level bed extended oiit at an angle to the 
 hill-side. The heavy banks at the sides and lower 
 part were then sodded, and the bed was ready for 
 planting. 
 
 This is a most satisfactoi'y mode of making a 
 bed, and we should recommend it to every one who 
 has a northern hill-side. It utilizes and beautifies a 
 place where little else will grow, and the plants are 
 more effective both in foliage and flower from their 
 position. We should not advise such a treatment 
 of a southerly slope, as the plants would probably 
 suffer from the sun both in summer and winter. 
 
 PLANTING. 
 
 The bed being prepared, a few days should be 
 allowed for the soil to settle to the level of the sur- 
 rounding ground ; then planting should begin. The 
 time should be about the first of May in the latitude 
 of Boston, but we have often varied it a fortnight 
 earlier or later. If the plants have been imported, 
 they will have come close packed in the cases, every 
 interstice being filled with moss. In unpacking, the 
 branches should all be carefully straightened out, 
 and the plants, which always come with good balls 
 
PLANTING. 11 
 
 01 earth, placed in a covered, open shed, not exposed 
 to the sun. 
 
 As soon as unpacked, they should be well watered 
 overliead with a coarse-rosed Avater-pot, which will 
 clean and freshen the foliage and moisten the balls. 
 In this position they may be left for weeks without 
 injury, moss being placed over the balls to prevent 
 undue evaporation, and occasional waterings being 
 given. It is, however, better to plant them within 
 a few days after unpacking, if the weather is settled 
 and favorable. 
 
 Plants obtained from nurseries in this country 
 may be planted as soon as received. 
 
 There is nothing more simple than planting Rho- 
 dodendrons. The plants have fine thread-like roots, 
 which seize hold of and retain the soil ; thus, unless 
 very carelessly packed, they always come with good 
 balls, and our only care is to place these balls in 
 congenial soil. 
 
 A hole proportioned to the size of the ball should 
 be dug in the prepared bed, the plant set as deep as it 
 was Ijefore (or if a little deeper it will do no harm), 
 the earth filled in and firmly pressed around the ball. 
 
 AVaterings should not be given after planting : the 
 balls having been well moistened after unpacking, 
 the soil of the bed will be wet enough to keep the 
 plants in good condition. Newly imported plants 
 should be set rather close, so that the leaves almost 
 touch, that during the first summer and winter they 
 may protect each other. 
 
 All planting, however, must be done with an eye 
 to the ultimate appearance of the bed. Thus, a bed 
 
12 THE RHODODENDEON. 
 
 large enough for ten Rhododendrons of moderate 
 size may the first season contain a hundred. The 
 next spring, however, every other one should be 
 removed, and so on year after year. 
 
 In the first planting, care must be taken to so 
 arrange the plants which are to remain' permanently, 
 that future transplanting may be avoided. This is 
 easily done by first setting them out in position, and 
 then filling in the others. 
 
 After planting, the surface of the bed should be 
 raked smooth, and prepared for 
 
 MULCHING. 
 
 We have said the Rhododendron is a surface-root- 
 ing plant, and therefore one great aim in cultivation 
 should be to keep tlie surface-soil moist. In old 
 beds, where the plants are masses of foliage, no ray 
 of sun will ever reach the ground, and the soil sel- 
 dom becomes dry. 
 
 In new plantations we must prevent undue evai> 
 oration by mulching. The best mulch is spent tan, 
 which may be obtained at any tannery for a few 
 dollars a cord. It is cool and moist, the best pre- 
 ventive of evaporation, furnishes nutriment to the 
 roots as it decays, and accords in color so well with 
 the dark foliage of the plants as to produce a charm- 
 ing effect. 
 
 The tan should be spread evenly over the surface 
 of the bed from one to three inches deep, according 
 to the exposure of the bed to the sun. It should be 
 applied by the middle of May, before the surface has 
 
MANURING. 13 
 
 had time to dry, and will not require renewal oftener 
 than once in three years. 
 
 This mulching of tan seems particularly adapted 
 10 the plant : it is not infrequent for branches which 
 chance to be bent down and covered with the tan 
 to strike root; and we have many i)lants from such 
 accidental layers. 
 
 Where tan cannot be procured, pine needles are 
 the best mulch. . These should be spread about two 
 inches deep, and will last undecayed for years. 
 
 Oak leaves, or leaves of other deciduous trees, may 
 be used where nothing better can be obtained ; but 
 they are objectionable, because they blow away, and 
 give the bed and its surroundings a slovenly, ill-kept 
 appearance. 
 
 Sawdust is too fine and close, preventing the access 
 of air to the roots, which (as far as we can judge 
 from our own experience), is of vital importance to 
 Rhododendrons. 
 
 The coarse chippings from a boring machine 
 would probably serve a good purpose if nothing 
 better can be obtained. Meadow hay and litter are 
 objectionable, as containing seeds of weeds and 
 grasses, and forming a fermenting, decaying mass, 
 injurio is to the roots of the plj^nts. 
 
 MANURING. 
 
 If the bed has been carefully prepared as we have 
 directed, it will need no manuring. 
 
 Every thing of a stimulating, heating nature is 
 injurious. 
 
14 THE RHODODENDROm 
 
 It is the best policy to do the work well at first, 
 and then no further enriching of the soil will be 
 needed. The roots of all "American Plants" feed 
 on thoroughly decomposed vegetable matter. This 
 we supply in abundance in the peat, of which the. 
 bed is composed, and as long as this nutriment lasts 
 no more need be provided. It is, of course, within 
 the range of possibility that in time, in old beds, 
 this supply may be exhausted, and then a top dress- 
 ing of peat, leaf mould, or even well-rotted stable 
 manure, may be beneficially applied. Special ma- 
 nures, certainly any containing lime, would probably 
 prove injurious. 
 
 .Our own beds, some of which are ten years old, 
 and contain plants twice that age, have never had a 
 shovelful of manure of any kind, except what may 
 have been derived from decaying tan, and are in 
 vigorous health, growing stronger every year. 
 
 Where Rhododendrons are suffering for want of 
 proper nutriment, tlie ground may be enriched ; but 
 all manure should be well rotted and thoroughly 
 decomposed before application. 
 
 With liquid manures we have had no experience : 
 we should, however, judge them to be of too stimu- 
 lating a nature, and likely to prove injurious. 
 
 A mixture of charcoal with the soil is said to 
 give intensity to the colors of the flowers. We see 
 no reason to doubt the statement ; but in view of the 
 brilliancy of color in some of the varieties of recent 
 origin, we see no need of such extraneous assist- 
 ance. 
 
PRUNING. 15 
 
 May be i)erformcd freely wlicn necessary. It was 
 once thouglit that Rhoilodciidrons could not bear 
 ])runing ; but, on the contrary, they bear it remark- 
 ably well. We have had large plants, which were 
 accidentally broken or cut down by the frost, pro- 
 duce young shoots as freely as rose-bushes, from 
 wood an inch in diameter. As a fact, Rhododen- 
 drons need very little pruning : in growth they are 
 symmetrical, and when left to themselves make such 
 beautiful plants, that any attempts to prune them into 
 formal shapes would prove wholly at variance with 
 good taste. 
 
 Some tall-growing varieties, such as it. Cataw- 
 biense album elegans, need to be cut in when they 
 grow too high. This may be freely done in early 
 spring, or immediately after flowering. 
 
 We prefer, however, to rub out the terminal buds 
 of shoots that would grow too high, just before the 
 buds begin to swell in the spring. 
 
 When in bloom, Rhododendrons may be freely 
 cut ; the only care to be observed being to cut in 
 such a way as not to injure the symmetry of the 
 plant, or to leave bare places where there is no grow- 
 ing bud coming on to fill up the gap. 
 
 Standard plants occasionally need pruning ; but, 
 by a little care in rubbing out buds, the knife will 
 seldom be needed for Rhododendrons. 
 
10 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 TRANSPLANTING. 
 
 This is an easy process, and with a little care may 
 always be successfully performed. We have said 
 that the fine rootlets of the Rhododendron hold a- 
 mass of soil, so that the plants always " lift with a 
 ball." 
 
 The only care is not to break the ball or to allow 
 the rootlets to become dry. With these precautions 
 Rhododendrons may be transplanted to any distance, 
 and left out of the ground for a long time without 
 danger of loss. 
 
 The season for transplanting is any time when the 
 plant is not in growth. The Rhododendron makes 
 its annual growth and ripens its wood in a few weeks 
 iii summer. 
 
 In most species, the growth is contemporaneous 
 with, or closely succeeds, the flowering period ; that 
 is, with hardy kinds, from the middle of May to the 
 middle of July, according to the species. 
 
 In a comparatively short time the growth is made, 
 and the remainder of the summer the plants are 
 forming the flowers or leaf-buds, and ripening the 
 wood for the next year. By the middle of July we 
 can usually tell how well the plants are to bloom the 
 following June. 
 
 Some varieties often make a second growth ; and, 
 indeed, where the autumn is warm and moist, this 
 is not an unfrequent occurrence. As this second 
 growth seldom ripens well, and is usually killed by 
 the winter, it should be prevented as much as pos- 
 
TRANSPLANTING. 17 
 
 sible. Plants in which this tendency exhibits itself 
 should be planted in dryer soil, and kept quite dry 
 during the months of August and September. 
 
 The only variety which we have known to ripen 
 the second growth successfully is "Cunningham's 
 Pwarf White " in its different kinds, the hardiest of 
 the '^ poiiticum^^ varieties, and which not unfrequcntly 
 gives a^ pretty autumn bloom. 
 
 The best season for transplanting Rhododendrons 
 is undoubtedly spring, say from the middle of April 
 to the middle of May ; but some cultivators move 
 the plants in August, and there is no objection to 
 autumn or winter transplanting, provided care is 
 taken that the plants do not sutfer by being thrown 
 out of the ground by the frost. 
 
 A few years since, at one of .the spring exhibitions 
 of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, there 
 being a scarcity of pot-plants, we removed from the 
 beds a number of large Rhododendrons in full bloom, 
 some bearing hundreds of flowers, put them in large 
 boxes, carted them into the exhibition, where they 
 remained two days, and bringing them back placed 
 them again in the positions whence they were taken, 
 without the plants receiving the slightest check or 
 injury. In England it is customary to bring hun- 
 dreds of plants from great distances, just as they are 
 coming into bloom, to form the celebrated exhibitions 
 of American Plants yearly held in the cities, and to 
 take them back again, the plants not feeling tire 
 removals. 
 
 Every autumn we take up hundreds of plants of 
 the more tender kinds, some of immense size, set 
 
18 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 them ill boxes, and keep them in cellars until spring, 
 when they are replanted in the open air. The plant? 
 are not unfavorably affected, and bloom finely year 
 after year. 
 
 Thus it will be seen that the Rhododendron, 
 usually reputed a plant of difficult management, is 
 capal)le of enduring quite as much hard usage in 
 removal as any plant of our acquaintance; a'\id this 
 should serve as an additional incentive to its in- 
 creased cultivation. 
 
 By a little attention to a reserve Rhododendron 
 bed where a number of duplicates may be grown, 
 we may yearly insure a display of bloom near the 
 house, and produce gorgeous effects at will from 
 masses of flowers. 
 
 TREATMENT AFTER FLOWERING. 
 
 As soon as the flowers have faded, the seed-cap- 
 sules should be removed. This is a work of much 
 labor, especially where the plants are large and tall. 
 It must be done carefully, that the tender shoots, 
 which are then just starting into growth at the base 
 of the flower-truss, may not be broken or injured. 
 The best way is to grasp the branch with the left 
 hand close to the upper tuft of foliage, and with the 
 thumb and finger of the right hand bend the truss 
 of seed-pods to one side : it will usually break off 
 clean, without injury to the young shoot. 
 
 The young wood coming from the base of a bloom- 
 truss will not usually, except on very strong plants, 
 set bloom the first year ; but if the seed is removed. 
 
TREATMENT AFTER FLOWERING. 10 
 
 it may bo depended on for strong bloom the follow- 
 ing year. Thus \vc can easily regulate the bloom 
 on any plant or portion of a jJant, by removing 
 bloom-buds one year to obtain a profusion of bloom 
 the next. 
 
 Large and old plants, however, will always set as 
 much bloom as they ought to carry ; and the difficulty 
 with Rhododendrons is rather overblooming than 
 the contrary. 
 
 Some cultivators assert that the removal of the 
 seed-vessels is not necessary. Yet they do not deny 
 that ripening the seed weakens the plant for flower- 
 ing ; and the best reason given for neglecting it is 
 that it takes too much time. We have tried both 
 ways ; and the superior beauty, vigor, and health of 
 the plants from which the seeds were removed, has 
 taught us always to do it at any expense of time 
 and troul)le. 
 
 Another objection to leaving the seed-vessels is 
 that, when they have opened and scattered the seed, 
 they become very hard and persistent, and are veiy 
 unsightly, disfiguring the plant. 
 
 If the weather is very dry after the flowers have 
 faded, the Rhododendrons should be plentifully 
 watered. At this season they are in full growth, 
 and need a great amount of moisture. This, how- 
 ever, should not be given after the young growth 
 begins to harden ; for then the object is to fully ripen 
 the wood and mature the flower and foliage buds for 
 winter. If the bed has been properly prepared, there 
 will seldom be any need of watering ; and mulching 
 is always the best way of retaining moisture. 
 
20 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 No weeds should be allowed to grow over the sur- 
 face of the bed ; but no spading or hoeing should ever 
 be permitted. The annual spading of shrubberies is a 
 relic of barbarism, which should long ago have been 
 discontinued in a civilized ase. 
 
 The Rhododendron has no diseases, at least this 
 is in our experience ; and of itself this fact should 
 lead to its general cultivation. 
 
 INSECT ENEMIES. 
 
 These are very few, and seldom do any great 
 injury. 
 
 We have occasionally noticed a branch in a dying 
 condition, and upon investigation have found the 
 pith eaten out by some species of borer ; but have 
 never been able to capture the insect in any state. 
 
 A species of saw fly sometimes cuts holes in the 
 young foliage, but never to any great extent. 
 
 A year ago, noticing a young Rhododendron in 
 bad health, and finding no apparent cause in the plant, 
 we were led to examine the roots, upon which we 
 found myriads of the white root aphis.. This, how- 
 ever, is an exceptional case. 
 
 Our experience gives us the above facts, from 
 which we deduce that insect enemies, as they exist 
 at present, need deter none from cultivating Rhodo- 
 dendrons. 
 
WINTER PROTECTION. 21 
 
 WINTKR PROTECTION. 
 
 Rhododendrons vary much in hardiness. The 
 greater part of the varieties found in English and 
 continental catalogues are tender in the latitude of 
 JJoston. 
 
 Yet there are some magnificent varieties that 
 are as hardy as a white pine, and which will endure 
 uninjured our severest winters. But even these 
 should be protected when first planted. 
 
 The first Rhododendron bed we ever made is on 
 the north-western slope of a steep hill, exposed to 
 the full force of the winter storms. It was planted 
 ten years ago, with seven varieties of Catawbiense 
 hybrids. For two years it was well protected in 
 winter ; but ever since it has stood without the 
 slightest protection, entirely uninjured, although the 
 mercury has at times fallen to fifteen degrees below 
 zero. The plants are now ten feet high, immense 
 masses of glorious foliage ; and every June display 
 thousands of gorgeous flowers. 
 
 Some of the more tender varieties endure the win- 
 ter perfectly well if protected from the wind, and we 
 may safely state that — of say seventy-five — of the 
 hardiest of the Catawbiense kinds, the greater part 
 will endure severe cold below zero, if they can be 
 sheltered from the direct influence of the Avind. 
 
 Even the hardiest kinds are sometimes injured in 
 their foliage by the wind ; and for this reason only 
 we protect standards during the winter, as we sh'all 
 fully describe in another chapter. 
 
22 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Evergreen boughs are the best winter protection 
 for Rhododendrons. We use the common red cedar, 
 it being of very dense growth, and plentiful in the 
 neighborhood ; but any evergreen will answer a good 
 purpose. 
 
 The boughs of small trees are cut somewhat longer 
 than the plants to be protected, and are stuck into 
 the ground around the plant, in a slightly slanting 
 position. When the ground freezes they become 
 firmly fixed in position, and any weight of snow 
 causes them to bend over and protect the plant. 
 Thus it will, be seen that this mode of protection is 
 also useful in preventing the branches of young plants 
 from being broken by the weight of the snow. 
 
 Another and an important object in protection is 
 to keep the plants from the winter's sun. 
 
 Many reputed tender varieties are perfectly hardy 
 if they can be kept in a frozen state all winter. 
 
 We can readily see that in our changeable climate, 
 where the thermometer, at zero at sunrise, may by 
 noon be fifty above zero in the sun, the evergreen 
 leaves of plants are alternately frozen and thawed ; 
 and no doubt can be entertained that it is injurious 
 to the foliage of the plants. 
 
 For this reason, Rhododendrons thrive better on 
 a northern than on a southern exposure ; and varie- 
 ties, which on a bleak northern hill we never protect, 
 on a lawn sloping to the south are carefully covered 
 each winter. 
 
 While one great object of protection is to shelter 
 the plant from wind and sun, any covering which 
 deprives the plant of a free circulation of light and 
 air is injurious. 
 
IMPORTI?.G AND PROCURING PLANTS. 23 
 
 Trussing up Avith straw, to us any thing but an 
 attractive mode of winter protection, or covering 
 with close boxes, are to be avoided. 
 
 Any protection, however, wliich will break the 
 force of the wind, and partially shield from the rays 
 of the sun, may be advantageously employed. 
 
 The time for covering Rhododendrons is just 
 before the ground freezes up in the autumn, and the 
 protection should be removed as soon as the frost 
 leaves the ground in the spring. We generally 
 cover the beds the last week in November, and 
 remove the covering the first week in April. 
 
 In considering this question of winter protection, 
 it must be borne in mind that our experience has 
 been in the latitude of Boston, and near the sea 
 coast. 
 
 Further south and in the interior, winter protec- 
 tion may be entirely dispensed with : in this matter 
 experience is the best teacher. 
 
 Every year we are g'iving less protection as plants 
 become acclimated and established ; and ultimately 
 may be able to dispense with it altogether for most 
 varieties. 
 
 IMPORTING AND PROCURING PLANTS. 
 
 Although the Rhododendron is so well adapted for 
 general planting, a large collection would be difficult 
 to obtain in this country. The largest sale stock, to 
 our knowledge, is that of Messrs. Parsons & Co., of 
 Flushing, Long Island, who are now devoting a large 
 portion of their extensive grounds to the raising of 
 Rhododendrons. 
 
24 THE KHUDODENDRON. 
 
 In this collection are many fine specimen plants ; 
 and a good stock of young plants of such varieties as 
 their experience has proved hardy and desirable, and 
 of which we speak more fully in another chapter, are 
 already for sale at reasonable prices. The plants in 
 this nursery are grown in a deep, moist, rich loam, 
 and such as have been supplied us have invariably 
 done well. Messrs. Hovey & Co., near Boston, have 
 many old and fine plants : their collection is grown 
 in a natural meadow. They have also a fine stock 
 of seedling Rhododendron maximum, the best species 
 for massing on woody places and on rocky hills. 
 
 There may be other sale collections, but we have 
 failed to find them. Every nurseryman's catalogue 
 contains Ehododendrons, but probably not one in 
 ten could supply half a dozen good plants. We have 
 repeatedly ordered them, misled by an advertise- 
 ment ; and the result has been no plants, or, what 
 was worse, a few ill-shaped, sickly specimens, only 
 fit for the brush-heap. 
 
 The greater part of our plants have been imported 
 from England, and yearly we thus add to our stock. 
 
 Probably the most extensive, as well as the oldest 
 collection of American Plants, in England, is the 
 Knap Hill Nursery, near Woking, Surrey, now of 
 Mr. Anthony Waterer. 
 
 Thousands upon thousands of plants, in hundreds 
 of varieties, are there annually grown for sale ; and the 
 nursery and grounds contain some of the largest and 
 finest specimens in England. About the first of 
 January we send an order to Mr. Watcjrer; and the 
 plants leave England by steamer from the first to 
 
STANDARD RHODODENDRONS. 25 
 
 the middle of April, arriving in about a fortnight 
 after shipping. They invariably come in good order, 
 and we have never lost a plant from poor packing ; 
 nor have avc ever had any occasion to complain of 
 the quality of the plants. The cost of importing 
 plants can easily be computed by reckoning an Eng- 
 lish sliilling, cost price, at fifty cents currency. This 
 is an outside figure, and includes gold, freight, ex- 
 change, and the outrageous imposition of a duty of 
 thirty per cent in gold. By thus estimating, we can 
 always be within our calculations. 
 
 American plants arc extensively grown in most 
 English nurseries, and catalogues before us contain 
 large lists of varieties, and from any nursery plants 
 could be imported. We, however, give the prefer- 
 ence to Mr. Waterer, as his long experience enables 
 him to send only such plants as are suited to our 
 climate. Those who are in doubt what kinds to 
 select can safely leave the choice to Mr. Waterer, 
 and will be sure of receiving only the best plants. 
 
 STANDARD RHODODENDRONS. 
 
 These are amongst the most splendid ornaments 
 of the garden, as those who have seen them in Eng- 
 land will admit. 
 
 Some of our plants when in bloom are wonder- 
 fully beautiful, and are always attractive from the 
 heads of rich glossy foliage. 
 
 Probably the largest standard in the country is on 
 our lawn : the trunlc is one foot one inch in circum- 
 ference at the ground ; it begins to branch four feet 
 2 
 
26 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 from the ground, where it is eleven inches around ; 
 it is eight feet four inches high, and the head is 
 twenty feet four inches in circumference ; and the 
 whole plant requires in winter, to cover it, a shed 
 six feet square by nine feet high. 
 
 It is of the variety roseum eleg-ans, which is par- 
 ticularly adapted for standards ; and in June is so 
 covered with flowers as almost to conceal the- foliage. 
 
 This plant was imported five years ago, and has 
 since stood uninjured two of the hardest winters 
 upon vegetation which we have known. We have 
 many other fine standards, both of hardy and tender 
 varieties : the former, with a slight protection from 
 wind and sun, are entirely uninjured by the winter ; 
 the latter are removed to the Rhododendron cellars, 
 of which we give a description in a future chapter, 
 upon the approach of severe weather. 
 
 Our advice would be to all to plant a few standard 
 Rhododendrons. They are expensive ; but one will 
 make more show than a dozen smaller plants, and 
 will not cost much more. In the centre of a bed, a 
 tall standard rising above the more dwarf plants is 
 especially effective. 
 
 The only care necessary is to be sure the plants 
 are worked on Cataiobiense stock : those grown on 
 ponticum stock would be kiUed or injured by the 
 first winter. 
 
 In planting them, the position should not be too 
 sunny, as the hot suns of summer may injure the 
 taU trunks. We have sometimes, when the weather 
 was very hot and dry, pressed a large flower-pot into 
 the ground close to the stems of the standards, and 
 
DWARF RHODODENDRONS. 2( 
 
 by filling it with water every morning a constant 
 moisture was kept up from the slow percolation of 
 the water through the hole in the bottom. These 
 pots, however, are not ornamental, and are seldom 
 necessary. Standards occasionally need pruning to 
 keep the heads in shape ; but a little attention to 
 disbudding, as we have described, will render this 
 unnecessary. 
 
 DWARF RHODODENDRONS. 
 
 These are among the most charming of the family, 
 and no collection is complete without them. The 
 greater part are perfectly hardy ; and though in 
 flower they are not so showy, yet in delicate beauty 
 they far surpass the taller-growing varieties. 
 
 In this class we find the charming species R. dau- 
 ricinn, rather a loose grower, and needing severe 
 pruning to make it symmetrical ; but always beauti- 
 ful in earliest spring, blooming with the crocus and 
 outlasting the hyacinth. 
 
 Next is R. Wilsonianum, with beautiful glossy 
 foliage, usually considered tender, but perfectly hardy 
 with us ; and then we have R. odoratum, the flowers 
 of which, as the name implies, are delightfully fra- 
 grant. 
 
 R. hirsiUum, and its variegated variety, are neat 
 little plants, useful for the edges of beds, but are not 
 particularly showy either in foliage or flower. 
 
 The charming Alpine R. lapponicum is most diffi- 
 cult of cultivation, but is beautiful enough to repay 
 any care. 
 
28 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 R. Torlonianwn and Govenianum, both hybrids, 
 are very pretty, but have with us proved rather 
 tender. 
 
 R. punctatum can hardly be considered a dwarf. 
 It is a pretty plant, but rather insignificant in 
 flower. 
 
 R. ferrugineum is also rather tall-growing, and is 
 showy in flower. Tliis is the true " Alpen Rose." 
 
 We shall have more to say of all these in a future 
 chapter, and only mention them in this connection 
 to call special attention to their beauty. 
 
INDOOR culturhL / ^ ]t!!> ^2!) 
 
 ^ - £7 YJJ. ^/l^ 
 
 CHAPTER 11. 
 
 INDOOR CULTURE. 
 
 'TPHERE are many of the finest species and varie- 
 -^ ties of Rliododendrons which are too tender 
 to survive the winters of our climate. Many kinds, 
 which in England are hardy, are tender with us, and 
 can only be grown with indoor culture. In this 
 class are all the fine varieties of Rhododendron pon- 
 ticum, and many of those which have a mixture of 
 Cataivbiense blood ; most of the best spotted and 
 scarlet varieties, and many of those with the best- 
 defined markings ; all the glorious species of the 
 Himalaya Mountains, the so-called " Sikkim Rho- 
 dodendrons ; " and all the various forms of the 
 tree Rhododendron, R. arboreiim, of Nepal ; the yel- 
 low and buff-flowered Javanese species; and the 
 delicate and beautiful kinds of which Rhododendron 
 iasminiflorum is a representative. 
 
 Thus, we see that the indoor culture of this plant 
 affords a far greater range than we can find in the 
 garden. This culture has as yet, however, received 
 but little attention : Ave find a few plants grown in 
 greenhouses, but usually they are neglected and in 
 bad condition. To grow Rhododendrons well, they 
 should have a house to themselves ; and with such 
 culture the result would be the production of glorious 
 
,'50 THE EHODODEXDRON. 
 
 masses of flowers during the early spring months- 
 We know of no house of this kind, but one could 
 be readily constructed at small expense. 
 
 It should be low, span-roofed ; the sashes arranged 
 to take off in summer, and shutters provided for 
 covering the roof in early winter. The heating a|> 
 paratus need not be very powerful, for the most that 
 would be required would be to keep out the frost. 
 The plants should be planted out in beds of prepared 
 soil, and, by taking off the sashes, allowed to perfect 
 their growth and mature their buds in the open air. 
 When freezing weather approaches, the sashes should 
 be replaced ; and during the short days the house 
 should be kept only a little above the freezing point. 
 As the days lengihen, and the sun gains more pow^r, 
 more heat may be given, which will soon start the 
 flower-buds. 
 
 According to the heat given, the plants will 
 bloom from March to May, or by a selection of 
 kinds a continuous bloom may be obtained. Such 
 treatment would suit all the ponticum and the more 
 tender Catawbiense hybrids : many of the Sikkim 
 varieties would thrive and bloom, and some of 'the 
 more tender species of other American plants might 
 be added for variety. The tropical kinds, of course, 
 require stove heat ; but they are hardly numerous 
 enough to warrant the erection of a special house. 
 
 Indoor culture is, in almost every respect, iden- 
 tical with garden culture, only it requires more care 
 in watering, and air should be freely given on all 
 occasions. 
 
 Such a house of plants in bloom would be a mag- 
 
01 
 
 nificent sight, and at other seasons it would require 
 very little care. 
 
 FORCINTx. 
 
 Rhododendrons are very easily forced into bloom, 
 and add greatly to the attractions of the green- 
 house. 
 
 Any varieties may be forced, although a selection 
 of the earlier blooming kinds would give those best 
 adapted for the purpose. The plants for forcing 
 should be selected in November from those best set 
 with flower-buds : they should be carefully potted 
 and removed to a cool, light cellar, where they should 
 be kept until the first of January, receiving only 
 sufficient water to keep the soil from drying up. 
 
 About the first of the year they should be gradu- 
 ally introduced into heat, and given a position near 
 the glass. Water should be freely administered, but 
 never allowed to stand around the roots. In a few 
 weeks the buds will begin to swell, and the plants 
 will rapidly come into bloom. 
 
 After flowering, the growth of the young shoots 
 should be encouraged, keeping the plants as near the 
 glass as possible to prevent them from becoming 
 drawn. After all danger of frost has passed, the 
 plants may be replanted in the bed from whence 
 they were taken. 
 
 The same plants cannot be forced for two succes- 
 sive years, as they usually fail to set many flower- 
 buds the second year ; but a hundred plants will 
 always supply plenty for annual forcing. 
 
32 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 AS PARLOR PLANTS. 
 
 Many will be surprised at our recommending the 
 Rhododendron as a parlor plant ; yet we know of 
 none more showy or of easier culture. We have 
 grown very fine specimens in a southerly window, 
 and had magnificent trusses of bloom during March 
 and April. 
 
 The process is very simple ; being only to take up 
 the plants in autumn, pot them, and keep them in a 
 light, cool cellar, as above directed, and after the 
 turn of the year place them in the parlor-window. 
 The heat of furnaces or exhalations from gas-burn- 
 ers, which prove so fatal to most parlor plants, do 
 not seem to affect them, and they soon develop fine 
 trusses of bloom. 
 
 By a selection of varieties, fine contrasts of color 
 may be obtained ; and, by taking some of the late 
 flowering kinds, a succession of flower may be main- 
 tained until the Rhododendrons bloom in the open air. 
 
 Parlor forcing is bad for the plants, as they sel- 
 dom make good wood, the growth being generally 
 weak and long ; but in a few years the plants re- 
 cover, and are again ready for forcing. 
 
 We have found " Cunningham's Dwarf White," in 
 its varieties, one of the best of the ponticum hybrids, 
 admirably adapted for parlor culture. We have also 
 successfully forced some of the most showy of the 
 Cataivbiense hybrids, such as Nero, Lord John Rus- 
 sell, and Brayanum, with perfect success ; and can 
 recommend parlor forcing to all lovers of Rhodo- 
 dendrons. 
 
PROPAGATION. 88 
 
 CHAPTER III. 
 
 PROPAGATION. 
 
 nPHE propagation of Rhododendrons is by no 
 -^ means difficnlt, although as yet it has been 
 little attempted in this country. Old and approved 
 varieties are increased by layers, cuttings, grafting, 
 or inarching ; and new varieties are obtained from 
 seed. 
 
 These various processes differ in no degree in the 
 case of this plant from the ordinary methods ; but 
 we will describe them briefly. 
 
 By this means the best plants are raised, and it is 
 the usual mode in England for propagating in large 
 quantities approved varieties. 
 
