Y empiri cts one a — ag, ay LT. Oe, FE arn Pgh ae. a . Pg aoe A: Mee oe . 9 3 - wv eat ire Pag Tete es ape he a SR S ra. a — fe oe oem = be Fin Oe Ad _— ~ te rae. or rr . = 2 een i 2 S . ee) Jee ere echt one Abe c _ = fe / JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY EDITED BY THE REV. W. WILKS, M.A. SECRETARY AND MR. JOHN WEHATHERS ASSISTANT-SECRETARYI ViOus iy. REPOLT OF THE CONIFER CONFERENCE LONDON Printed for the Aopal Horticultural Society BY SPOTTISWOODE & CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE, E.C. 1892 CONTENTS. Hse PENG Meee isc aisy e cis visists ssc fuisigce sce ce's c's ea PRED EE ee laut Ah add SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS. By Diva HEE 0. MASTERS "E: RaS., NARZELS, 6c. . cei eecccncsesedoces THE CONIFERZ OF JAPAN. By Mr. H. J. VEITCH, F.L.S., F.R.H.S. CONIFERS AS SPECIMEN TREES FOR LANDSCAPE GARDENING. By MiG HOSONICHOLSONACA:S., HaRcES, 2 verses cseccdecesSoccceeesesers CONIFERS FOR EcoNoMiIc PLANTING. By Mr. A. D. WEBSTER, THE DECORATIVE CHARACTER OF CONIFERS. By Mr. E. J. SEP AMisT Tintern ya terete se ere fat ere rare cle dVaiotsielales cin Srohiwts vues Coisiesio arsismiaicltveloeciolasclowrs CONIFERS AT DROPMORE. By Mr. CHAS. HERRIN .......cc.ccceeseesee CONIFERS AT ORTON LONGUEVILLE. By Mr. A. HARDING......... OPENING ADDRESS (Second Day). By Mr. W. T. THISELTON DYER, AINE Cer HUIS AOC Pula h sles sels cstslalsatesisicinciensiaioe els cotcsioteaitsiv etsuinelseeslon'ens THE VALUE IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS OF INTRODUCED CONIFERS. By lEVAE COIGM SDGNIN, (HORUS. cc cctecs.sdiceseeeencoeierercecasetes THE QUALITY OF CONIFEROUS TIMBER As AFFECTED BY SYLVI- CULTURAL TREATMENT. By W. SOMERVILLE, D.(ic., B.Sc., &c. THE TIMBER OF EXOTIC CONIFERS. By Mr. D. F. MACKENZIE... DISEASES OF CONIFERS. By Prof. MARSHALL WaRD, M.A., F.R.S., &c. INSECTS INJURIOUS TO CONIFER. By Mr. W. F. H. BLANDFORD, WV Ie Neem METIS nr ie Cm lam strike aauieuluailateieisaasice sania onmvisie s eisis Seie/vats Silocieuny slate LIsT OF CONIFERS AND TAXADS CULTIVATED IN GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. By Dr. MAXWELL T. MASTERS, F.R.S., F.R.H.S. PinvEuM DANTCUM. By: Prof. CARL. HANSEN soccces.cccccsscscccssse coe STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE COUNTIES OF ENGLAND, SCOT- LAND, AND IRELAND. By Mr. MALCOLM Dunn, F.R.H.S. List oF LARGEST SPECIMENS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM ......... CONIFERS SUITABLE FOR VARIOUS PURPOSES Bi tesa iaanione scenes s iiSTeOr- a XHIBITORS AND AWARDS sccsictececisscseacetesccsccctecvesacsecs LIstT OF CONIFERS EXHIBITED AT THH CONFERENCE ......coeseeees MENDD EON a5 ose se ces vie SABC CO DHUOFOERSEE NEED CODD DOLICECERE TOC OCETIC ESOT OEBEEE BenAne CEM ae ee a has te, Z Ties .> zm. 7 — a ’ Fis wy : 7 r ate ee pie —e A eu Gi - : eae SF — u <=, Ly = } q At ee Cie x eo d She -) ae Fos Ot Vance = * ’ f ” ee Bae tN A 20 Bier 4 3 me ; = r py) oh > va » i r : ws t a Mee Ps a £ (s. id E ‘ ‘ : hock a ; ‘\ 4 Lb é R 5 < poi Ts oy . A i Noch, " ; UK * S h f Ni i ~ A S ics m + ng } Syn oye 4 , ; eae = a lees t , ed : ¥ 5 on (ee Sn! \ fils - - Ber PNT ee Ny a fas! = A) 7 ; ~ * e ers peace! 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Ay lt. ei te asae eal , aires BoP ieee Ri He JU: toa j : sate i aes ie ; seats PS (hark is “canta Wig! < a 8 : ras rae i. 4h aw ty i ' ; pi : ete he + emt i rgeCR ot) Bah. eat pemnily ve ity a. : . ie ue Com ikea tetesdh igen asia) / 8 hi ih 1) ee = d ae 4 ent ARITA ser tt 7a TA Bde ia 8- puoi _ Vat a A bg “apeid am Me ane ve ath, bee hoe: aH 3 as Rlbag it tNe: vee vey, PE ‘45 “iM, WA) eddie OW mer | att wale, Poa ATE (Ae af gag AMe het Ce: ate me : I = Oy D bate BER Haniel Hh pia at, wie zh han ae Lani aye . ‘ a 4 ‘al ‘ ve a28 oes ohn see Passe ory Ta i ishedivat "bias & i toaees 1 ext aes ee) ee Apes “Ag grat heh 2h Abe dha ; i aig ‘QSt. Cab al " eth (ioe staat aT eh Ape f > om Ties Oaks sie elites cease eater WB. GR a tar f) cae eres aut Agung: a ie rs. ‘be o i rales bh eA ak ian arta rate ae a Misskshis snout ie ayeks2e Ai a aie ¢ wigliaY a ak aC ih a ea ‘oat pissis * ioe i pan) (8 “al : a i ra i oA waters swirl if Soe" PREFACE. wees In sending out this memorial of the Conifer Conference, 1891, we would draw attention to the fact that it contains far more than a mere verbal report of the Conference, Dr. Maxwell T. Masters, F.R.S., and Professor Carl Hansen, of Copenhagen, having promised at the time to recast their notes more fully. This they have done most kindly and with infinite labour and research, but not without some little expenditure of time, the final sheets of MS. having only come into our hands in July, and the corrections extending up to the 29th of September. Nomenclature.—The names adopted by Dr. Masters and Professor Hansen may, of course, be relied upon as representing the latest decisions of botanical science in England and on the Continent of Europe respectively, though future research may necessitate some still further slight alterations. However, the hitherto inextricably confused nomenclature of Conifers may safely be described as settling down upon the lines adopted in this volume by these two eminent authorities, who, although not yet in absolute agreement, will be found to approach very nearly. After most careful consideration we have thought it better to leave the names in the papers read at the Conference and in the List of Returns almost unchanged, for had we altered the various and varying names, erroneously used, into those scientifically correct, the writers would in many cases have hardly recognised the plants of which they were speaking. Having set forth a correct system of nomenclature for Great Britain in Dr. Masters’ ‘‘ Synopsis,”’ we must refer all readers to it for verification of names occurring elsewhere in the volume, and leave it to time to bring about a slow and gradual reforma- tion whereby the discarded names may become changed into vi PREFACE. those scientifically correct. At the same time we would venture io urge all nurserymen and growers of Conifers to at once begin the substitution of the correct for the erroneous names, adding perhaps for some few years to come the now obsolete one in brackets, thus :—‘* Sequoia (Wellingionia) gigantea,” or “‘ Tsuga Mertensiana (Abies Alberiiana).’’ In proof of the great confusion and diversity of nomenclature, the reader has but to refer to the “« Tast of Conifers Exhibited ”’ (see page 579), where every speci- men shown appears under both the name used by the exhibitor and that by which it should be more properly known. The Index.—lt has not been thought necessary to make the general index to the volume include the coniributions of Dr. Masters and Professor Hansen, as they are themselves of the nature of indices. The reader referring to the General Index must therefore bear in mind that he will probably find the plant he is searching for mentioned in Dr. Masters’ and Professor Hansen’s lists as well as at the page indexed. To have indexed these lists would have been in great part to repeat them. The Exhibitors——The thanks of the Society are due to all the exhibitors for the profusion of specimens sent, which formed such a collection of coniferous planis as all experis agree had never before been collected in any one place. And herein we cannot help mentioning how greatly the Conference was indebted to Mr. Malcolm Dunn and the Scottish contingent. Iniroducers.—The mention of thanks to the exhibitors can- not but remind one of the vast debt of gratitude which we of to-day owe to the intrepid men who have gone before us, and who for the most part introduced these beautiful plants; and no one can read the following pages without perceiving that it is to our Royal Horticuliural Society that Great Britain in great measure owes both the first stimulus of miroducmg and the largest number of useful mtroductions. Douglas and Hartweg and Fortune, to whom the chief honours are due, were all sent out directly by the Society, and the rich harvest of their dis- coveries was distributed freely by the Society throughout the length and breadth of Great Britam. If our Society had no other record than this of the miroduction of Conifers, it would still have deserved the cordial support of all who love our country woodland scenes and parks and copses. JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, Vou. XIV. 1892. CONIFER CONFERENCE, Hetp at CHISWICK, Octrosrer 7 ann 8, 1891. OPENING ADDRESS ON “SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS.” By Maxwewtut T. Masters, M.D., F.R.S8., Corresponding Member of the Institute of France. Axsourt this time last year, in this very place, Mr. Shirley Hibberd, whose presence on occasions like this we so greatly miss, declared, in the emphatic manner characteristic of him, “ that the Dahlia was the most wonderful of all flowers.”’ Nobody gainsaid him. A short time afterwards, also in this place, under like circum- stances, the same speaker asserted ‘ that the Chrysanthemum was the most wonderful of all flowers!’’ Still nobody contradicted him. In truth, all plants, all living creatures, are so wonderful that it is impossible to say which is the most so. Those which come under notice at the moment must therefore be admitted to have the greater claim to precedence. # Permit me, in opening the business of this Conference, to advocate the pretensions of the Conifers, and if, in so doing, I travel in some particulars a little outside the bounds of practical horticulture, I do so of set purpose, in order to introduce variety B 2, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. into our discussions, and also because practical matters will be treated of in these meetings by specialists of greater competence than myself. It must suffice here to touch but lightly and superficially on some points of interest to all plant-lovers, and the few points selected must be taken as suggestive of the vast stores at the disposition of the earnest student rather than as in any way exhaustive. ANTIQUITY. And first as to antiquity. We may smile at the fable of a Montmorency swimming about in Noah’s flood with the family pedigree held in his mouth for safety, but the story, at any rate, illustrates the respect we all more or less pay to a continuous record of unbroken descent. But the pedigrees constructed by genealogists and heralds are only as the records of seconds on the limitless dial of Time. I shall not attempt to sketch even the outlines of the geological history of Conifers, as it has been taught us by Williamson, Carruthers, Starkie Gardner, and many others.* It must suffice to say that the first traces of the order are met with in the Devonian and Carboniferous series—shall we say about half-way down the record of the earth’s strata as we know it? but in any case so very long ago as to be utterly beyond computation. But let us note particularly: The earliest Conifers of which geologists tell us were Araucarias. Pines followed not long after in the scale of geological time. Now these Araucarias and these Pines are about the most highly organised of the Conifers of the present day—and, so far as we can see, they were quite as highly organised then as they are now. Moreover, it is certain that many forms equally highly developed, or even more so, existed then, and in still earlier times, which have since disappeared. We must go still further back, then, for the origin of these Conifers. But how much further back? Who can tell? ‘Such know- ledge is too wonderful for me. It is high—TI cannot attain to it.” * The reader will find an admirable epitome of the history of the Gymno- sperms in Mr. Starkie Gardner’s “ British Eocene Flora,’ published by the Paleontographical Society, in which the labours of British and Conti- nental naturalists are summarised, and also in the learned and cautious ‘Fossil Botany ’’ by Professor Count Solms-Laubach, of which an English translation has just issued from the Clarendon Press. SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS. S GENEALOGY. But whilst it is utterly impossible to say when Conifers made their appearance on the surface of the globe, we have, nevertheless, some means of ascertaining with a high degree of probability what their lineage has been. All the available evidence goes to show that we must look for the ancestry of the Conifers among some group now extinct, but which must have been closely allied to existing Lycopods and Selaginellas. This presumption is based upon certain very remarkable peculiarities in the organs of fertilisation—in the pollen as well as in the ovule—originally observed in part by Robert Brown, and subsequently investigated in detail by Hofmeister, Stras- burger, and many others. I cannot enter upon these points at any length, but I may put it thus: If, as is now proved, the construction of the innermost penetralia of the microspore and of the megaspore (of the pollen and of the seed, if I may so speak) be the same, if their method of working be substan- tially identical in the groups before mentioned, or if, to be more precise, the ovule of a Conifer contains a megaspore with a prothallus bearing archegonia, then the relationship between the Conifers and the higher Cryptogams must surely be con- sidered to be established. STAGES OF GROWTH. There are other pieces of evidence which can be appreciated by any of us, even by those who are not trained microscopists, and they can be worked out better in the garden or in the forest than in the herbarium. ‘They depend on the circum- stance, which seems to be generally admitted, that the progres- sive changes which may be observed during the development and growth of each individual living creature are the reflections of similar changes and of similar stages of growth in their ancestry. Now the growth of Conifers presents a very close resemblance to that of Lycopods and Selaginellas. Of them- selves these resemblances might be treated as merely superficial and unimportant, but when considered in association with those other embryonic ‘“‘ characters’’ that I have mentioned, it is impossible to resist the conclusion that we have to deal with “homologies ’’—that is, with real affinities, not with superficial or misleading resemblances. B2 4 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. An investigation of the various stages of growth of each species is not only of the greatest importance from a genealogical point of view, but it supplies the explanation to many a puzzling circumstance in their cultivation, and furnishes us with many hints which we may utilise in our daily practice. I would, there- fore, strongly urge upon those who have leisure to devote to such investigation the comparative study of the living Conifers during the successive stages of their growth. They should not confine themselves to the investigation of any one species taken as a type, but they should examine comparatively, organ by organ, member by member, as many forms as they can obtain, and they should arrange and classify the results in due order, and with a due sense of proportion. In this manner the student should pass in review the whole life-history of the plants from the egg-stage to that of the “‘oospore”’ or, ripe seed, and from the first formation of the embryo to the close of embryonic life—as represented in the process of germination, ‘‘ the hatching of the chicken,” and the complete development of such parts as were originally within the fertilised egg. After germination comes an adolescent or transition stage, which is a particularly interesting one in Conifers. After the seed-leaves have been formed there are produced in very many, if not in all Conifers, leaves of a shape differing, on the one hand, from that of the seed-leaves, and, on the other, from that of the adult foliage. Such leaves are, of course, familiar to all who have had to do with the raising of Conifers. Again, look at the Junipers, especially such a one as J. chinensis, and you will see on the same branch two kinds of leaves, the one transitional and temporary, the other characteristic of the adult form. The Retinosporas, so called, of our gardens have no separate existence aS a genus, or even as species. They are mere stages in the growth of certain species of Thuya, of Cupressus, of Chamecyparis, or of Juniperus. On the selfsame bush we find specimens of two or three different kinds of Retinospora, and we see others reverting to the adult form, and bearing the cones peculiar to it. Of the adult stage I need say no more on this occasion than may serve to remind you that this is pre-eminently the stage in which the plant is adapted to reproduce itself, either by bud or by seed. SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS. 5 Thus we have the characteristics of the plant in the bud- stage and in the egg-stage to study ; and whilst the peculiarities of the latter are more specially the objects of study for the microscopist and the physiologist in the laboratory, the differences of the former (the bud-stage) are particularly fit for the obser- vation of the horticulturist or the forester, and abound in prac- tical lessons for his consideration. Some of the stages here alluded to more or less overlap one another, occur simultaneously, or are connected one with another by intermediate gradations, so that they cannot in all cases be sharply defined. Now, as each individual plant passes, has passed, or may pass through any or all of these stages, so it must be that the species, which is only a collection of individuals, must have passed through the same stages. Some of the variations which puzzle us so much to-day, in all probability represent the conformation of the progenitors of existing plants; at any rate there is ample evidence to show that Conifers in those remote times passed through the same stages as the existing ones do now, and that they were as well adapted to meet variable conditions as their descendants now are. If, therefore, to repeat what has been said before, we find that the Conifers pass through the same stages, say, as the Selaginellas do, we naturally conclude that they have been derived from the same stock. Again, if we find that the Conifers pass through some of the stages visible in certain vascular Cryptogams, but not through others, we deem the relationship less close; whilst if the phases of growth be almost wholly different, we naturally conclude that the relationship is propor- tionately remote. I have mentioned these matters to show how botanists and geologists attack problems, with a reasonable chance of success, which on first consideration you might deem to be quite insoluble by mortal men—mere matters of speculation beyond the capability of actual demonstration. PuysioLocy, Movements, &c. I have so far endeavoured to show you how the geologist, the morphologist, the microscopist, the genealogist find rich mines for observation and research among the Conifers. The physio- logists are none the less fortunate. You will have seen already 6 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. that this must be so; but I should like to add an illustration which presents itself every spring, and always excites increasing wonder. I allude to the remarkable growth-movements of the shoots, especially of the leader. During the period of rapid growth this may be observed particularly well in some species of Abies in which the shoot bends from the vertical nearly or quite to the horizontal, whilst its point is directed in the course of a few hours to each point of the compass in succession. Similarly the side-shoots are twisted as growth goes on. These are growth-movements such as Darwin watched so carefully in climbing plants and in root-tips, and which probably occur in some degree in all plants, but which one would hardly expect to see in so marked a degree in the stiff-looking shoots of the Conifers. These movements depend upon the circumstance that the activity of growth and the fulness or turgescence of the cells of the shoot, which is a necessary accompaniment, are not equal in amount in all parts of the shoot at the same time, but are greater at one time in one part, at another time elsewhere. Another circumstance inducing these gyrations, which is frequently over- looked, is the amount of resistance offered by certain parts of the shoot itself. Thus the most active growth is at the base of the shoot (centrifugal). The apex of the shoot is occupied by cells which are smaller, and which are, moreover, checked in their growth by the compression exercised by the more or less tightly packed leaves and bud-scales which surround the tip of the shoot. The tip of the shoot then grows more slowly than the basal portions, and, acting as a check or curb, causes the shoot to twist just as we may conceive the radicles to do in consequence of the restrictions offered by the root-cap. The movements of the leaves are of a different nature, and are very conspicuous in some species, as in Abies Veitchw and Picea ajanensis. By these movements the stomate-bearing sur- face—whether it be, as is usual, the lower, or, as it is by exception, the upper surface, as in Junipers and in Picea ajanensis—is exposed to the heat and light of the sun, and the evaporation o vapour is proportionately facilitated. PRACTICAL ILLUSTRATIONS. I do not advocate the comparative study of Conifers through- outall the stages of their growth for purely scientific reasons. SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS, 7 It is also because I believe the propagator and the planter may derive valuable hints from it that I venture to mention the subject to-day. Let me give you one or two illustrations. Many of you know the difficulty there is in obtaining a “ leader”’ in some species—as in Abies amabilis, for instance—and this quite independently of any insect or fungus injury. On what circumstances does this difficulty depend, and how can we apply aremedy? A partial answer at least to these questions can be given after noticing the arrangement of the buds at the ends of the shoot. You will find in all cases a terminal bud at the end of the shoot and a cirelet of closely packed lateral buds immedi- ately around it. Notice, too, how, in most species of Pinus, the terminal bud starts into growth in spring before the side ones - do, and compare this state of things with what happens in Abies (Silver Firs), where the side-buds usually push first. There isan entire ring of these side-buds, and unless the central bud starts away first it will be pressed upon by its companions, its growth re- stricted, and its supplies of nourishment largely appropriated by its more vigorous companions. I have sometimes fancied that there is in some of the Silver Firs and in Araucarias an alternation of growth in different years, so that whilst in some seasons the terminal bud starts first, and manifests the greater amount of energy, in others the side-shoots are the first to move and the most vigorous in growth. But this is a matter which requires the observation over different years of a much larger series of specimens than I have been able to compass. In any case, if what I have said be true, we have an easy means of securing a leader by simply suppressing the lateral buds. I may also call your attention to the way in which the shoots of some species of Pinus are clothed to the base with leaves, whilst in others the base of the shoot is bare. The scraggy, unfurnished appearance of some old Pine-trees is accounted for by this peculiarity. What to suggest as a remedy in this case is not so easy. Nevertheless the frequent appearance of numerous adventitious shoots on the trunk of such species as Pinus rigida, P. Sabsmana, or Sequoia sempervirens seems to show that by a judicious disbudding or removal of the tips of some of the upper shoots forming the head a more bushy, or, as gardeners call it, a more furnished, habit would result. 8 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. The buds and the scales which envelop them afford valuable objects for study and comparison, the more so in that they are not so much influenced by external conditions as are some other organs, and that the “ characters’’ they offer are therefore more constant than some others and proportionately well suited for the discrimination of one species from another. The manner in which the young growing shoots either push their way through the bud-scales, leaving them in the form of a tube or sheath, or lift them off in the form of a conical cap, is also a point worthy of attention, for, though not exempt from variation, it is sufficiently constant to be useful for purposes of discrimination. The form of the young shoot after it has protruded beyond the bud-scales also merits attention. Sometimes it is cylindric or conic, sometimes brush-like, at other times nearly flat, or with a central depression. These differences depend in the first instance upon the arrangement of the leaves in the bud, and in the next on the way in which they arrange themselves as the bud lengthens into the shoot. The direction which the side-shoots assume when growing, independently of the gyratory movement before alluded to, is also worthy of notice. In some cases the most energetic growth is, at any rate for a time, on the lower surface of the shoot, whence arises an upward direction of the tip of the shoot and a curvature of the shoot itself, which is convex on the lower, concave on the upper surface. In other species the greatest growth-power is on the upper side of the shoot; the lower side now acting as a curb causes a downward bending of the tip of the shoot and a general curvature whose convexity is upwards. ‘These are the condi- tions which botanists denote as ‘‘epinasty’”’ and ‘‘ hyponasty ”’ respectively. Whether there is any definite relation between the ‘* epinastic’’ condition and the downward bending of the so-called pendulous or weeping varieties of Spruce, of Sequoia, &ec., is a matter for further inquiry and observation in the garden. The branching of the Conifers is associated in most people’s minds with the idea of formal symmetry, especially when the trees are young, and in some cases that remains true to the end; but, in most instances, wind and storm, frost and snow, and the innumerable contingencies that occur during the life of a tree leave their marks upon it, and the primitive regularity is replaced by a ruggedness of outline delightful to the eye of an artist, SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS. 9 interesting to the botanist, and one which unconsciously im- presses the spectator, much in the same way that the human face, with its tale of trials surmounted, of cares ingrained, or of patient trust, arouses his interest and appeals to his sympa- thies. Many of the “ curiosities”” among these plants are dependent upon the inordinate development of the branches in size or in number. Thus thecurious ‘‘ Snake Firs” (Piceaexcelsa monstrosa), with their long, lithe, unbranched arms trailing on the ground, owe their peculiar appearance to the circumstance that the side- buds are almost entirely suppressed or undeveloped. In such branches the leaves are often unusually large, asif to compensate for their diminished number and to ensure as large an amount of leaf-surface as if the branches were developed in the usual way.