 In its native swamps the Rhododendron roots 
 readily wherever the branches bend to the ground, 
 and become covered with soil or a ddbris of moist 
 leaves. 
 
 In our own garden we have often obtained fine 
 plants from branches which had by chance been 
 covered by the earth of the bed or by the tan mulch, 
 roots being very freely produced where the natural 
 sufficiency of moisture is afforded. 
 
 We have only to bend the branch to the ground, tc 
 2* 
 
34 THE KHODODENDRON. 
 
 cover any portion of the old wood with the moist 
 earth, an A to secure the branch in position : roots will 
 soon be protruded, and the second year the branch 
 may be severed from the parent stock, to become an 
 independent plant. The production of roots may be 
 greatly facilitated by making an upward cut one 
 half through the branch where it is to be buried 
 deepest in the earth, in the ordinary manner of 
 layering: the flow of sap is in a measure thus 
 arrested. 
 
 These layers, if made in spring, will in two years 
 be very strong, and ready to remove ; in some cases 
 a single season may be sufficient for them, but 
 ordinarily two years are required. The oidy atten- 
 tion necessary is to keep the branches in place by 
 strong pegs, and the soil moist. 
 
 By layering the branches, tall, ungainly plants 
 may be made in time fine specimens. The long, 
 straggling branches should be bent down and firmly 
 pegged at even distances all around the plant : they 
 will root, and the bending of the branches between 
 the old plant and the layers will facilitate the pro- 
 duction of buds ; or, in gardener's parlance, the old 
 wood will break, and the bare places be filled with 
 new shoots, and the plant will become of a bushy, 
 symmetrical shape. 
 
 CUTTINGS 
 
 Should be made of the half-ripened wood of the 
 growing shoots. They should be inserted in silver 
 sand, or peat and sand, and covered with a bell-glass. 
 
INAIICIIING. . 35 
 
 No special attention is required, except to shade 
 them from the direct sun, and to occasionally wipe 
 the moisture from the glass : the sand, of course, 
 should be kept moist. The cuttings root readily, 
 and may then be transplanted to single pots, and the 
 next season placed in the open ground. 
 
 Propagation by cuttings is seldom resorted to, ex- 
 cept in the case of new varieties, and with the fine, 
 tender species of the greenhouse and stove. 
 
 INARCHING. 
 
 This process is the same ordinarily employed for 
 the propagation of camellias, and like hard-wooded 
 shrubs. 
 
 Some vigorous stock of a common variety is 
 selected. The branch should then be brought close 
 to the stock, and the parts which fit best be care- 
 fully marked ; next, at the places of contact, pare 
 away the bark and wood for an inch or more in 
 leng-th on both stock and branch ; then, letting the 
 bark join exactly, tie the stock and branch tight 
 together, and cover with clay or grafting wax. 
 When the stock and graft are of the same size, a 
 slit is made upward in the branch, and a correspond- 
 ing slit downward in the stock ; the parts are then 
 tongued together, the whole joined exactly, tied, and 
 covered with wax. or clay as above. 
 
 If the operation is performed out of doors, both 
 stock and graft should be carefully staked ; but in 
 the house this is not necessary. 
 
 A few months will generally be sufficient to unite 
 
30 . THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 the parts, and the grafts may then be separated from 
 the parent plant. 
 
 They should be cut off close to the graft, and the 
 head of the stock also removed. Inarching is some- 
 times called approach grafting, and is a very sure 
 mode of propagation. 
 
 The best time for this operation is from January 
 to April, or in summer: when performed in the 
 house, the stocks should be well established in 
 
 SEED. 
 
 By this mode innumerable varieties are raised, 
 and thus all of the fine hybrids now in cultivation 
 have been produced. 
 
 The seeds, which like those of most of the Eri- 
 cacege, are small and fine, should be sown soon 
 after ripening. They retain their vitality about a 
 year ; but the sooner they are sown the more certain 
 is their germination. 
 
 The soil should be very fine peat and silver sand, 
 in shallow boxes or pans : it should be made very 
 fine and moist, the seed be thinly sprinkled on the 
 surface, and just enough soil to cover it be sifted 
 over the pan. The soil should be kept at a uniform 
 rate of moisture, and be shaded from the direct rays 
 of the sun and from frost. A close, cool frame is the 
 best place. The time of germinating varies much 
 with the season of planting, from a few weeks to six 
 months. The seedlings are at first very small, and 
 should be allowed to remain in the seed-pans until 
 
HYBRIDIZATION. ii i 
 
 they attain some size. They should then be " pricked 
 off" in pans or boxes, and grown in frames, witl 
 plenty of air in good weather, until large enough to 
 be planted out. 
 
 In its native haunts the Rhododendron seeds very 
 freely, and young plants are readily obtained. 
 
 In a recent journey through the Alleghany Moun- 
 tains, we saw acres of Rhododendrons of the species 
 Cataivbiense and maximum. On one mountain side, 
 where a stream ran along the road, myriads of plants 
 had sprung up. They were of all sizes, from the 
 tiniest plant to large trees ; and we pulled up hun- 
 dreds of nice well-rooted plants, which reached home 
 in good condition. 
 
 In many places we found seedling Rhododendrons, 
 Kalmias, and Epigasa rooting in the same cleft of 
 the rock, and often so firmly it was impossible to 
 dislodge them without destroying the plants. 
 
 HYBRIDIZATION 
 
 Has been but little attempted in this country. 
 Some few good seedlings have ■been produced, but 
 usually from chance seed. 
 
 The process is very simple, being only to fertilize 
 a fine flower with the pollen of another, having pre- 
 viously removed the anthers of the female parent. 
 
 It is a good rule to make the hardier plant the 
 female. 
 
 After fertilization, protect the fertilized flower by 
 a gauze covering until it fades, and carefully gather 
 the ripened seed. 
 
38 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Some of the seedlings recently produced in Eng- 
 land are of wonderful beauty, combining depth and 
 breadth of flower, brilliancy of color, and immense 
 size of truss, with great vigor of constitution and 
 beauty of foliage. 
 
 Of some of these we shall have occasion to give 
 descriptions in future pages. 
 
 It is, however, very doubtful if any of them will 
 prove thoroughly hardy, although in England they 
 are the most splendid ornaments of the shrubbery. 
 
 Our aim should be to raise American seedlings 
 suited to our climate. 
 
 Messrs. Parsons & Co.' have a few, of which we 
 think well so far as we have tried them. We also 
 have exhibited for the last three years, at the weekly 
 shows of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, a 
 well-marked seedling, which has proved very hardy. 
 The color is very good, and the plant vigorous. 
 These good qualities, with its hardiness, will prob- 
 ably render it valuable. 
 
 The field is wide and open to all ; and what better 
 can our nurserymen and amateurs compete in than 
 raising hardy seedling Rhododendrons ? 
 
COMPARATIVE HARDINESS. 39 
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 
 COMPARATIVE HARDINESS. 
 
 'T^HE hardiness of Rhododendrons is a very diffi- 
 -^ cult subject to treat. 
 
 Every cultivator will express a different opinion , 
 and Avhile on some few varieties all will agree, upon 
 the greater number no two Avill form the same opin- 
 ion. The reason is simply that we are upon the 
 northern limit of hardiness for most kinds, and 
 the difference of a few degrees in the range of the 
 mercury is life or death to the plant. 
 
 Yet, strange as it may seem, some varieties, which 
 we find marked as tender in English catalogues, prove 
 hardy in the latitude of Boston. 
 
 An instance of this is the fine variety, " President 
 Van den Hecke," the flowers of which are blush 
 white, thickly spotted with chocolate, which has 
 with us stood the last three winters uninjured, both 
 in leaf and bud. 
 
 The hardest winters for Rhododendrons are those 
 when there is but little snow, when the mercury falls 
 below zero. The greater number of Cataivbiense 
 varieties will stand uninjured where the thermometer 
 occasionally falls to zero ; but a long continuance 
 of zero weather is fatal to very many kinds. Snow 
 is a great protection: we repeatedly find plants 
 
40 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 killed or badly injured above the snow-line, but 
 bright and in good condition below. 
 
 Heavy falls of snow, however, sometimes do great 
 damage by breaking the plants : we have had fine 
 plants ruined by a thaw succeeding a heavy snow- 
 storm, the snow settling and breaking all the 
 branches, leaving only a tall stem with a few 
 branches at the top. The covering of cedar-boughs 
 is often a great protection against breaking by 
 snow. 
 
 Of the hardiness of species we can speak with 
 greater certainty. 
 
 All the Rhododendrons from Eastern and Central 
 Asia, and the numerous " Sikkim " species, are ten- 
 der. Some of the Himalaya kinds are precariously 
 hardy in the south of England, and therefore might 
 succeed south of Pennsylvania ; but we do not sup- 
 pose the experiment has been tried. A cold snap, 
 such as that which has recently (December, 1870) 
 visited the Southern States, would destroy them. 
 
 Rhododendron ponticum, and most of its varieties, 
 are tender in New England : in the Middle States 
 they would probably succeed. " Cumiingham's 
 Dwarf White," of which there are several varieties, 
 (although a variety of R. ponticuni), is hardy with 
 us, some .fifty plants having stood the last three 
 winters uninjured, both in foliage and flower-bud. 
 
 This variety is said to be the only Ehododendron 
 which will endure the winters of northern Europe. 
 
 Rhododendron hirsutum, i?unctatum, and ferrii- 
 gineiim, are hardy. R. californicum is not hardy 
 in New England. 
 
COMPARATIVE HARDINESS. 41 
 
 R. dauricwn, and its variety, atrovirens, will 
 stand in any exposure. R. caucasicum and chry- 
 santhemum should prove hardy, but they are seldom 
 found in cidtivation. 
 
 B. lapponicum is a native of high mountain ranges 
 and northern latitudes, but is an " Alpine " of diffi- 
 cult cultivation. In its native habitat it is probably 
 protected by snow during the winter. 
 
 R. maximum is perfectly hardy ; and any hybrids 
 raised from it would probably partake of this char- 
 acteristic. 
 
 R. Cataivhiense is hardy as far north as Boston, 
 though in severe winters the foliage has sometimes 
 been a little browned. 
 
 The hybrids of Cataivhiense vary greatly in hardi- 
 ness. Though thus popularly called, they are of 
 mixed blood, and are hardy just so far as they 
 resemble the hardy parent. As a general rule, the 
 bright colors and the deeply spotted varieties will be 
 found tender ; but we have great hopes that some of 
 the newer seedlings, which in color are superior to 
 any of the old kinds, may prove hardy with us. 
 
 In the description of varieties in Part II., we pro- 
 pose to give our experience of the hardiness of the 
 several kinds. We must say, however, that the 
 experience of one locality is not necessarily that of 
 another, differing but little in climate. Each one 
 must experiment for himself with doubtful kinds, 
 and thus only can he ascertain the true rule for his 
 guidance. 
 
 There are many Rhododendrons that in branch 
 and bud are hardv, but of which the foliage is dis- 
 
42 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 figured every winter. The result is, the plants look 
 badly the greater part of the year, and the flowers 
 are small and poor. These varieties should be dis- 
 carded. A great beauty of the Rhododendron is the 
 foliage; and as a variety wliich keeps its foliage 
 unluirt occupies no more room, and requires less care 
 than one which is thus partially tender, tlie hardy 
 varieties should be preferred. Greater attention is 
 now being paid in the production of seedlings to size 
 and color of foliage, and some of the new kinds are 
 of surpassing excellence in this respect. 
 
 HOUSES FOR WINTER PROTECTIGJN. 
 
 Standard Rhododendrons, even of the hardiest 
 kinds, are liable to have the foliage very much dis- 
 figured by the cutting winds of winter. It is difficult 
 to protect or screen very large plants with cedar- 
 boughs ; therefore we must protect them otherwise. 
 
 We have found rough houses, made of light boards, 
 to answer this purpose perfectly. 
 
 Those we use xavy greatly with the size of the 
 plant : some are so small one man can place them ; 
 others so large it takes half a dozen men to put them 
 in position. 
 
 They are not ornamental, but could easily be 
 made so, though this would increase their weight. 
 The matter of appearance is of little importance, as 
 they are in use only from the middle of December 
 to -the first of April. In their construction we must 
 bear in mind that they are not to protect against 
 cold, but only against direct w.ind ; so we must not 
 
GROUPING. 43 
 
 make them tight. Those we use are made with a 
 sloping roof, the joints battened to keep rain from 
 leaking on to the plant ; the sides of light boards, 
 nailed about an eighth of an inch apart, to allow" a 
 free circulation of air. The northerly side is in one 
 piece, and is secured by screws : in the middle of 
 this side is a square window, a foot or more wide, 
 which is covered with a piece of white cotton-clolh. 
 The house is moted on from the southerly side, then 
 the northerly side is screwed on, and the plant is 
 liouscd for the winter. With this protection, Ihe 
 standards come out in the spring with fresh foliage 
 and in splendid condition. 
 
 When not in use, the houses are stored in some 
 remote shed. 
 
 Is of great importance for effective display. The 
 diflferent species and varieties differ greatly in habit 
 aild foliage. Some are only suitable for the front of 
 the bed ; others look well only in the background. 
 Color of flower also enters as an element in planting 
 for effective display. 
 
 While experience in this must be, in a measure, 
 the teacher, some hints may be given which may 
 prove advantageous. 
 
 Thus, of two fine white-flowered varieties, botli 
 excellent and equally hardy, album elegans is a tall- 
 grower, and only suited for the middle or rear of a 
 bed ; and coriaceinii is very dwarf, and in any jiosi- 
 tion but the front would be lost. 
 
44 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Ill Part II. we shall give tlie habit of the variety 
 where it is peculiar, in order to aid the planter. 
 
 Rhododendrons are particularly adapted for speci- 
 mens, and never look better than when so planted. 
 Large masses are, however, very effective in foliage, 
 and of wonderful magnificence when in flower. In 
 their native habitats the plants grow in huge masses, 
 and any one who has seen a Southern " Laurel 
 swamp" in bloom will never forget its beauty. 
 Some of the hills of the Alleghany Mountains pre- 
 sent masses of Rhododendrons, than which one can- 
 not find a finer sight in the floral kingdom. We 
 can, in cultivation, excel nature in variety, if not in 
 quantity. We have masses of Rhododendrons which, 
 when in bloom, are sheets of color, — white, pink, 
 scarlet, and purple ; and no more beautiful sight can 
 be imagined. 
 
 In planting masses, regard need not be had to 
 keeping the plants separate. Give each room to 
 develop, and then let the branches mingle : the 
 effect is far more natural and beautiful. Varieties 
 should also be arranged as to color to present the 
 best contrasts when in bloom : this is easily done by 
 selecting named kinds. Those which bloom at the 
 same season should be planted together : there is a 
 difference of many weeks in the flowering of species 
 and varieties. 
 
 Thus, Rhododendron dauricum blooms with the cro- 
 cuses ; but R. hirsidum not until the middle of June. 
 R. grandiflorum is with us a week earlier than any 
 of the Cataivbiense hybrids ; while R. Hannibal is 
 the latest of all, seldom blooming until all the others 
 
GROUPING. 45 
 
 have faded. R. maximum does not blooin until after 
 the first of July. 
 
 Those kinds which bloom very early or very late 
 should be planted as specimens, or in masses by 
 themselves ; thus a continuous and effective bloom 
 may be obtained. 
 
 In the new seedlings, many are late bloomers ; 
 and this is a great gain, as thus the Rhododendron 
 season is prolonged. 
 
 In grouping, some attention should be paid to 
 foliage : the flower lasts only a few weeks, the foliage 
 the whole year ; therefore those varieties with great- 
 est breadth of foliage, of a bright or very dark green, 
 should be chosen for the front of the bed. 
 
PART II. 
 
 DESCRirXlON OF THE RHODODENDRON 
 
PART 11. 
 DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron Ponticum. 
 
 " I ''HIS species has been longest in cultivation, and 
 -*- there are in England many very large plants. 
 It does not grow very tall, the largest of which we 
 have any record being about fifteen feet high ; but it 
 spreads its branches over a large space, and is not 
 unfrcquently found thirty feet in diameter. Many 
 of the large plantations in England are of this species, 
 and it is extensively planted for game covers, as the 
 buds are not eaten by rabbits. Seedlings are very 
 easily raised, and are furnished by nurserymen for 
 about twenty shillings per hundred for flowering 
 plants a foot high. It grows freely in any good 
 loam, and flowers abundantly. 
 
 The flowers are purplish, and, though in the mass 
 very showy, are wanting in substance. The foliage, 
 though good, is by no means so handsome as in 
 many other species. 
 
 This species is a native of Armenia, the Levant, 
 Georgia, the Caucasus, and various parts of Asia 
 extending to the Himalaya Mountains. 
 
50 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 It is not hardy in New England, and probably 
 would not succeed well north of Philadelphia ; 
 although it would doubtless survive with a slight 
 protection, or even unprotected in ordinary winters, 
 south of New York. Where it is hardy, its cheap- 
 ness, and the facility with which it adapts itself to 
 different soils, render it a most desirable plant for 
 massing on hill-sides and in open woods. Figured 
 in Bot. Mag. 18, t. 650. 
 
 There are many hybrid varieties and named seed- 
 lings, some hardier than the species and very well 
 worth growing. Of these we may especially men- 
 tion : — 
 
 E. P. FOL. ARGENTEIS, FOL. AUREIS, FOL. MARGINATIS, 
 
 The kinds with silver and gold striped foliage 
 which are desirable, as the markings are distinct 
 and permanent. - The plants grow freely, and are 
 ornamental. The flowers are poor. Our plants 
 are wintered in a cold cellar, and planted out in 
 summer. 
 
 Variety Cunningham's Dwarf White. 
 
 This is the hardiest of the pontic varieties, and 
 has with us stood^ the winter perfectly well for the 
 last four years. . 
 
 The foliage is more glossy, and brighter, than in 
 the species ; and the flowers vary from pink to pure 
 white. 
 
 It is a rapid grower, though of dwarf habit ; and 
 flowers very freely. For forcing there is nothing 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 51 
 
 better, as even in a parlor window it will bloom in a 
 few weeks after being brought from the cellar. 
 
 Plants may be imported for about fifty cents each. 
 
 We heartily recommend this variety for general 
 planting. 
 
 Variety album. This is merely a white-flowered 
 variety of the species, and is only desirable for 
 planting with it for contrast. 
 
 Variety salicifolium and cheiranthifolium, the 
 willow and wall-flower leaved, are very pretty for 
 contrast, the foliage being narrow and somewhat 
 curled. The flowers are small ; pale purple. Our 
 plants do well wintered in the cellar. 
 
 Variety azaleoides is a hybrid with some species 
 of azalea. The leaves are small, and the flower not 
 especially showy ; the plant is dwarf, and suitable 
 for the borders of beds. With us it has stood eight 
 winters, flowering freely ; but the leaves are liable 
 to be browned by the winter's sun without protection. 
 
 A sub-variety, crispijlorum, figured in Illus. Hort. 
 5, t. 181, has very showy flowers ; rich pink, with 
 ■wavy petals. 
 
 Variety pictum is very distinct, and worthy a 
 place in the choicest collection ; color white, with 
 very dark spots on upper , petals ; requires cellar 
 protection in winter. 
 
 Found in catalogues as Loivii. 
 
 Variety multimacdlatum is a very neat variety ; 
 flowers white, spotted with red ; tender. 
 
52 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Variety nivaticum is a very fine flower ; white, 
 spotted with pale yellow; tender. 
 
 Variety BiiANDUM, a good pale blush kind ; tender. 
 
 Variety roseum has rosy flowers, not especially 
 desirable with so many better flowers of the color ; 
 tender. 
 
 Variety aucub^folium is a very distinct kind, with 
 spotted leaves. The flowers are light lilac, and very 
 pretty. It has stood the winter with us for three 
 y^ears uninjured. 
 
 Variety tortulosum has light green and curiously 
 contorted foliage. It is only desirable as a curi- 
 osity. 
 
 Variety flore pleno is desirable if any one wishes 
 a double-flowered Ehododendron. The color is pale 
 purple, the flower of good form ; but it is wanting 
 in the simplicity and beauty of the single varieties. 
 
 It seems tolerably hardy, having stood the last 
 four winters with us in a northern exposure, the 
 flower-buds surviving, and the foliage only being 
 slightly browned one year. 
 
 Variety hyacinthiflorum is another double-flow- 
 ered kind, and open to the same objection as the 
 last-mentioned. The flowers are very double ; and 
 the plant is a good grower, and blooms freely. 
 
 It has proved hardy with us. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODEND. . 53 
 
 Variety Vervaneanum is also double-llowercd. 
 We cannot speak as to its hardiness. 
 
 Variety guttatum is delicate and pretty. The 
 flowers are white, distinctly spotted. Well worth 
 growing, but tender. 
 
 There are other varieties, varying in color from 
 deep purple to pure white, some very pretty and 
 desirable, and all worth planting for experiment. 
 
 It is impossible to tell whether these will prove 
 hardy, and the only course is for each cultivator to 
 try them for himself. As the plants are very cheap, 
 the experiment cannot prove expensive. 
 
 We have given descriptions of those which we 
 have grown at Glen Ridge, and probably any which 
 we have found hardy will prove so anywhere south 
 of the latitude of Boston. We do not, however, 
 advise the amateur who only plants a few Rhododen- 
 drons to choose any of the pontic varieties. They 
 are less showy than others, and may be cut off at 
 any time by a winter of mmsual severity. 
 
 Rhododendron maximu3i. 
 
 This is the Rose Bay, or Great Laurel, of the New 
 England States ; and is found plentifully from south- 
 ern New England southward. The farthest north- 
 ern limit is a swamp near Sebago Lake, near 
 Portland, Me. ; it next occurs in a large swamp on 
 the banks of Charles River, in Medfield, Mass., and 
 next m a swamp in Randolph, south of the Blue 
 Hill. 
 
04 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Ill Medfield it was till recently very abundant, 
 and flowered so freely that we have seen wagon 
 loads of flowers gathered : but the tall trees which 
 sheltered it have been cut down, and the i^lants in 
 many places chopped off even with the ground. So 
 a few years hence, it may be extinct in that locality. 
 
 The plant is a tall grower, of loose habit ; foliage 
 large, dark green above, rusty or whitish beneath. 
 The flowers are small, white or pinkish, with yel- 
 lowish-green spots on the upper petals. 
 
 This species is the latest blooming Rhododendron 
 we have, never blooming until after the first of 
 July, in New England. 
 
 It is common in cultivation, th^ plants having 
 been brought from the swamps ; and plants are often 
 seen for sale at the large markets, in the spring. It 
 is, however, the least desirable of all the Rhododen- 
 drons, its only merit being its late flowering. For 
 large masses on the banks of ponds or on shady 
 hill-sides, it is to be recommended, as it is perfectly 
 hardy. It will not bear drought, however, as well 
 as other species, and does not do well in full sun- 
 shine. The only losses of Rhododendrons from the 
 excessive drought of the past summer (1870), at 
 Glen Ridge, have been large plants of Rhododendron 
 maximum. Figured in Bot. Mag. 24, t. 951; in 
 Michaux, vol. 3, pi. 4 ; and in Big. Med. pi, 51. 
 
 In English magazines we find mentioned as varie- 
 ties maximum, album, purpureum, and Wellsianum. 
 The first is probably little different from the species, 
 and is the M. Purshii of Loudon. The second is 
 
DE^C.IIPTIOX OF THE RHODODEXDROX. 55 
 
 the R. purjiurcum of Piirsli, "svhich never existed as 
 a species, is not now recognized, and is probably 
 some hybrid of R. Cataivhiense. Of the last we have 
 been able to obtain no information. It is said by a 
 writer in the " Cottage Gardener " to have " pink 
 flowers, fine foliage, and to be of good habit ; " if so, 
 it must be indeed desirable. 
 
 Rhododexdron dauricum. 
 
 This charming species we place among the most 
 desirable of Rhododendrons, not so much for the 
 beauty of the individual flowers as for its hardiness, 
 its early blooming, and the abundance of blossoms. 
 It is a native of Siberia and Eastern Asia. The 
 foliage is deciduous ; the flowers are rosy-purple, and 
 appear in very early spring before the leaves. A 
 mass of this plant is a charming object in early 
 spring; and no collection, however small, should be 
 without it. 
 
 Figured in And. Rep. 1, 4; Lodd. Cab. 605 and 
 1446. Bot. Mag. 17, t. 636. 
 
 Variety atrovirexs is also a native of Siberia, and 
 differs only from the species in having dark ever- 
 green leaves, which render it more desirable, as when 
 in bloom it is more effective. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 44, t. 1888 ; and in Lodd. 
 Cab. t. 1584, under the name of sempervirens. 
 
 These plants naturally grow tall and spindling, 
 and are much benefited by careful pruning. 
 
 They may be imported for about fifty cents a 
 plant. 
 
56 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron californicum. 
 
 This species is a native of California, and is well 
 worthy of cultivation wherever it proves hardy. 
 The chances are, it will not stand the winters in 
 New England. In England it is hardy, a writer 
 in the "Cottage Gardener" calling it the " hardiest 
 Rhododendron " he has " met with, standing wind 
 well." 
 
 The flowers are rosy, very showy ; and the habit 
 of .the plant is good. Figured in Bot. Mag. 81, 
 t. 4863. 
 
 Rhododendron arboreum. 
 
 A noble species, native of Nepal, attaining larger 
 size than any of the family, the trunks being found 
 twenty feet high and twenty-four inches in diameter. 
 The foliage is large, dark green above, silvery be- 
 neath ; the flowers bright scarlet, in dense heads. 
 
 This species varies much in the color of the 
 flowers : in the wild state they are found of every 
 shade, from deep scarlet to pure white ; and in culti- 
 vation numerous varieties have been raised, ditFering 
 greatly in color, markings, and size of flowers, and 
 in foliage. 
 
 Some of these are among the most valuable Rho- 
 dodendrons for gTcenhouse culture and for forcing. 
 "With us all are tender, and require greenhouse 
 protection. As they bloom very early in the spring, 
 they are not suitable for outdoor culture, even if 
 protected by removal to the cellar in winter. For 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 57 
 
 a tender Rhododendron house they are perfectly 
 adapted, and furnish a variety of brilliant colors 
 not to be found in other species. 
 
 The species is figured in Bot. Reg. 11, t. 890 ; 
 Hook, Ex. Fl. t. 168; Pax. Mag. 1, p. 101, and 2, 
 p. 98 ; Sweet's, Fl. G. 250. 
 
 The follo^ring are native varieties : — ^ 
 
 Variety album has white flowers, with delicate 
 purple spots. Figured in Bot. Mag. 61, t. 3290; 
 and Bot. Reg. 20, t. 1684. 
 
 Variety roseum has bright rosy flowers. In its 
 native country this variety is higher up the moun- 
 tains than the scarlet species, and is hardier. Figured 
 in Bot. Reg. 15, 1. 1240 ; and in Sweet's Fl. G. t. 339. 
 
 Variety niyeum is a charming variety, with white 
 flowers, spotted with purple. Figured in Sweet's, Fl. 
 G. t. 148. 
 
 Variety cinnamomeum has rosy-white flowers, 
 spotted with brown. The foliage is rusty on the 
 under side. A very showy plant. Figured in Bot. 
 Mag. 67, t. 3825. 
 
 The figure in Bot. Reg. 23, t. 1982, under this 
 name, is a ditferent plant. 
 
 Variety Paxtoni is a fine kind, with deep crimson 
 flowers of great substance. Figured in Pax. Mag. 
 14, p. 99. 
 
 This variety should not be confounded with the 
 Catawbiense hybrid of the same name. 
 
 3* 
 
58 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 The following are hybrid varieties : — 
 
 Variety Russellianum is a hybrid between Cataw- 
 biense and arbor eum ; color, bright crimson. Fig- 
 ured in Sweet's, Fl. G. 2, t. 91. 
 
 Variety Smithii coccinea has scarlet flowers, 
 beautifully spotted ; a hybrid between R. ponticum 
 and arbor eum. Figured in Sweet's Fl. G. 2, t. 50. 
 
 Variety alta-clarense was raised from R. arbo- 
 reum, fertilized with a seedling between ponticum 
 and Cataiobiense . The flower is clear, bright, trans- 
 parent scarlet, and the foliage very rich. Figured 
 in Bot. Reg. 17, t. 1414; and in Bot. Mag. 62, 
 t. 3423. 
 
 Variety undulatum is a hybrid with R. ponticum. 
 The flowers are deep, shaded purple ; and the foliage 
 has a peculiar, wavy form. Figured in Sweet's Fl. 
 G. t. 341. 
 
 Variety album speciosum, figured in Illus. Hort. 
 1, t. 1, has white flowers, beautifully spotted with 
 crimson. 
 
 There are many other fine hybrids, and new ones 
 are constantly produced. All are showy in flower ; 
 but many popular this year will be lost a few years 
 hence, giving place to varieties of newer origin. 
 Some of the old varieties we have mentioned still 
 hold their place as standard kinds, and are as yet 
 unsurpassed. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 50 
 
 The tendency now is to raise hardy Ehododen- 
 drons ; but the tender kinds should not be neglected, 
 as they comprise some of the most beautiful of the 
 family. 
 
 Many other hybrids, in which the blood of R. 
 arhoreum is mingled, are mentioned in future pages. 
 Indeed, it is to this species we owe much of the 
 high coloring fomid in some of the most popular 
 varieties. 
 
 Rhododendron albiflorum. 
 
 A very distinct and beautiful species, native of 
 high regions in the Rocky Mountains. It is a low 
 shrub, bearing the leaves in tufts at the ends of the 
 branches, and below them a few small drooping 
 creamy-white flowers, which bear little resemblance 
 to those of other Rhododendrons. It first bloomed 
 in England in 1837, but probably is not now in 
 cultivation. Fig-ured in Bot. Mag. t. 3670, and in 
 Hook. Fl. Bor. Am., vol. 2, p. 43, t. 133. 
 
 Rhododendron anthopogon 
 
 Is a small-flowered species, with rusty leaves and 
 yellowish-white flowers, not especially ornamental. 
 It is not hardy. A native of the Himalayas. Fig- 
 ured in Bot. Mag. 68, t. 3947. 
 
 Rhododendron campanulatum. 
 
 This is a magnificent species, native of the moun- 
 tain of Gosainthan, in Nepal. In England it is 
 
60 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 hardy, but the flowers expand so early as to be 
 often injured by the frost ; therefore, with us it would 
 require house protection. The flowers are rosy- 
 lavender, witli dark spots ; the foliage deep green, 
 rusty underneath. Figured in Bot. Mag. Q6, t. 3759 ; 
 and in Sweet's, Fl. G. II. t. 241. 
 
 The variety B. c. superbiim (Pax. Mag. 16, p. 190) 
 has waxy white flowers, spotted with crimson-purple. 
 
 Rhododendeon caucasicum. 
 
 This is a small species, in its native country 
 forming a low shrub, with procumbent branches ; a 
 native of the Caucasus, on high rocks, near the 
 limits of perpetual snow. 
 
 The flowers are white, tinged with purple or rose. 
 
 It is a desirable species, and should prove hardy 
 with slight protection. Figured in Bot. Mag. 28, 
 t. 1145. 
 
 Variety stramineum has straw-colored flowers, and 
 is a very handsome plant. Figured in Bot. Mag. 
 
 Variety album is a hybrid with the white variety 
 of Azalea pontica, and resembles an Azalea more 
 than a Rhododendron. Figured in Bot. Mag. 67 
 t. 3811. 
 
 Variety pulcherrimum is a hybrid between arho- 
 reum and caucasicum. The flowers are rosy, and 
 very showy. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE EHODODENDRON. 61 
 
 Variety Nobleanum has bright scarlet flowers, 
 and is a very beautiful kind. There are also sub- 
 varieties with rose and jiink flowers ; but that called 
 Nobleanum sitperbum is the best. 
 
 Rhododendron chrysanthum. 
 
 Tliis pretty little s]X3cies is a native of Siberia and 
 other extreme northern countries: it is also found 
 in the Caucasus Mountains. It is a Ioav shrub, never 
 exceeding one foot in height, with evergreen leaves, 
 and large, irregular, yellow flowers. 
 
 While perfectly hardy, it is difficult to cultivate, 
 the heat of summer probably aifecting it unfavorably. 
 It is rarely found in cultivation. Figured in Wood. 
 Med. 2, 103 ; and in Steph. Med. 2, 80. 
 
 Rhododendron punctatum. 
 
 This pretty species, although a native of Carolina 
 and Georgia, generally stands the winter with us ; 
 although the foliage is usually somewhat disfigTired, 
 and the flower-buds are killed if the mercury falls 
 much Ijelow zero. The foliage is dark green, covered 
 below with rusty dots, whence the name ; the flow- 
 ers are small, pink, very pretty, but not especially 
 showy. The habit of the plant is straggling. It is 
 worth growing in a collection, but is only interesting 
 for variety. Seedlings vary much in shade and 
 markings of the flowers. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 49, t. 2285 ; Bot. Reg. 1, 
 t 37 ; and And. Rep. 1, t. 36. 
 
 Sometimes called R. minus. 
 
62 THE KHODODENDRON. 
 
 Ehododendron hirsutum. 
 
 A low-growing s}30cies, and the most common of 
 the dwarf Rhododendrons. The leaves are small, 
 evergreen, thickly covered with rusty hairs; the 
 flowers pale red, in small clusters. 
 
 Native of the Alps, and one of the flowers most 
 commonly sent home in collections of Alpine plants. 
 This and B. ferrugineum are known as the " Alpen 
 Rose." 
 
 This plant is useful for the edges of beds of Amer- 
 ican plants, but is not showy. Figured in Bot. Mag. 
 43, t. 1853. 
 
 Variety variegatum is a more showy plant than 
 the species, and the foliage variegated with yellow 
 is very pretty. It can be readily obtained from 
 England, but is not common. 
 
 Rhododendron ferrugineum. 
 
 Although this plant and the last are considered 
 by some botanists as but varieties of one species, 
 the differences are quite sufficient to abundantly 
 disting-uish them. The foliage of B. ferrvgineum 
 is smooth above, rusty and dotted below, and far 
 larger than B. hirsutum ; the flowers are also much 
 larger, lighter-colored, and the habit of the plant is 
 taller. The buds seldom open until other Rhodo- 
 dendrons, except B. maximum, are out of bloom ; 
 and this renders it a very valuable species. 
 
DESCRIPTION 01-^ THE RHODODENDRON. 63 
 
 The blossoms cover the whole plant, and, though 
 not brilliant in color, in the mass arc very showy. 
 It stands the coldest Avinters uninjured, will grow 
 in any moist garden soil, and never fails to bloom. 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 65, though the flower is 
 too bright in color. 
 
 Yariety album, figTired in Sweet's, Fl. G. II. 
 t. 258, has white flowers. We do not now find it 
 in any catalogues. 
 
 Rhododendron lapponicum. 
 
 A small Alpine species, growing about six inches 
 high, with small violet-purple flowers. We have not 
 seen it in cultivation, although it can easily be 
 obtained from the White Mountains. Probably, like 
 all Alpines, it would prove of difficult cultivation. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 58, t. 3106. 
 
 Rhododendron kamtschaticum. 
 
 A low-growing species, with purple flowers, native 
 of Kamtschatka ; probably not now to be found in 
 cultivation. 
 
 Rhododendron CHAMiECiSTUS. 
 
 This species, in foliage, is wholly unlike a Rho- 
 dodendron, the leaves rather resemljling some species 
 of thyme. It is a native of the European Alps and 
 of Siberia ; and would probably prove hardy, with 
 
64 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 slight protection, such as a winter covering of pine- 
 needles, as it never exceeds a few inches in height. 
 
 The flowers are large, for the plant ; pale purple, 
 and very handsome. 
 
 Figured in Pax. Mag. 3, p. 169 ; Bot. Mag. 14, 
 t. 488 ; Lodd. Cab. 1491. 
 
 We now come to the most showy of the family, 
 the magnificent species of the Sikkim Himalayas. 
 Of these we can only briefly cite from English 
 authorities. We have had no experience in their 
 culture. They are all tender, — many true green- 
 house plants ; others will stand a few degrees of frost. 
 These latter are worthy of cultivation in a Rhodo- 
 dendron-house. 
 
 The magnificent work of Hooker, on the " Rho- 
 dodendrons of the Sikkim Himalaya," from which 
 we derive most of our information, gives beautiful 
 colored figures of these noble species. We have 
 also given references to such figures as we have 
 been able to find in other illustrated works ; but our 
 notice of all these species must necessarily be 
 brief, and can only serve to call the attention of 
 the amateur to the wealth of floral beauty which is 
 within his reach. 
 
 All the best species can now be obtained of Eng- 
 lish nurserymen, and many fine hybrids have been 
 originated within the last ten years. 
 
 We also mention some of the tropical Rhododen- 
 drons: species of easy growth with stove-heat, 
 many of which are exquisitely beautiful, and some 
 deliciously fragrant. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron Dalhousije. 
 
 This species, one of the noblest of the family, pro- 
 duces flowers three to four inches in diameter ; white, 
 tinged with rose, and very fragrant. 
 
 It is parasitical on the trunks of oaks and mag- 
 nolias, in its native habitat ; but in cultivation does 
 not require the treatment of an epiphyte, growing 
 freely in the gromid or inarched on other species. 
 No description can do justice to its beauty ; but some 
 idea may be formed by reference to the illustrations 
 in Hook. Rhod. tab. 1 and 2 ; Bot. Mag. 79, t. 4718, 
 and 88, t. 5322 ; Fl. des Serres, 5, t. 460-468. 
 
 Rhododendron barbatum. 
 
 A tall-growing species, attaining the height of 
 sixty feet ; the leaf-stalks covered with long bristles, 
 or hairs. The flowers are blood-color, in a close, 
 compact head ; very handsome. This species has 
 proved hardy in England. Figured in Hook. Rhod. 
 pi. 3 ; and Fl. des Serres, 5, t. 469-472. 
 
 Rhododendron lancifolium. 
 
 A shrubby species, with lanceolate, coriaceous 
 leaves, and small, close heads of rich crimson 
 flowers ; nearly allied to the foregoing, but wholly 
 destitute of hairs. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 4. 
 
Q^ THE RHODODENDEON. 
 
 Rhododendron Wallichii. 
 
 A shrub attaining a height of about eight feet, 
 with showj foliage, and large lilac flowers, with 
 rosy dots. In foliage this species is distinct from all 
 others. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 5. It is, however, 
 regarded as a form of M. campanulatum, and as such 
 is figured in Bot. Mag. 82, t. 4928. 
 
 Rhododendron Campbelli^. 
 
 A species often attaining the height of forty feet, 
 and only distinguished slightly, botanically, from R. 
 arboreiim. Flowers scarlet, in close heads. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 6. 
 
 Rhododendron Roylh. 
 
 A low-growing shrub, with brownish-red flowers, 
 tipped with blue ; not a very showy species. 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 7. 
 
 Rhododendron cinnabarinum. 
 
 A small species, very distinct both in foliage and 
 flower ; the former beautifully reticulated, the latter 
 of a fine cinnabar color. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 8. 
 
 Variety pallidum has fine rose-colored flowers, in 
 an irregular terminal umbel. Figured in Bot. Mag. 
 80, t. 4788. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 67 
 
 Rhododendron eljeagnoides. 
 
 A little Icnown, low-growing species, from the 
 snowy regions of the Himalayas. The flowers are 
 usually yellow, but vary to deep-red purple. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 23. 
 
 Rhododendron argenteiim. 
 
 A tall-growing, magnificent species, with leaves 
 a foot long, by three or four inches in breadth. 
 Flowers white, two or three inches long, and as 
 much in diameter. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 9; Bot. Mag. 84, 
 t. 6054; and Fl. des Serres, 5, t. 4T3-476. 
 
 Rhododendron Falconeri. 
 
 A large tree, with immense leaves, downy on the 
 under side ; and heads of numerous, small, white 
 flowers. A very distinct and striking species. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 82, t. 4924 ; Fl. des Serres 
 5, t. 477, 480, and 11, t. 11G6-67 ; Hook. Rhod. 
 pi. 10. 
 
 Rhododendron vaccinioides. 
 
 A very small, straggling, epiphytal species, much 
 resembling in growth and appearance the Himalaya 
 vaccinum ( V. ohovatum^. The flowers are un- 
 known. 
 
68 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron niveum. 
 
 A species much resembling R. arboreum, but dis- 
 tinguished by the snow-white under surface of the 
 foliage. Flowers light lavender-white color. 
 
 Figured in Lem. Jar. t. 421 ; and Bot. Mag. 79, 
 t. 4730. 
 
 Rhododendron oboyatum. 
 
 A small, resinous shrub, with small red flowers ; 
 nearly allied to R. lepidotum. 
 
 Rhododendron lepidotuivi. 
 
 A species with small flowers, existing in two 
 varieties ; the one with yellow, the other with red- 
 dish-purple flowers. 
 
 It is a pretty species. Although native of high 
 mountains, it would probably prove tender. 
 
 Figured in Lem. Jar. pi. 343 ; Bot. Mag. 78, t. 
 
 Rhododendron Aucklandh. 
 
 A magnificent species, the flowers often measuring 
 five inches in diameter. Color white, tinged with 
 pink. Leaves four to ten inches long, bright green. 
 
 Figured in Revue Hort. 1855, 5 ; Hook. Rhod. 
 pi. 11. 
 
 This plant is sometimes referred to R. Griffith- 
 ianum, as a variety. See Bot. Mag. 84, t. 5065. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON, 69 
 
 Rhododendron Thomson7. 
 
 A slirubby species, noticeable for the deep blood- 
 red color of the flowers, and their glossy surface. 
 Foliage roundish. 
 
 Figmed in Fl. des Serres, 7, t. 688-690 ; Hook. 
 Rhod. pi. 12 ; Bot. Mag. 83, t. 4997 ; Revue Hort. 
 1855, t. 7. 
 
 Rhododendron pendulum. 
 
 An epiphytal species, native of damp, gloomy 
 forests, on the branches of pine-trees. Shoots long, 
 straggling ; leaves dull green, rusty below ; flowers 
 small, white. Figin^ed in Fl. des Serres, 7, t. 662 ; 
 and Hook. Rhod. pi. 13. 
 
 Rhododendron pumilum. 
 
 This is the smallest of the Sikkim Rhododendrons, 
 and one of the rarest and most beautiful. Leaves 
 about half an inch long ; flowers very delicate rose- 
 color. 
 
 Figured in Fl. des Serres, 7, t. 667 ; and Hook. 
 Rhod. pi. U. 
 
 Rhododendron Hodgsoni. 
 
 A common Himalaya species, forming immense 
 masses of jungle. Foliage large ; deep, brilliant 
 green. Flowers in close heads, pale purple or rose- 
 color. 
 
70 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 Figured in Revue Hort. 1855, 22 ; Hook. Rliod. 
 pi. 15 ; Bot. Mag. 92, t. 5552. 
 
 Rhododendron lanatum. 
 
 A small tree-like species ; leaves yellowish-green, 
 tawny white below. Flower pale sulphur-colored, 
 with red dots. A very pretty plant. 
 
 Figured in Fl. des Serres, 7, t. 684 ; and in Hook. 
 Rhod. pi. 16. 
 
 Rhododendron glaucum. 
 
 A pretty little plant, with glaucous foliage and 
 pale purplish-pink flowers. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 79, t. 4721 ; Revue Hort. 
 1855, t. 11 ; Hook. Rhod. pi. 17 ; FL des Serres, 7, 
 t. 672. 
 
 Rhododendron Maddeni. 
 
 A magnificent plant, with large, campanulate, 
 white flowers, often tinged with pink. Foliage clear 
 green, tawny below. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 80, t. 4805 ; Fl. des Serres, 
 9, t. 912 ; Hook. Rhod. 18 ; Revue Hort. 1855, 
 16 ; nius. Hort. 1857, t. 140. 
 
 Rhododendron triflorum. 
 
 A small shrub, with pale greenish-yellow flowers 
 much resembling an azalea, growing in clusters of 
 three. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE KIIODODENDRON. 71 
 
 Figau-ed in Fl. dcs Scrrcs, 7, t. G73 ; Hook. Rhod. 
 pi. 19. 
 
 Rhododendron setosdm. 
 
 A small-growing species, much resembling a 
 Rhodora in habit and flower. Leaves box-like, and 
 evergreen ; flowers purplish, freely produced. The 
 whole plant is strongly and disagreeably resinous. 
 A native of the highest mountains, and very showy 
 when in bloom. It would probably be hardy. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 20. 
 
 Rhododendron Edgeworthi. 
 
 An epiphytal species, with superb flowers and 
 neat, small foliage. Flowers white, tinged with 
 blush or pale yellow, often four inches in diameter. 
 
 Figiu-ed in Fl. des Serres, 8, t. 797-8 ; Hook. 
 Rhod. pi. 21 ; Bot. Mag. 82, t. 4936. 
 
 Rhododendron ^ruginosum. 
 
 A shrubby species, native of altitudes 15,000 feet 
 above the level of the sea. Flowers lilac-rose, in 
 small, close heads. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 22. 
 
 Rhododendron saligneum. 
 
 A slender plant, with pale glaucous-gi'een, droop- 
 ing leaves. Flower light yellow, spotted with 
 green, about an inch in diameter. A pretty species. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 23. 
 
72 THE KHODODENDRON. 
 
 EnODODENDRON CILIATUM. 
 
 A small shrub, attaining the height of two feet ; 
 the whole plant hairy. Leaves dark green. Flower 
 pale reddish-purple, very pretty. This species is 
 one of the most easily grown of the Sikkim kinds, 
 and flowers freely. 
 
 Figured in Pax. Fl. G. t. 83 ; and Hook. Rhod. 
 pi. 24. 
 
 Variety rosed album differs in having rosy-white 
 flowers, and, like the species, blooms freely when 
 only a few inches high. This was the first of the 
 Sikkim species which flowered in cultivation. 
 
 Figured in Lem. Jar. t. 312 ; Bot. Mag. 78, t. 
 4648 ; Fl. des Serres, 8, t. 766. 
 
 Rhododendron fulgens. 
 
 A native of high latitudes, and a very showy 
 plant. Flowers in round, close heads, of a deep, 
 glowing scarlet color. Foliage roundish; tawny 
 below. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 88, t. 5317 ; Fl. des Serres, 
 8, t. 789 ; Hook. Rhod. pi. 25. 
 
 Rhododendron nivale. 
 
 A little plant, growing only two inches high, and 
 attaining " a loftier elevation than any other shrub 
 in the world." It much resembles R. lapponicum. 
 The foliage is very small; the flower about one- 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 73 
 
 third of an inch in diameter, purple. The whole 
 plant has an odor resembling cologne. 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 26. 
 
 Rhododendron virgatum. 
 
 A very slender, twiggy species, from Bootan. 
 Flowers reddish-purple, solitary or in pairs. Foliage 
 very glaucous. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 26. 
 
 See also Bot. Mag. 84, t. 5060; and Fl. des 
 Serres, 14, t. 1408, for varieties which differ, in 
 having pink and white flowers, and in their disposi- 
 tion, — Avhich is in the one axillary, in the other 
 terminal. 
 
 Rhododendron WiGHTn. 
 
 A very large tree, with showy foliage ; rusty cin- 
 namon-color below, rich green on the upper sur- 
 face. Flowers bell-shaped, in dense clusters ; yellow, 
 beautifully marked with red. A splendid species. 
 
 Fig-ured in Fl. des Serres, 8, t. 792-3; Hook. 
 Rhod. pi. 27. 
 
 Rhododendron camelli^florum. 
 
 A singular epiphytal species, found growing 
 upon pine-trees. Stems slender ; foliage small ; 
 flowers white, resembling a single camellia. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 28 ; and Bot. Mag. 
 82, t. 4932. 
 
74 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron candelabrtoi. 
 
 This plant, of which a beautiful figure is 
 given in Hook. Rhod. pi. 29, is considered by Dr. 
 Hooker as a pale-flowered variety of R. Thomsoni. 
 (Hook. Rhod. pi. 12.) There are, however, some 
 slight botanical differences between the two. 
 
 Rhododendron campylocarpum. 
 
 This species is a small shrub, and is one of 
 the most charming of the Sikkim Rhododendrons. 
 Foliage bright green ; flowers bell-shaped, sulphur- 
 yellow, spotless, and fragrant. 
 
 Figured in Hook. Rhod. pi. 30 ; Bot. Mag. 83, 
 t. 4968. 
 
 Rhododendron Nh^agiricum. 
 
 • This plant much resembles R. arboreum, of 
 which it may prove a variety. By some, however, 
 it is considered identical with R. Camphellice. It is 
 a native of Nepal, and bears large trusses of rosy- 
 pink and white flowers. 
 
 Figured in Fl. des Serres, 10, t. 1030-1; and 
 Bot. Mag. 74, t. 4381. 
 
 Rhododendron formostoi 
 
 Is a native of Silhet, in the east Himalaya range. 
 The flowers are large, white, fragrant, and very 
 showy. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 75, t. 4457. 
 
DESCRIPTION OP THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron Gibson: 
 
 Is a very fine species, with large, white flowers, 
 with yellowish shading. The young foliage resem- 
 bles an azalea. 
 
 Figured in Pax. Mag. 8, p. 217 ; and Fl. des 
 Serres, 1, t. 18. 
 
 Rhododendron javanicum. 
 
 This is a tropical species, but will thrive and 
 bloom freely in a warm greenhouse. The foliage is 
 bright glossy green ; the flowers orange-yellow, but 
 very variable in shade. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 73, t. 4336 ; Pax. Mag. 15, 
 p. 217 ; Fl. des Serres, 3, t. 293-4. 
 
 Variety aurantiacum (Fl. des Serres, 6, t. 576) 
 has trusses of vivid orange flowers, lighted with rosy 
 tints. 
 
 Rhododendron citrinum. 
 
 This small species is also a native of Java. The 
 flowers are small, drooping, light yellow. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 80, t. 4797 ; and m Fl. des 
 Serres, 10, t. 970. 
 
 Rhododendron jasminiflorum. 
 
 This elegant species is a native of Malacca. The 
 flowers are tubular, white, with deep pink eye ; the 
 
76 THE EHODODENDROX. 
 
 foliage neat and sliowy. From this species some 
 beautiful hybrids have been produced. 
 
 Figured in Lem. Jar. t. 41 ; Bot. Mag. 76, t. 
 4524 ; nius. Hort. 1859, t. 203. 
 
 Rhododendron Champions. 
 
 This beautiful species is a native of Hong Kong. 
 Botanically, it is nearly allied to jR. formosum. The 
 foliage is distinctly veined; the flowers rosy, or red 
 dish-pink, shading to a white throat, with broad, 
 spreading petals. 
 
 A variety is described with delicate, white flowers, 
 the upper lip pale yellow, towards the centre copi- 
 ously dotted with ochre. 
 
 Figured in Lem. Jar. t. 208 ; and Bot. Mag. 77, 
 t. 4609. 
 
 Rhododendron Farrer^, 
 
 Figured in Sweet's Fl. G. 2, t. 93, is a small, 
 pink-flowered species from China. The flowers are 
 very pretty, resembling azaleas. Probably not in 
 cultivation. 
 
 Rhododendron Metternichi. 
 
 This is a Japanese species, a native of high 
 mountains, and would doubtless prove hardy. 
 The flowers are rather small, rosy-white, something 
 like those of R. maximum. 
 
 Figured in Sieb. Fl. Jap. pi. 9. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE EHODODENDEON. 
 
 Rhododendron album. 
 
 A very pretty Javanese species, with whitish-yel- 
 low flowers; foliage dark green, rich rust-color 
 below. 
 
 . In habit this species resembles i?. citrinum. A 
 stove plant. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 83, t. 4972. 
 
 Rhododendron Batemani 
 
 Resembles as a species R. campamdatum. Flowers 
 large, deep crimson-red. Native of Himalaya. 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 89, t. 5387. 
 
 Rhododen-dron blandfordianum. 
 
 A Himalayan species, very variable both in flower 
 and foliage. Color brick-red, orange, or even 
 greenish. 
 
 A fine figure is given in Ulus. Hort. 3, t. 112. 
 See also Bot. Mag. 82, t. 4930 ; and Fl. des Serres, 
 11, t. 1173. 
 
 Rhododendron Boothii. 
 
 A very showy, tender species, from Central Asia. 
 Flowers small, bright yellow ; foliage, when young, 
 very hairy. Figured in Illus. Hort. 3, t. 174. 
 
78 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron Brookianum. 
 
 A rare and splendid kind, native of Borneo, 
 and, in its wild state, epiphytal. Flowers large, 
 rich golden yellow. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 82, t. 4935 ; and Fl. des 
 Serres, 12, t. 1238-9. 
 
 Rhododendron calophyllum. 
 
 A fine species, native of the Bootan Mountains, 
 where Mr. Booth discovered sixteen new species, 
 emulating the example of Hooker, who found forty- 
 three in the Sikkim Himalayas. 
 
 Flowers large, white, very showy. 
 
 Figiu-ed in Bot. Mag. 83, t. 5002 ; also in Hen. 
 111. Bou. pi. 19. 
 
 Rhododendron grande. 
 
 A tall-growing species from India. Figured in 
 Wight, vol. 4, t. 1202. 
 
 Probably not in cultivation. 
 
 Rhododendron Griffithianum. 
 
 A fine species, with large, white flowers. Figured 
 in Wight, vol. 4, t. 1203. R. Aucklandii (Bot. 
 Mag. 84, t. 5065) is sometimes referred to this 
 species. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 79 
 
 Rhododendron Hookeri. 
 
 One of the Bootan species, of tall habit, and only 
 found at high elevations. Flowers very regular, of 
 rich scarlet color. 
 • Figmed in Bot. Mag. 82, t. 4926. 
 
 Rhododendron Kendrickii. 
 
 A species with dark foliage, which varies much in 
 width. Flowers in large trusses, scarlet. 
 
 Figured in (variety latifoliuni) Bot. Mag. 85, 
 t. 5129. 
 
 Rhododendron Keysii. 
 
 A very singular species, wholly dissimilar in 
 flower from all other Rhododendrons. The flowers 
 are dull red, tipped with pale yellow, and are pro- 
 duced in clusters from the old wood. In habit it is 
 a small shrub, a native of Bootan, and has proved 
 hardy in England. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 81, t. 4875; and Fl. des 
 Serres, 11, t. 1110. 
 
 Rhododendron moulmaynense. 
 
 A small, slender-growing species, producing deli- 
 cate white flowers, tinged with yellow. Native of 
 Moulmain. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 82, t. 4904. 
 
80 THE EHODODENDEON. 
 
 Rhododendron Shepherdh. 
 
 One of the Bootan kinds, much resembling R. 
 Kendrickii. Flowers deep scarlet, in large trusses. 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 85, t. 5125. 
 
 Rhododendron Nuttallii. 
 
 A superb species ; in Bhotan, its native country, 
 forming a tree thirty feet high. The leaves are 
 nearly a foot long, and the single, white flowers 
 measure six inches in diameter. It is not a free 
 bloomer in cultivation. The flowers are white, 
 shaded to light yellow, and are very beautiful. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 85, t. 5146 ; Fl. des Serres, 
 13, t. 1326 ; Illus. Hort. 1859, t. 208 ; Hen. 111. 
 Bou. pi. 21. 
 
 Rhododendron eetusum. 
 
 A native of western Java and Sumatra, generally 
 on high mountains. The flowers are small, but of a 
 bright scarlet color, very rich and showy ; foliage 
 bright evergreen. 
 
 A fine figure of this plant is given in Illus. Hort. 
 2, t. 76. See also Bot. Mag. 81, t. 4859 ; Fl. des 
 Serres, 10, t. 1044. 
 
 Rhododendron Smithii. 
 
 Another of the Bootan species. Foliage rich 
 dark green ; flowers rich red, in large, close heads. 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 85, t. 5120. 
 
DESCEIPTION OF THE EHODODENDRON. 81 
 
 Rhododendron Yeichianum. 
 
 A magnificent species, from Moulmain. Flowers 
 very large and showy, white, with wavy petals, as in 
 some of the Indian azaleas. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 88, t. 4992 ; Fl. des Serres, 
 14, t. 1416, and 15, t. 1519-20. 
 
 Rhododendron Windsorii. 
 
 A Bootan species, which proves hardy in Eng- 
 land. Foliage dull, opaque green ; silvery below. 
 Flowers rosy-red or white. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 83, t. 5008. 
 
 Rhododendron Lobbianum. 
 
 A fine stove species, from Penang, intermediate 
 between R. javanicum and Brookiamim. Foliage 
 bright evergreen ; flowers bright yellow. 
 
 Figured in FL Mag. pi. 10. 
 
 Rhododendron Thibaudiense. 
 
 This pretty species is nearly related to R. Keysii, 
 which it resembles in the peculiar form of the 
 flowers ; but, unlike that species, they are terminal, 
 and not produced on the old wood. It is a very 
 showy plant, native of Bhotan. 
 
 Figured in Fl. Mag. pi. 253. 
 4* 
 
82 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron Fortuni. 
 
 A Chinese species, resembling — both in foliage, 
 form of flower, and fragrance — R. Griffithianum ; 
 but differing in color of flower, which is in this 
 plant a delicate rose. Hardy in England. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 92, t. 5596. 
 
 It is not improbable that, the next few years may 
 give us new species of these magnificent Rhododen- 
 drons. The mountains of Asia have proved won- 
 derfully rich in new plants, and seem the true 
 kingdom of this glorious flower. The beauty of 
 the species already known is such that it seems 
 impossible that finer kinds can be discovered. We 
 have already beauty, size, and richness of foliage ; 
 color, size, symmetry, and fragrance of flower; and 
 good habit in the plant, — which leave us nothing 
 to expect and nothing to desire. 
 
 The varieties we now mention are hybrids, gen- 
 erally from species we have already described. 
 
 Rhododendron Aprilis. 
 
 A hybrid between ponticum and dauricum ; color 
 ■rose. Figured in Bot. Reg. 29, t. 62. 
 Probably lost from cultivation. 
 
 Rhododendron alstromerioides 
 
 Is a cross between an azalea and R. caucasicum 
 album. The flowers are prettily spotted, but there 
 are hundreds of better kinds. 
 
 Figured in Lem. Jar. t. 384. 
 
description op the rhododendron. 83 
 
 Rhododendron Wilsoni, 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 85, t. 5116, is a hybrid 
 between R. ciliatum and R. glaucum. The flowers 
 are rosy-red, and very pretty. 
 
 Rhododendron precox. 
 
 An early-blooming variety, raised from R. dau- 
 ricum atrovirens and ciliatum. The flowers are 
 bright rosy-lilac, and freely produced. Probably 
 hardy. 
 
 Figured in Fl. Mag. pi. 58. 
 
 Rhododendron Prince of Wales (RoUinson's) 
 
 Is a hybrid between R. javanicum and retusum. 
 Flowers tubular, orange, very showy. Requires 
 stove culture. 
 
 Figured in Fl. Mag. pi. 155. 
 
 Rhododendron carneum. 
 
 Flowers pale pinkish-white, with green spots ; a 
 hybrid between R. arboreiim and some variety of 
 Azalea sinensis. 
 
 Figured in Fl. des Serres, 1846, t. 3. 
 
 A seedling between Azalea midijlora and Rhodo- 
 dendron Catawbiense, has pretty purplish flowers, 
 with lighter centre, much resembling R. Govenia- 
 num. The foliage is evergreen in ordinary winters. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Reg. 17, t. 1449. 
 
84 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron caucasicum aeboreum 
 
 Is a hybrid between B. arboreum and caucasicum. 
 The flowers are pink, and very pretty. Figured in 
 Maud. Bot. 4, p. 157. 
 
 E. venustum of Sweet, Fl. G. 2, t. 285, is the 
 same plant. 
 
 Rhododendron Denisoni 
 
 Was raised from R. Dalhomice, crossed with R. 
 Edgeworthi and Gfibsoni. The flowers are large, 
 white, lighted with straw-color. 
 
 Figured in Fl. Mag. p. 291. 
 
 Rhododendron album speciosum. 
 
 A tender, white - flowered variety, beautifully 
 spotted. 
 
 Fig-ured in lUus. Hort. 1, t. 1. 
 
 Rhododendron Sesterianum. 
 
 A cross between JR. Edgeworthi and Gribsoni. 
 Flowers white, very large, marked with reddish-yel- 
 low spots. 
 
 Figured in Illus. Hort. 9, t. 345. 
 
 Rhododendron Princess Alexandra, 
 
 A hybrid from JR. jasminijlorum, has large, fra- 
 grant, white flowers, tinged with pink. 
 Figured in Fl. Mag. pi. 245. 
 
DESCRIPTION OP THE RHODODENDRON. 85 
 
 Rhododendron Princess Helena 
 
 "Was also raised from jR. jasminiflorinn, fertilized 
 with a scarlet seedling. The flowers are long, 
 tubidar, bright pink, and very showy. 
 
 Figured in Fl. Mag. pi. 220. 
 
 Rhododendron Princess Alice 
 
 Is the result of crossing B. ciliatiim and Edge- 
 worthi. The flowers are very large, pure white, 
 the buds tipped with pink. 
 
 Figured in Fl. Mag. pi. 206. 
 
 Rhododendron Madame Van Houite 
 
 Is a hybrid of R. maximum, and of course hardy. 
 The truss is very large, the flowers bright pmkish- 
 white. 
 
 Figured in Fl. des Serres, 15, t. 1606-7. 
 
 Rhododendron Othello (Yan Houtte) 
 
 Is also a hybrid from R. maximum, which it 
 resembles in the shape of the truss. Flowers deep 
 reddish-purple. 
 