* The peculiar elegance and great diversity in the sprays of Cypresses and Thuyas is likewise due to variations in the direc- tion and in the degree of branching of the ultimate twigs. A fascinating subject for investigation is here presented to the student, and one which would not only be useful to the scientific botanist, but specially advantageous to the propagator. ‘Those who raise these plants from cuttings, say of a Retinospora, know well how important it is that the cutting should be taken from a leading and not from a lateral branch. There are numerous other matters connected with the growth of these plants upon which gentlemen who have these trees under daily observation might give information. Isit a generally observed fact that the Eastern Arbor Vite (Biota) will not unite by grafting with the Western Thuya occidentalis; that the Golden Larch (Pseudolarix Kempferi) will not graft on the common Larch, nor the Douglas on the Silver Fir; that Abies Lowiana (Parsonsiana) as a grafted plant is always unsatisfac- tory, whilst, on the other hand, that Picea pungens always does well when grafted on the Spruce? Again, is it generally known that Thuyopsis borealis must be propagated by cuttings rather than by seed, whilst the not distant Thuya gigantea (Lobbw of * Since the Conference an obliging correspondent has informed me of an Araucaria imbricata which, after producing two tiers of branches, ceased to develop any side-branches, whilst the leader-shoot has con- tinued to lengthen year after year. The analogy between the lithe branches of the Araucaria and those of the Snake Firs must often strike the observer. 10 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. gardens), like the Wellingtonia, does better when raised from seed than when propagated from cuttings ? Systematic information is also needed as to the hardiness and rate of growth of particular species on particular soils. Many such particulars are buried in the “‘ Pinetum Britannicum ”’ and in the horticultural journals; but it is time that they were made more accessible, and that the observations made some years since should be added to and correlated with the results of more recent inquiry, so that the records of this Congress may afford the most complete information on the growth of these trees in Britain. Beauty oF Form AND CoLourR. Some will say they feel no interest in speculative chronology, internal structure, or mysterious laws of growth; they love beauty for its own sake. Beitso. They will find a rich harvest among the Conifers. The exhibition to-day furnishes abundant illustrations. Listen also to those who have traversed the forests of the Californian Sierras, and note how rapturously they speak of beauties which not even the Palms or Tree-Ferns of the tropics can excel—of majesty, of stature and dignity of form that the mountains only can surpass. In point of colour we have every shade of green, from the tender green of the Swamp Cypress to the deep hues of the Cypress so expressively noted by Mrs. Trollope : “ And a cypress mystic-hearted Cleaves the quiet dome of light, With its black-green masses parted But by gaps of blacker night.’’,, In point, too, of colour, to say nothing of the many varie- gated and coloured forms so well represented to-day, the unfold- ing buds and shoots are marvels of beauty in the spring season, whilst the orange and crimson and purple of the male catkins, of the female flowers and of the young cones are not to be out- done in intensity of hue by any other plants whatever. Those who assert, as I have heard them assert, that Conifers are monotonous in point of colour can evidently never have seen the trees either when they put on their spring attire or when they don their mature bridal dress. SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS. 11 STATURE. As to size, some of the Conifers are as veritable sons of Anak. Only some of the Kucalypts of Australia can approach them in this particular. We have Sequoias close upon 400 feet in height, Pinus Lambertiana and ponderosa not greatly inferior, whilst at the other extreme we have in New Zealand, as we learn from Professor Kirk, Dacrydiums smaller than our Polar Willow. What we have not got, and what geologists and explorers are on the look-out for, is an herbaceous Conifer or one which would link on to such a plant as Isoetes. UTILITY. Turning now to more utilitarian considerations, there is no need for me to remind you of the extreme importance of the Conifers. From the time we get up in the morning till we take our rest at night, from our cradles to our graves, we of the northern hemisphere at least, are daily availing ourselves in some way or another of the products of these trees. Without petroleum, tar, timber, or coal, where would our civilisation and prosperity be? To maintain an adequate supply of timber, to protect existing forests, renew old ones and plant new ones, is an urgent duty upon us as cultivators,* and one which will not be lost sight of in the proceedings of this Conference. NOMENCLATURE. Scientific nomenclature, of course, is subject to the vicissitudes of scientific progress, and thus changes occur which, though highly embarrassing to practical men, are historical landmarks to the botanist. The subject is not one which can be discussed at * How urgent it is may be gathered from the following figures, taken from Dr. Schlich’s “ Manual of Forestry,” vol.i., p. 58, et seg. :—Annual average value of imported wood, fifteen million pounds sterling, of which twelve millions represent the value of coniferous woods, oak, &c., which could be produced in this country, to say nothing of minor produce, such as bark, resin, &c. Dr. Schlich computes that 5,869,667 loads of timber are imported annually which could be grown in Britain. For the produc- tion of this amount six million acres of land, roughly speaking, would be required. Out of the total area of 26,757,000 acres of waste land in Britain, it may be assumed that at least six millions would be suitable for tree-culture. Large tracts in Ireland and the Hebrides now unproductive might be planted, and it is all the more desirable that this should be done as the prospects of a continuous importation of timber from Canada and Northern Europe, whence at present we derive our principal supplies, are by no means assured. 12 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. any length here, but I venture to counsel the general adoption by gardeners and foresters of the generic names as given in Bentham and Hooker’s ‘‘ Genera Plantarum,” and, in the main, of the specific names as found in Veitch’s ‘‘ Manual,’ the more recent ‘Handbuch der Nadelholzkunde” of Beissner, or the catalogue published by the same author under the title of ‘‘ Handbuch der Coniferen-Benennung.”’ The want of an acquaintance with the German language forms no obstacle to the employment of this list, in which also are included the principal synonyms. As to the Abies-Picea question, concern- ing which so much has been written, I shall not attempt to add anything beyond the recommendation to our gardeners to adopt, for uniformity sake, the now all but universal plan of calling the Spruces ‘‘ Picea ’”’ and the Silver Firs ‘‘ Abies.’’ This is the plan adopted by Bentham and Hooker and all modern writers on Conifers. In dealing with specific names we are, I consider, bound by the spirit, if not always by the letter, of the ‘‘ Lois de la Nomenclature Botanique”’ formulated by M. A. de Candolle, modified and adopted at the Paris Botanical Congress in 1867. According to the general spirit of this code we adopt as the proper name that which we believe to be correct both as to its generic and as to its specific portion. The two por- tions form one name. Hither by itself is incomplete. Thus botanically we do not now speak of Abzes Douglasiw because Carriére’s proposal to form a separate genus Pseudotsuga has been generally recognised as correct and is adopted in standard books. The plant, then, is now, for those who adopt the French botanist’s ruling, Pseudotsuga Douglasw of Carriére. Any other names it may have had are relegated to the list of synonyms. But this practice does not commend itself to some of our Trans- atlantic friends, who consider that priority and precedence should be given, not necessarily to the generic half of the name, but to the specific half only. It so happens, for instance, that Pseudo- tsuga Douglasw was first made known as Pinus taxifolia of Lambert. Few botanists nowadays would include it under Pinus, so that the generic half of the name had to be changed. In changing it Carriére omitted to associate with his new generic name Psewdotsuga the old half-name taxzfolia, but adopted in its stead the name Douglasi. Carricre was perfectly justified in SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS. 138 what he did, although it would have been better had he adopted the part-name taxifolia. Accordingly, as this last word is decidedly older in its application than is ‘‘ Douglasii,”’ Dr. Britton proposes to call the tree in future Pseudotsuga taxifolia, Britton. This plan we venture to think is objectionable and unfair to Carriére. Had the latter botanist been proved to be in error in his deter- mination, it might have been right to have rejected his name ; but as Carriére was quite within his rights in framing the name Pseudotsuga Douglas, and no one proposes to alter the generic name he adopted, it seems unfair to deprive him of his rights asa nomenclator. The new-old name is further open to objection in- asmuch as, by implication at least, it leads the reader to assume that Dr. Britton has in some way or another contributed to our scientific knowledge of the tree. This, indeed, may be so, but so far as we know his only title is that of unearthing a partial and incomplete appellation that once it might have been better to have adopted, but which, under the circumstances, may now be more advantageously forgotten, or at best consigned to the list of synonyms. Where no important principle and no injustice are involved we may be excused for following established custom and the law of convenience rather than inelastic convention. Whilst the botanists are settling these points we may as horticulturists, without impropriety and with much convenience, continue to employ the name of the “ Douglas Fir.” There are occasionally times and circumstances, and this is such a case, when it is best to employ a ‘‘ popular ’’ name, although in most instances such epithets are unmitigated nuisances, if not worse. INTRODUCTION OF SPECIES INTO CULTIVATION. In this connection I may be permitted to remind you that, with the exception of the Scotch Pine, the Yew, and the Juniper, no species of Conifer is wild in Great Britain, and that in con- sequence we are, and always have been, largely dependent on foreign supplies. Our earliest records referring to the introduction of these plants do not go beyond the sixteenth century. We know that the Norway Spruce, the Cypress which grew in Gerard’s garden, and was, as he asserts, “‘ well knowen to most,” the Arbor Vite, the Silver Fir, and the Stone Pine were in cultivation prior to 1548, and had probably been introduced much earlier. 