 Figured in Fl. des Serres, 12, t. 1274. 
 
 Rhododendron Grand Due de Bade 
 
 Is derived from the hybrid omnigiiUatum, fertil- 
 ized with R. cinnamomeum. The flowers are white, 
 flaked all over with dark reddish-purple. 
 
 Figured in Illus. Hort. 11, t. 423. 
 
THE EHODODENDEON. 
 
 Rhododendron Madame Wagner 
 
 Is a hybrid from B. caucasicum. The flowers are 
 white, edged with cherry, the petals crimped. 
 Figm-ed in Illus. Hort. 2, t. 66. 
 
 Rhododendron Madame Picouline 
 
 Is a hybrid between B. ferrugineum and arboreum. 
 The flowers are white, intensely spotted. 
 Figured in Illus. Hort. 3, t. 84. 
 
 Rhododendron omniguitatum 
 
 Is probably derived from B. poiiticum. Flower 
 small bright rose, beautifully marked with crimson. 
 Figured in Illus. Hort. 7, t. 244. 
 
 Rhododendron myrtifolium 
 
 Is a cross between B. hirsutum and punctatum ; 
 a hardy variety, suitable for small beds, or the 
 edges of larger ones. Flowers reddish-pink. 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 908. 
 
 Rhododendron fragrans. 
 
 This is a chance seedling from B. Catawbiense, 
 probably hybridized with an azalea. The foliage 
 is fine evergreen ; the flowers pale purple, and fra- 
 grant. A desirable hardy variety. 
 
 Figured in Pax. Mag. 10, p. 147. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 87 
 
 Rhododendron hybridum 
 
 Is a dwarf, neat TarietY, of uncertain parentage. 
 While very pretty, the foliage has with us been badly 
 cut up by the winter. The plant figured under this 
 
 such- 
 
 Rhododendron Govenianum. 
 
 This variety was produced from a hardy azalea, 
 crossed with a hybrid of R. ponticum and Cataw- 
 biense. . With us it is not an evergreen, except in 
 v6ry mild winters. Flowers fragrant, pale reddish- 
 purple ; habit slender, much resembling an azalea. 
 
 Figured in Sweet, Fl. G. 1, t. 263. 
 
 Rhododendron Torlonianum. 
 
 A hybrid, like the last, and in habit much resem- 
 bling it. 
 
 The flowers are whitish purplish-pink, but vary in 
 shade. Both this and the last variety suffer some- 
 what in severe winters ; and, while pretty, they are 
 not especially to be recommended. 
 
 Rhododendron arboreum cinnamomeum 
 
 Was raised from seed obtained by crossing R. 
 maximum with R. cinnamomeum. The foliage is 
 very large, and tawny below ; the truss large ; 
 flowers A\hite, with dark purple spots. 
 
 Figun d in Pax. Fl. G. p. 16. 
 
88 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron Comtesse Ferdinand Yisant. 
 
 A seedling of Van Houtte's, from R. campanula- 
 turn, fertilized with It. cinnamomeum. Flowers 
 creamy white, bordered with delicate rose. 
 
 FigTired in Fl. des Serres, 9, t. 935. 
 
 Rhododendron daphnoides. 
 
 This is a pretty dwarf variety, of which we have 
 been unable to find the origin. The flowers are pink 
 .or rose-colored, and very pretty. 
 
 Rhododendron ovatum. 
 
 Another dwarf variety, with rosy flowers and neat 
 foliage. Both this and the last are generally hardy, 
 although the foliage often gets browned by the winter. 
 
 Rhododendron Countess of Haddington. 
 
 A hybrid, between jR. Dalhousice and ciliatmn; 
 of neat, evergreen habit, and large, white, blush- 
 tinted flowers. Figured in Hen. Illus. Bou. pi. 82. 
 
 Rhododendron aureum magnifictjim. 
 
 This variety, which is probably the same as that 
 figured in Sweet, and which we have before men- 
 tioned under the name of R. Smithii aureum, is one 
 of a lot of seedlings produced by crossing a Rhodo- 
 dendron with a species of yellow azalea (^A. sinensis^. 
 In habit they are robust ; the fohage is sub-ever- 
 green, partaking of the character of both parents. 
 
DESCRIPTION OP THE KHODODENDRON. 
 
 89 
 
 The following list we copy from " Henderson's 
 Illustrated Bouquet," where a fine plate is given : — 
 
 J.iireum magnijiciim. 
 
 „ punctatum . 
 
 „ superbum 
 Alhicmjf avian . . . 
 
 Bianca 
 
 Burlingtonii . . . 
 ^ Carneum versicolor . 
 
 Congestum aureum . 
 Cupfeum .... 
 
 Delicatum aureum . 
 
 Gloriosum .... 
 Jenhinsii .... 
 
 Macranllmm jiavum . 
 
 Ornatum .... 
 
 Primulimun formosum 
 
 ,. elegans . 
 
 clear bright yellow ; large truss, 
 primrose, spotted with orange, 
 fine yellow, deep orange spots, 
 blush white, orange-yellow sjjots. 
 pure white, yellow spots, 
 bright yellow ; large truss, 
 yellow - pink edging, finely 
 
 spotted, 
 good yellow ; compact truss, 
 rich coppery - orange, suffused 
 
 with pink, 
 blush pink, with large blotch of 
 
 orange spots, 
 white, spotted with yellow, 
 lemon, tinged with pink ; large 
 
 truss, 
 shaded pink, with buff-yellow 
 
 centre, 
 sidphur - yellow, with orange 
 
 spots ; large truss, 
 clear primrose - yellow, orange 
 
 spots, 
 light primrose, with pale spots ; 
 
 compact truss. 
 
 We are not aware that any of these have been 
 tested in this country, but hope soon to be able 
 to report from experience upon their merits and 
 hardiness. 
 
90 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 Rhododendron Catawbiense. 
 
 Magnificent as are the flowers of the Himalayan 
 and Bhotan Rhododendrons, it is not too much to 
 say that our gardens owe more to this species than 
 to any other. A large proportion of the species and 
 varieties we have described are tender or preca- 
 riously hardy. But for the garden and shrubbery 
 we need plants which will endure any winter, and 
 for these we must look to the so-called " Cataiv- 
 biense hybrids." 
 
 The species is a native of the Southern States, 
 usually upon the mountains. It is a tall shrub, 
 with lilac-purple flowers, evergreen foliage, and 
 quite a pretty species ; but the parent is seldom 
 grown, being lost in the nnfltitude of seedling 
 varieties. To trace the parentage of these varieties 
 is generally impossible. They range in color from 
 rose or white to deep purple, and vary greatly in 
 foliage. 
 
 Every year hundreds of thousands of seedlings 
 are raised, the best of which receive names, and are 
 thrown upon the market : most of these, in turn, 
 give place to newer, yet often no better kinds, 
 although from the first there has been a steady 
 improvement in color, constitution, and foliage. 
 
 In the following list we have selected those which 
 the popular verdict in England has pronounced the 
 best. A large number of them are in our own col- 
 lection ; and we describe them as hardy or tender, 
 according to our experience. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 91 
 
 Where figures of any have been given in iUus- 
 trated periodicals, we have referred to the plate. 
 For convenience we give the list alphabetically. 
 
 Many of these have the blood of many species ; 
 and some, perchance, have no trace of Cataivbiense, 
 yet, as hardy garden Rhododendrons, their place 
 seems to be in this list, and, without vouching for 
 parentage, we call the class 
 
 Catawbiense Hybrids. 
 
 AcHiEVEiiENT . . . One of Anthony "Waterer's new 
 seedlings of 1870 ; rosy-scar- 
 let, with a clear white centre ; 
 very showy. 
 
 AcLAXDiANUJi . . . Delicate blush, deeply spotted 
 with chocolate ; precariously 
 hardy. 
 
 AcuTiLonuM .... Cherry -red, shaded ; truss large, 
 petals acute. Figured in 
 Illus. Hort. 4, t. 149. 
 
 Admiratiox .... Bright rosy-crimson, very dark 
 spots. 
 
 Alakic Dark purple, shaded with crim- 
 son or plum color ; large truss 
 and flower ; hardy. 
 
 Alarm A very beautiful flower ; centre 
 
 white, edged with pale scar- 
 let or crimson ; flower rather 
 small; tender. 
 
 Album Pure white ; free bloomer, fine 
 
 foliage; hardy. 
 
92 
 
 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Album elegans 
 
 Album geandiflorum 
 
 Album triumphans 
 Alexander Adie . 
 
 Amilcar 
 
 Ambroise 
 
 Andersoni . . . 
 Ange Vervaet . . 
 
 Annihilator . . 
 Archedug Etienne 
 
 Archimedes . . . 
 Ascot Brilliant . 
 
 Blush, changing to white ; large 
 flower, tall habit, good foli- 
 age ; perfectly hardy. 
 
 Flower like the last, but some- 
 what larger ; truss large ; fine 
 foliage ; perfectly hardy. 
 
 A very fine white, large flower. 
 
 Brilliant rosy - scarlet ; close, 
 handsome truss. 
 
 Bright violet-purjDle, with a red- 
 dish tinge, intense blotch of 
 black spots on the upper 
 petal. Figured in Fl. Mag. 
 pi. 18. 
 
 White, bordered with rich cochi- 
 neal - red ; tender. Figured 
 in Fl. des Ser. 8, t. 945. 
 
 White ; good foliage ; hardy. 
 
 Clear pink, white throat, in- 
 tensely sjootted with carmine. 
 Figured in Fl. des Sei*. 18, 
 1870-1. 
 
 Bright rosy-scarlet. 
 
 White; upper petals dee^Dly 
 spotted with maroon-brown. 
 Figured in Blus. Hort. 13, 
 t. 491. 
 
 Bright rosy-crimson, with lighter 
 centre ; very distinct ; hardy. 
 
 A seedling of John Standish, 
 from jR. Blandyamim with R. 
 Thomsoni ; flowers deepest 
 blood - color, having the . ap- 
 pearance of being crystallized. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 93 
 
 Athene White, with yellow blotch. 
 
 Atkosanguineum , . Deep blood-red ; riowei' of great 
 substance, fine foliage ; hardy. 
 
 Attila Dark jmrple, shaded- with crim- 
 son; hardy. 
 
 Augustus Same as Alauic. 
 
 Auguste Van Geert . Light rosy-puri^le, marked with 
 brown. 
 
 Aurora Bright rosy-lake ; free and late 
 
 bloomer. 
 
 AzuuEUJi Bluish-lilac ; hardy. 
 
 Barclatanum . . . Deep rosy-crimson ; fine truss 
 and foliage; late bloomer; 
 hardy. 
 
 Baron Cuvier . . . Lilac, chocolate blotch. 
 
 Baronesse Lionel ") White, with scarlet - crimson 
 Rothschild . . .) margin. 
 
 Bertie Parsons . . A seedling of Parsons & Co., 
 of Flushing, Long Island ; of 
 good form, and lilac-pink or 
 mauve color, with brown eye ; 
 hardy. 
 
 BicoLOR Rose, clear white spot on the 
 
 upper petals ; hardy. 
 
 Bijou de Gand . . White, edged with rose, beauti- 
 fully spotted; tender. Fig- 
 ured in lUus. Hort. 7, t. 2G1. 
 
 Blanche superbe . . Waxy white, green eye. 
 
 Blandyanum . . . . Deep rosy - crimson ; beautiful 
 flower ; fine habit and foliage ; 
 hardy. 
 
 Blatteum Claret - crimson, shaded and 
 
 spotted-; fine form and truss ; 
 precariously hardy. 
 
94 
 
 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Brabantia .... Dark rich crimson. 
 
 Bratanum Vivid crimson, lighter centre; 
 
 fine foliage and truss ; a 
 dazzling flower ; generally 
 hardy. 
 
 Brennus Rich crimson-lake. 
 
 Brilliant Crimson-scarlet ; free bloomer, 
 
 dwarf habit ; same as Sun of 
 AusTERLiTZ; tender. 
 
 Broughtoni .... Rosy - crimson ; fine foliage ; 
 large truss ; tender. 
 
 Brutus Pale rose, large flower. 
 
 Bylsianum .... Clear white gi'ound, the tips of 
 the petals edged with bright 
 crimson-pink ; a very beauti- 
 ful variety. Figured in Illus. 
 Hort. 5, t. 155; and Hen. 
 Illus. Bou. pi. 18. 
 
 Candidissimum . . . Blush, changing to pure white ; 
 tender. 
 
 Candidissimum (Par- 
 sons') .... 
 
 Candidum . . . 
 
 Caractacus . . 
 
 Chancellor . . 
 Charles Baglet 
 Charles Dickens 
 
 Chionoides . . 
 
 Pure white ; hardy. 
 
 Blush. 
 
 Rich purplish - crimson ; fine 
 truss ; foliage and habit; 
 probably hardy. 
 
 Light purple, deeply spotted ; 
 large truss ; hardy. 
 
 Cherry - red ; fine truss ; prob- 
 ably hardy. 
 
 Dark scarlet; fine foliage; a 
 beautiful variety ; probably 
 hardy. 
 
 Creamy white, fine form 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RIIODODENDROxV. 95 
 
 Climax Deep scarlet-crimson, with dark 
 
 spots on the upper petals; 
 probably hardy. Figured in 
 Fl. Mag. pi. 65. 
 
 Chloe Crimson-lake, spotted. 
 
 Cliveanch .... Pinkish - white ; large truss; 
 tender. Figured in Bot. 
 Mag. 75, t. 4478. 
 
 Clowesianum . . . White, purple spots. Figured 
 in Fl. des Ser. 13, t. 1315. 
 
 CcELESTiNUM . . . . 'j Blusli, ycllow cyc. 
 
 CcELESTiNUM PiCTDM . I Blush, purple-spottcd. 
 
 CcELESTiNUM GRANDi- | Blush, yellow eye ; large truss, 
 
 FLORUM j and fine foliage; all fine, 
 
 hardy varieties. 
 
 C(ERULESCENS . . . Bluish whitc ; hardy. 
 
 Columbus Clear purple, spotted ; hardy. 
 
 CONCESSUM .... Light centre, clear rosy-pink 
 margin ; an exquisite variety ; 
 tender. 
 
 CoNGESTUM ROSEUM . Light rose, dark spots ; fine 
 foliage. 
 
 Comet Bright scarlet. 
 
 COMTE DE GoMER . . "Wliite, edged with rosy- crim- 
 son; fine form. Figured in 
 nius. Hort. t. 230. 
 
 CoRiACEUM .... Yellowish, changing to pure 
 white ; dwarf, free bloom-ing ; 
 hardy. 
 
 CoRREGGio .... Clear dark scarlet. 
 
 Countess of Devox . French white, rosy edges ; upper 
 petals spotted with purplish- 
 crimson. Figured in Fl. 
 Mag. pi. 162. 
 
THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Cruextum . 
 Cdrrieanum 
 
 Decorator .. . 
 Delicatissimum. 
 
 Desdemona . 
 Dona Maria 
 
 DORKINSII . . . 
 
 Duo DE Braban: 
 
 Duchess de Nassau 
 
 Duchess of Suther- 
 land 
 
 Duke of Cambridge , 
 
 Duke of Norfolk 
 E. C. Baring . . 
 
 EdaVard S. Rand . 
 
 Elfrida . 
 
 Eminent . 
 
 Rich lake, fine deejD color ; prob- 
 ably tender 
 
 Dark rosy-lilac, spotted ; fine 
 form and truss ; precariously 
 hardy. 
 
 Clear bright rose, dark spots. 
 
 Blush- white, tinted with pink ; 
 hardy. 
 
 Blush, riclily marked on the 
 
 upper petals- 
 White, tinged with pink, deeply 
 marked with yellow and red 
 spots. Figured in Fl. des 
 Ser. 10, t. 1040. 
 
 Dark, clear chocolate-crimson. 
 
 Salmon-white, spotted ; semi- 
 double ; tender. 
 Pink, white centre, intensely 
 spotted with brown. Fig- 
 ured in Illus. Hort. 12, t. 450. 
 
 White centre, shading to broad 
 margin of rosy-lilac. 
 
 Bright crimson - scarlet, pale 
 centre. 
 
 Clear rose ; same as Rubens. 
 
 Glowing crimson; fine habit; 
 a new seedling of Anthony 
 Waterer. 
 
 Another of Mr. Waterer's new 
 seedlings ; crimson ; immense 
 truss ; fine Cntawhiense habit ; 
 probably hardy. 
 
 Bright rosy-crimson, dark spots : 
 a fine flower. 
 
 Rosy -lilac. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Erectum 
 
 !]&TENDAKD DE Fl ANDRES 
 
 EtOILE DE VlLHERS . 
 
 EVERESTIANUM . 
 
 FaSTUOSUM FLORE 
 PLENO .... 
 
 Faust 
 
 Fleur db Flandre 
 
 Fleur DE Marie . 
 
 Francis Dickson . 
 
 Gemmiferum . . . 
 General Cabrera 
 
 Genseric 
 
 Georgianum 
 
 GiGANTEUlI 
 
 Rosy-crimson ; good habit. 
 
 Lavender-wliite, finely spotted ; 
 generally hardy. Figured in 
 Fl. des Ser. 8, t. 783-4. 
 
 Rose, shading to white, deeply 
 marked with yellow spots. 
 Figured in Fl. des Ser. 11, 
 t. 1084. 
 
 Rosy-Ulac, spotted and fringed ; 
 fine foliage ; free bloomer ; 
 the best hardy Rhododen- 
 dron. 
 
 Lilac, fading to lavender ; im- 
 mense truss of double flowers, 
 remaining long in bloom ; 
 very showy and desirable ; 
 precariously hardy. Figured 
 in Fl. des Ser. 2, t. 143-4. 
 
 Pale lilac, beautifully blotched. 
 
 Reddish-pink, deeply spotted 
 with pm-ple and green. Fig- 
 ured in Fl. des Ser. 17, t. 
 1816-17. 
 
 Bright rosy-crimson, blotched 
 with white. 
 
 Brilliant scarlet; a fine late 
 bloomer ; probably tender. 
 
 Rosy-crimson, light centre. 
 
 Crimson, with blotch of dark 
 spots ; large flower ; tender. 
 
 Purplish-crimson, shaded to 
 scarlet. 
 
 Light pink, distinct. 
 
 Light rose; large truss; fine 
 foliage ; hardy. 
 
98 
 
 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 Glennyan-um .... Light pink ; pretty, but tender. 
 
 Gloriosum .... Blush-white; large flower; 
 hardy. 
 
 Gkandiflortjm . Clear rose ; fine truss ; good 
 
 foliage; free bloomer; and 
 very hardy. 
 
 Gloire de Bellevue Rose, finely spotted. 
 
 GuiDO Crimson; probably hardy. 
 
 Gulnare Blush-pink ; fine form. 
 
 Hannibal Rose, shading to blush and 
 
 lighted with white ; a fine, 
 late-blooming, hardy kind. 
 
 Hendersoni .... Dark purplish ; hardy. 
 
 Henry Bessamer . . Rich crimson, intensely blotched 
 with black markings, and well 
 defined; one of Mr. Water- 
 er's new seedlings. 
 
 Hester ...... Fine white, reddish-brown spots. 
 
 H. H. HuNNEWELL . Dark rich crimson ; good habit ; 
 fine foliage ; probably hardy. 
 
 Hogarth . . . •. . Rosy - crimson ; a fine, late- 
 blooming variety ; precari- 
 ously hardy. 
 
 H. W. Sargent . . . Crimson ; enormous truss ; fine 
 habit and foliage; probably 
 hardy. 
 
 Iago Rosy-violet, dark spots. 
 
 Tngrami Blush, blotched with lemon; 
 
 fine form. 
 
 James Bateman . . Clear rosy-scarlet; good form; 
 probably hardy. • 
 
 James Nasmyth . . Rich mulberry, with distinct 
 orange spot; one of Mr. Wa- 
 terer's new seedlings. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 99 
 
 James McIntosh . . 
 J. Marshall Buooks 
 
 John Spencer . . . 
 
 JoHX Waterer . . 
 
 johnsonianum . . 
 Joseph Whitavorth 
 
 Lady Annette de 
 
 Tr AFFORD . . . 
 
 Lady Armstrong . 
 
 Lady Clermont 
 
 Lady Dorothy Ne- 
 ville 
 
 Lady Eleanor Cath- 
 
 cart 
 
 Lady Emily Peel . . 
 Lady Falmouth . . 
 Lady Godiva . . , 
 
 Lee's Purple . . . 
 
 Lady Frances Cross- 
 ley 
 
 Rosy-scarlet. 
 
 Scarlet, with rich brown blotch ; 
 a new seedling of Mr. Wa- 
 terer. 
 
 A fine truss of rosy flowers, 
 margined with deep pink ; a 
 late bloomer, and probably 
 hardy. 
 
 Intense dark crimson ; a fine, 
 free-blooming variety; large 
 flower and fine form. 
 
 Brilliant crimson ; tender. 
 
 Dark lake, with darker spots; 
 large flowers ; fine foliage. 
 
 Pale rose, intensely blotched 
 with chocolate ; a new seed- 
 ling of Mr. Waterer's. 
 
 Pale rose, beautifully spotted ; 
 probably hardy. 
 
 Rosy-scarlet, intensely blotched 
 with black ; probably hardy. 
 
 Lavender-white, finely spotted ; 
 same as Etendard de 
 Flandres. 
 
 Clear bright rose, with chocolate- 
 crimson sjjots ; very beautifub 
 
 Bright rose, chocolate spots. 
 
 Clear rose, deep black blotch. 
 
 White, finely spotted with ochre; 
 large flower. 
 
 Dark purple ; a fine bloomer ; 
 hardy, distinct, and good. 
 
 Rosy-pink or salmon. 
 
100 
 
 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 Lefevreanum . . 
 Leviathan . . . 
 
 Leopardi 
 
 .LlilBATDM 
 
 londinense . '. . 
 
 Lord Clyde . . . 
 Lord John Russell 
 Lowii 
 
 LUCIDUM .... 
 Lucy Neal . . . 
 Macranthuji . . 
 Maculatum grandi- 
 
 FLORUM 
 
 INDlCulatuji nigrum 
 
 Ricli purplish - crimson ; good 
 
 foliage ; liardy. 
 Blush, margined and tinged 
 
 with violet; fine form and 
 
 flower. 
 Lilac, spotted all over with 
 
 chocolate. 
 Rosy -white, shading to pure 
 
 white throat; deep rose 
 
 blotch; tender. Figured m 
 
 Bot. Mag. 88, t. 5311. A 
 
 variety of R. arhoreum. 
 Crimson-purple ; good form and 
 
 free bloomer ; precariously 
 
 hardy; same as Ne Plus 
 
 Ultra. 
 Dark rich crimson ; same as 
 
 Brabantia. 
 Rose, intensely spotted ; very 
 
 showy and beautiful ; tender. 
 "White, distinctly spotted with 
 
 orange - chocolate ; tender ; 
 
 same as Pictum. 
 Lilac, brown spots ; free bloom- 
 er ; beautiful foliage ; tender. 
 Purplish - crimson, shaded to 
 
 scarlet ; same as Genseric. 
 Rosy - blush ; late bloomer ; 
 
 hardy and desirable. 
 Dark rosy -lilac, spotted; fine 
 
 form and truss; same as 
 
 CURRIEANUM. 
 
 Dark purple, spotted. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 101 
 
 MaCULATUM rURPUREUM 
 
 MaCULATDM RUBRUXr . 
 
 IMaculatuji supkrbum 
 
 Madame Carvalho 
 
 Magnum Bonum 
 
 Marc Antony . . . 
 
 MaRGINATO rUNCTATUM 
 
 Metaphor .... 
 Michael Waterer . 
 
 MiLNEI 
 
 Minnie 
 
 MiRANDUM . 
 
 Mt. Blanc 
 
 Mr. John Penn 
 Mrs. Fitzgerald 
 
 Light purple, deeply spotted ; 
 large truss ; hardy ; same as 
 Chancellor. 
 
 Rose, finely spotted. 
 
 Lilac - rose, intensely spotted 
 with black; large and fine 
 truss ; a late bloomer. 
 
 Clear white, greenish - brown 
 spots; fine shape and sub- 
 stance. 
 
 Rosy-lilac, beautifully spotted; 
 large flower ; precariously 
 hai'dy. 
 
 Lilac, brown eye ; hardy. 
 
 White ground, deep carmine 
 spots. Figured in lUus. Hort. 
 14, t. 505. 
 
 Rose ; large truss ; fine form. 
 
 Scarlet - crimson ; fine form ; 
 very beautiful. 
 
 Rosy-crimson ; large truss. 
 
 White, with large blotch of 
 orange-chocolate ; fine form 
 and substance ; remains long 
 in bloom, one of the most 
 striking varieties ; tender. 
 Figured in lUus. Hort. 9, 
 t. 317. 
 
 Rose ; fine foliage. 
 
 White; dwarf; free blooming; 
 tender. 
 
 Salmon-pink, deeper edge. 
 
 Bright rosy-scarlet. 
 
102 
 
 THE EHODODENDRON. 
 
 Mrs. G. H. "W". Heneage 
 
 Mrs. John Glutton . 
 
 Mrs. John Waterer . 
 Mrs. Milner .... 
 Mrs. Sam Mendel 
 
 Mrs. Joseph Shuttle- 
 worth 
 
 Mr3. R. S. Holford . 
 
 Mrs. Thomas Brassey 
 Mrs. Thomas Wain . 
 
 Murillo . . . 
 Neige et Cerise 
 
 Rosy - purple, white centre, 
 fringed ; remains long in 
 bloom ; jDrobably hardy. 
 
 Splendid flower ; white, yellow- 
 spotted ; of fine form and 
 substance, remaining long in 
 bloom ; i^robably hardy. Fig- 
 m-ed in Florist, September, 
 1869. 
 
 Rosy ~ crimson, spotted ; fine 
 truss. 
 
 Rich crimson ; fine foliage and 
 flower ; probably hardy. 
 
 Clear rose; distinct white ray 
 up the centre of each petal, 
 and beautifully spotted ; one 
 of Anthony Waterer's new 
 seedhngs. 
 
 Pale rose, intensely blotched ; 
 new. 
 
 Rich salmon, a new color ; large 
 truss and flower; a superb 
 Rhododendron ; tender. 
 
 Clear white, margined witk rosy- 
 purple. 
 
 Pale rose, deep brown blotch ; 
 very beautiful ; probably 
 hardy. 
 
 Rich crimson. 
 
 Snowy white, bordered with 
 rich carmine ; very beauti- 
 ful ; tender. Figured in Fl. 
 des Ser. 13, t. 1391. 
 
DESCIIIPTIOX OF THE RHODODENDRON. 103 
 
 Neilsoni Rosy -lake; large flower and 
 
 truss. 
 
 Nerkus Light purple, dark spots. 
 
 Nk Plus Ultra . . Crimson-purple ; same as Lon- 
 
 DINKNSE. 
 
 Nero Dark rosy-purple, richly spotted; 
 
 fine form and truss ; tender. 
 
 NiGRESCENS .... Dark phim-color, almost black. 
 
 OcuLissiMUM .... Rose, deeply marked. 
 
 Old Port Rich plum-color. 
 
 Onslowiancm . , . Waxy blush, yellow eye; dis- 
 tinct and fine ; hardy. 
 
 Ornatusi ..... Rose; late bloomer. 
 
 Ornatissimum . . . White, bordered to delicate rose, 
 shading almost to purple. 
 Figured in EIus. Hort. 14, 
 t 530. 
 
 Othello Crimson, with mauve tinge. 
 
 Papilioxaceum . . . Pale lilac, changing to white, 
 orange spots. 
 
 Pardoletox .... Rosy-lilac, spotted ; precariously 
 hardy. 
 
 Paxtoxi Rose, deeply spotted ; precari- 
 ously hardy. 
 
 Pelargoxifloru.m . . White, shaded pink, red spots, 
 and yellowish lighting. Fig- 
 ured in Fl.des Ser. 10, 1. 1063. 
 
 Perfectiox .... Blush, yellow eye ; fine form. 
 
 Perrieanum .... Light rose, finely spotted. 
 
 Perspicuum .... AVhite or blush. 
 
 PiCTUM White,beautifullyspotted; same 
 
 as Lowii. 
 
 Poussix Deep rosy - crimson ; same as 
 
 Barclayaxdm. 
 
104 
 
 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 President van den ~> Light rose, beautifully spotted : 
 
 Hecke ) precariously hardy. 
 
 Prince Albert . . . Rich lake. 
 Prince Camille de^i Rose, deeply spotted with brown- 
 RoHAN ) ish-red, fringed." Figured in 
 
 Fl. desSer. 10, t. 1073; and 
 
 Illus. Hort. 2, t. 46. 
 Prince Eugene . . . Blush, intense spot on the upper 
 
 petal. 
 Princess Mary of i White centre, edge of petals 
 
 Cambridge . . . . | rosy-purj^le ; fine. 
 Prince of Wales ') Brilliant rose, shaded to purple, 
 (Young's) . . . . j black marking on the upper 
 
 petals. Figured in Fl. Mag. 
 
 pi. 177. 
 Princess of Wales . Creamy white centre, bordered 
 
 with violet-purple. Figured 
 
 in Fl. des Ser. 18, t. 1834-5 
 PuRPUREUM elegans . Fine purple ; hardy. 
 PuRPUREUii CRiSPUJi . Pui'ijle, friugcd ; hardy. 
 PuRPUREUM GRANDi- "> Purple ; large truss and flower ; 
 
 florum ) hardy. 
 
 Purity White, faint j'ellow eye. 
 
 Raphael Spotted crimson ; large flower. 
 
 Reedianum .... Bright cherry-red ; tender. 
 Rosabel Pale rose ; fine foliage and 
 
 habit ; probably hardy. 
 RosEUM ELEGANS . . Rose ; very hardy. 
 Roseum grandiflorum Rose ; late bloomer ; hardy. 
 RosEUM PiCTUM . . . Rose, yellow eye ; tender. 
 RosEUM SUPERBUM . . Light rose ; large truss and 
 
 flower; hardy. 
 R. S. Field .... Scarlet; very fine; probably 
 
 hardy. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE IlIIODODENDROX. 
 
 105 
 
 Rubens .... 
 Salmono roseum 
 
 Schiller .... 
 
 Scipio 
 
 Sheravoodianum . 
 Sidney IIkkbert . 
 
 SlGISMUND RuCKliR . 
 
 Sir Charles Napier 
 Sir Isaac Neavton . 
 Sir James Clark . . 
 Sir John Thwaites . 
 
 Sir Robert Peel . . 
 Sir Thomas Seabright 
 
 Sir William Arm- 
 strong 
 
 Souvenir de Jean | 
 Byls j 
 
 SlMXIOSUM . . . 
 
 Splendens . . 
 Stamfordianum . 
 
 Clear rose; same as Duke op 
 
 Norfolk. 
 Rosy - salmon, deeply spotted ; 
 
 delicate and pretty. Figured 
 
 in lUus. Hort. 12, t. 437. 
 Bluish-purple, dark black spots. 
 Rose, deep spot. 
 Light rose, dark spots. 
 Bright crimson, with blotch of 
 
 black spots. 
 Rich dark puce, new and fine. 
 Rose, beautifully spotted; fine 
 
 shape. 
 Claret -crimson, shaded and 
 
 spotted ; same as Blatteum. 
 Dark crimson, shaded with pur- 
 ple. 
 Deep scarlet, distinctly blotched 
 
 with yellow ; a new seedling 
 
 of Mr. Waterer's. 
 Bright crimson, dark spots. 
 Rich purple, distinct bronze 
 
 blotch; remaining long in 
 
 flower. 
 
 Crimson ; fine truss and flower. 
 Red, with yellowish - green 
 
 blotch on the u2-)per petal. 
 
 Figured in Illus. Hort. 9, 
 
 t. 326. 
 Light pink ; hardy. 
 Rose ; very good. 
 Dark pink, with deep purple or 
 
 black spots. Figured in Fl. 
 
 des Ser. 14, t. 1428. 
 
106 
 
 THE EHODODENDROX. 
 
 Standard of Flanders Lavender-white, finely spotted ; 
 
 same as Lady Dorotht 
 
 Neville and Etendard de 
 
 Flandres. 
 Standishii .... Rosy-purple, spotted. 
 Stella Pale rose, deep chocolate blotch ; 
 
 very distinct and showy; 
 
 probably hardy. 
 
 Sultana White, reddi'sh-brown spots. 
 
 Surprise Lilac, chocolate blotch. 
 
 The Grand Arab. . Brilliant crimson ; fine shape. 
 The Sun of Auster-^ Crimson - scarlet ; same as 
 
 LiTZ ) Brilliant. 
 
 The Gem Light blush, tinged with pink. 
 
 The Queen .... Blush, changing to white. 
 The "\Yarrior . . . Rosy - crimson ; fine form and 
 
 foliage. 
 Titian Light rosy-scarlet ; very beauti- 
 ful ; tender. 
 
 Towardii Rosy-lilac ; beautiful form. 
 
 Vandyke Rosy - crimson ; late bloomer ; 
 
 very fine ; hardy. 
 Verschaffeltii. . . Pale lavender - pink, deeply 
 
 spotted on the upper petals. 
 
 Figured in Illus. Hort. 9, 
 
 t. 317. 
 Vesuvius Crimson - scarlet, black spots ; 
 
 large truss. 
 Vestitum coccineuji . Very showy crimson. 
 Victoria (Pince's) . . Claret-crimson. 
 
 Victoria Plum-color. 
 
 William Downing . Rich dark puce, finely blotched ; 
 
 remaining long in bloom; a 
 
 magnificent plant in flower 
 
 and foliage. Figured in Fl. 
 
 dos Ser. 17. t. 7.^4—5. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE RHODODENDUOX. l07 
 
 The foregoing list is a selection of the most 
 approved varieties. Some of thepi are new kinds 
 that have not been proved, but which promise to 
 surpass all older varieties. 
 
 Of the list of two hundred and forty-six, we have 
 more than one hundred now in our garden. Many 
 of those marked " tender " have been grown and 
 discarded as misuited to our climate. 
 
 There is probably not one of the varieties men- 
 tioned which could not be successfully grown in the 
 open air south of Philadelphia ; and a large propor- 
 tion would succeed further north. 
 
 With such a collection to choose from, what gar- 
 den should be without Rhododendrons ? 
 
 The following lists may prove useful in select- 
 ing : — 
 
 For one Rhododendron, perfectly hardy, and which 
 combines good foliage, fine flower, and free growing 
 and blooming habit, — 
 
 Everestianum. 
 
 For three hardy kinds, add, — 
 Album grandiflorum and Purpureum grandiflorum. 
 
 For six, add, — 
 
 Coriaceum, Grandiflorum, and Roseum elegans. 
 
 For twelve, add, — 
 
 Album elegans. Hannibal. 
 
 Lee's Dark Purple. Giganteum. 
 
 Delicatissimura. Glor 
 
 losum. 
 
108 
 
 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 For twenty-four, add, ■ 
 Purpureum elegans. 
 Roseum grandiflorum. 
 Bicolor. 
 Coelestinum. 
 INIacranthum. 
 Ccelestinum pictum. Speciosuin. 
 
 List of eighteen very fine Rhododendrons, which 
 will generally prove hardy : — 
 
 Album. 
 Cohimbus. 
 
 Candidissiinum (Parsons). 
 Purpureum crispum. 
 Cunninoiiam's Dwarf "VVliite. 
 
 Archimedes. 
 
 Ne Plus Ultra. 
 
 
 Atrosauguineum. 
 
 Onslowiauum. 
 
 
 Barclayanum. 
 
 Pardoleton. 
 
 
 Blandyanum. 
 
 Paxtoni. 
 
 
 Brayanum. 
 
 Rubens. 
 
 
 Currieanum. 
 
 Standard of Flanders. 
 
 
 Hendersoni. 
 
 Azureum, 
 
 
 Lefevreanum. 
 
 Coerulescens. 
 
 \ 
 
 Maculatum purpureum. Roseum superbum. 
 
 
 List of twenty-fire 
 
 magnificent yarieties, requir- 
 
 
 ing cellar protection in winter : — 
 
 
 Aclandianum. 
 
 Lord John Russell. 
 
 
 Alarm. 
 
 Maculatum superbum. 
 
 
 Broughtoni. 
 
 Minnie. 
 
 
 Bylsianum. 
 
 Neige et Cerise. 
 
 I 
 
 Concessum. 
 
 Nero. 
 
 ■ ',1 
 
 Desdemona. 
 
 Pictum. 
 
 
 Elfrida. 
 
 Princess Mary of Cambridge. 
 
 i 
 
 Fastuosum fl. pi. 
 
 Sir Charles Napier. 
 
 
 Fleur de Marie. 
 
 Sidney Herbert. 
 
 
 Lady Cathcart. 
 
 Titian. 
 
 i 
 
 Lady Crossley. 
 
 Towardii. 
 
 
 Limbatum. 
 
 Vandyck. 
 
 
 "William Downing. 
 
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE EHODODENDROX. 
 
 109 
 
 List of Late Blooming Varieties: — 
 Barclayanum. John Spencer. 
 
 Hogarth. 
 
 Roseum grancliflorum. 
 
 Hannibal. 
 
 Francis Dickson. 
 
 Macuhitum superbum. 
 Orriatum. 
 Vandyck. 
 William Downing. 
 
 Macranthum. 
 List of New Varieties, which will probably prove 
 
 hardy : — 
 
 Caractacus. 
 Charles Bagley. 
 Charles Dickens. 
 Guiclo. 
 
 H. H. Hunnewell. 
 H. W. Sargent. 
 James Bateman. 
 John Spencer. 
 Lady Armstrong. 
 
 E. S. 
 
 List of twenty-five ver 
 
 Barclayanum. 
 
 Brayanum. 
 
 Lord John Russell. 
 
 Concessum. 
 
 Ci'uentum. 
 
 Elfrida. 
 
 Fastuosum fl. pi. 
 
 H. W. Sargent. 
 
 SteUa. 
 
 Lady Clermont. 
 
 Lady Frances Crossley. 
 
 ]SIaculatum superbum. 
 
 Lady 
 
 Lady Clermont. 
 Edward S. Rand. 
 Mrs. Heneage. 
 Stella. 
 Rosabel. 
 Purity. 
 
 Mrs. John Clutton. 
 Mrs. Milner. 
 Mrs. Wain. 
 Field. 
 
 Y distinct varieties : — 
 
 Minnie. 
 
 Mrs- John Clutton. 
 
 Mrs. R. S. Holford. 
 
 Neige et Cerise- 
 Nero. 
 
 Nigrescens. 
 
 Onslowianum. 
 
 President van den Hecke. 
 
 Hannibal. 
 
 Titian- 
 
 Towardii. 
 
 William Downing. 
 Cathcart. 
 
110 THE RHODODENDRON. 
 
 List of varieties for Standards : — 
 
 Everestianuni. Brayanum. 
 
 Roseum elegans. Victoria. 
 
 Minnie. Concessum. 
 
 Lady Catlicart. Fastuosum fl. pi. 
 
 William Downing. Archimedes. 
 
 Maculatum superbum. Barclayanum. 
 Roseum pictum. 
 
PART III. 
 
 OTHER "AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 

 PART III. 
 
 OTHER "AMERICAN PLANTS." 
 
 'T^HE greater part of the plants enumerated in 
 -■- this portion of our work belong to the same 
 natural family as the Rhododendron (Ericaceae), 
 and thrive best with the same treatment. In Eng- 
 lish catalogues they are included under the general 
 name of "American plants;" and, although some 
 are not natives of America, we adopt the popular 
 name as most familiar. 
 
 They are especially adapted for combination with 
 Rhododendrons, and afford a wide range of color 
 in bloom, and a great variety of foliage. Among 
 them we find many plants combining symmetry of 
 form, beauty and fragrance of flower, and easy cul- 
 ture. Some are rarely seen ; but all are easily 
 obtained, and well repay the care necessary to have 
 them in perfection. 
 
 The Azalea. 
 
 This genus is nearly related to Rhododendron, 
 and indeed by some botanists lias been included in 
 
114 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 it. Early volumes of some illustrated horticultural 
 works figure all Azaleas as Rhododendrons. 
 
 The genus Azalea has also been extended by other 
 botanists so as to include many plants which the 
 best authorities now give to other genera. As now 
 defined, the genus is confined to about twenty 
 species, natives of Asia and North America, all 
 shrubs, mostly with large showy flowers, which, 
 both from their beauty and fragrance, are popular 
 ornaments of our gardens and shrubberies. 
 
 The tender species are well-known . greenhouse 
 plants, and both these and the hardy kinds have in 
 cultivation developed many very beautiful varieties. 
 
 Those that are hardy thrive best in Rhododendron 
 soil, and need the same general culture as prescribed 
 for Rhododendrons. They grow freely, flower pro- 
 fusely, and need only to be kept from drought to do 
 well. They are all deciduous, and therefore, where 
 a mass of foliage is wanted for the winter, should 
 not be mixed with Rhododendrons. We prefer to 
 plant them in masses by themselves ; although when 
 in bloom, and during the summer, they combine 
 well with other American plants. As specimens 
 and standards, they are very handsome ; always 
 blooming well, and forming a conspicuous feature in 
 the garden. All the species are propagated easily 
 by inarching, grafting, or by cuttings of the half- 
 ]"ipened shoots, which root readily under a bell- 
 glass in sandy peat. The hardy kinds are also 
 increased by layers, in the same manner as Rhodo- 
 dendrons. New varieties are obtained from seed, ~ 
 which should be sown in sandy peat, as directed for 
 Rhododendrons. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 115 
 
 The tender species are evergreen plants, requiring 
 the protection of a cool greenhouse in Avinter. In 
 summer they should be set out of doors, in a par- 
 tially shaded situation. 
 
 All the species bear pruning well, and may be 
 cut to any required shape. In habit they vary 
 greatly, some naturally being of fine form, and 
 others requiring severe pruning. The foliage is not 
 ornamental, being usually dull or rusty green ; but 
 when in bloom the plants are such a mass of flower 
 that the leaves are not noticed. 
 
 For forcing in the greenhouse, all the species are 
 well adapted ; and there are no better or more easily 
 grown parlor plants than the varieties of tender 
 Azaleas. 
 
 Many hybrids have been produced by fertilization 
 between the Azalea and the Rhododendron. Many 
 of these we have already described : they vary 
 greatly in habit, foliage, and flower, according as 
 they partake of the nature of either parent. The 
 number is very large, and is yearly increasing. 
 The species are : — 
 
 Azalea arborescens. 
 
 A. tall shrub, native of the Middle and Southern 
 States, with large, fragrant, rose-colored flowers. 
 The foliage is smooth above, glaucous below, and 
 ornamental. The flowers appear in June, after the 
 leaves. 
 
 We have been unable to find a figure of this 
 species. 
 
116 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 Azalea nudiflora. 
 
 A well-known shrub, native of swamps, from 
 Massachusetts southward ; producing a profusion of 
 showy flowers, which vary much in color, early in 
 May. 
 
 The common names are Wild Honeysuckle and 
 Pinxter Flower, the latter from its blooming about 
 Whit-Sunday. 
 
 The flowers appear before the leaves, often in 
 snch abundance as to cover the whole plant. In 
 the wild state they are found of every shade, from 
 purple to blush-white. Seedlings vary greatly, and 
 in cultivation numerous hybrids have been produced, 
 affording a wide range of color. 
 
 The following varieties of this species are very 
 fine : Versicolor, do, grandiflora, mirahilis, carnea 
 delicatissima, colorata, incmmata superba, coccinea, 
 do. major, incana, Coburg-hii. All have scarlet, 
 pink, or blush flowers, and are perfectly hardy. 
 
 Azalea viscosa. 
 
 This species is ^the well-known " Swamp Honey 
 suckle," so common in low swamps, damp, shady 
 "woods, and by road-sides. 
 
 It forms a tall shrub, with dark green leaves, 
 and bears in the latter part of June and July an 
 abundance of clammy, white, deliciously fragrant 
 flowers, sometimes tinged with deep rose. 
 
 It thrives in cultivation, not requiring a wet soil, 
 but growing and blooming freely if the roots are 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 117 
 
 not allowed to dry up. From its fragrance and late 
 blooming, it is a desirable plant. There are nu- 
 merous varieties, and this species is the parent of 
 many hybrids. All are hardy. 
 
 Some of the best are : rtibescens, do. grandijlora, 
 Jlonbunda, pcnicillata, do. picta. 
 
 Azalea- GLAUCA 
 
 Is only a variety of A. viscosa, with pale glaucous 
 foliage ; not uncommon. 
 
 Azalea nitida 
 
 Is also" a variety of A. viscosa, of dwarf habit, 
 with dark green, shining leaves, and white, clammy 
 flowers, tinged with pink. 
 
 Azalea calendulacea. 
 
 A shrub, growing from five to ten feet high, with 
 hairy leaves and large, flame-colored or orange, scent- 
 less flowers ; native of the Middle and Southern 
 States. It is common in gardens, is hardy, and 
 flowers freely in May, the blossoms appearing with 
 the leaves. There are many varieties, of which we 
 may mention : Morterii, fulgida, calendulacea coc- 
 cinea, do. crocea, do. eleg-ans, do. ezimia, do. flam- 
 mea, do. siiperba, ig-nescens, triumphans. 
 
 Azalea pontic a. 
 
 A native of Asia Minor and the Caucasus, form- 
 ing a tall shrub, with bright yellow flowers in the 
 
118 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 species, which in the numerous varieties are found 
 of every shade, from yellow to copper or orange, 
 white or striped. 
 
 This species seeds freely ; and from it, by hybrid- 
 izing with the American species, innumerable seed- 
 lings have been raised. Much attention has been 
 paid to thus crossing the species in Belgium, 
 especially in the neigliborhood of Ghent ; whence 
 all hardy Azaleas have come to be known as " Bel- 
 gian, or Ghent Azaleas." 
 
 These seedlings are generally hardy, although 
 some of the lighter-colored varieties have proved 
 tender with us ; and some lose their flower-buds in 
 severe winters, although the wood is not injured. 
 
 Some of the best varieties referred to this 
 species are: ardens, aurantia, do. major, Candida, 
 coronaria, cuprea, pontica alba, carnea, compacta, 
 conspicua, delicatissima, grandiflora, grandidis- 
 sinia, imperialis, mutabilis, midtijiora pallida, ma- 
 crantha, princeps, sulphurea, do. g-randijiora, do. do. 
 nova. 
 
 There are innumerable other hybrid varieties m 
 nurserymen's catalogues, and every year gives us an 
 increased number. 
 
 To the above lists we may add, as desirable; 
 Adelaide, alta-clarense, aurea speciosa and grandi- 
 flora, Cliveana, aiitumnalis, concirma, decits horto- 
 rum, elegantissima. Napoleon III., flammeola 
 incarnata, fama, gloriosa, 31arie Verschaffelt, nitens, 
 Ne Plus Ultra, ornata rosea, prcenHens, violce 
 odorata. 
 
OTHEE AMERICAN PLANTS. Hi) 
 
 Those wlio arc not fomiliar with the flower will 
 find iiiie varieties figured in Bot. j\[ag. 28, t. 27, 17, 
 t. 1402, 31, t. 51-60, 16, t. 1366-67 ; Illus. Hort. 
 t. 75, 209, 415 ; Fl. des Scrres, 1298, 1306-7. 
 
 Mr. Anthony Watercr, of the Knap Hill Nursery, 
 near Woking, Surrey, England, has been very suc- 
 cessful in raising seedling Azaleas, and within the 
 past few years has produced some varieties which 
 are far superior to any before raised. This has 
 been accomplished by crossing the best hardy kinds 
 with Azalea siiioisi^, a Chinese species, with large, 
 golden, Rhododendron4ike flowers. 
 
 These new varieties are thus described in Mr. 
 Waterer's catalogue of the present year : — 
 
 Amcena Delicate rose, with rich buff 
 
 spot. 
 
 Bessie Holdaway . Bright rose, clear bronze spot. 
 
 CuPREA Coppery - orange, shaded with 
 
 salmon. 
 
 FcLGiDA Bright fiery-orange, deej^er in 
 
 the centre. 
 
 Nancy TVaterer . . The finest of all the yellows, 
 rich and deep in color ; large 
 in size and perfect in form. 
 
 OcHUOLEUCA .... Pale straw-color, with golden 
 spot. 
 
 Primulina .... Delicate primrose-yellow. 
 
 PuLCHRA Shaded rose, with orange blotch. 
 
 Sinensis rosea . . . Pale, shaded rose. 
 
 Straminea .... An extremely delicate tint of 
 , straw-color. 
 
 SuLPHUREA .... Sulphur-yellow, with deep yel- 
 low blotch. 
 
120 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 Figures of Nancy Waterer and Bessie Holdawav 
 are given in the " Florist " for May, 1869. 
 
 Double Hardy Azaleas. 
 
 These are very beautiful and desirable, as they 
 are very showy and remain long in bloom. 
 
 They are perfectly hardy, having stood the last 
 four winters with us ; grow freely and flower 
 abundantly. 
 
 The varieties are: Maja, Van Houtte, Ophire, 
 Dr. Strcitcr, Heroine, Bartolo Lazaris, Narcissiflora, 
 Leibnitz, Graaf von Mcran. 
 
 Azalea amcena. 
 
 This is a charming little Chinese species, usually 
 •grown as a greenhouse plant, but perfectly hardy. 
 
 The flowers are purple, produced in the " hose in 
 hose " form, in gardening parlance ; that is, with a 
 double corolla. The plant was found by Mr. For- 
 tune, near Shanghac, and, as we have it in cultiva 
 tion, is evidently a garden variety of some unknown 
 species. The flower resembles that of Rhododen- 
 dron dauricum, and, like that, is produced in very 
 early spring, almost top early with us. The foliage 
 is evergreen. 
 
 Figured in Pax. Fl. G. pi. 89 ; Lem. Jar. 4, t. 329 ; 
 Bot. Mag. 79, t. 4728. 
 
 Azalea sinensis. 
 
 A Chinese species, vnth large, yellow-orange flow- 
 ers, to which we have already had occasion to refer 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 121 
 
 as one of the parents of the liybrid yellow Rliodo- 
 dendrons, and of Mr. Waterer's new hardy Azaleas. 
 The flowers are scentless, and only resemble those 
 of A. pontica in color. A very showy plant. 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 885. 
 
 Variety alba, with white flowers, is figured in 
 nius. Hort. t. 563. 
 
 Azalea squamata. 
 
 A Chinese species, with small, lavender-pm-ple 
 flowers, with crimson spots, produced before the 
 leaves ; probably not hardy. 
 
 t. 3 . 
 
 Azalea obtusa. 
 
 Also a Chinese species, with small, deep -red 
 spotted flowers and evergreen foliage. The flowers 
 are fragrant. Coming from the north of China it 
 may be hardy. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Reg. 32, t. 37. 
 
 Azalea ledi folia. 
 
 This si)ecies, also known as Azalea indica alba, 
 is the Avcll-known white Azalea of our greenhouses. 
 The foliage is rough, small, and not ornamental ; 
 the flowers large, white, and fragrant. It is the 
 parent of innumerable varieties, which are far 
 superior to the parent. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 2901. 
 
122 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 The purple Azalea, generally known as A. phm- 
 nicea, is a variety of this species. 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 3239. 
 
 Azalea indica. 
 
 This species is the parent of all the so-called 
 " greenhouse Azaleas." It is a native of China 
 and Japan, with very showy scarlet, red, or white 
 flowers ; but has sported into numerous varieties, 
 some of which are among the most attractive of 
 greenhouse plants. None of them are hardy. 
 
 Those who are not familiar with this flower will 
 find very beautiful figures of fine varieties in Floral 
 Mag. pi. 63, 59, 25, 39, 14, 113, 104, 193, 231, 201, 
 268, 303, 395 ; Illus. Hort. t. 8, 20, 38, 65; 90, 130, 
 136, 170, 178, 182, 267, 302, 288, 340, 342, 428, 
 478, 512 ; Fl. -des Ser. 1. 1618-22, 1654, 1572, 1567, 
 1365, 1334, 1301-2-3, 1060, 1180, 1157, 1243 ; 
 Hen. Illus. Bou. pi. 23. 
 
 Azalea ovata. 
 
 A small, pretty species, with pale purple flowers, 
 and small, shining green foliage ; native of China. 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 5064. 
 
 Azalea occidentalis 
 
 Is the Californian species. The flowers are large, 
 white, marked with yellow ; a very showy plant, and 
 probably hardy. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 5005 ; and Fl. des Ser. 
 14, t. 1432. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 123 
 
 The Rhodora. 
 
 There is but one species of this genus, R. cana- 
 densis; a low, deciduous shrub, not uncommon in 
 New England, and often found so plentifully as to 
 cover acres. 
 
 The leaves are deciduous ; the flowers of every 
 shade from purple to pure white, blooming in clus- 
 ters, before the leaves, in early May. 
 
 It is a pretty plant, readily obtained, of easy 
 culture j and does well in any moist loam. 
 
 It thrives wonderfully in a Rhododendron -bed, 
 and is well worthy of the position from its showy, 
 abundant, and early bloom. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 14, t. 474. 
 
 The Loiseleuria. 
 
 The only species is L. procumbens, sometimes 
 known as Azalea procumbens. It is a small, 
 evergreen shrub, a native of high latitudes, on 
 mountains, both in this country and Europe. The 
 flowers are small, white or pink, in terminal 
 clusters. 
 
 It would probably do well on the border of a 
 Rhododendron-bed. 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 762 ; Bax. Brit. Bot. 6, 
 t. 463. 
 
 The Kalmia. 
 
 These well-known plants, the " Mountain Laurel " 
 of our woods, are fit companions for Rhododendrons, 
 
124 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 thriving under the same treatment, and harmonizing 
 well with them, both in foliage and flower. 
 
 Their culture is very simple, being only to plant 
 them in moist soil, and leave them to grow. While 
 they will bear pruning, they seldom need it; for, if 
 not crowded, they form symmetrical bushes them- 
 selves. They are propagated by layers or from seed, 
 in the same manner as Ehododendrons. 
 
 They are perfectly hardy, although in exposed 
 situations the foliage sometimes gets browned in 
 winter. 
 
 No insect attacks them, and they are subject to no 
 diseases. 
 
 A mass of the large-flowered Kalmia in full bloom 
 is a beautiful sight, and the smaller species are all 
 attractive and pretty. 
 
 No words can describe the beauty of this plant 
 on the mountains of the Middle States, where it 
 covers acres, and sheets whole hillsides with pink 
 and white. Even in New England there are places 
 where it grows in great abundance, but it does not 
 flower as freely as further south. 
 
 The plant is popularly known as " Mountain 
 Laurel," in distinction from the " Great Laurel " 
 (^Rhododendron maximuvi) ; also as " Spoonwood " 
 and " Calico Bush." 
 
 The common small species is called Sheep Laurel, 
 or Lambkill. 
 
 The foliage of all the species is evergreen, but 
 only in Kalmia latifolia is ornamental. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 125 
 
 Kalmia LATIFOLIA. 
 
 This is the most showy species, and is one of the 
 most ornamental of our indigenous plants. It is a 
 tall shrub, sometimes attaining the height of ten 
 feet. In cultivation, however, it is seldom more 
 than half that height, and grows thick and bushy. 
 The foliage is dark shining green, large and orna- 
 mental. 
 
 The flowers vary from pure white to deep pink, 
 and thus constitute the varieties of some nursery 
 catalogues. Seedlings vary much • in size of the 
 flower, in floriferous qualities, and in form of the 
 corymbs of bloom ; some bearing close, compact 
 masses, others having them very loose and straggling. 
 
 Although a native of our w^oods, the cheapest 
 and easiest mode of procuring plants is to import 
 them from England, where they are raised from seed 
 in large quantities. Nice, bushy plants, about a foot 
 high, cost only twenty-five dollars per hundred 
 landed here, and, as they grow rapidly, soon form 
 large plants. 
 
 Kalmias mass well w4th Rhododendrons, and, as 
 they bloom somewhat later, serve to keep up the 
 period of bloom in the bed. AVe prefer them, how- 
 ever, as specimen plants, or in clumps by them- 
 selves. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 5, pi. 175 ; Michaux, Arb. 3, 
 pi. 5 ; Big. Med. pi. 13. 
 
 Variety myrtifolia is a dwarf -growing plant, 
 with small, shining leaves ; very pretty for the bor- 
 ders of beds. 
 
126 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 Kalmia ANGUSTIFOLIA 
 
 Is by no meaiis a popular plant, from the foliage 
 being poisonous to sheep ; whence the oommon name 
 of " Lambkill." It is, howe\er, very pretty, and 
 improves greatly on acquaintance. The foliage is 
 narrow, dull green, glaucous below, and not orna- 
 mental. The flowers vary from pale pink to the 
 deepest red. 
 
 By a little search in the fields in the season of 
 bloom, many varieties, differing greatly in color, 
 foliage, and growth, may be obtained. The plant is 
 too pretty to be neglected, and were it less common 
 would be highly esteemed. 
 
 Planted on the border of a Rhododendron-bed, it 
 increases rapidly by suckers, and never fails to 
 flower freely. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 10, t. 331 ; and in Lodd. 
 Cab. pi. 502. 
 
 Kalmia glauca. 
 
 A charmingly pretty species, and the earliest to 
 bloom, the flowers expanding in early May. The 
 foliage is narrow, evergreen, whitish below ; the 
 flowers large, rose-colored, in terminal corymbs. 
 
 While in its native bogs, the plant is a low, strag- 
 gling shrub. 
 
 We receive it from England in neat, pretty, sym- 
 metrical plants, which always come out of the cases 
 in full bloom. It is not so easy of culture as the 
 other species, and is very liable to die off. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 127 
 
 The varieties siricta, snperba, and rosmarinifolia, 
 only differ from the species in size and color of 
 flower, or in foliage. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 5, t. 177 ; Lodd. Can. 
 t. 1508. 
 
 Kalmia hirsuta. 
 
 This species is a native of pine barren swamps of 
 the Southern States. The foliage is small ; the flow- 
 ers large, rose-colored, solitary, produced in the axils 
 of the leaves. Tliis plant would probably prove of 
 difficult cultivation and be tender in the Northern 
 States. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 4, t. 138 ; Lodd. Cab. 
 t. 1058. 
 
 Kalmia cltveata. 
 
 This species, which is a native of the mountains 
 of Carolina, we have never seen. It is said to be 
 deciduous ; and to bear white flowers, red at the 
 bottom, in few-flowered, lateral corymbs. 
 
 The Ledum. 
 
 This plant, familiarly known as " Labrador Tea," 
 is by no means uncommon in low mountain bogs. 
 The foliage is rusty, pleasantly fragrant; the flowers 
 in large, terminal clusters, white and very showy. 
 All the species thrive on the borders of Rhododen- 
 dron-beds, for which place their low growth adapts 
 
128 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 them. They bloom in May, and flower freely and 
 regularly. All are perfectly hardy. 
 
 Ledum palustre. 
 
 A low shrub, with linear leaves with revolute 
 margins ; flowers white. A native of Canada and 
 the north of Europe. 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 560 ; Bax. Brit. Bot. 6. 
 p. 508. 
 
 L. DECUMBENS is a prostrate variety from the far 
 North. 
 
 Ledum latifolium. 
 
 Altogether a largqr plant in every way. Leaves 
 broad ; flowers large, white. The most showy spe- 
 cies, and well worth cultivating. 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 534. 
 
 We have in our garden a plant received under the 
 name of Ledum angustifoUum, which seems to be 
 intermediate between these two species. 
 
 L. canadense, figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 10-19, does 
 not appear to differ in flower from other species. 
 
 The plants sometimes known as L. buxifoUum and 
 thymifolium are now referred to Leiophyllum. 
 
 The Leiophyllum. 
 
 A charming little evergreen, with small, shining 
 leaves, somewhat resembling a myrtle ; whence the 
 popular name, " Sand Myrtle." 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 129 
 
 The only species is L. buxffoUum, a native of l\c\v 
 Jersey and southward, but perfectly hardy with us 
 at Glen Ridge. 
 
 The flowers are small, white, or tinged* with pink 
 on the ends of the branches, in close corymbs, and 
 in the latter part of May completely cover the plant. 
 At other seasons the evergreen foliage is very neat 
 and pretty. A border of this plant around a mass 
 of Rhododeudons, Kalmias, or Azaleas, is very 
 effective. 
 
 FigTired in Lodd. Cab. 52, as Ledum huxifolium. 
 
 The plant known as L. thymifolium is a variety, 
 with smaller foliage, equally ornamental and desir- 
 able. This plant is also known as Ammyrsine. 
 
 The Menziesia. 
 
 A genus of small shrubs, not very ornamental, but 
 desirable in a collection. The foliage is deciduous, 
 and resembles that of an Azalea ; the flowers are 
 small, greenish-white or brownish-purple. 
 
 The species is M. ferriiginea^ a native of North- 
 western America, of which the variety ghhularis is 
 found plentifully on mountains in Virginia. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 38, t. 1571 ; and the variety 
 in Hook. Bor. Am. 132. 
 
 The Phyllodoce. 
 
 The plant known in florist's catalogues as Menziesia 
 coerulea is a charming little plant, resembling a Heath 
 both in foliage and flower ; a native of North-western 
 
 G* 
 
130 OTHER AMEKICAN PLANTS. 
 
 America, of the White Mountains, and some parts 
 of Em^ope. It is very ornamental, and will thrive 
 in cool, moist soil. The flowers are bluish-purple^ 
 nodding, and charmingly pretty. The proper name 
 of the plant is Phyllodoce taxifolia. There is also 
 another species, P. or M. empetnformis, with pale 
 red flowers. 
 