14 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. The Pinaster was known here in 1596, the Larch in 1629, the Lebanon Cedar in 1664, shortly before the time of the great fire in London. It would be tedious to enumerate the dates of intro- duction of even the most remarkable only of the Pines and Firs, but in an assembly like this we ought gratefully to recall the services of Bishop Compton, by whose agency the Balsam Fir and various Atlantic-American species were introduced, and of John Evelyn, always a most honoured name in horticulture, who is credited with the introduction of the so-called Red Cedar (Juniperus virginiana). The Corsican Pine is said to have made its way hither in 1759, through whose instrumentality we do not know. In 1796 Araucaria imbricata was introduced from Chili by Menzies. ‘The only survivor of that introduction is still at Kew in the shape of a decrepit veteran. From 1827 to 1833, or thereabouts, Douglas startled the botanical and horticultural world by the number and importance of his discoveries in North-west America. The Douglas Fir, the Lambert Pine, the Menzies Spruce, Abzes amabilis, A. grandis, A. nobilis, and many others may be mentioned as having been either discovered or introduced into this country by Douglas. To Fellows of the Royal Horticultural Society it must always be a source of legitimate pride that these magni- ficent and important discoveries (like those of Hartwee and Fortune later on) were made by officers of this Society, and that the plants were in the first instance grown and distri- buted from these very gardens of Chiswick. Amid the many memories which cling to Chiswick, amid the recollections of the many vicissitudes which have befallen our old Society, we may ever proudly remember the part that it has played in the intro- duction of these noble plants. Surely it is Incumbent upon us to venerate the memory of the collectors who conferred so much honour on our Society and so much benefit on mankind.* About the same time that Douglas was sending home the first instalment of these treasures, the Deodar was introduced from the Himalayas, and the Atlas Cedar appeared shortly afterwards. The useful Austrian Pine was introduced in 18385 from South- east Hurope. In the next decade Hartweg introduced numerous * The Lindley Library, however, contains no portrait of Douglas, of Fortune, or of Hartweg! Contrast this with the recent erection of a statue to Roezl at Prague. SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE ORDER OF CONIFERS, 15 species, including the Redwood (Sequoia sempervirens). These also were sent to Chiswick, grown and described by George Gordon, whose name will always be associated honourably with these plants, whatever view his successors may take of his work in detail. In 1846, and the subsequent years, Robert Fortune, whose name, like that of Douglas, should be inscribed in the golden book of the Society, introduced the Cryptomeria japonica and various highly curious species from China and Japan, to which I can only allude in passing. In 1850 William Lobb, by the discovery and introduction through Messrs. Veitch of the Wellingtonia (Sequoia gigantea), renewed the excitement and astonishment which his predecessor Douglas had occasioned. There is no need for me here to do more than allude in passing to the marvels attaching to the Mammoth Tree and its near ally, the Redwood; but I may point out that, wonderful as they are in history and stature, they are surpassed in practical utility by another of William Lobb’s © introductions—I mean the Lobb’s Thuya (Lhaya gigantea). In 1853 Thomas Lobb introduced from Java a single specimen of the very extraordinary Umbrella Pine (Sczadopitys verticil- lata), but it was not till 1861 that it was introduced in quantity by John Veitch and by Fortune. In the same year our Scottish friends sent out Jeffrey to Oregon, and to him we are indebted, amongst others, for the introduction of the magnificent Libo- cedrus decurrens. In the following year William Murray made known the very valuable Lawson’s Cypress, or Port Orford Cedar. This was described by his brother Andrew Murray, at one time the secretary of our Society, and one whose know- ledge of these plants was only equalled by his quaint humour and genial kindliness. In or about 1860 the late John Gould Veitch was sending us from Japan several most beautiful and promising species, many of which were described by Andrew Murray in his “ Pines and Firs of Japan,’’ originally published in the Journal of our Society. Veitch’s labours were supple- mented nearly twenty years later by those of Charles Maries. The history of the introductions made by these two botanists, is it not written in the excellent “Manual of the Conifers ” published by Messrs. Veitch ? I must needs curtail my remarks on the introduction of these plants, but before quitting the subject it may be interesting to 16 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. note that in introducing the Araucarias from Chili and Australia, the Sequoias and Libocedrus from the North-west Pacific, or the nearly allied Cyeads from South Africa and Australia, we are but bringing back plants which flourished at various epochs upon our own soil. I donot know anything more wonderful from this point of view than the history of the genus Ginkgo, species of which once overspread the whole of the temperate and warmer regions of the globe, and one of which, the Maidenhair tree, known to us as wild only in China and as a cultivated plant, cannot be distinguished from the fossil plants. It is, in fact, a survivor from those extremely remote times of which mention has been made.* Ifin the course of our rambles we were to meet a living Icthyosaurus,} or any other uncanny monster, such as those whose models are placed in the grounds of the Crystal Palace, we should probably be not a little startled. And yet in the Ginkgo of China, the Araucaria Cunninghamii of North Australia, the Libocedrus decurrens of North-west America, the Servian Spruce (Picea Omorika), and even the Redwood of California, we have actually living in our gardens trees indistinguishable from those, some of which must have existed on the soil of our own land, such as it then was, ages before the gigantic Saurians before mentioned. Kconomic VALUE. But it is our business to study the prospects as well as the past history of these trees, and I venture to hope that one result of the present Conference will be the accumulation of evidence con- cerning the economic value of these introductions, especially of some of the more recent ones. We all know the value, as a decorative tree, of the Lebanon Cedar, one of the earliest of intro- ductions of this kind, and we have had opportunity of testing the value of the Weymouth Pine. But with regard to many others we are still in doubt. Has not the Deodar, for instance, which was introduced with such great hopes, rather disappointed our expectations? Is the Douglas Fir likely to be of any great value ag a timber tree? Will either of them equal the Corsican Pine or the Menzies Spruce, which were introduced at an earlier * Its powers of endurance are further curiously illustrated by the fact that this tree tolerates the smoky atmosphere of towns as well, if not better, than most others. + See Dr. Schlich’s remarks on the Earl of Mansfield’s plantation of Douglas Firs in Gardeners’ Chronicle, Noy. 10, 1888, pp. 583, 568, and 598 SOME FEATURES OF INTEREST IN THE OEDER OF CONIFERS. 17 period? Again, considering the distressing failure of the Larch in many situations owing to the attacks of a fungus, carefully studied of late by Mr. John Carruthers, what have we among the new-comers that we may fairly look forward to with con- fidence as substitutes for it? I venture to think we have several, and I would hope that some of those present may favour us with their opinion on the prospects of such trees as e.g. Lobb’s noble Cypress (Thuya gigantea), the Lawson Cypress, the Redwood (Taxodiwm sempervirens), the Nootka Cypress (Thuyopsis borealis), the Abies brachyphylla, and some others of Japanese origin. At one time I should have been disposed to have included the stately Nordmann Fir (Abies Nordmanniana), but, alas! it falls too ready a prey to the attack of a woolly aphis allied to that which, under the name of American blight, attacks our Apple-trees. In any case, it is to be feared that many of the Conifers, so handsome in their youth, are too precocious in this climate, and attain their full span of life much sooner than in their native country. Many of the Pines especially are already showing signs of decrepitude, which render them unsightly and sadly interfere with their value as timber trees. Did time and space permit, I would fain say something more about the botanists by whose patient labour and piecing together of imperfect and discontinuous evidence the confusion that once reigned is becoming gradually cleared and the nomenclature more settled. The Mexican species are still imperfectly known, but the Californian and Japanese species are now much better defined than formerly, whilst, thanks in a great degree to Dr. Henry, much of the mystery investing the Chinese species has _ been dissipated, and Henry and the Abbés Delavay and David have enabled us to clear up the history of certain very interesting species previously only known as coming from Chinese gardens, and the structure and affinities of which were previously im- perfectly known. Such are ‘‘ some of the features of interest ’’ connected with this family. I might have dwelt on them at much greater length, I might have introduced a much larger number and a greater variety of illustrations, but there are limits even to your patience, and I must no longer interpose between you and the gentlemen who have undertaken to address you. I shall have failed if I do not leave with you the impression Cc 18 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. that, as was stated in the beginning, we have to deal with a most wonderful group of plants—one the importance of which to mankind is hardly second to any other; one with few or any superiors in interest, beauty, majesty or stature; one which supplies numerous links in the evolutionary chain connecting our present times with those periods when the foundations of the globe were laid; one which has had its share in making the world what it was in the past, and what it is in the present, whilst, so far as we are permitted to see, its influence will be no less potent in the future. THE CONIFERA OF JAPAN. By Mr. Harry J. Vurrcx, F.L.8., F.R.H.S. In the programme of to-day’s proceedings, the Council of the Royal Horticultural Society have assigned to me the subject of “* Japanese, Chinese, and Californian Conifers,’’ which covers a wide field for discussion, so wide indeed that, extending over two of the richest coniferous regions of the world, abundant subject- matter can easily be found for a separate paper on each. To attempt, therefore, to bring under review within a limited time so many objects of interest that have originated in the countries named, must necessarily result in a very imperfect rendering of the task assigned ; for this reason I have preferred to confine my remarks to the Conifers of Japan. Moreover, I have an especial interest in these Conifers from the circumstance that the greater number of them were introduced to British gardens by our firm, through my brother, the late John Gould Veitch; all the intro- duced species and varieties have been since cultivated at our Coombe Wood Nursery, and have thence been long under direct observation. With the view of bringing the subject before you in a con- nected form, I propose first to sketch the history of the discovery of the Japanese Conifers, then to compare the geographical positions and climates of Japan and Great Britain, and lastly to pass in review the species and varieties according to their tribes as seen in Japan and as we see them in Great Britain, noting instances where, and the conditions under which, they are found to thrive satisfactorily in our country. THE CONIFERH OF JAPAN. 19 The first glimpse of the magnificent vegetation of Japan obtained by a European naturalist was afforded to Kempfer in the 17th century, but the record he left of it was too meagre to excite in those early days any interest respecting it. Nearly a hundred years elapsed before another HKuropean naturalist, the Swedish botanist Thunberg, landed in Japan. He stayed at Jeddo for about two months, and while there and at Nagasaki collected such materials as were within his reach, from which he afterwards compiled his ‘‘ Flora japonica.’’ Nine Conifers are included in this ‘“ Flora,’’ of which five belong to the Fir and Pine tribe, and to which he gave the names of the European and American species they most resemble; three he referred to Taxus, of which Z. nucifera and T'. macrophylla are now brought under Torreya and Podocarpus respectively. The ninth, which he also mistook for a member of the Yew tribe, is the remarkable Sccadopitys verticillata. This was all that was practically known of Japanese Conifers till the Austrian physician Siebold entered the Dutch service nearly half a century later, and proceeded to Japan, where he resided several years. The publication of Siebold’s “ Flora ’’in 1842 was the first reliable intimation of the wealth of subjects that awaited intro- duction from that remote quarter of the globe; the figures and descriptions are carefully executed and drawn up, but they are those of cultivated plants only. Forty plates are devoted to - coniferous trees and shrubs, but several of the species figured are not indigenous to Japan; and as the author had to draw his materials from native sources, it has, unfortunately, happened that, owing to the Japanese practice of applying the same name to two or more closely allied species, Siebold has, in one in- stance at least, mixed up two species under one name. A similar case happened to my brother, to which I shall have occasion to refer presently. It should here be noted that Thunberg during his stay in Japan was not permitted to leave the coast, and that Siebold during his long residence could not go beyond the limits assigned to him at Tokio (Jeddo) without special permission, and accompanied by a military escort. The botanical literature treating of Japanese Conifers during the twenty years following the publication of Siebold’s “Flora”’ con- tains little else than transcriptions from that work. The opening up of Japan in 1859 to Huropean intercourse, c2 90 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. and the appointment of Sir Rutherford Alcock ag British Minister, was an opportunity not to be neglected, and accord- ingly my brother, John Gould, proceeded to the East in the spring of 1860, and before returning home in the following year succeeded in discovering three Abies not previously known to science, two of which he introduced, in addition to all the in- digenous Conifers known to Siebold, of which two, Pinus densiflora and P. Thunbergu, had previously found their way to Europe, probably through Siebold’s agency. The Cryptomeria had been introduced from China by Fortune several years before, and Podocarpus macrophylla had also been brought from that country in the early part of the century. Fortune introduced Thuya Standishu (properly T. yaponica) in the same year that my brother returned; about ten years later seeds of Abies brachyphylla were distributed from the Botanic Garden at St. Petersburg, the seedlings afterwards receiving in addition the names of Veitchw and Harryana. The latest acquisitions were made by Maries, who, while collecting for our firm in Japan, 1877-79, discovered the very distinct Fir that bears his name; he also sent to us the true Abies Veitch, which John Gould Veitch had discovered but failed to procure seeds of, and A. sachalinensis, a northern tree with small cones like those of A. Veitchii, and with foliage resembling that of A. szbirica. The extensive knowledge of Japanese Conifers acquired by Maries in their native country enabled us to give in our Manual much interesting information respecting them not previously known; and the excellent materials brought home by him, which were placed in the hands of Dr. Masters for determination, led to the publication of a most valuable paper by our learned friend in the Journal of the Linnean Society (vol. xviii., p. 478). This paper contains the most complete enumeration of Japanese Conifers yet compiled, and I therefore gladly follow it for our present purpose. The latest contribution to our knowledge of these trees comes from Dr. Mayr, Professor of Forestry at Tokio (Jeddo), who, by a systematic arrangement of a large series of observations of the trees 27 sitw, has put us in possession of an array of facts sufficient to allow of a tolerably just estimate to be formed of them as seen in their native country. Dr. Masters says: ‘‘ The Conifers recorded as natives of Japan admit of being grouped in thirteen genera, of which one only ig THE CONIFERZ OF JAPAN. a1 peculiar to that country, viz., Sciadopitys. The thirteen genera comprise forty-one species exclusive of varieties and doubtful natives, distributed thus:—The Silver Firs (Abies) have four endemic species in Japan, and two others common to Japan and North-east Asia; of Picea (the Spruce Firs) there are five species, three of which are peculiar to Japan; and of Tsuga (the Hemlock Spruce) there are two species. Larix has one species peculiar to Japan ; Pinus has five species, but none of them endemic. Thuya (including Thuyopsis, Biota, and Retinospora) has four species peculiar to Japan, including 7’. japonica or Standishu, and one - common to Japan and China; Juniperus is represented by five species, of which two are common to Japan and China. Crypto- meria also occurs both in Japan and China. Cephalotaxus is represented by three species; one Yew is peculiar to Japan, another is common to that country and China; Torreya has one species, and Podocarpus four. It may therefore be said that there are forty-one species of Conifers in Japan, of which no fewer than twenty-two are endemic.’ Upto the time of the pub- heation of Siebold’s ‘‘ Flora ’’ scarcely half a dozen of the endemic species were accurately known to science; thirty years ago only three of them were known in British gardens; at the present time, with the exception of two or three northern species un- suited to our climate, we have them all in our midst, both those peculiar to Japan and those common to that and other countries, some thriving better than others, but by far the greater number sufficiently acclimatised and playing a conspicuous 7éle in the de- coration of our gardens and parks. This enumeration reveals the startling fact that, in proportion to the area of the country, the Flora of Japan includes more coniferous species than that of any other country in the world, and enormously in excess of the same element in the Flora of Great Britain, which includes only three indigenous species, the Scotch Fir, the common Juniper, andthe Yew; yetthe geographical position of the two groups of islands, Japanese and British, the one lying on the eastern and the other on the western side of the oreat Huro-Asiatic continent, although not similar are somewhat analogous, for while our group lies between the 50th and 60th _parallels of north latitude, the Japanese group lies between the 30th and 45th parallels, that is to say, from 15 to 20 degrees . hearer the equator than we are. 29, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Notwithstanding the much greater proximity of the Japan islands to the equator, there is much similarity in the climatic conditions of the two groups, especially between those of England and Nippon, or Honda, the climate of the North of Scotland ap- proaching more nearly that of Southern Yesso. Thus the isothermal line for 50° Fahrenheit which passes through Ireland and England between the 50th and 55th parallels curves below the 45th where it passes through Japan, which is the same as saying that the average yearly temperature of the two countries where that line passes, and to a certain distance on each side of it, is the same; but there the similarity ends. Turning to the other important factor in climatology, rainfall and atmospheric humidity, we find a great disparity between the two. The annual rainfall in the south-eastern counties of England rarely exceeds 25 inches, in the southern and western counties there is sometimes registered from 80 to 85 inches, in parts of Devonshire and Cornwall as much as 50 to 60 inches, and in particular localities, but of limited area, in Ireland, Wales, Cumberland, and the extreme south-west of Scotland it is even greater, but these cases must be regarded as exceptional ones due to local causes ; on the other hand the annual rainfall in the eastern and midland counties ranges from 20 to 22 inches. InjJeddo the registered annual rainfall is 70 inches, with a gradual decrease northwards towards Yesso, where, in the absence of meteorological stations, it is estimated to be not much greater than in the midland coun- ties of England; southwards from Jeddo the rainfall in each year seldom sinks below 50 inches. As the Gulf Stream exercises a great influence on the hygrometric condition of our atmosphere, so there is an analogous agency at work in Japan, which has a still greater influence on its climate; this is the north equatorial current of the great Pacific Ocean. This current flows west- ward parallel with the northern tropic till it reaches the island - of Formosa, near the coast of China; it thence turns northward, when it becomes known as the Japan current, washes the southern shores of Kiusiu and Sikok, the southernmost of the Japanese islands, where its influence on the temperature and moisture of the climate is so great that such tropical Orchides as Dendrobium, Aérides, Angreecum, and Calanthe are indigenous. Continuing its course along the eastern shore of Nippon, the atmospheric humidity of Central Japan, through its means, Dr. THE CONIFERA OF JAPAN. 93 Mayr estimates to be fully 10 per cent. greater than in Western Kurope. We have here a clue to the presence of a luxuriant coniferous vegetation on the range of mountains stretching through Nippon, culminating in the peak of Fusi-yama, which rises to 17,000 feet, and is covered with coniferous forest above the limits of the Oaks and Chestnuts, up to nearly the snow-line, the upper limit being occupied by Larix leptolepis. At the risk of being tedious, I have brought before you these elementary geographical facts ; but, simple as they are, they have a most important bearing on the distribution of coniferous vegeta- tion, for we may learn from them that a high degree of humidity in the atmosphere is an all-important factor in the development of these gigantic coniferous trees. This phenomenon is present wherever gigantic coniferous trees exist. The enormous Crypto- ‘merias of Japan, the grand Deodars of the Himalayas, the mammoth Sequoias of California, and the towering Firs of Oregon all owe their lofty proportions more to this than to any other cause. That the soil in which these trees grow is but a sub- ordinate factor is shown by many examples. Pinus densiflora erows upon slopes of almost bare rock; William Lobb found Abies bracteata on the slaty débris of the Santa Lucia, where it would seem impossible for any vegetation to exist, and other instances could be adduced. We thence infer that when these and all other Conifers growing under the same conditions are planted in countries like England, for example, where the amount of atmospheric: humidity is less, the moisture of a re- tentive soil, although favourable to coniferous growth, cannot of itself, in a drier atmosphere, fully compensate the hygrometric deficiency, and, carrying our inference a step further, we arrive at the conclusion that the gigantic Conifers I have named will never in this country attain the enormous dimensions reached by them in their native homes. The southern islands of Japan have a sub-tropical climate, and nearly all the native Conifers belong to a sub-tropical genus, Podocarpus. The other Conifers met with in Southern Japan are believed to be cultivated plants brought from the cen- tral provinces, or introduced from China. On the other hand, the northern islands, Yesso, Sachalien, and the Kurile group, are subjected to the rigours of an almost Siberian winter ; the period of active vegetation is restricted to four or five months. These 94 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. islands are but sparsely inhabited; they are for the most part covered with coniferous forests of the Siberian type, composed very largely of trees of the Fir and Pine tribe, and include A. sachalinensis, A. jezoensis of Siebold (the A. microsperma of Lindley), A. Glehnw ; a Pine resembling a stunted Pinus Cembra, which Mayr calls P. pwmila; and also a Larch, to which Mayr has given the name of Larix kurilensis. The first two have been introduced by our firm, but the mildness of our winters compared with that of their natural home stimulates them into premature growth, which is destroyed by spring frosts—au injury from which they but imperfectly recover, and hence they are practically useless for the British Arboretum; we will, therefore, dismiss them with the suggestion that they might be tried in the North of Scotland. With these exceptions, all the Japanese Conifers cultivated in Great Britain have been brought from the principal island, Nippon, or Honda as it is sometimes called, and from that portion of it that les between the 35th and 40th parallels, where the climate is intermediate between the extremes just mentioned, and in the highest degree favourable for their development. But here it should be noted that within this tract, owing to the presence of a dense population, comparatively little is left of the original vegetation ; it is only to be seen here and there in the neighbourhood of shrines and temples, on inaccessible hanging rocks, on the steep places on the mountain-sides unsuited for cultivation, and on the summits of the mountain ranges. We are now prepared to pass in review the Conifers of Nippon in the order of their tribes, commencing with the Firs and Pines. Abies firma.