 See figures in Lodd. Cab. t. 164, and Bot. Mag. 
 t. 3176. 
 
 The species of I>abo£cia, pretty heath-like plants 
 with showy flowers, but not hardy with us, are some- 
 times called Menzietia. 
 
 The Calluna. 
 
 This plant, the " Heather " of Europe, is hardy 
 enough to endure our winters. Blooming in July, 
 when flowers are not plenty, it forms a most attrac- 
 tive border to a clump of evergreens. The plant is 
 low-growing, with heath-like foliage, and when in 
 bloom is a mass of flower. The species C. vulgaris 
 is a native of Europe, but has been found growing 
 wild near Boston, the locality being such as to leave 
 little doubt as to its being indigenous. The flowers 
 are rose-colored ; but there are garden varieties of 
 every shade from red to white, one mtli double flow- 
 ers and one with golden foliage. All these are 
 easily grown along th'e borders of Rhododendron- 
 beds, and with a slight covering of pine-needles in 
 winter escape entirely uninjured. 
 
 They can be imported for about three dollars a 
 dozen. 
 
 Figured in Eng. Bot. 15, t. 1013 ; and in Bax. 
 Brit. Bot. 1, t. 76. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 131 
 
 The Gypsocallis. 
 
 The hardiest of the " Heaths," as the plant is 
 always found in catalogues as Erica herhacea. It is 
 a native of Central Europe, but with us has proved 
 hardy in all exposures, the only care taken being to 
 cover the plant with pine-needles in winter ; as in 
 our experience, while no degree of cold injured the 
 plant, the flower-buds were killed when the mercury 
 fell below zero. The species to which we specially 
 refer is G. carnea. This little plant is low-growing, 
 like the Heather ; and, like it, is suited for the bor- 
 ders of Rhododendron-beds. It blooms in the early 
 days of spring, opening its flowers with the crocuses 
 in April, and giving to the bees the first promise of 
 summer. 
 
 The flowers are pale red or whitish, and com- 
 pletely cover the plant. By growing it in every 
 position, from very sunny to very shady, a succes- 
 sion of bloom may be obtained for weeks. We 
 regard this as one of the most valuable of spring 
 flowers. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 11 ; Lodd. Cab. t. 1452. 
 
 The other species of Gypsocallis are not hardy iu 
 New England, although thej- are often grown as 
 greenhouse plants. 
 
 The Cassiope. 
 
 C. hypnoides is a rarely beautiful plant, with moss- 
 like foliage and lovely red and white flowers. It is 
 
132 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 a native of Lapland and Siberia, and is found on the 
 tops of the mountains of New England. 
 
 Although hardy, it is very difficult of cultivation : 
 the best place for it would be in a shady bed of 
 sandy peat. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 2936. 
 
 Another species, C. tetragona, also a native of 
 higli northern latitudes, is very difficult to keep 
 in cultivation. It is a beautiful plant, with large, 
 drooping, white, bell-shaped flowers. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 3181. 
 
 • These plants were formerly known as Andromeda. 
 There are other species not in cultivation. 
 
 The Arctostaphylos. 
 
 A small, trailing plant, very generally distributed 
 over America and Europe. The common name is 
 " Bearberry." The flowers are small, white, tinged 
 with red, very pretty; tlie leaves small, box-like, 
 evergreen. It does well in peat, or will thrive in 
 any sandy loam, and is a good plant for rock- work. 
 
 Figured in Wood. Med. Bot. t. 70; Bax. Brit. 
 
 A. alpina is a deciduous species, with pure white 
 flowers and black berries ; a native of high moun- 
 tains, both in Europe and America. Like the last, 
 the stems are trailing ; and it is a suitable plant for 
 covering the ground. 
 
 Figured in Eng. Bot. t. 2030. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 132 
 
 A. glauca is the "Mazancta" of California, and 
 varies in size from a tall shrub in the low country 
 to a very low creeping bush far up above the snow- 
 line. The flowers arc pink and very handsome, the 
 foliage clear glaucous green, the bush red. Alto- 
 gether the plant is very ornamental, and if hardy 
 will prove a great addition to our shrubbery. We 
 liave plants sent from California now on trial. 
 
 The Epig/EA. 
 
 ' There is but one species, E. repens, the " Trail- 
 ing Arbutus," " Ground Laurel," or " May Flower," 
 almost too well known to need description. Neat 
 in habit and foliage, deliciously fragrant in flower, 
 and blooming at a season when it is especially attrac- 
 tive, this charming .plant is seldom found in cultiva- 
 tion. We are told '" it cannot be grown in gardens," 
 yet nothing is easier. 
 
 Obtain good plants, either from the woods or by 
 unportation, in early spring, or any time after Au- 
 gust; plant them in your Rhododendron-bed, and 
 your work is done. They will increase, carpet the 
 ground, give you flower year after year, and ask 
 you for no attention. 
 
 There is not in the whole floral kingdom a more 
 attractive flower, and it loses none of its wild-wood 
 beauty when we take it to our homes. 
 
 The flowers vary much in size and color, and, in 
 planting, the largest and most highly colored should 
 be selected. Plants may also be raised from seed. 
 
 Figured in And. Bot. Rep. 102; Lodd. Cab. t. 
 201 ; Sweet, Fl. G. 2, t. 384. 
 
134 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 The Gaultheria. 
 
 A genus of low, shrubby plants, with neat flow- 
 ers and showy berries, particularly adapted for cov- 
 ering the surface of the ground, or for planting under 
 trees, where little else will grow. They need no 
 special culture beyond being planted in sandy peat, 
 or open loamy soil ; and propagate readily by suckers. 
 
 Gaultheria procumbens. 
 
 This pretty little species is the well-known " Check- 
 erberry " of our woods, and produces the aromatic 
 red berries so often seen in the markets. The stem 
 is slender, creeping, never more than a few inches 
 high. The leaves are evergreen, shining, and 
 strongly aromatic to the taste ; the flowers are 
 pinkish-white, nodding. This plant is especially 
 suitable for covering the surface of Rhododendron- 
 beds, and is ornamental in foliage, flower, and fruit. 
 The best way is to transplant them from the woods. 
 A' few set here and there will rapidly spread and 
 cover the surface, doing no injury to the larger 
 plants. 
 
 Figured in And. Rep. 2, t. 116 ; Bot. Mag. 45, t. 
 1966 ; Lodd. Cab. t. 82 ; Barton, Med. 15 ; Big. 
 Med. 22. 
 
 Gaultheria Shallon. 
 
 A fine species from the north-western coast of 
 America. The leaves are large, coarse, dull green; 
 the flowers pinkish-white, very showy ; the berries 
 purplish-black, edible. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 135 
 
 This plant in its native liabitat grows in dense 
 forests, and is thus adapted for planting under the 
 shade of trees. In height it varies from a few 
 inches to two feet, but is usually very low-growing, 
 creeping along the surface and increasing rapidly by 
 underground stems. 
 
 We are sorry to say that this beautiful species lias 
 not proved hardy with us at Glen Ridge : of a large 
 nmnber of plants set out a few years since, only a 
 few survive, and these are in bad health. For some 
 years they grew, flowered, and fruited freely ; but a 
 winter when the mercury fell to ten degrees below 
 zero "was too severe for them, although a covermg 
 of pine-needles woiild probably have 'saved them. 
 We strongly advise the introduction and extensive 
 planting of this species. Plants can be bought in 
 England for a shilling each : thev transplant easily ; 
 and wherever they prove hardy, they will be found to 
 merit our recommendation. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 55, t. 2843 ; Bot. Reg. 17, 
 t. 1111 ; Lodd. Cab. t. 1372. 
 
 There are other species of GauUheria, but they 
 are not in cultivation. 
 
 The Chiogexes. 
 
 A pretty little creeping shrub, with slender stems, 
 close-set, evergreen leaves, inconspicuous flowers, 
 and showy, white, aromatic berries. The species is 
 C. hispidida, and is well worthy a place in some 
 sheltered portion of the Rhododendron-bed, where 
 it will trail over the surface, grow, flower, and fruit 
 
130 OTHKK AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 freely. It is one of those natives of the wild woods 
 which we are always charmed to find in cultivation. 
 
 Plants could easily be procured from our north- 
 ern woods. 
 
 Figured in Torr. N. Y. 68 ; also in Pursh, Fl. 
 13, as Q-aultheria serpyllifolia. 
 
 The Linn^a. 
 
 All the plants we have thus far described belong 
 to the same family as the Rhododendron (Ericaceae). 
 The pretty little Linncea borealis, so well adapted 
 for covering the soil in shrubberies, is one of the 
 Honeysuckle family (Caprifoliacese). It is a charm- 
 ing plant, with pretty evergreen foliage and delicate 
 pink, fragrant flowers. 
 
 It is a common plant in northern woods ; and 
 we mind us of localities where it fringes the road- 
 sides for miles, carpeting the ground under the 
 spreading firs and hemlocks. It is impatient of 
 drought, or of much sun, but will thrive well in a 
 Rhododendron-bed. 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 183 ; Bax. Brit. Bot. 5, 
 840. 
 
 The Mitchell a. 
 
 Another creeping evergreen, commonly called 
 "Partridge" or "Twin Berry;" botanically, M. 
 repens. It is very common in woods, and always 
 beautiful, whether clothed with the lovely pink and 
 white flowers or sparkling with scarlet berries. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 137 
 
 . It is easily procured, is very amenable to cultiva- 
 tion, and is well worthy a place in the garden. It 
 belongs to the Madder family (Rubiaccae). 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 979 ; and Barton, Fl. 
 8, t. 95. 
 
 The Empetrum. 
 
 A plant of the Crowberry family (Empetraccae), 
 much resembling a heath, and worthy a place in 
 the collection. It is not an uncommon Alpine on the 
 summits of mountains ; and is abundant on the 
 island in Frenchman's Bay, off Mt. Desert, covering 
 the ground and trailing over the cliffs. 
 
 The foliage is dark green and rather sombre, the 
 flowers inconspicuous, the berries black and orna- 
 mental. 
 
 Botanically,the plant is E. nigrum, or Black Crow- 
 berry. 
 
 Figured in Eng, Bot. 8, t. 526 ; and Bas. Brit. 
 Bot. 6, p. 469. 
 
 The Vaccinium. 
 
 Tlie only plant of this genus desirable for cultiva- 
 tion in the garden is the Cowberry (F. Vitis-Idaea) , 
 a low-growing species, with dark green, shining fo- 
 liage, pretty pink flowers, and showy red berries. 
 As a plant for covering the surface, it is well worthy 
 a place, growing freely and requiring no care. 
 
 In Maine, where this plant is very abundant, the 
 berries are used as cranberries, and are quite 
 palatable. 
 
138 . OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 Figured in Lodcl. Cab. t. 1023 ; Bax. Brit. Bot. 5, 
 t. 383. 
 
 Variety ma jus is larger in all its parts. 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 616. 
 
 V. oxYCOCCUS and macrocarpus are our small 
 and large cranberries, both found plentifully growing 
 wild, and the latter sometimes cultivated for market. 
 Though naturally growing in bogs, a wet soil is not 
 essential to them, as they do well in any good loam. 
 The flowers and fruit of both are very pretty. 
 
 Y. stamineum, the Deerberry, with deciduous 
 foliage, greenish-white flowers, and large, greenish 
 fruit, is sometimes found in cultivation, and is not 
 uncommon in the wild state in drv woods. 
 
 The Leucothoe. 
 
 A genus containing two of our most beautiful 
 flowering shrubs, without which no collection of 
 American plants can be complete, and which add 
 greatly to the attraction of the shrubbery. They 
 are hardy plants, doing well in Rhododendron soil, 
 and require no special culture. 
 
 They are commonly known as Andromeda. 
 
 Leucothoe floribunda. 
 
 This elegant species is a native of the Southern 
 States, on the mountains, but is generally hardy 
 with us. The foliage is evergreen, rather small, 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 130 
 
 dark green, and very ornamental ; tlic flowers -wliite, 
 in panicles at the. ends of the branches. The buds 
 form in the summer, and arc very conspicuous all 
 winter, opening in early spring ; the white flowers 
 contrast beautifully with the dark foliage. A mass 
 of this plant is a most attractive feature in the 
 garden. As the buds are a little liable to be winter- 
 killed with us, and the foliage sometimes gets 
 browned, Ave generally protect our plants by placing 
 over them a few evergreen boughs, with which cov- 
 ering they pass the winter uninjured, although in a 
 very exposed situation, and every spring reward us 
 by abundance of bloom. A bed of this plant, edged 
 with the hardy heath (Gypsocallis'), is very hand- 
 some, both plants blooming at the saftie time, and 
 contrasting well in color. 
 
 In catalogues this plant is called Andromeda flori- 
 bunda, and, botanically, is more properly referred to 
 that genus. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Reg. 10, t. 807; and Bot. Mag. 
 t. 1566 ; Pax. Mag. 4, p. 101. 
 
 Leucothoe Catesb^i. 
 
 A very showy plant, and somewhat hardier than 
 the last described. The foliage is large, serrate, 
 coriaceous, and evergreen ; the flowers white, in 
 long, drooping racemes. This species is ornamental, 
 both in the mass or as a specimen plant : we grow 
 it most successfully both ways, and regard it as 
 one of the most desirable American plants. Its 
 height is from one to three feet ; and the slender 
 
140 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 branches, drooping with the weight of the flowers, 
 are extremely showy. It is very hardy, never win- 
 ter-ldlled, and never fails to flower abundantly. It 
 thrives in a rich loam, but is impatient of drought : 
 we grow it in beds of peaty loam, in a northern 
 exposure ; but if the roots are not allowed to dry, it 
 will stand the full sunshine. A native of Virginia, 
 and southward along the mountains. Known also 
 as Andromeda Catesbcsi and spinulosa, and as L. 
 spimdosa. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 1. 1955 ; Lodd. Cab. 1. 1320. 
 
 LeUCOTHOE AXILLARIS. 
 
 A pretty 'species, but by no means so. showy a 
 plant as those we have described. The flowers are 
 white, in axillary spikes or racemes. A native of 
 the low country of Virginia and southward, and 
 probably tender in New England. 
 
 Figured as Andromeda axillaris in Bot. Mag. t. 
 2357. 
 
 There are other species, some of which are tender ; 
 and others, although hardy, are not sufficiently 
 ornamental to be worthy of cultivation, except in 
 large collections. L. racemosa is the best of these, 
 and is worthy of a place in the shrubbery : it is a 
 hardy native plant. 
 
 The Cassandra. 
 
 0. calyculata is a hardy shrub, very common in 
 swamps. The foliage is rusty, and not ornamental ; 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 141 
 
 and the cliicf merit of tlic plant is its expanding its 
 flowers early in April. When well grown, it is very 
 pretty ; but it is not naturally of good habit. Th» 
 flowers are pretty white bells. 
 
 There are varieties which differ only in height, 
 size of flower, and breadth of leaf, respectively 
 known as nana, ventricosa, and lalifolia. All are 
 of easiest culture in peat-soil. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. 1. 1286 ; Lodd. Cab. 1. 1464, 
 530, and 1286. 
 
 The Zenobia. 
 
 This plant, also known as Andromeda speciosa, 
 is very showy and desirable, but is not hardy in the 
 Northern States, as it is a native of. Southern 
 swamps. The flowers are large, white, and very 
 showy ; the foliage is deciduous. 
 
 The plants found in catalogues as Androineda pul- 
 verulenta, cassincsfolia, pitlvendentissima, dealbata, 
 and ovata, are all varieties of this species, and like 
 it are tender. They are very elegant and showy 
 plants, and very desirable. In England they are 
 hardy, and would probably prove so south of Phila- 
 delphia. 
 
 Figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 551 ; Bot. Mag. 25, t. 
 970, and 18, t. 667 ; Bot. Keg. 12, t. 1010. 
 
 The Andromeda. 
 
 The species to which this genus has been restricted 
 by most botanists is A. polifolia, a charming little 
 
142 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 plant, with narrow, giaiicous-green leaves and beauti- 
 ful white flowers tipped with rosy-red. 
 
 It is a native of cold bogs of both continents, 
 extending into high latitudes, and is therefore per- 
 fectly hardy. 
 
 The difficulty in cultivation is to keep it cool and 
 damp. With us it grows and flowers beautifully in 
 the shady part of a Rhododendron-bed on a northern 
 hillside. 
 
 There are many varieties, differing in size of plant 
 and color of flower : all thrive under the same treat- 
 ment, and are desirable. 
 
 Figured in Bax. Brit. Bot. 5, p. 361 ; and in vari- 
 ety in Lodd. Cab. t, 546, 1591, 1714, 1T25. 
 
 A. ROSMARINIFOLIA 
 
 Much resembles the last, and may be only a 
 variety. 
 
 The plant found in catalogues as Andromeda 
 formosa is a native of Nepal, and tender with us. 
 The flowers are rosy-white, in drooping clusters, and 
 very showy. Also called Pieris formosa. 
 
 Andromeda mariana. 
 
 This species, also known as Lyonia, is a hardy 
 plant, with deciduous foliage and large, white flowers. 
 It is well worth growing, and does well in any good 
 loamy soil. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mas;, t. 1597. 
 
OTHKR AMERICAN PLANTS. 143 
 
 There are other native species, which are desirable 
 111 collections ; but none of them are so showy as 
 those we have mentioned. 
 
 The very beautiful Andromeda floribunda has 
 been described under the gaww^ Leucothoe. 
 
 The Daphne. 
 
 Of this extensive genus, to which the. well-known 
 greenhouse plant D. odora belongs, but two are 
 hardy in New England : one of these, D. Mezereon, 
 is a common shrub in the spring garden, and pro- 
 duces its purple or white flowers with the early 
 crocus. It is a very hardy plant, growing freely in 
 good garden soil, and is ornamental in flower, 
 foliage, and fruit. There is also an autumn- 
 blooming variety. 
 
 Daphne cneorum 
 
 Is the most attractive of the hardy species. It 
 is a low-growing plant, with evergreen foliage and 
 terminal umbels of fragrant, pink flowers, which 
 are produced in great profusion in early spring. 
 Although indigenous to Central Europe, it is perfectly 
 hardy with: us, and is a most useful plant for low 
 beds or for the borders of the shrubbery. The fra- 
 grance of the flowers, is so strong as to be almost 
 unpleasant in a close room, but in the garden they 
 perfume the air delightfully. They open in sunny 
 exposures in April, and, by a little care in having 
 plants in different places, may be had in bloom far 
 
144 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 into June : a second crop of flowers is sometimes ; 
 
 produced in September. The flowers vary somewhat 
 
 in shading, and there is said to be a white variety. I 
 
 Variety majus. has larger flo\Yers than the species, 
 
 and is a more desirable plant. , 
 
 Variety variegatum has the foliage prettily edged | 
 
 with yellow. i 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 313 ; Lodd. Cab. t. 1800. 
 
 D. altaica, a native of Siberia, and D. alpina, j 
 
 from the Swiss Alps, both with white flowers, which ! 
 
 in the latter are fragrant, would probably prove i 
 
 hardy ; but we do not know of them in cultivation. ! 
 
 D. Laureola, the Spurge Laurel, indigenous to I 
 
 most parts of Europe, is a. good plant for shady i 
 
 plantations, as it is not injured by the drip of trees. ■ 
 It is not hardy in New England. 
 
 D. pontica, native of Asia Minor, and also found 
 in Siberia, is precariously hardy, and is killed in 
 
 exposed situations. j 
 
 D. alpina is figured in Lodd. Cab. t. 66. | 
 
 D. altaica in Bot. Mag. t. 1875 ; and in Lodd. I 
 
 Cab. t. 399. ^ 
 
 B. Laureola in Eng. Bot. 2, 119. 
 
 D. pontica in And. B-ep. 2, t. 73 ; and Bot. Mag. ! 
 
 t.'l282. \ 
 
 The Skdimia. 
 
 A genus of evergreen shrubs, from northern India j 
 
 and Japan, of which one, S. japonica, is a very desir- , 
 
OTHER AMEUICAN PLANTS. 145 
 
 able plant. As its name implies, it is a native of 
 ■Japan, and is a low-growing shrub found upon the 
 mountains. The foliage is dark green, shining, and 
 evergreen. The flowers are white, in long, clustered 
 panicles on the ends of the branches, and are suc- 
 ceeded by bright, globular, scarlet berries. Alto- 
 gether it is a very ornamental plant. With us it 
 proves hardy in Riiododendron soil, and grows, flow- 
 ers, and fruits freely. 
 
 Seedlings are easily raised from tlie berries. 
 
 Figured in Sieb. Fl. Jap. 68; Fl. des Serres, 7, 
 p. 39 ; Bot. Mag. t. 4719 ; Illus. Hort. 1, 1. 13. 
 
 Skimmia oblata. 
 
 This species, also from Japan, has large, rich, lau- 
 rel-like foliage, and oblate berries of briglit vermil- 
 ion-red. It is a more showy plant'than S. japonica, 
 but we cannot vouch for its hardiness. As yet it is 
 somewhat rare, but, as it grows readily from seed, 
 will soon be common. The plant known as S. fra- 
 grantissima proves to Be the male plant of this 
 species, which is. sometimes hermaphrodite, though 
 usually unisexual. 
 
 Figured in The Florist, 18G5, p. 161. 
 
 The Pernettya. 
 
 These plants are pretty little, evergreen shrubs 
 
 from South America. The foliage is small and very 
 
 neat ; the flowers little white bells, covering the 
 
 plant, which are succeeded by pink berries. They 
 
 7 
 
146 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 are more likely to be destroyed by the summer than 
 by the winter ; at least siich has been cm- experience 
 at Glen Ridge, where plants which survived two 
 winters, with little injury, perished from the effects 
 of the summer's sun. All the species , are very 
 impatient of the extremes of wet and dry, and if 
 planted in full exposure to the rays of the sun soon 
 perish, and an excess of moisture at the roots is 
 sure to kill them. The best culture is to plant them 
 in a Rhododendron-bed, with a northern exposure, 
 and during winter to cover them lightly with pine- 
 needles. 
 
 They are easily raised from seed. 
 
 The two species in cultivation are : — 
 
 P. MUCRONATA, 
 
 A native , of the Straits of Magellan, with dark 
 foliage, which contrasts well with the white flowers. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Reg. 20, t. 1675 ; and in Maud. 
 Bot. 3, 112. And 
 
 P. ANGUSTIFOLIA, 
 
 A native of Chili. The foliage is dark, and the 
 plant flowers very freely. This species seems quite 
 as hardy as the preceding. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Reg. 26, t. 63 ; and in Bot. Mag. 
 ,t: 3889. 
 
 There are other species which prove tender. 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 147 
 
 The Hypericum. 
 
 The St. Johns-worts are well-known plants, with 
 yellow flowers ; some wortliy of garden culture, and 
 others mere weeds. 
 
 One species, however, is a very sliowy and desir- 
 able plant : — 
 
 Hypericum calycinum 
 
 Is a native of Ireland^ Scotland, and other parts 
 of Europe, and proves perfectly hardy with us, if 
 slightly protected during the winter. The foliage is 
 large, evergreen, and thickly covered with pellucid 
 dots; the flowers are large, yellow, and very showy, 
 two or three inches in diameter, with reddish 
 anthers. It is a low-growing shrub, thriving under 
 the drip of trees, and well-calculated for banks, rock- 
 works, or the margins of shrubberies. The roots 
 are creeping, and a small plant will soon cover a 
 large space. 
 
 Our plants are on the borders of a Rhododendron- 
 bed, and are protected in winter by a slight covering 
 of pine-needles. We do not regard this as necessary, 
 for plants have done well wholly unprotected ; but 
 the foliage is very much browned and the beauty of 
 the plant impaired. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 146 ; and in Eng. Bot. 
 29, t. 2017. 
 
 Of other species H. Kalmianum is a well-known 
 inhabitant of our shrubberies, conspicuous for its 
 
148 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 yellow flowers in July ; and H. Uralum, with ns, a 
 rather tender species from Nepal, with terminal 
 corymbs of bright orange-yellow blossoms, is desir- 
 able. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 2375. 
 
 The Polygala. 
 
 One species of this beautiful genus is suitable for 
 cultivation with American plants : — 
 
 Polygala CHAMiCBUxus 
 
 Is a dwarf-growing, evergreen, shrubby plant, 
 with large, yellow flowers, a native of the Swiss and 
 Austrian Alps. It is a neat, pretty plant, increasing 
 rapidly from running roots, and freely producing its 
 fragrant flowers during the spring and summer. 
 We can scarcely regard it as perfectly hardy ; but 
 with a little care, covering the whole plant with 
 pine-needles in winter, it may be preserved, and is 
 well worth the trouble. Plants may be imported 
 from England for about nine shillings per dozen. 
 
 They should be grown in a soil of peaty loam. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 316 ; and in Lodd. Cab. 
 t. 593. 
 
 The Pyrola. 
 
 Among the Wintergreens are some very pretty 
 plants well worthy of cultivation. The common 
 Pyrola rotundifolia is by no means an inelegant 
 
OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 149 
 
 plant, and if not found 'Nvild is very desirable in the 
 garden. The leaves are radical, smootli, roundish, 
 and shining ; the flowers white, delicately fragrant, 
 drooping on a slender raceme. 
 
 It does well in any light, rich soil, and increases 
 rapidly from its running roots : it prefers a rather 
 moist, shady place. There are several varieties, dif- 
 fering in shape of the leaves and color of the 
 floAver. 
 
 P. elliplica closely resembles this species ; and P. 
 chlorantha, minor, and seainda, are all neat-growing 
 plants, thri\-ing with little care, and worth growing 
 in a collection. 
 
 MONESES UNIFLORA, 
 
 Formerly Pyrola uniflora, is not uncommon in 
 northern woods. It is a delicate and very pretty 
 plant, bearing one large, white or rosy, terminal 
 flower, and increasing readily by creeping roots. 
 
 The Chimaphila. 
 
 These plants are low-growing herbs, with shining, 
 evergreen foliage and jewelled flowers. The most 
 common species is C. umbellata, sometimes called 
 " Pipsissewa," or " Bitter-Sweet." The flowers are 
 roes-colored, with purple anthers, and very pretty. 
 
 C. maculata, the other species, has lighter green 
 leaves, marked with white ; and is a very showy, 
 variegated-leaved plant. 
 
150 
 
 OTHER AMERICAN PLANTS. 
 
 It is not veiy common in New England, but 
 recently we found it in great abundance on the 
 slopes of tlie Alloglianies in Virginia. The flower 
 is not so handsome as the last. All species do well 
 in sandj loam and peat. 
 
PART lY. 
 
 HERBACEOUS PLANTS ADAPTED FOR GROWTH 
 IN RHODODENDRON-BEDS. 
 
PAllT lY. 
 
 HERBACEOUS PLAXTS ADAPTED FOR GROWTH 
 Df RHODODENDROJf-BEDS. 
 
 nPHERE are many herbaceous plants, seldom 
 -^ found in good health in the garden, which 
 thrive wonderfully if grown in Ehododendron-beds. 
 Many of these are rare native plants, usually con- 
 sidered of difficult cultivation ; but their only fault 
 is refusing to grow under conditions in no way suited 
 to their nature. To domesticate these choice wild- 
 lings, and to have them bloom under your own care 
 in greater perfection than in their native haunts, 
 is a triumph of floriculture which few achieve. Yet 
 such success is not difficult, and a little study of 
 the requirements of each plant will enable one to 
 attain it. 
 
 Plants that natiu-ally grow in the rich humus of 
 old woods, rooting in the deep leaf-mould, or that 
 find congenial soil in shady swamps, will not thrive 
 transplanted to common garden soil and exposed 
 in full sunshhie. 
 
 7* 
 
154 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 For such and for many others the edges of Rho- 
 dodendron-beds are suitable situations : they there 
 have moisture, depth of soil, and partial shade, and 
 seldom refuse to reward the grower. 
 
 We propose to enumerate a few of the plants that 
 have succeeded with us under such cultivation, in 
 the hope that others may repeat the experiment, 
 deriving therefrom a pleasure equal to our own. 
 
 The Hepatica. 
 
 Almost the first flower of spring, following hard 
 upon the snowdrop and bulbocodium, and often 
 opening before the crocus, — can there be a more 
 charming blossom ? 
 
 Pretty as our wild species is, the garden varieties 
 of the European type are far more showy; and 
 transplanted, in our cold and backward spring, are 
 true to their nature, blooming long before plants 
 born in our own woods unfold their delicate flowers. 
 
 Earliest of all is the double red Hepatica, per- 
 haps the most charming of spring blossoms, a 
 sparkling little flower, already in bloom in sunny 
 spots when the early April days betoken spring, and 
 blooming on till May. Then follow our pretty sin- 
 gle blue, pink, and white native varieties, with the 
 single red, the mauve (^H. Bar low ii), and the rare 
 white, with red stamens. Last, but no whit less 
 beautiful, comes the double blue; and that latest 
 acquisition, the Hungarian H. angulosa, with large, 
 deep-lobed leaves and sky-blue flowers, an inch in 
 diameter. 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 155 
 
 But where can we find all these ? many will ask ; 
 and out of our own garden we should be at a loss 
 where to seek for thorn. We know of no florist of 
 this country who can supply an order ; yet these 
 plants should he grown by thousands, and be as 
 cheap and as common as violets. 
 
 In England they are very cheap ; and a few shil- 
 lings will buy a dozen plants, well rooted in pots, 
 and all ready to put out in the border. Like all 
 spring-blooming plants, they should be imported in 
 the autumn, wintered in a cold frame, and trans- 
 planted to the border in early spring. 
 
 If imported in spring, they usually make a rank 
 growth in the cases, which perishes when the plants 
 are set out ; and, as no second growth, is made, the 
 plant dies. 
 
 For years we lost all our spring-imported plants ; 
 but since we have imported in autumn, it is seldom 
 we lose a plant. 
 
 All the Hepaticas are natives of Europe and 
 North America. They arc low-growing plants, Avith 
 evergreen, lobed leaves, and thrive well in any deep 
 garden soil. 
 
 Our native varieties, transplanted from the woods, 
 grow freely, and soon form large clumps. 
 
 All the varieties are worth growing. Had we to 
 choose one, it would be the double red, as it has the 
 most brilliant flowers, blooms earlier than J he others, 
 and more readily accommodates itself to various 
 soils and exposures ; but we should be loath to give 
 up any. 
 
 The Hungarian H. angulosa is the largest species, 
 
156 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 and a very showy plant : it proves hardy with us, 
 and no choice collection should be without it. 
 
 Hepaticas do not require Rhododendron soil, but 
 thrive wonderfully in the sunny edges of Rhododen- 
 dron-beds, blooming gayly in early April, when the 
 Kalmia glauca, the Cassandra, Rhodora, and, Dauric 
 Rhododendron begin to open their blossoms, and 
 all the year are ornamental from their neat, ever- 
 green foliage. 
 