—This is the common Silver Fir of Japan. It is spread generally, either wild or cultivated, over the southern half of Nippon. It also ascends to a considerable height on the central range, a circumstance that seems to affect its hardiness in this country ; for, while some seedlings are killed outright by a severe winter, others escape unscathed, and this may have resulted from the situation of the trees from which the cones were gathered. It sometimes attains a great size; trunks 150 feet high and 4 feet in diameter have been measured. In its young state it is a fast-growing, symmetrical tree, remarkable for the variability: of its foliage, which has caused it to be encumbered with many synonyms. In this country it is not so often seen as could THE CONIFERZ OF JAPAN, 95 be wished; the handsomest specimens known to me are at Pencarrow in Cornwall, and at High Canons near Barnet, where, in the midst of many fine Conifers, it proclaims its individuality so decidedly as to suggest its more general use as an ornamental tree. Abies homolepis or brachyphylla, for it is now clear that the trees to which these names have been applied belong to one and the same species. Thisis a later introduction than A. firma, and no.large specimens yet exist in this country; but all that have come under observation, and these have been planted in many different soils, attest its suitability to our climate, and as an ornamental tree for the park and pleasure-ground it igs un- questionably destined to take a high rank. In Japan it often attains a height of 125 feet. The silvery whiteness of the under- side of its leaves becomes more intense and striking with the age of the tree. Abies Vettchiz is an alpine tree ascending to 6,000 feet and upwards, in places forming unmixed belts of considerable extent ; in its lower limit sometimes mixed with A. Tswga and A. polita. It is the most rapid grower of the Japanese Abies, and forms a slender tree upwards of 100 feet high, with rather short branches more distantly placed than in many other Firs. Plants eight to ten years established in this country are now showing a decided upward tendency. We may, therefore, expect this Abies to form a spirelike tree cf ight and open aspect. Its foliage is hand- some, and may be compared with that of A. amabdilis and A. Nordmanniana, between which it is intermediate in colour, but the leaves are far more silvery beneath than either. Abies Mariesw is the smallest of the Japanese Silver Firs, and in some respects the most remarkable of them. Its geographical position is between A. Veichu and A. sachalinensis, to either of which it bears but a slight resemblance. Its principal station is at Awamori, in Northern Nippon; it also occurs sparingly on the Nikko hills. Its cone declares it to bea true Abies, but its foliage resembles that of a Tsuga or Hemlock Fir. Being the latest introduction among the Japanese Abies, its ornamental qualities are not yet developed; its hardiness is, however, assured, both from its geographical position and from the experience of last winter (1890-91). The Spruce Firs are next in interest, These are now often AG) JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, called Piceas; and, although I purposely refrain as much as possible from introducing purely botanical questions into this paper, such is the unfortunate state of the nomenclature of some of these Firs and of other Japanese Conifers in its relation to horticulture, that occasional reference to it cannot be avoided. The names here used are those by which they are best known.* Abies polita usually occurs mixed with other trees, and in favourable situations attains a height of upwards of 100 feet, but its timber is reported to be of but littlevalue. Mayr observes that it is the stateliest of the Japanese Spruces, and commences its season’s growth later. Our experience of it in England agrees with this; its growth is slow in its early life, but when established it is one of the most distinct and ornamental of its race, perfectly hardy, and thriving in many varieties of soil. Evidence of this is seen in the fine specimens growing at Linton, Tortworth, Pencarrow, Carclew, Warham Court, and other places, some of them now 20 feet high. Abies ajanensis.—This was discovered by John G. Veitch while ascending Fusi-yama in company with Sir Rutherford Alcock. It grows in the cooler region of the mountain, associated with another Spruce Fir, to which the Japanese at that time applied the same name. Seeds of the two species were unwittingly mixed together, and seedlings of both were distributed under the name of Abies Alcockiana. Several years elapsed before the confusion became sufficiently apparent to call for correction, and the matter was at length referred to Dr. Masters, who retained one species under Lindley’s original name Alcockiana, and referred the other to the A. ajanensis of Fischer. This was a satisfactory solution of the difficulty for the time; but, unfor- tunately, doubts have been raised since as to the accuracy of the identification, for Fischer’s ajanensis is a northern tree inhabiting Yesso and Sachalien, where it is often mixed with Abies sachalinensis, but our ajanensis, according to Mayr, is not found north of the 88th parallel. Thisis perplexing enough, and will have to be dealt with in due course; for the present let us turn to the practical side of the question. In A. ajanensis (Masters) we have a useful ornamental tree, of sturdy growth, not capricious as to soil and situation, remarkably distinct in the * For the correct botanical nomenclature of Conifers and Taxads, see Dr. Masters’s ‘‘ Synopsis,’’ page 179 e¢ seq. THE CONIFERX OF JAPAN. D7. colour of its young cones, which are produced very freely, even in the early age of the tree, and in the silvery whiteness of the underside of its leaves, surpassing in this respect every other Spruce Fir. Abies Alcockiana—or perhaps it will be more correct to say the tree at present known under this name—is evidently not destined to receive so great an amount of favour among planters as the preceding species. It has also a formidable competitor in the recently introduced A. Omorika from South-eastern Europe. A. Alcockiana grows on the higher slopes of Fusi-yama, along with A. Vetch and Larix leptolepis, where it is less common than our ajanensis. Abies Tsuga, the Japanese Hemlock Spruce, is a more orna- mental tree than the Canadian species ; its foliage is of a brighter and more attractive colour. Thirty years’ experience of it in this country has proved its hardiness in the southern, western, and midland counties, and probably further north. In its native country it spreads as far south as Kiusiu, often mixed with A. firma, and attains a height of 100 feet. A second species, called by Maximowicz and Mayr diversifolia, but known in British gardens as T'suga nana or T'suga Sreboldw, for there is, I think, but little doubt that they are the same, is an alpine tree growing near the upper limits of the timber-line on the central mountains. In this country it grows slower than the typical Tsuga, to which as an ornamental tree it is quite subordinate. Lariz leptolepis differs from the Kuropean Larch in its longer leaves, which are glaucous when first developed, in its differently shaped cones, and in other details; it grows much more slowly, and hence is more suitable for decorative than for economic use. Its ornamental qualities are well developed at Tortworth, where there is a fine specimen in front of the mansion. This tree has a more spreading habit than the common Larch; its aspect is ight and open, and affords an ex- cellent contrast to the broad-leaved trees standing around it. In its native country Larix leptolepis is an alpine tree ascending in places to near the snow-line, where it is often distorted by the wind; at the lower limits of its vertical range it attains the dimensions of the European Larch. We now come to the true Pines, of which there are five 98 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. (perhaps six) species, all, with one exception, available for the British Arboretum. Pinus densiflora attains its greatest development on the sides of the hills in the interior, in places where no other tree can grow. It is known as the Red Pine in Japan, and often attains a height of from 100 to 120 feet. Good specimens are now growing in various parts of Kngland, notably at Eastnor Castle, where there is a tree 25 feet high, which was planted in 1865; this gives the annual average growth at something less than 12 inches. Pinus Thunbergu was figured and described by Siebold in hig ‘ Wlora’’ under the name of P. Massoniana; it was also intro- duced by him under that name, whence it became current in European gardens; but as another Pine from China had been previously figured and described as P. Massonmana, we must adopt Parlatore’s name, ‘‘ Thunbergii,’”’ for the Japanese species. This is the Black Pine of the natives, and attains its best develop- ment near the coast, which suggests that it would be suitable for our own seaside if not too much exposed. It is far less common than P. densiflora, and so few seedlings have been raised in this country that it is still comparatively rare. The best speci- mens known to me are in the Royal Gardens at Kew. Pinus koraiensis is believed to have been originally intro- duced into Japan from the Corea, but so long ago that it may be regarded as indigenous. Its height and size vary much with the soil and situation ; in some places it is 50 feet high, in others not half so much. It is comparable with the Cembra Pine of Europe, but more spreading in its habit. In this country it grows freely and soon forms a handsome specimen. Pinus parvifloraa—Under this name we have two distinct forms, that introduced by J. Gould Veitch, and called the cultivated parviflora, and that introduced by Maries, which he calls the wild parviflora. Mayr has observed both forms in their native home, and expresses his opinion that the cultivated parviflora is a transitional form between Cembra and Sirobus, and that the wild form is a true Strobus, and specifically distinct from parviflora (giving his reasons for that conclusion). The wild form, as we call it,is the most robust of the two; it belongs to the cooler region of Nippon, and spreads farther north than parviflora, The latter, as we see it, is one of the most distinct, THE CONIFERZ OF JAPAN. 99 and certainly one of the most ornamental of the small Pines; it may be used as a decorative plant where the larger Pines are unsuitable. ! Before dismissing the Japanese Pines, a circumstance of exceptional interest in connection with two of them should be noticed; thisis Mayr’s hypothesis of the existence of natural hybrids between Pinus densiflora and P. Thunbergu. Seminal variations among Conifers are common occurrences, of which many striking instances of known origin are now in cultiva- tion. In the case of the two Pines in question, Mayr detected intermediate forms in which the characteristics of the two species are so intimately blended that they cannot be regarded as seminal variations either of the one or the other. He observed two groups of these supposed hybrids, one approaching nearer the Black Pine (P. Thunbergu) and the other nearer the Red Pine (P. densiflora) ; he thence infers that one group must have resulted from the opposite cross of the other. When we bear in mind the enormous quantity of pollen produced by a single Pine-tree, which, when shed, is blown by the wind in clouds, sometimes to a great distance, the possibility of the cones of one ‘species being fertilised by the pollen of a closely allied species commends itself to us as a very possible natural event. To return to our review of the Conifere of Japan. Scradopitys verticillata, or the Umbrella Pine as it is often called, is one of the most remarkable monotypes in the Order. It has now been in our midst more than thirty years, but there are not yet to be found in this country specimens 30 feet high, or even half 30 feet, or if so they are extremely rare. Com- plaints reach us from all parts that it will not grow, and yet the answer to these complaints is simple enough, and may be thus formulated. Where the Rhododendron thrives the Scia- dopitys will grow. This means that the soil in which it is planted must be sufficiently retentive to afford a constant supply of moisture to the roots while the tree is growing. Where this supply is intermittent—that is to say, when the Sciadopitys is planted in a soil that is sometimes dry and sometimes wet, according to the changes of weather—it will not grow. In the highly saturated atmosphere of Central and Southern Nippon, the Sciadopitys towers to a height of 100 feet. In the moist climate of Cornwall, where the annual rainfall ig greater than 30 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. in most other parts of England, the finest specimens in England are to be found. Cryptomeria japonica is now become one of the most fami- liar of Japanese Conifers, yet it is a remarkable fact that the Cryptomeria we so often see is not the Japanese type, but a variety of it brought from Shanghai in China by Fortune’in 1844 ; but it may perhaps be accepted as the representative of the Chinese type, for there is now sufficient evidence at hand to show that the Cryptomeria is indigenous to both countries. Much nearer the Japanese type is the variety known as Lobb’s Cryptomeria, which was introduced from the botanic garden at Buitenzorg in Java ten years later than the Shanghai form. Maries sent us in 1879 what he affirms to be the true Cryptomeria japonica, but any opinion at the present time as to its merits as an ornamental tree would be premature. ‘The two forms intro- duced by Fortune and Lobb respectively are too well known to need description ; the variability in habit of the one and the comparative constancy of the other have been frequently remarked. Of the numerous varieties and sub-varieties of Japanese origin that called elegans is well known as the most distinct and most useful for ornamental planting. Its striking aspect and peculiar huein winter is owing to the foliage con- sisting entirely of the primordial leaves; hence it is what is called a juvenile or larval form, a phenomenon by no means unusual among the Conifer, especially in the Cypress tribe. Retinospora squarrosa, R. ericoides, Biota meldensis, B. de- cussata (all properly Thuyas) are instances of perpetuated juvenile forms. Perhaps the most curious fact about Crypio- meria japonica elegans is that it retains its primordial character so long. Trees of it from twenty to twenty-five years old show no tendency to develop the normal foliage of the species, although a slight difference in habit among them is observable, due probably to local circumstances. At Linton a tree nearly 30 feet high presents to the eye a dense mass of foliage with an irregular outline caused by the weight of snow resting upon it last winter; at Tortworth the trees are more formal, more open, and the bole more or less exposed. In the more humid climate of Cornwall, at Tregothnan and Scorrier for example, where they grow more rapidly, their tops bend down under the weight of the branches and foliage, and during the storm of last THE CONIFER OF JAPAN, 81 March some were broken off at a few feet from the ground; at Pencarrow and Menabilly they are more upright; but in all the cases observed the larger trees had formed a colony around the parent stem, the lower branches sweeping the ground, often rooting, and the ends of the branches ascending like the leaders of the parent. Six or seven species of the Cypress tribe are peculiar to Japan, and three or four others are common to that country and China. Four of the endemic species are brought under Thuya in the Genera Plantarum, but for the convenience of horti- culturists I will use the names by which they are best known ; the others are Junipers. One of the former, a true Thuya— T. japonica, or Standishit, as it is sometimes called—is a hand- some species worthy of a place in any garden, and saying thus much of its merits, time forbids further mention of it. Un- doubtedly the first place in the Thuya group must be assigned to Thuyopsis dolabrata. Comparatively slow-growing in the early years of its life, whether raised from seed or from cuttings, the older plants are now developing into stately trees that at once arrest attention by their distinct habit and foliage. Almost everywhere the finest specimens present the aspect of a conical outline with a very broad base in proportion to the height. The largest specimen known to me is at Killerton, near Exeter, which is now 25 feet high, and the spread of its branches at the base covers a circular area fully 18 feet in diameter. This tree has a history of its own, for it or its parent seems to have been introduced prior to the multitude of plants now distributed over the country. A plant was brought, presumably from Japan, by Captain Fortescue and presented by him to the late Earl Fortescue at Castle Hill; from this three were propagated, and one of them, which has developed into the specimen in question, was presented to Sir T. Dyke Acland. It would be highly interesting to know the exact date of the introduction of the parent plant. The Retinosporas now constitute a group of great interest; but before noticing the most conspicuous members of it, it will be right—nay more, it will be rendering a service to horticulture —to emphasise the fact here that the name Retinospora can have no place in scientific nomenclature ; even its orthography is faulty, and horticulturists will show a wise discrimination in grasping this fact. The changing of names, especially of 32 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HCRTICULTURAL SOCIETY: popular plants in common use, is always an irritating incoi- venience, but when the inevitable occurs the best course is to accept it. For the nonce let us call this group of Conifers Retinosporas, and, numerous as they are, they have all been derived from two, and only two, types or species, so surprisingly polymorphous have these species proved under Japanese cultiva- tion. The twospeciesare obtusa aud pisifera, and the numerous varieties of Retinospora naturally fall into two groups, of which these two species are the types. In its native country R. obtusa is a lofty tree, often attaining a height of 150 feet where the annual rainfall is greatest; A. pisiferaisa much smaller tree. In Great Britain the proportions thus far are reversed; the tallest observed specimens of the former do not exceed 80 feet, while ‘specimens of f. pisifera are to be seen 40 feet high. Both in habit and aspect the two species may be readily distinguished from each other; in £2. pisifera the branches, both primary and secondary, are longer and more slender than in Lv. obtusa, and the tree more open. S&. obtusa has a more regular conical outline, denser in aspect, deeper in colour. Neither of them have the massive, almost columnar growth of their North American affinities, Cupressus Lawsomana and C. nootkatensis (Lhuyopsis borealis). The varieties of both species are dwarfer, more compact, and of slower growth than the types. Of the obtusa varieties jilicoides and lycopodioides are dense bushes remarkable for the peculiar form of their branchlets and the rich green of their foliage ; the best-coloured form is gracilis aurea, the smallest is pygmea, a dense tuft useful for the rockery. Of the pisifera varieties pluwmosa is a universal favourite ; its sub-variety awrea and pisifera awrea are the richest-coloured forms to be found among Retinosporas, while squarrosa, a juvenile form, is almost unique in its grey primordial foliage; jfilifera also is a striking form on account of its slender drooping branchlets. The chief drawback attending these Conifers is that they will not grow everywhere ; they fail entirely in a chalk soil and in soils with a, limestone substratum. Even amidst the rich coniferous sur- roundings at Eastnor Castle, Mr. Coleman informs me that the Retinosporas do not thrive. A good retentive soil with a porous substratum suits them, such as we find in the sandy loam at THE CONIFER OF JAPAN. 33 Tortworth, in the Kentish rag at Linton, and in the Wealden clay at Warnham Court. I have already detained you so long that the remaining Japanese Conifers must be briefly disposed of. Juniperus rigida is one of the best of Junipers for ornamental planting when it is free from the attacks of red-spider, for, unfortunately, this proviso must be added. Two coloured dwarf forms of Juniperus chinensis, brought from Japan by J. Gould Veitch and named respectively aurea and awreo-variegata, have proved constant. The Taxads include some useful and distinct forms, notably the fastigiate variety of Cephalotaxus pedunculata and Torreya drupacea, which has in places adapted itself to our climate better than any other Torreya. The Japanese Yew is distinct from all the seminal varieties of the common Yew, but perhaps not quite so generally hardy. The foregoing is necessarily an imperfect sketch of the Japanese Conifer, because [am unwilling to encroach further upon the available time of this Conference, and because the field of observation has been a limited one—a deficiency, I trust, that will in a great measure be made good in the reports which the owners of Pineta and amateurs of Conifers have been invited to furnish. Nevertheless, some general conclusions may be arrived at which may be thus summarised :— The whole of the Conifere of Japan indigenous to that country between the 35th and 40th parallels are available for the British Arboretum under certain restrictions, chiefly of soil and situation. The members of the Fir and Pine tribe grow generally in a greater variety of soils and situations than those of the other tribes, and with them may be associated the Cryptomeria and its varieties. The members of the Cypress tribe, especially the Retinospora group, and the Taxads are more capricious. The Retinosporas only thrive under the conditions already mentioned. The most restricted at present is the Sciadopitys, but this requires a more extended trial. The general hardiness of the Japanese Conifere must ever make them valuable in this country for ornamental planting, and the variety of form and colour to be found among them must always render them favourites with all who plant for effect. D 84 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. CONIFERS AS SPECIMEN TREES AND FOR LANDSCAPE GARDENING. By Mr. George Nicuorson, A.L.S., F.R.H.S. THE subject on which it has fallen to my lot to speak is a rather formidable one, and would require, for anything like an exhaustive treatment, much more time than is available at this Conference, where Conifers have to be looked at from other points of view than that of ornament. Were time not so much an object, and space no object at all, an entire volume of the Society’s Journal could be filled without the question being thoroughly thrashed out. It would scarcely be possible for one man to give, from his own experience, a series of lists which could be relied on by planters in all parts of the British Islands. Not unfre- quently—even where soil and some other conditions seem nearly identical in character—various Conifers thrive remarkably well in one spot, and in another, a few miles away perhaps, do not succeed nearly so well, or refuse to grow at all. It is to be ‘hoped that this Conference will be the means of bringing together, focussing, and arranging experiences of this sort for our own benefit as well as for that of future planters. Many Conifers seem to be indifferent to soil and situation, provided that such physical conditions obtain as efficient drainage and shelter, as well as absence of smoke. All Conifers object strongly to a smoke or dust-laden atmosphere, and that is why none thrive for any lengthened period in the immediate neighbourhood of a large town. A partial exception to this rule may perhaps be made in respect to the Ginkgo or Maidenhair-tree of China and Japan. (Ginkgo biloba), which I have seen growing freely in the High Street of Brentford, the branches overhanging the pave- ment. Since writing the foregoing sentence I have been to Brent- ford to sce the tree in question. Not many years ago it was a remarkably fine specimen, but the leader is now dead and it will probably uct last much longer. It is to be found between the gasworks and the Royal Brewery, and extension of buildings seems to have injured the roots and restricted the space available for them to work in. CONIFERS FOR LANDSCAPE GARDENING. 85 Comparatively few Conifers like a cold water-logged soil, some thrive in very barren dry soil, but the majority hke good rich eround, well drained. Pines, as a rule, succeed in dry stony land, where Firs soon get covered with red-spider and become stunted and unsightly ; generally speaking, the Firs like more moisture in the soil than Pines, and a cool bottom. It may be as well to say here that I do not intend entering into a long disquisition on the merits or demerits of Conifers as elements in the landscape. No doubt a park where Conifers predominate very markedly lacks the beauty and variety of another in which, Conifers not having been overlooked in the arrangement, due advantage has been taken of fine deciduous timber and other ornamental trees. There are places where under the stress of a great love for Conifers, the owner has got together a fine series of Pines, Firs, and their allies, but has only succeeded in producing a general effect of sombreness and same- ness objectionable from the artistic point of view. All the taller-growing Conifers make striking objects either as single specimens or in groups, and, skilfully arranged, may be made to play an important part in the landscape. Wonderful colour-effects are at the command of the planter who knows how to make the best use of the material at hiscommand. From the soft light green of the Larches and deciduous Cypress to the black- green of the Austrian Pine there exists an extraordinary series of shades. The leaves of the Golden Larch assume a fine rich golden yellow before falling, and those of the deciduous Cypress a fine brown. The young growths of many, too, contrast strikingly with those of previous years. In the following list— which could be very considerably extended for many localities— only the hardiest are given, those, in fact, which may be most generally recommended. It will probably be somewhat of a surprise to many that the Douglas Fir finds no place in this selection of large-growing Conifers for parks. In Scotland and elsewhere I have seen magnificent specimens; I have also seen the species fail completely in many places where most of the Conifers I name succeed admirably. The Deodar is another case in point. The nomenclature adopted (except in one or twe instances) in