 The only culture, when once planted, is to let 
 them alone : they are impatient of disturbance and 
 of extremes of drought and moisture. 
 
 In winter we lay an evergreen bough over the 
 plants to protect the foliage from the sun, but this 
 is not necessary. They are propagated by division 
 in early spring. 
 
 To all we say. Grow hepaticas, even if the garden 
 is but a few feet square. They occupy little room, 
 and are the sunniest, the brightest, the most cheery 
 children of the floral world. 
 
 The Sanguinaria. 
 
 The Bloodroot (/S. canadensis'), a well-known 
 native plant, thrives perfectly in the garden. 
 Transplanted from the woods to a deep, rich soil, 
 the flowers increase in size and in the number of 
 petals, and ripen seed freely, which often sows 
 itself. ' 
 
 It is curious to watch this plant in the early days 
 of spring : a few hours will often be sufficient to 
 expand the snowy blossoms, and to spread the count- 
 less yellow stamens to the sun. 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. loT 
 
 The leaves, which at first enwrap the flower, grow 
 very large, and protect the seed-pods until they 
 I'ipen. 
 
 There is but one species, and there are no well 
 defined varieties ; though on some plants the flowers 
 are larger than on others, and the stamens show a 
 disposition to be converted into petals. 
 
 A sunny nook in the garden is well filled with 
 this plant, which in deep, rich soil thrives without 
 care, and blooms freely every spring. 
 
 The Jeffersonia. 
 
 The only species, J. diphi/Ila, bears a pretty white 
 flower in early April, somewhat resembling that of 
 the bloodroot. The leaves and foot-stalks are blu- 
 ish-green, and the whole plant is glabrous : from the 
 leaves folding together in two equal parts, the popu- 
 lar name " Twinleaf " is derived. The seed-capsule 
 is very curious, opening by a hinged lid when the 
 seed is ripe. 
 
 This is rather a rare plant, and is not found wild 
 in New England. In cultivation, it grows freely in 
 any good garden soil, and is easily propagated by 
 division. 
 
 The Caltha. 
 
 Early in spring the bright yellow blossoms of 
 the Marsh Marigold ( C, palustris) are very conspic- 
 uous in wet meadows, and the leaves are sold in the 
 markets as " water cresses." In cultivation, the 
 
158 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 plant is valuable as an early flower, and does not 
 require a wet soil, but easily domesticates itself if 
 planted in good loam. 
 
 The double variety, which is not uncommon, is 
 very showy, lasting long in bloom, and is very bril- 
 liant in color. 
 
 C. parnassifolia and radicans are also pretty 
 exotic species. 
 
 All are easily propagated by division. 
 
 The Dentaria. 
 
 The Tootliworts are pretty little, spring-blooming 
 plants, with delicate foliage and white or purple 
 flowers. They are easily cultivated in rich loam, 
 and, though rather inconspicuous, occupy little room, 
 and take care of themselves. We have grown one 
 species for years, in a sheltered nook of a Rhodo- 
 dendron-bed, and admire it the more each spring. 
 
 The species, which are D. diphi/lla, lacinata, 
 maxima, muUifida, and heterophylla, much resemble 
 each other in flower. 
 
 Propagated by division in spring. 
 
 The Anemone. 
 
 All of the hardy species of these favorite plants 
 thrive in Rhododendron soil. We have already 
 described the Hepatica, which is only a sub-genus of 
 Anemone, as one of the most desirable of spring flow- 
 ers ; and many other species, although not such early 
 bloomers, are most ornamental and attractive. 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 169 
 
 Wc are all familiar with tlic wild Anemone of our 
 woods (A. nemorpsa), varying in color from pure 
 white to deep pink or purple, and tinted like some 
 delicate sea-shell ; but we have not all grown this 
 charming flower in the garden, and watched it day 
 by day, from 'the first moment the dark foliage 
 breaks through the ground until the delicate blos- 
 som nods in the spring breezes. This is easy to do; 
 for the plant does well in any light, rich loam, 
 increasing rapidly by its slender root-stocks, and 
 carpeting the ground with rich foliage, spangled with 
 lovely blossoms. We have only to transplant it and 
 let it alone, and year after year it will reward us 
 with a profusion of blossoms. The double varieties, 
 both white and pink, we have in our garden : both 
 are very charming and attractive, and grow as freely 
 as the species. An allied plant is the Rue-leaved 
 Anemones (-4. tlialictroides, or Thalictrum aneme- 
 noides), found both in tlie single and double varie- 
 ties, pure white, very showy, quite as easy to 
 cultivate, and very desirable, not only for the flower, 
 but also for the delicate foliage. 
 
 Anemone apennina, although a native of Italy, 
 proves hardy with us ; but Ave have been somewhat 
 disappointed in its proving a very shy bloomer. The 
 flowers are blue, and very showy. 
 
 The English A. ranuncidoides, with yellow, butter- 
 cup-like flowers, is precariously hardy, and has not 
 with us proved a satisfactory plant. 
 
 A. narcissijlora, a charming European species, is 
 perfectly hardy, and produces its white flowers in 
 great profusion. 
 
160 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 A. pennsylvanica is a tall-growing species, bloom- 
 ing in summer, and, although a little coarse, is a 
 desirable plant. "We prefer it, however, in good 
 garden soil, rather than in a Rhododendron-bed, as 
 it spreads rapidly and soon appropriates every thing 
 to itself. 
 
 The sub-genus, Pulsatilla, contains several species 
 of spring-blooming plants, with dull purple flowers : 
 in bloom they are not very showy, but the long- 
 tailed heads of seed are ornamental. 
 
 No species, however, can compare with the Japan 
 Anemone, and its hybrid Honorine Joubert, probably 
 a cross between A. japonica and the Nepalese A. viti- 
 folia. The species and a variety, A. j. speciosa, 
 have reddish-pink flowers in October, and are very 
 desirable autumn-blooming plants ; but the hybrid is 
 the best flower of autumn. The foliage is large and 
 showy, deep green and of vigorous growth ; the plant 
 tall ; the flowers very large, pure white with yellow 
 centre, and produced in great abundance. It is 
 perfectly hardy, and easily propagated by division ; 
 indeed, each little piece of the root will make a 
 plant. 
 
 We know of no more charming flower to place 
 here and there in open spots among Rhododendrons. 
 The flower shows well on the dark background of 
 foliage, and lends it an additional charm : from the 
 middle of September until cut off by late frosts the 
 plant is a mass of flower. 
 
 If we had only the genus Anemone to ornament 
 the spring garden, we might be content ; for it con- 
 tains many species, which vary greatly in appear- 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 161 
 
 ance. All tire not hardy, but frame protection is 
 sufficient to preserve them through the winter ; and 
 they well repay the trouble. Many hardy species 
 are rarely found in cultivation in this country ; but a 
 few shillings Avill import a choice assortment from 
 Europe, where both florists and amateurs fully 
 appreciate the beauty of these charming plants. 
 
 The Claytonia. 
 
 Two of the species, 0. virginica and caroliniana, 
 are pretty, spring-bloomiug plants, which succeed 
 well in any deep, rich soil. The root is a small 
 tuber, from which in early spring a slender stem 
 arises, bearing two leaves, and terminated by a 
 raceme of delicate pink blossoms, deeply veined with 
 darker shades. 
 
 Plants procured from the woods and once estab- 
 lished take care of themselves, and increase both by 
 root and seed. 
 
 The Scilla. 
 
 All the exotic Squills are better suited to the bulb 
 border than the Rhododendron-bed, as they require 
 rather a light and sandy soil. 
 
 The best is ;S. sibirica, with deep blue flowers in 
 early spring : a plant which is worth every trouble 
 to have in perfection. 
 
 A clump of this is in place anywhere in the gar- 
 den, and it would be difficult to name a more spark- 
 ling floral gem. 
 
162 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 The Squill of the western prairies, S. Fraseri, 
 needs a deep, rich soil. 
 
 The flower is whitish-blue, and very pretty. It 
 flowers freely, and once introduced needs no further 
 care ; and, if easily obtained, is well worth growing. 
 
 The Camassia. 
 
 The only species, C. esciilenta, is a small bulbous 
 plant, with leaves somewhat resembling a hyacinth, 
 and a tall spike of a dozen or more showy purple 
 flowers. It is, with us, a, rare plant, though on oui 
 north-western coast it is so abundant as to form 
 the chief food of the Indians. It succeeds in 
 deep, rich soil, and flowers in May. Our plants 
 were imported from England. It proves perfectly 
 hardy. 
 
 The Oxalis. 
 
 The common wild Oxalis of our northern woods 
 (O. Acetosella), which often carpets the ground for 
 miles, is familiar to all White Mountain tourists. 
 It is. a delicate little plant, pretty in foliage and its 
 white, veined blossoms, and increases rapidly by its 
 creeping root-stocks. It takes kindly to cultivation, 
 and if placed in a congenial soil soon covers the 
 ground. 
 
 There is, however, another species, rare in New 
 England, which is a very beautiful plant, and quite 
 as easy of domestication. O. violacea is a little 
 bulb, with clover-like leaves and charming purple 
 flowers. 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 163 
 
 None of the exotic species are prettier than this, 
 and none more desirable. It is perfectly hardy, 
 grows freely, and flowers profusely in the latter part 
 of May. 
 
 The Erythronium. 
 
 The " Dog-tooth Violet," which is no violet at all, 
 but rather a lily, is a very pretty, spring-blooming 
 plant. The exotic species, in its many varieties, is 
 showy both in foliage and flower. Our native 
 species, though not so showy, are no less interest>- 
 ing. The most common are E. americanum and E. 
 albidum, with yellow and white flowers respectively: 
 the former is more showy both in foliage and flower. 
 Both are small plants, with lily -like foliage, springing 
 from small, deep-rooting bulbs, and bear handsome 
 nodding flowers. They are a little capricious in 
 cultivation, and seldom succeed in common garden 
 soil. In the deep loam of the Rhododendron-bed 
 they grow freely, and seldom fail to bloom. 
 
 The yellow species is very common, and may 
 easily be procured ; but the white-flowered must be 
 sought on the western prairies. 
 
 The AriSuEma. 
 
 A. triphjllum, commonly known as " Jack in the 
 Pulpit," or " Indian Turnip," is a common plant in 
 rich, damp woods. It is curious in flower, orna- 
 mental in foliage, and very showy in fruit. 
 
 A place should l;o found for it in the garden, and 
 no situation will suit it better than the rich, deep 
 
164 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 soil of a Rhododendron-bed, where it will also find 
 congenial shade. In such a situation it will attain 
 wonderful size, and seldom fail to ripen the showy 
 scarlet fruit. 
 
 A. Dracontium, also hardy, is not so showy a 
 species, but is worth growing in a collection. 
 
 There are many pretty exotic species, but none 
 have proved hardy with us. 
 
 The Pachysandra. 
 
 . This curious plant is of very easy culture, grow- 
 ing and flowering freely in any rich, damp soil. 
 
 The flowers are greenish or purplish wdiite, and 
 peculiarly scented. The foliage is coarse, deep green, 
 perennial. For covering the surface, this plant is 
 well adapted, though as especially ornamental it is 
 not to be recommended. 
 
 The species is P. procumbens, a native of moun- 
 tains in the Southern States, and perfectly hardy. 
 
 The variegated-leaved variety is very pretty, but 
 seems somewhat more tender than the species. 
 
 The Dodecatheon. 
 
 The " American Cowslip," or " Shooting Star," 
 is not uncommon in gardens. It is a singularly 
 elegant plant in the wild form, and some of the 
 seedlings raised in cultivation are among the hand- 
 somest of spring flowers. It grows in any rich, 
 moist soil, and is easily increased by seed or division. 
 In color the flowers vary from white to deep red 
 or purple. The species is D. Meadia. 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 165 
 
 A form from our north-western coast (i). Jefrey- 
 anum) is a far larger plant, with large, dark green 
 foliage, and tall scapes of deep pink ilowers. 
 
 The Trientalis. 
 
 A pretty little plant, with starry white blossoms, 
 springing from the centre of a whorl of light green 
 leaves, is the "Star Flower" (^ americana). It 
 grows readily in any damp, rich soil, and if given a 
 shady situation is well worth cultivating. 
 
 The Mitella. 
 
 No better plant for covering the surface of the 
 ground can be found than the common Mitella 
 (J/. diphyllcC). The foliage, though not especially 
 showy, is neat ; and the racemes of delicate white 
 flowers are very elegant. 
 
 The plant blooms freely, spreads rapidly, and 
 requires no care. 
 
 M. nuda is a very small species, with delicate 
 greenish flowers. 
 
 The Tiarella. 
 
 This plant ( T. cordifolid) is not so showy as the 
 Mitella, which it much resembles, but is equally 
 useful as a low-spreading plant. The flowers are 
 white. 
 
 Both this and the Mitella are easily obtained 
 from the woods, and soon adapt themselves to 
 cultivation. 
 
166 HERBACEOUS PLANTb. 
 
 The Helonias. 
 
 H. bullata is a very rare and beautiful native 
 plant, growing naturally in damp meadows, and 
 thriving in cultivation in any deep, moist soil. The 
 leaves are lanceolate, radical, spreading flat on the 
 ground, evergreen. The flowers are clustered on a 
 tall spike, and are of a purplish-pink, tm-ning green 
 as they fade. It is a flower seldom seen in cultiva- 
 tion, and finds a congenial soil in a Rhododendron- 
 bed, where it will flower freely every spring. 
 
 The Clintonia, 
 
 The large, shining leaves of Clintonia borealis are 
 very conspicuous in low woods. The flower is green- 
 ish, and on examination very pretty ; but the berry, 
 which is bright blue, is, after the foliage, the most 
 attractive part of the plant. 
 
 There is no difficulty in cultivating this plant, as 
 it grows rapidly, and with us flow&rs more freely 
 than in the wild state. The foliage is strikingly 
 handsome, and this alone should entitle it to culti- 
 vation. 
 
 C. umhellata is a rarer species, with white flowers 
 speckled with green or purplish dots, which we have 
 not seen. 
 
 The Cornus. 
 
 C. canadensis^ the " Bunch-berry " of our north- 
 ern woods, is another plant more charming in fruit 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 167 
 
 than in flower. The root is Avoody ; the flowers, or 
 rather iioral invoUicrc, greenish-white; the berries 
 brilliant scarlet, and very showy. This plant does 
 Avell in any good, rich soil, and flowers freely ; but 
 with us fails to set its berries, for which, as yet, we 
 have not been able to discover a reason. It is worth 
 growing, however, for the flowers alone. 
 Easily obtained from the woods. 
 
 The Convallaria. 
 
 The Lily of the Valley (C mojalis') is too well 
 known to require description, and we need use no 
 argument to find a place for it in the flower garden. 
 It is in place everywhere, in beds by itself, rambling 
 through the grass, or carpeting the ground under 
 trees. For delicacy, beauty, and fragrance, it has no 
 superior. In a Rhododendron-bed there is danger 
 of its growing too luxuriantly and injuring the other 
 plants, but if kept within bounds it may be used 
 with good effect. When it sets its scarlet berries it 
 is very showy. 
 
 The varieties with double flowers, and with single 
 and double rose-colored flowers, are oidy desirable 
 in a collection : in the latter the color is a dirty 
 pink, and not attractive ; all are, however, very 
 fragrant. 
 
 The variegated-leaved kinds, especially that with 
 golden-striped foliage, are very handsome, but are 
 not common. They are well worth growing, as the 
 variegation is handsome and permanent. 
 
 The Solomon's Seal (^Polygonatwni) , and {Smila- 
 cinci), and the Bcllworts (^Uvularia) are all very 
 
168 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 pretty plants, and should find place in the garden if 
 possible. The best for surface covering is Smilacina 
 bifolia, with shining foliage, fragrant, white flowers, 
 and red berries. All these are readily obtained from 
 the woods. 
 
 The Ficaria. 
 
 This genus is closely allied to Ranunculus, indeed 
 by some is combined with it. The flowers of the 
 common species, F. ranunculoides, greatly resemble 
 small buttercups ; but they open only in sunshine, 
 and bloom earlier in the spring. The roots are 
 small tubers, from which spring glossy green leaves, 
 followed by the bright flowers in early May. In a 
 few weeks the foliage fades and dies away, and the 
 plant disappears until the next spring. The double 
 variety is a rarer and more showy plant, and the 
 white-flowered variety is seldom found. All are 
 well worth growing, and increase rapidly by multi- 
 plication of the tubers. They only require common 
 garden soil. 
 
 The Ranunculus. 
 
 Of the Buttercups the only one we can recom- 
 mend for a choice collection is the " Fair Maids of 
 France" {R. aconitifoUus flore pleno). 
 
 It is a delicate plant, with fine-cut foliage and 
 pretty double, white flowers. Although not uncom- 
 mon, it has an ugly way of dying out, and is one of 
 those plants wliich, unless great care is taken, is 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 169 
 
 often lost. It should be grown in rich, dani]) soil, 
 and not be allowed to dry up. 
 
 The Hellebore. 
 
 The best of the Hellebores is the " Christmas Rose" 
 (^H. nig-er^, a plant by no means so well known as 
 its merits deserve. It is the best winter flower 
 Ave have ; aud by covering, the plant with a cold 
 frame, to keep the snow from crushing it, may be 
 gathered any day from November to April. It is 
 attractive both in foliage and flower : the former is 
 large, deep-cut, dark shining evergreen ; the latter 
 measure from one to two inches in diameter, are 
 ■white, often tinged with pink, single, and full of 
 briglit golden stamens. 
 
 Cold has no effect upon them : if frozen hard, they 
 thaw out uninjured. The plant is perennial, and 
 requires a deep, moist soil, where it will not dry up 
 in sunnner. 
 
 When once planted, it should not be disturbed, 
 as it does not transplant readily, and takes long to 
 become well established. 
 
 H. fcetidiis, a native of England, is showy in 
 foliage and flower, but with us has not proved 
 hardy. 
 
 //. viridis, which much resembles it, but is a 
 smaller plant, is hardy, and is naturalized in some 
 parts of the country. 
 
 JI. ohjmpicus is a beautiful species from India, 
 with pinkish flowers, figured in Bot. Reg. 28, t. 58. 
 It is not quite hardy, but by covering the plants 
 with a frame we winter them successfully. 
 
170 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 S. atroruhens and odorus, natives of Hungary, 
 are also a little tendei-. 
 
 Figured in Bot. Mag. t. 4581. 
 
 R. orientalis is tender even with frame protection. 
 
 The Epimedium. 
 
 We consider this one of the most elegant plants 
 in our spring garden ; and no one vrho has seen the 
 showy and curious blossoms of E. macranthum and 
 violaceum will dispute the assertion. The foliage is 
 very neat, finely toothed, and remains in full beauty 
 all summer ; the flowers, which are freely produced 
 in May, are singularly graceful. No description 
 can give an idea of them. All the species are 
 hardy perennials, and do well in any deep garden 
 loam, but succeed far better in the moist, rich soil 
 of a Rhododendron-bed, where we grow them in 
 great perfection. Of some twenty species the. best 
 are macranthum, pinnatum, diphi/Uum, with white 
 flowers, and violaceum, with white and purple flow- 
 ers ; all natives of Japan. 
 
 E. alpinum is a European species, with reddish- 
 yellow flowers, which increases rapidly, and is a 
 good plant for covering the ground in shady places, 
 or under trees : it also thrives well on rock-work. 
 All the species are propagated by division ; but they 
 are impatient of disturbance, and should be removed 
 only when absolutely necessary, as they always are 
 some years in recovering from the effect. The 
 larger the clumps are the better, and the more 
 showy are they in foliage and flower. 
 
HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 The Cypripedium. 
 
 171 
 
 This well-known genus of terrestrial orchids, 
 commonly called Lady's Slipper, find their congenial 
 home in a Rhododendron-bed ; and only in such soil 
 can they be cultivated in perfection. 
 
 The different species arc among the most beauti- 
 ful of our native plants; while their easy culture, the 
 one requirement of soil being attended to, should 
 place them among the most popular of garden 
 flowers. 
 
 Yet they are very seldom grown, and outside of 
 our own garden we know of none where all the 
 indigenous hardy species can be found in cultivation. 
 The most common eastern species is C. acaule or 
 humile, usually found wild in dry sandy woods, pro- 
 ducing its showy pink or purplish flowers in May. 
 This species is rather difficult to domesticate ; but 
 we have succeeded, by giving it a more sandy soil 
 than the other siDCcies, removing it from the woods 
 both in early spring just as growth was beginning, 
 and in autumn when the plant was at rest. 
 A variety with white flowers is rarely found. 
 0. arielinum, the Ram's Head, is the rarest spe- 
 cies, so rare, indeed, that many amateurs have never 
 seen it in bloom. It is a small plant, with flowers 
 which need close examination to reveal their beau- 
 ties: the lip is veined red and white, the petals 
 greenish-brown. It is a native of cold bogs, and if 
 allowed to dry up in cultivation seldom survives. 
 A shady spot in rich, damp soil is the place for it. 
 
172 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 C. parviflorum and pubescens, the smaller and 
 larger yellow Lady's Slipper, are very sliowy plants, 
 and the easiest to cultivate. If placed in good soil,- 
 with an admixture of peat and sand, they increase 
 rapidly, and soon form large clumps. In bloom they 
 are very showy, often giving two, and sometimes 
 three flowers on a stem. Although usually consid- 
 ered species, they seem to run into each other. 
 These plants will live in common garden soil, but 
 they die out in a few years. 
 
 0. calceolus is a European species, with yellow 
 flowers, which proves with us perfectly hardy, and 
 is a very desirable plant. 
 
 Next to the Ram's Head, the smallest species is 
 the white-flowered Lady's Slipper of the West ((7. 
 candiduiii). It is a very pretty plant, with delicate 
 white flowers, the lip looking like a bird's Qgg. 
 
 It flowers very freely, and takes kindly to cul- 
 tivation. 
 
 By far the finest species is C. spectabile, a native 
 of our northern woods, and one of the most showy 
 of our native plants. 
 
 It is a tall plant, growing from eighteen inches 
 bO two feet high, with large clasping foliage, and 
 beautiful white flowers, blotched in front with 
 pinkish-purple : there is also a pure white variety. 
 In good soil it becomes a very conspicuous plant, 
 giving from one to three flowers on a stem, and 
 soon increasing so as to form a large clump. It 
 blooms in July, long after the other species have 
 faded. 
 
 All the Lady's Slippers continue long in l)loom, 
 
iii:iiBACi:ous plants. 173 
 
 and are vciy ornamental : we cannot liavo too many 
 of them. 
 
 Tlic best way to obtain a stock is from the woods, 
 .for generally florists cannot supply them. 
 
 They may be transplanted early in the spring or 
 late in the autumn, and once planted should be 
 seldom disturbed. 
 
 The TiiiLLiUM. 
 
 All the species are low -growing plants, w^ith 
 tuberous roots, or root-stalks, and arc remarkable 
 for having all the parts of the plant in threes. 
 Tliey come up in very early spring, blossom, and 
 die away in a few weeks, unless they set seed. The 
 finest species is T. grandijioriim^ a very beautiful 
 plant, which succeeds better in cultivation than 
 most of our indigenous flowers. 
 
 The individual blossoms are pure white, changing 
 to deep rose before they fade, and in rich soils are 
 often more than two inches in diameter. 
 
 A clump of this plant is one of the most attractive 
 objects in the spring garden. 
 
 T. erectum, a more common species, is a very 
 showy plant : the flowers are dark chocolate-color. 
 There is also a variety with dirty white flowers. 
 
 T. sessile, a western species, has also dull-colored 
 lilossoms, but is very showy from the elegant foliage, 
 which is beautifully marbled with light and dark 
 green. 
 
 T. pictum or crylhrocarpum is the " Painted Tril- 
 lium," and is the most difficult of all to cultivate. 
 
174 HERBACEOUS PLANTS, 
 
 It grows Ijest in pure peat, and needs a very shady 
 situation. 
 
 The flowers are white, delicately painted with 
 rich lake at the base of each petal. 
 
 T. cernuum, the " Nodding Trilliura," our most 
 common species, has small pinkish-white flowers, 
 which nod beneath the leaves. It is not very 
 showy, and will grow in any garden soil. 
 
 There are also some Southern species. 
 
 All the Trilliums do best in rich, deep, peaty 
 loam : they are increased by seed or division, but 
 are. somewhat impatient of removal. They should 
 be transplanted from the woods in early spring, and 
 soon domesticate themselves. 
 
 The Lily. 
 
 All the Lilies like a deep, rich soil, except perhaps 
 our wild blackberry lily, which thrives in dry sandy 
 loam ; but some never display themselves in full 
 beauty except in a soil in which peat has been 
 mixed. 
 
 This is especially the case with two of our native 
 species, L. superbum and canadetise, the droopiug- 
 flowered lilies of the fields, which naturally grow in 
 rich meadows. These, removed to a Rhododendron- 
 bed, become plants of wonderful beauty. During 
 the last summer, we had about thirty specimens of 
 these species, not one of which was less than five 
 feet in height, each stalk giving from ten to thirty 
 drooping flowers. The effect of these, rising from 
 the rich foliage of the Rhododendrons, was very 
 
HERI5.\Ci:0US PLANTS. 175 
 
 fine. The variety of color — for even of ilie same 
 species no two plants are alike in shading — was 
 also very pleasing. 
 
 Another species, which is never seen in l!nll beauty 
 unless planted in Rhododendron soil, is the Purple 
 Martagon. This past year bulbs of this kind, two 
 years planted, threw up stalks over four feet in 
 height, which produced from twenty to thirty 
 flowers each. 
 
 L. Catesbcei, the Southern Red Lily, also grows 
 and blooms very freely, as do also all the varieties 
 of Zr. umbellatum, aurantium, and croceum. The 
 noble L. auratum seems to thrive better in a soil of 
 peat, loam, and sand ; and we had, the last summer, 
 stalks an inch in diameter and four feet high, the 
 largest giving seventeen flowers from bulbs two 
 }^ars planted. 
 
 The Japan Lilies, while blooming in the Rhodo- 
 dendron-bed, do not, however, exhibit any remark- 
 able luxuriance. They are, however, very effective, 
 as the background of dark evergreen foliage sets off 
 the large, white flowers to great advantage. 
 
 The same may be said of the beautiful Long-flow- 
 ered Lily (Z. longifloruni) and the Scarlet Martagon 
 (L. chalcidonieum) ; indeed the latter does not suc- 
 ceed in peat. 
 
 The old white Lily (L. candiduiii) seems also to 
 prefer a lighter and more sandy soil. 
 
 Some of the rarer species, such as L. tenuifolium, 
 pumilum, and kamtschaticum, are very showy 
 planted on the borders of Rhododendron-beds. 
 
176 HERBACEOUS PLANTS. 
 
 The old Tiger Lily also does well, but is rather 
 coarse, and better adapted for the shrubbery. 
 
 There are no better plants than Lilies to mingle 
 with Rhododendrons: generally sparse in foliage, 
 the latter supply it ; and the showy flowers are more 
 effective than when wholly unrelieved by green, as 
 we usually see them. 
 
 They grow freely, and once planted take care of 
 themselves. Indeed, a Rhododendron-bed is worth 
 all the trouble of making, if only to show the per- 
 fection to which our native Lilies can be grown. 
 
INDEX. 
 
INDEX. 
 
 American Cowslip, 164. 
 . AmmjTsine, Tiie, 129. 
 Andromeda axillaris. 140. 
 
 ,, cassiiixfolia. 141. 
 
 „ Cafesbivi, 140. 
 
 „ dealbata, 141. 
 
 „ floribmula, 139, 143. 
 
 ,, formosa, 142. 
 
 ,, hvp'oides, ].32. 
 
 ,, Mariana, 142. 
 
 ,, ovata. 141. 
 
 ,, polifolia, 142. 
 
 ,, pulverulenta, 141. 
 
 ,, pulverulentissima, 141. 
 
 ,, rosmarinilblia, 142. 
 
 „ spinulosa, 140. 
 
 ,, tetragona, 132. 
 
 Anemone, The, I'S. 
 
 ,, apennina, 159.' 
 
 ,, Ilonorine Joubert, 160. 
 
 ,, japoniea, KiO. 
 ,, ,, speciosa, 160. 
 
 ., narcissiflora, 159. 
 
 ,^ penn.syls-aniea, 160. 
 
 ,, ranunciiloides, 1.09. 
 
 „ thalictroides, 159. 
 
 „ vitifolia, 160. 
 
 Arbutus, Trailins, 133. 
 Arctostaphylos, The, 132. 
 ,, ' alpina, 132. 
 ,, fclauea, 133. 
 
 Uva-ursi, 132. 
 Aris-Tema, The, l'J3. 
 
 ,, Dracoiitium, 164. 
 „ triphyllum, 163. 
 
 Azalea, The, 113. 
 
 ,, amoena, 120. 
 
 ,, arboresccns, 115. 
 
 ,, calendulaeea, 117. 
 ,, ., varieties, 117 
 
 „ Double hardy, 120. 
 
 „ general culture, 114. 
 
 ,, glauca, 117. 
 
 „ Hardy double, 12J. 
 
 ,, iniliea, 122. 
 
 „ iedilolia, 121. 
 
 „ new hardy varieties, 119. 
 „ . nitida. 117. 
 „ ' nuditlora, 116. 
 ,, ,, varieties of, IIC. 
 
 ,, obtusa, 121. 
 
 ,, oceidenfaiis, 122. 
 
 ,, ovata, 122. 
 
 ,, pha?nicea, 122. 
 
 ,, pontica, 117. 
 ,, ,, varieties, 117. 
 
 ,, procumbens, 123. 
 
 ,, sinensis, 120. 
 
 alba, 121. 
 
 ,, squamata, 121. 
 
 ., viscosa, 117. 
 ,, ,, varieties, 118. 
 
 B. 
 
 Bearberr^^ 132. 
 Bellwort, 107. 
 Bitter-Sweet. 149. 
 liloodroot, 15'). 
 Buneh-berry, 166. 
 Buttercups, 168. 
 
180 
 
 Calico Bush, 124. 
 Call una, The. 130. 
 Caltha, The, 1.57. 
 ,, paliistris. 157. 
 ,, parnassifolia, 158. 
 ,, radicans, 158. 
 Camassia, The, 1G2. 
 
 „ esculcnta, 162. 
 Cassandra, The, 140 
 
 ,, calyculata, 140. 
 
 „ „ latifolia. 141. 
 
 ,, „ nana, 141. 
 
 ,, ,, ventricosa, 
 
 141. 
 Cassiope, The, 131. 
 
 „ hypnoides, 132. 
 „ tetragona, 132. 
 Checkerberrr, 134. 
 Chiniaphila,'Tlie, 149. 
 
 ,, luaculata, 149. 
 
 ,, umbellata, 149. 
 
 Chiogenes, The, 135. 
 
 „ hispidula, 135. 
 
 Christmas Rose, 169. 
 Claytonia, The, IGl. 
 
 ,, caroliniana, 161. 
 
 ,, virginica, 161. 
 Clintonia, The, 1C6. 
 „ borealis, 166. 
 „ umbeUata, 166. 
 Comparative hardiness, 39. • 
 Convallaria, The, 167. 
 
 ,, majalis, 167. 
 
 Cornus, The, 166. 
 
 ,, canadensis, 1G6. 
 Cowberry, 137. 
 Cranberry, 138. 
 Crowberry, 137. 
 Cuttings, Propagation by, 34. 
 Cypripedium, The, 171. 
 
 ,, acaulc, 171. 
 
 ,, arictinuni, 171. 
 
 ,, calceolus, 172. 
 
 ,, candidum, 172. 
 
 ,, ' humile, 171. 
 ,, parviflorum, 172. 
 
 ,, pubescens, 172. 
 
 „ spectabile, 172. 
 
 Habnecia. The, 130. 
 Daphne, The, 143. 
 ,, alpina, 144. 
 
 Daphne altaica, 144. 
 ,, cneoruui, J 43. 
 ,, ,, inajus, 144. 
 
 ,, ,, variegatum, 144. 
 
 ,, Laureola, 144. 
 ,, Mezereon, 143. 
 ,, pontica, 144. 
 Deerberry, 138. 
 Dentaria, The, 158. 
 
 „ diphvlla, 1.58. 
 „ heterophylia, 158. 
 ,, ]acinata,"l58. 
 ,, maxima, 158. 
 ,, multitida, 158. 
 Diseases of Rhododendrons, 20. 
 Dodecatheon, The, 164. 
 
 „ Jelfrcvanum, 165. 
 
 ,, Moadia, 164. 
 
 Dog-tooth Violet, 163. 
 Dwarf Rhododendrons, 27. 
 
 E. 
 
 Empetrum, The, 137. 
 
 ,, nigrum, 137. 
 
 Enemies of Rhododendrons, 20. 
 Epig.Ta, The, 133. . 
 „ repens, 133. 
 Epimediuni, The, 170. 
 
 ,, alpinum, 170. 
 
 ,, diphyllura, 170. 
 
 ,, nir.cranthum. 170. 
 
 ,, pi.matum, 170. 
 
 ,, \iolacouni, 170. 
 
 Erica herbacea, 131. 
 Erythronium, The, 163. 
 
 „ albidum, 163. 
 
 ,, americanum, 163. 
 
 F. 
 
 Fair Maids of France, 168. 
 Ficaria, The, 168. 
 
 ,, ranunculoides, 168. 
 
 Gaultheria, The, 134. 
 
 ,, procumbens, 134. 
 
 „ serpvllifolia. 1-36. 
 
 Shailon, 134. 
 Grouping, 43. 
 Gypsocallis, The, 131. 
 
 „ carnea, 131. 
 
INDEX. 
 
 181 
 
 11. 
 
 Hardiness, comparative, 39. 
 
 ,, of IJIiododundron?, 21. 
 
 Hcatlier, Tiie, 130. 
 Heath, Hardv, 130. 
 Heloiiias, The, IGG. 
 
 bullata, IGG. 
 Hellebore, 'J'he. hi'.). 
 llelleboriis atrDnibuiis, 170. 
 „ f.eti.liis. KiU. 
 
 ,, nii^or, lO'J. 
 
 0(i(.nis, 170. 
 ,, olyninieiis. 169. 
 
 ,, oriuntalis. 170. 
 „ viridi^ 1G9. 
 Hepatiea, The, 154. 
 ,, aiij^iilosa, 155. 
 „ IJarlowii, 154. 
 „ double, 154. 
 triloba. 154. 
 Hillsides for Khododendron-beds, 9. 
 Houeysuckle, Wild. 110. 
 
 „ Swamp, IIG. 
 
 Houses for winter proteetion, 42. 
 H^'bridization, 37. 
 Hypericum, The, 147. 
 
 „ .ealyciuum, 147. 
 
 ,. Kaliniamnn, 147. 
 
 Uralum, 148. 
 
 Importinjj Rhododendrons, 23. 
 Inarchiuj^, l'ropaj,fatiou by, 35. 
 Indian Turnip, 1G3. 
 Indoor culture of Ehododendrons, 
 
 2d. 
 Insects attacking Rhododendrons, 
 
 20. 
 
 Jack in the Pulpit, 1G3. 
 Jeffersonia, The, 157. 
 
 „ diphylia, 157. 
 
 Kalmia, The, 124. 
 
 „ angustifolia, 12G. 
 
 Kalmia cuiieata, 127. 
 
 ,, glauca, 12G.- 
 „ „ stricta, 127. 
 
 „ ,, superba, 127. 
 
 „ „ rosmariuifolia, 127. 
 
 hirsuta, 127. 
 
 „ latilolia, 125. 
 
 „ mvrtilolia, 125. 
 
 L. 
 
 Lady's Slipper, 171. 
 Lambkill, 124. 
 Laurel, dreat, 53, 124. 
 
 „ Sheep. 124. 
 Laurel, Spurf;-e, 144. 
 Layers, I'ropajxation by, 33. 
 Labrador Tea, 127. 
 i^edum. The. 127. 
 
 „ anfiustifolium. 128. 
 
 „ biixitulium, 128. 
 
 „ dccumbi'iis, 128. 
 
 „ latifoliuni, 128. 
 
 „ pakisfre, 128. 
 
 thvmifoliuni. 128. 
 Leiophyllum, The. 128. 
 
 ., buxifolium, 129. 
 
 „ thvmitblium, 129. 
 
 Leucothoe, The."l38. 
 „ axillaris, 140. 
 
 „ Catesbiei, 139. 
 
 ,, floribmida, 138. 
 
 ,, racemosa, 140. 
 
 „ sjjiuulosa, 140. 
 
 Liliumauratum, 175. 
 
 „ auraiitium, 175. 
 
 „ canadense, 174. 
 
 „ ca didum, 175. 
 
 „ (.'atesba'i, 175. 
 
 „ chalcidonicum, 175. 
 
 „ croceum. 175. 
 
 ,, lonjjitlorum, 175. 
 
 „ pumilum, 175. 
 
 ,, superbiim, 175. 
 
 „ tenuifolium, 175. 
 Lily, The. 174. 
 
 „ of the Valley, 1G7. 
 
 ,. ,, „ ' varieties of, 167 
 
 Lilies, Japan, 175. 
 
 „ JLartagon, 175. 
 Linna;a, The, 13G. 
 
 ,, borealis, 13G. 
 Loam, 9. 
 
 Loiseleuria, The, 123. 
 Lyonia Mariana, 142. 
 
182 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 M. 
 
 Manuring, 13. 
 Manures, liquid, 14. 
 Mazaneta, l;i3. 
 Marsh Marigold, 157. 
 May Flower. The, 133. 
 Menziesia, The, 129. 
 
 „ coerule.i, 129. 
 
 „ lerrugiuea, 12D. 
 
 „ ,1 globularis 
 
 129. 
 Mitella, The, 165. 
 „ diphj'Ua, 165. 
 „ uuda, 1G5. 
 Mitchella, The, 136. 
 
 repens, 13G. 
 Moneses, The, 149. 
 
 ,, unifiora, 149. 
 Mountain Laurel, 124. 
 Alulchihg, 12. 
 Mulching, various kinds of, 13. 
 
 New .\zaleas, 119. 
 ,, Rhododendrons, 91-105. 
 
 Osalis, The, 1G2. 
 
 „ Acetoseda, 102. 
 „ violacca, 102. 
 
 P. 
 
 Pachysandra, The, 104. 
 
 ., procumbens, 164. 
 
 Partridge berry, 130. 
 Peat, 8. 
 Pernettya, The, 145. 
 
 ,, angustitblia, 146. 
 
 ,, mucronata, 146. 
 Phyllodoce, The, 129. 
 
 „ empetritbrmis, 130. 
 
 taxifolia, 130. 
 Pieris for;:iosa, 112. 
 Pinxter Flower, 110. 
 Pipsissewa, 149. 
 
 Plants imported, unpacking, 10. 
 Plants imported, after treatment, 11. 
 Polygouatum, The, 167. 
 
 Polygala, The, 148. 
 
 " „ Chamajbuxus, 143. 
 Preparatioii of the Soil, 3. 
 Propagation of Khododendrons, 33. 
 Propagation of Khododendrons, by 
 
 cuttings, 34. 
 Propagation of Rhododendrons, by 
 
 inarching, 35. 
 Propagation of Rhododendrons, by 
 
 layers, 33. 
 Propagation of Rhododendrons, by 
 
 seed, 36. 
 Protection, winter, of Rhododen- 
 drons, 21. 
 Protection, winter, by houses, 42. 
 Pruning, 15. 
 Pulsatilla, The, 160. 
 Pyrola, The, 148. 
 
 „ chloraiitha, 149. 
 „ elliptica, 149. 
 „ minor, 149. 
 „ rotundifolia, 148. 
 „ secunda, 149. 
 ,, uniflora, 149. 
 
 R. 
 
 Ram's Head, 171. 
 Ranunculus, The, 168. 
 
 „ . aconitifolius flore pleno, 
 168. 
 Rhodora, The, 123. 
 Rose Bay, 53. 
 
 Rhododendrons, after flowering, 18. 
 „ as parlor plants, 32. 
 
 Rhododendron-beds, 5. 
 
 „ „ situation, 5. 
 
 ,, „ Preparation of,- 
 
 7. 
 „ „ drainage, 7. 
 
 „ Filling for, 8 
 ,, „ on hillsides, 9. 
 
 „ „ Treatment of, 
 
 20. 
 Rhododendrons, Di.seases of, 20. 
 „ Dwarf, 27. 
 
 „ Enemies of, 20. 
 
 „ ■ Forcing, 31. 
 
 „ Grouping, 43. 
 
 „ Habitat of, 4. 
 
 „ Hardiness of, 21. 
 
 ,, Houses for tender, 
 
 30. 
 „ How to obtain, 24. 
 
 ,, Importing, 23. 
 
 „ Indoor cultui-e, 29. 
 
INDEX. 
 
 Ilhoilodeiulrons, list of I'l^litoeu 
 very line, lu8. 
 „ list ot" twenty-tive 
 
 very line, 108. 
 „ list of late bloom- 
 
 ing, 109. 
 „ list of new, prob- 
 
 ably hardy, lo'J. 
 „ list of tweiiU'-tive 
 
 very distinct, lOli. 
 ,, list of varieties tor 
 
 Standards, 110. 
 ,, planting. 10. 
 
 „ jn-ona'^ation, 33. 
 
 suod-vosscls, re- 
 nicviii- 18. 
 „ ."Standard, 25. 
 
 „ „ planting, 
 
 2d. 
 „ t lie best one hardy, 
 
 107. 
 „ the best three 
 
 hardy, 107. 
 ,, the best six hard}-, 
 
 107. 
 „ the best twelve 
 
 hardy, 107. 
 „ the best twenty 
 
 hardy. 108. 
 „ Time of -covering, 
 
 23. 
 „ Time of uncover- 
 
 ing, 23. 
 „ Watering, after 
 
 flowering, 19. 
 ,, Wind injurious to, 
 
 21. 
 ,, Winter protpctioa 
 
 of, 21. 
 Uhododendron Achievement, 91. 
 Aclandianiuu.Ol. 
 acubjefolium, 52. 
 acutilobuni, Ul. 
 leruginosuni, 71. 
 Admiration, 91. 
 Alaric, 91. 
 Alarm, 91. 
 albiliorum, 59. 
 album, 77, 91. 
 „ elegans, 92. 
 „ flavum. 89. 
 „ grandiflorum, 
 
 92. 
 „ speciosum,58, 
 
 84. 
 „ triumphans, 
 
 Khodo 
 
 •ndron Alexander Adie, 92. 
 alstronieroides, 82. 
 alta-clarense, 58. 
 Amilcar, 92. 
 -Vmbroise, 92. 
 Andcrsoni, 92. 
 Ange Vcrvaet. 02. 
 Annihilator, 92. 
 anthopogon, 59. 
 Ai.rilis, 82. 
 arboreum, 56. 
 
 ,, album, 57. 
 
 ,, cinnamo- 
 
 inoum, 57, 87. 
 alboreuni niveum. 57. 
 
 ,, l'a.\:toni,57. 
 
 ,, roseum, 57. 
 
 ,, hybrid va- 
 rieties, 58. 
 Archeduc Etienne.92. 
 Archimedes, 92. 
 argeuteum, i)7. 
 Ascot brilliant, 92. 
 Athene, 93. 
 atrosaiiiiuineum, 93. 
 Attila, 93. 
 Auclandii,,G8. 
 Augustus, 93. 
 Auguste Van Geert, 
 
 93. 
 aureum magnificum, 
 
 88-89. 
 Aurora, 93. 
 azaleoides, 51. 
 azureum, 93. 
 barbatum, 05. 
 Barclaj'anum, 93. 
 Baron Cuvier. 93. 
 Haronesse Lionel 
 
 Kothsehild, 93. 
 Batemani, 77. 
 Bertie I'arsons, 93. 
 Bianca, 89. 
 l)icol()r. 93. 
 Bijou de Gand, 93. 
 blanche superbe, 93. 
 blandfordianum, 77. 
 blandum, 02. 
 lilandyatmm, 93. 
 Blatteum. 93. 
 Boothii, 77. 
 Brabantia, 94. 
 Brayanum. 94. 
 Brennus, 94. 
 Brilliant, 94. 
 Brookianum, 78. 
 Brouffhtoni, 94. 
 
184 
 
 Rhododendron Brutus. 94. 
 
 „ Burlingtonii, 89. 
 
 „ Bylsiaiium. 94. 
 
 „ calitbrnicum, 56. 
 
 „ calopliylhim, 78. 
 
 „ camellireflorum, 73. 
 
 „ cainpaimlatum, 59. 
 
 n ■! su- 
 
 perbum, GO. 
 
 ,, Campbelliae, GG. 
 
 „ camp\-locarpum, 74. 
 
 „ candelabrum, 74. 
 
 „ candidissimum, 94. 
 
 (Par- 
 son's), 94. 
 
 „ candiduni 94. 
 
 ., caj-neuni, 83. 
 
 „ „ versicolor, 
 
 „ Caractacus, 94. 
 
 „ Cartoni, i;3. 
 
 „ Catawbiense, 90. 
 
 „ ,, hybrids,. 
 
 yl-106. 
 „ caucasicum, GO. 
 
 „ caucasicum album, 
 
 GO. 
 „ caucasicum arbo- 
 
 reuni, &4. 
 „ caucasicum Xoble- 
 
 auum, 61. 
 „ caucasicum pulcber- 
 
 rimum, 60. 
 caucasicum stranii- 
 
 neum, 60. 
 „ chaniEecistus, 63. 
 
 „ Championpe, 76. 
 
 „ Chancellor, 94. 
 
 „ Charles Bavlej', 94. 
 
 „ Charles Dickens, 94. 
 
 „ cheiranthifolium, 51. 
 
 „ chionoides, 94. 
 
 „ Climax, l.'5. 
 
 „ Chloe, 95. 
 
 „ chrvsanthum, 61. 
 
 „ ciliatum, 72. 
 
 „ ,, roseo album. 
 
 72. 
 „ cinnabarinura, 66. 
 
 palli- 
 dum, GG. 
 ,. citrinum, 75. 
 
 „ Cliveanum, 95. 
 
 „ .Clowesianum, 95. 
 
 „ coelestinum, 95. 
 
 „ coelestinum grandi 
 
 florum, 95. 
 
 Rhododendron coelestinuiu 
 95. 
 
 pictuiu. 
 
 coerulescens, 95. 
 Columbus, 95. 
 Comtesse Ferdinand 
 
 Visant, 88. 
 concessum, 95. 
 congestum aureura, 
 
 8y. 
 congestum roseuni, 
 
 95. 
 Comet, 93. 
 Comte de Gomer, 65. 
 coriaceum, 95. 
 Correggio, 95. 
 Countess of Devon, 
 
 95. 
 Countess of Hadding- 
 ton, 88. 
 crispifiorum, 51. 
 cruentum. 95. 
 Cuiiningliani's 
 
 Dwarf White, 17, 
 
 32, 50. 
 cupreum, 83. 
 Currieanum, 96. 
 Dalhousia. G5i 
 daphiioides, 88. 
 dauricuui, 55. 
 dauiicum atrovirens, 
 
 55. 
 dauricmn semper- 
 
 virens, 55. 
 Decorator, 96. 
 delicatissimum, 96. 
 delicatum aureum, 
 
 89. 
 Denisonii, 84. 
 Desdemo a, 9G. 
 Dona Maria, 96. 
 Dorkinsii, 96. 
 Double Flowering, 
 
 52-53. 
 Due de Brabant, 96. 
 Duchess de Nassau. 
 
 96. 
 Duchess of Suther- 
 
 hand, 96. 
 Duke of Cambridge, 
 
 96. 
 Duke of Norfolk, 96 
 E. C. Baring, 96. 
 Edgeworthi, 71. 
 Edward S. Rand, 96 
 elseagnoides, 67. 
 Elfrida, 96. 
 Eminent, 96. 
 
INDEX. 
 
 185 
 
 Rhododendron (M-octmn, 97. 
 Eteiulurd d 
 
 rian- 
 
 dn-s, 1)7. 
 Ktoilc dc Villiers 97. 
 Evere.stianuni, 97. 
 ralconeri, G7. 
 Farrenv, 7G. 
 lastuosiun flore 
 
 pluno, it7. 
 Taust, 97. 
 ferrup;ineimi, (j2. 
 ferrugineiini alljuni, 
 
 G3. 
 FleurdeFlandres, 07. 
 
 „ „ Marie, 97. 
 fonnosiim, 74, t9. 
 Fortiini, 82. 
 fragrans, 86. 
 Francis Dickson, 97. 
 t'ulgens, 72. 
 genimiferum, 97. 
 General Cabrera, 97. 
 Geiiseric, 97. 
 Georgianuni, 97. 
 Gil)soni, 75. 
 giganteuni, 97. 
 glauciim, 70. 
 Gleiinvaiiuni, 98. 
 gioriosuni, 89, 98. 
 Gloire de Bellevue, 
 
 98. 
 Govenianum, 87. 
 Grand Due de Bade, 
 
 85. 
 grande, 78. 
 grandiHoruni, 98. 
 (jritHthiaNum, 78. 
 Giiido, 98 
 Giiliiare, 98. 
 guttatiim, 53. 
 Hannibal, 98. 
 Ilendersoni, 98, 
 Henrv Uessamer, 98 
 Heste'r, 98. 
 H.H. Hunnewell, 98. 
 hirsntum, 62. 
 hir.-Jiitum variega- 
 
 tum, 62. 
 Ilodgsoni, 69. 
 HoLcartb, 98. 
 Ilookcri. 79. 
 II. W. Sargent, 98. 
 hybrids, 82-89. 
 hybridum. 87. 
 hvacinthiflorum, 52. 
 ligo, 98. 
 Ingram!, 98. 
 
 Hhodoi 
 
 lendron .lames Hatcinan, 98. 
 
 .laMi.-.-< NaMiivth, 98. 
 
 .James .Mcintosh, 99. 
 
 .1. .Ma^^hall ISrooks, 
 99. 
 
 jasuiinifloruni. 75. 
 
 Jjivanicwm, 75. 
 
 Javanieum aurantia- 
 cum, 75. 
 
 .Jenkinsii, 8J 
 
 .l..hnS|»'neer, 99. 
 
 .lolui W.iterer, 99. 
 
 .)olui>(inianuni, 99. 
 
 .biscph Wliitworth, 
 99. 
 
 kamtsfliaticnm, 63. 
 
 Kendrickii, 79. 
 
 Keysii, 79. 
 
 LmW Annette de 
 Tiaftbrd, 99. 
 
 I^ulv Armstrong, 99. 
 
 I.ady Clermont, 99. 
 
 Ladv Uorotliv Ne- 
 ville, 99. 
 
 Ladv Eleanor Cath- 
 cart, 99. 
 
 Lady Emily Peel, 99. 
 
 Lailv Falmouth, 99. 
 
 Lidv (iodiva, 99. 
 
 laiiatinn, 70. 
 
 Lee's Purple, 99. 
 
 Ladv I'Vances Cross- 
 ley, 99. 
 
 lancitblium, 05. 
 
 lapponicum. 63. 
 
 Let'evreanum. 100. 
 
 Leviathan, 100. 
 
 lo(.panli, 100. 
 
 Irpi.ldtiim, 68. 
 
 liml.atum, 100. 
 
 Lol)l)ianiim, 81. 
 
 Londinense, 100. 
 
 Lord Clyde, 100. 
 
 Lord John Kussell, 
 100. 
 
 Lowii, 51, 100. 
 
 lucidum, 100. 
 
 Lucy Neal, 100. 
 
 maeVanthum, 100. 
 
 macranthnm flavuin, 
 89. 
 
 maculatnm grandi- 
 florum, 100. 
 
 maeulatum nigrum, 
 100. 
 
 maeulatum purpu- 
 reum, 101. 
 
186 
 
 Rhododendron raaculatum 
 101. 
 
 nibriim, 
 
 super- 
 
 maculatum 
 
 bum, 101 
 Madame Carvalho, 
 
 101. 
 Madame Picouline, 
 
 8G. 
 Madame Wagner, 86. 
 Madame Van Houtte, 
 
 85. 
 Maddeni, 70. 
 magnum bonum, 101. 
 Marc Antony, 101. 
 marginato puncta- 
 
 tum, 101. 
 maximum, 53. 
 maximum, varieties 
 
 of, 54. 
 Metaphor, 101. 
 Metternichi, 70. 
 MichaelWaterer, 101. 
 Milnei, 101. 
 Minnie, 101. 
 minus, 61 
 mirandum, 101. 
 mouhnaynense, 79. 
 Mt. Blanc, 101. 
 j\rr. John Penn, 101. 
 Mrs. litzirerald, 101. 
 Mrs. G. H. W. Hen- 
 
 eage, 102. 
 Mrs. .John Glutton, 
 
 102. 
 ]\Irs. John Waterer, 
 
 102. 
 :\[rs. Mihier, 102. 
 Mrs. Sam Mendel, 
 
 102. 
 Mrs. Joseph Shuttle- 
 worth, 102. 
 Mrs. R. S. Holford, 
 
 102. 
 Mrs. Thos. Brassov, 
 
 102. 
 Mrs. Thomas Wain, 
 
 102. 
 mnltimaculatum, 51. 
 Murillo, 102. 
 myrtifolium, 80. 
 Neige et Cerise, 102. 
 Neilsoni, 103. 
 Nereus, 103. 
 Ne Plus Ultra, 103. 
 Nero, 103. 
 nigreseens, 103. 
 Nilagiricum, 74. 
 
 Rhododendron nivale, 72. 
 
 „ nivaticum, 52. 
 
 „ niveum, 08. 
 
 „ Nobleanum, 61. 
 
 „ Nuttallii, 80. 
 
 „ obovatum, 68. 
 
 „ oculissimum, 103. 
 
 Old Port, 103. 
 „ oniniguttatum, 86. 
 
 „ Onslowianiim, 103. 
 
 „ ornatum, 81), 103. 
 
 ,, ornatissimum, 103. 
 
 Othello, 103. 
 Othello (Van 
 
 Houtte), 85. 
 ovatum, 88. 
 „ papilionaceum, 103. 
 
 „ Pardoleton, 103. 
 
 „ Paxtoni, 103. 
 
 „ pelargoniflorum, 103 
 
 ,, pendulum, 09. 
 
 ,, Perfection, 103. 
 
 „ PeiTieanum, 103. 
 
 „ perspicuum, 103. 
 
 pictum, 51, 103. 
 „ ponticum album, 51. 
 
 „ ponticum flore pleno, 
 
 52. 
 „ ponticum hybrids, 
 
 50-53. 
 „ ponticum, 49. 
 
 „ ponticum, golden • 
 
 leaved, 50. 
 „ ponticum roseum. 
 
 52. 
 „ ponticum, silver- 
 
 leaved, 50. 
 „ ponticum, variegated, 
 
 50. 
 „ ponticum, varieties, 
 
 50-53. 
 ., Poussin, 103. 
 
 ,. precox, 83. 
 
 President van den 
 
 Hecke, 104. 
 ,, primulinum elegans, 
 
 89. 
 „ Prince Albert, 104. 
 
 „ Prince Gamille de 
 
 Rohan, 104. 
 „ Prince Eugene, 104. 
 
 „ Prince of Wales 
 
 (Rollinson's), 83. 
 „ Prince of Wales 
 
 (Young's), 104. 
 „ Princess Mary of 
 
 Cambridge, 104. 
 
INDEX. 
 
 1^7 
 
 Khododendron Princess Alexandra, 
 
 84. 
 „ Princess Alice, 85. 
 
 ' „ Princess Helena, 85. 
 
 „ Princess of Wales, 
 
 104. 
 ,, pmnilum, G9. 
 
 ,, punctatiim, 61, 89. 
 
 „ purpureuni elegans, 
 
 104. 
 ,, purpureuni crispum, 
 
 104. 
 ,, purpureuni grandi- 
 
 Horuni, 104. 
 „ Purshii. -.4. 
 
 „ Puritv, 104. 
 
 „ Raphael, 104. 
 
 „ Reedianuni, 104. 
 
 „ retusuni, So. 
 
 „ Rosabel. 104. 
 
 „ roseo album, 72. 
 
 „ roseum elegans. 104. 
 
 „ roseum granditiorum- 
 
 104. 
 „ roseum pictum, 104. 
 
 „ roseum superbum, 
 
 104. 
 „ Roylii. 00. 
 
 R. S. Field, 104. 
 „ Rubens, lUo. 
 
 „ Russcllianum. 58. 
 
 „ salicitolium, 51. 
 
 „ saligueum, 71. 
 
 ,, salmono roseum, 105. 
 
 „ Schiller, 105. 
 
 ,, Scipio, 105. 
 
 „ Sesterianum, 84. 
 
 ,, setosum. 71. 
 
 „ Shepherdii, 80. 
 
 „ Sher\voodianum.l05 
 
 „ Sidney Herbert, 105. 
 
 ,, Sigismund Rucker, 
 
 105. 
 „ Sikkim species, 65- 
 
 „ Sir Charles Napier, 
 
 105. 
 „ Sir Isaac Newton, 
 
 105. 
 „ Sir James Clark. 105. 
 
 „ Sir John Thwaites, 
 
 105. 
 „ Sir Robert Peel, 105. 
 
 „ Sir Thos. Seabright, 
 
 lOo. 
 „ Sir Win. Armstrong, 
 
 105 
 
 Rhododendron Smithii, 80. 
 
 ,, Smithii coccinea. 5S. 
 
 , Souvenir de Jean 
 
 IJyls, 105. 
 „ speciosuni, 105. 
 
 ,, splendens, 105. 
 
 „ Stamt'ordianum. 105. 
 
 ,, Standard of Planci' 
 
 crs, 106. 
 „ Standishii. 106. 
 
 ,, Stella, 106. 
 
 ,, Sultana, 100. 
 
 ,, Surprise, 106. 
 
 The Grand Aral). 
 106. 
 „ The Sun of AuMcr- 
 
 litz, 100. 
 „ The Gem, 106. 
 
 „ The Queen, 106. 
 
 „ The Warrior, 100. 
 
 „ Thibaudiense, 81. 
 
 Thomsoni, 6'J. 
 „ Titian, 106. 
 
 ,, Torlonianum, 87. 
 
 tortulosum, 52. 
 ,, Towardii, 106. 
 
 ,, trillorum, 70. 
 
 ,, undulatuni, 58. 
 
 ,, vacciiiioides. 67. 
 
 „ Vandyke, 106. 
 
 ,, Veichiantim. 81. 
 
 „ Verschatlcltii, 106. 
 
 Vervaneanuni. 5-'J. 
 „ Vesuvius. 106. 
 
 vestitum coccineum, 
 106. 
 
 Victoria (I'incc's). 
 106. 
 „ Victoria, 106. 
 
 virgatum, 7.3. 
 ;, Wallichii, 66. 
 
 Wellsianum, 54. 
 ,, W' ightii, 7a. 
 
 ,, Wilsoni, 8-3. 
 
 ,, Wm. Downing, 106, 
 
 ,, Windsorii, 81. 
 
 s. 
 
 Sand, 9. 
 Sanguinaria, The, 156. 
 
 ,, canadensis, 156. 
 
 Scilla, The, 161. 
 ,, Fraseri, 162. 
 ,. siberica, 161. 
 i Seed. Propagation by, 36. 
 
188 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 Shooting Star, IG-l. 
 Skimmia, The, 144. 
 
 ,, japonica, 145. 
 
 ,, oblata. 145. 
 
 Smilaciua, The, 167. 
 
 ,, bitblia, 168. 
 
 Soil, Mode of mixing, 9. 
 
 ,, Preparation of, 3. 
 Solomon's Seal, 167. 
 Spoonwood, 124. 
 Squill, The, 161. 
 St. Johns-wort, 147. 
 Standard Rhododendrons, 2b. 
 Standard Rhododendrons, planting 
 
 26. 
 Star Flower, 165. 
 
 T. 
 
 Tan for mulching, 13. 
 Thalictrum anemenoides, 159. 
 Tiarella, The, 165. 
 
 ,, cordifolia, 165. 
 Time of covering Rhododendrons, 
 
 23. 
 Time of uncovering Rhododendrons, 
 
 23. 
 Toothwort, 158. 
 Transplanting, 16. 
 
 ,, Season for, 17. 
 
 Trien talis, The, 165. 
 
 ,, americana, 165. 
 
 Trillium, The, 173. 
 „ cemuum, 174. 
 „ erectum, 173. 
 „ erythrocarpum, 173. 
 
 Trillium grandifliorum, 173. 
 
 ,, pictum, 173. 
 
 ,, sessile, 173. 
 Twin Berry, 136. 
 Twinleaf, 157. 
 
 Unpacking imported plants, 10 
 Uvularia, The, 167. 
 
 Vaccinium, The, 137. 
 
 macrocarpon, 13f 
 oxycoccus, 138. 
 stamineum, 138. 
 Vitis-IdKa, 137. 
 ,, majus 
 
 w. 
 
 Watering after planting, 11. 
 
 Wild Honeysuckle, 116. 
 
 Wind injurious to Rhododendrons, 
 
 21. 
 Wintergreen, The, 148. 
 Winter protection. Houses for, 42. 
 
 Zenobia, The, 141. 
 ,, speciosa, 141. 
 
!:., 
 
 '■'■'MW-'—^ 
 
?\^- 
 
 c 
 
 
 APR 22 
 
 .349 
 
 MY 7 
 
 ^2 
 •58