this paper, as also in the collection of specimens exhibited by Key, is that of Beissner’s ‘‘ Handbuch der Coniferen-Benennung,”’ Da 56 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. a useful little book which all Conifer lovers and growers should possess. LARGE-GROWING CoNIFERS FOR PARKS. Taxodium distichum Taxus baccata Ginkgo biloba Pinus contorta » Pinaster », Silvestris » | Liaticio » austriaca » Coulterii Sabiniana, the Digger Pine. At Kew this is perfectly hardy and forms, with judicious pruning, a fine tree; the very large seeds were formerly much used as food by the Californian Indians. Pinus ponderosa, the Yellow Pine » deida », Cembra » excelsa » Peuce », Strobus, the Weymouth Pine monticola Cedrus Tibani Cedrus atlantica Larix leptolepis » europea » americana Picea nigra », alba, the White Spruce », pungens and p. glauca » excelsa and tall forms yy) spolita » orientalis » ajanensis sitchensis Tsu oa Mertensiana » Canadensis Abies Nordmanniana » numidica », Pinsapo », brachyphylla » nobilis » concolor Thuya gigantea » occidentalis Chamecyparis Lawsoniana SMALLER-GROWING CONIFERS AS SINGLE SPECIMENS FOR Lawns, &c. Only a limited selection is here given; no attempt is made to give an exhaustive list. Where the aim of the planter is not to bring together within his limits all the species and varieties possible, he could probably not do better than choose from the names given below :— Thuya occidentalis Wareana " Vervaeneana 3) plicata Chamecyparis Lawsoniana Aa pisifera ‘ nutkaensis 5 obtusa a spheroidea Thuyopsis dolabrata Biota orientalis Juniperus chinensis and yar. atirea 5 virginiana and vars. ne arizonica a Oxycedrus Cryptomeria japonica Yews Cephalotaxus Sciadopitys. This likes plenty of moisture and does well in peat. Pinus Banksiana, the Serub or Gray Pine; a low shrub or tree rarely exceeding 20 feet in height. Pinus Pinea » tuberculata. Ahandsome Pine, remarkable for the crowded whorls of cones which, in a wild state, persist on the stems and branches from bottom to top until the de- struction of the tree by fire, when the cone-seales open with a loud report, setting free the transparent- winged seeds, to be carried away by the wind and, perhaps, reforest the region. CONIFERS FOR LANDSCAPE GARDENING. Pinus silvestris fastigiata and P. sil- vestris aurea Pinus densiflora , flexilis; a Rocky Mountain Pine and the most valuable tim ber tree of Central Nevada. Pinus Bungeana, the Lace-bark Pine of China Pinus Balfouriana, the Californian Fox-tail Pine Pinus koraiensis », parviflora », edulis, the Pinon or Nut Pine; asmallcompact-growing tree, whose large edible seeds furnish to the Indians a valuable article of food; it occurs wild from Colorado to New Mexico and Arizona. Pinus monophylla, another species called the Nut Pine; a small, bushy, compact-growing tree, in a ov wild state attaining a height of from 10 to 20 feet, with a trunk some- times 2 feetin diameter; the large edible seeds are invaluable to the Indians of the “ Great Basin,” and are their principal article of food. Pinus Gerardiana, a species from Af- ghanistan, is also of great import- ance as a food-producer to the natives of the districts where it erows wild; in cultivation, as far as my experience goes, however, this seems to barely do more than exist; our Kew plants are small, miserable objects, and do worse than any other Pine cultivated in the open air in the Royal Gardens. Cananyone furnish more favourable particulars of thisinteresting Pine ? Tsuga Sieboldii » Pattoniana CoNIFERS WHICH HAVE BEEN FOUND TO SUCCEED ON CHALKE, Norway Spruce Cedrus atlantica Abies Pinsapo » cephalonica ODIs Pinus austriaca 3» . Juaricio a eimaster » silvestris » excelsa . » insignis Larix europea 5, leptolepis Chamecyparis Lawsoniana A nutkaensis derfully well Vite do won- also on peat Cupressus macrocarpa (the Monterey Cypress). This requires more shelter than the rest of those named. Both this and the Mon- terey Pine (Pinus insignis) are limited to a few miles of the Monterey coast. Biota orientalis, the Chinese Arborvitse Thuya gigantea Thuya occidentalis, the common Arborvite of eastern North America Junipers, most of the species Yews, most of the species and very numerous varieties Ginkgo biloba The Wellingtonia (Sequoia gigantea) and Deodar also thrive on chalk, but neither has, as a rule, come up to the expectations of the planters of from twenty to thirty yearsago. For landscape purposes both have, in thousands of instances, proved useless. Neither can stand a windy, exposed situation, and the Deodar frequently begins to grow too early and iscut by late frosts. A form of the Deodar (Cedrus Deodara, var. robusta), with larger leaves of a darker green colour, begins to grow much later than the type, and is more valuable as a hardy ornamental tree. Probably this is a geographical form, and not a mere garden sport. The Wellingtonia appears to like a warmer climate than 88 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. that of Britain. I have seen perfect specimens in the neighbour- hood of Tours and in other parts of Western France, also about the Lake of Geneva, &c. CONIFERS SUITABLE FOR WET GROUNDS. Most of the trees here mentioned grow naturally in swampy places or along the borders of streams; most of them, it is true, thrive perfectly in cultivation under widely different conditions, and their names have been mentioned under some of the headings already given. This list could doubtless be greatly extended. First and foremost is the deciduous Cypress, of which the finest specimens I have seen are in the grounds of Syon House, the residence of the Duke of Northumberland, an ardent lover of trees. One of the many fine deciduous Cypresses in Syon Park has developed numbers of the characteristic knees which form so striking a feature of the species in its wild habitats. Thuya occidentalis.—The garden varieties of this tree would probably also succeed as wet-ground plants. Chamecyparis spheroidea, the White Cedar of the eastern United States. In a wild state this always occurs in deep cold swamps. The interesting and pretty garden forms of this are no doubt equally as suitable as the type for margins of water, &c. It may perhaps sound strange to some to be told that the so- called Retinospora leptoclada is a form of the American White Cedar, but so it is. In Veitch’s ‘‘ Manual of the Conifere,”’ an extremely useful book, to which I am indebted for much valuable information, the Red Cedar (Juniperus virginiana) and three of its varieties are recommended for planting in proximity to ornamental water, as are also Juniperus recurva and its variety densa. Taxodiwm distichum pendulum, formerly known under the name of Glyptostrobus pendulus, and at one time believed to bea Chinese © tree. should, like the common deciduous Cypress, be planted near water where it is possible to do so. Pinus contorta grows naturally in wet sandy soil, but under cultivation it also thrives on a dry, hungry gravel. Pinus rigida, the Pitch Pine, also grows in the driest and most barren sandy soil or in deep swamps; this species is inter- esting on account of the numbers of adventitious buds which are produced on the stem and larger branches, giving the tree an CONIFERS FOR LANDSCAPE GARDENING. 89 aspect totally unlike that of any other Pine I have named. It may be as well to mention that the Pitch Pine of the timber- merchant is not furnished by this species, but is principally derived from P. australis, a long-leaved rather tender Pine whose native habitat is the southern United States. The American Larch or Tamarack (Larix americana), within the limits of the United States, is, according to Prof. C. 8. Sar- gent’s “ Catalogue of the Forest Trees of North America,” always found in cold damp swamps. Under these conditions, however, it is not of such value as a timber-tree as in Labrador and Newfoundland, where it is not confined to swamps. Tsuga canadensis, the Hemlock Spruce, I have seen do well near water; in a wild state it is found in rather dry, rocky situations, and generally on the north side of hills. Picea sitchensis or Menziesw I have seen attain a large size in Scotland in wet spots; in Alaska and California it is found in wet sandy soil generally near the mouth of streams. CONIFERS FOR THE SEASIDE, Cupressus macrocarpa, the Monterey Pinus austriaca Cypress 5, Pinaster Pinus Laricio 5, insignis P. Pinaster has been planted over immense tracts in the Landes, adjoining the Bay of Biscay, and has served a double purpose by binding the sand and also forming a screen, thus preventing the great damage done by the frequent sand-storms, which drove the sand-dunes inland and made them encroach annually, at a rather alarming rate, on the cultivated ground. P. halepensis, the Aleppo Pine, I have seen growing almost close to the water’s edge along the Mediterranean coast, and in rocky barren spots too where scarce another tree was to be seen. P. Pinea, the Stone Pine, also occurs along the Mediterranean under similar conditions. It would seem that these two species might thrive, at any rate in sheltered places, along our south, south-western, and western coasts. Have experiments to this end been tried to any extent ? | Gilpin, in his “ Practical Hints on Landscape Gardening,” says: “It would seem that the Silver Fir stands the sea-breeze, as some of the largest I ever saw are growing upon the highest point of land at Tregothnan; but not having met with them 40 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. anywhere else under such circumstances, I can only state the fact. I have, in one or two instances, found the Cedar of Lebanon flourishing under nearly similar exposure.” Possibly. some one at this conference may be able to Corroborate Gilpin, and add further names to my short list of seaside Conifers. Pinus muricata grows along the Californian coast exposed to sea winds and fogs. Has this been tried as a sea-coast plant in Britain ? It does well inland, at Kew and elsewhere, but, like P. msignis —at Kew at any rate—is more liable to be injured by the attacks of the larve of Hylurgus puuperda than most other Pines. The cones of P. mwricata have been known to persist twenty or thirty years, and then release good seeds. CONIFERS OF SMALL SIZE SUITABLE FOR RocKWORK, &c. Thuya occidentalis Ellwangeriana Taxus baccata Dovastonii Chamecyparis Lawsoniana nana Podocarpus alpina a i » glauca Pinus silvestris pygmea 5 obtusa nana » montana » aurea », Laricio pygmea Juniperus Sabina prostrata Strobus nana 5 chinensis nana; or, as it is Picea nigra Doumettii sometimes called, J Japonica Pp excelsa Clanbrassiliana, hs nana » pygmea Taxus baccata ericoides Cr yptomeria elegans nana DISCUSSION. The Rey. C. WotnEy Dop was surprised to find that Mr. Nicholson had excluded the Douglas Fir from his list of trees recommended for ornamental grounds. Twenty-three years ago Mr. Dod had gone to live a few miles south of Chester, where the soil was the stiff boulder clay of the New Red Sandstone formation, with a cold and wet subsoil. There were then no Conifers on the estate, except a few Larch and Scotch Fir. The prevailing timber was Oak. Mr. Dod consulted Mr. John Standish, then at Ascot Nurseries, and proceeded to try in Cheshire every Conifer recommended as likely to prove orna- mental or useful. New enclosures were made, old plantations cut down and renovated, and every chance given to the trees to do well. Of all the Conifers then planted the Douglas Firs have done decidedly the best. Several hundred of these were planted in different situations and aspects, and, except where exposed fully to westerly gales, they have universally done well, some of them being now over fifty feet high and well furnished. Of the CONIFERS FOR ECONOMIC PLANTING. 41 Pine tribe the Corsican Pine has been most successful, having grown rapidly; though for a few years they were liable to be blown down, they have stood well when fully established. This Pine was less molested than others by rabbits. The Austrian Pine makes excellent shelter, but, except the Scotch Fir, other Pines have failed, as compared with the Spruce tribe. The Nordmann’s Silver Fir, however, has done worse than any. Mr. Dod had persevered with this very ornamental tree, and had planted several hundred in successive years, and in every variety of aspects, but hardly one now survived, and he considered thig species a total failure for stiff and cold land. Of other kinds, two or three specimens of Abies grandis had done very well in rather exposed places. Cedrus atlantica was exceptionally good. Abzes Pinsapo had proved hardier than he expected. Sequoia gigantea seemed satisfied with the soil and climate, but was not a favourite. Cedrus Deodara and Abies nobilis promised fairly well, except that the last-named pro- duced cones in great abundance, showing precocious maturity. Cupressus Lawsomana was a success everywhere ; but T’axodiwm sempervirens, the Redwood, from which he had hoped great things, because he had seen it do so well on the stiff soil of Windsor Great Park, had failed entirely, in spite of repeated trials. Mr. Dod hoped these hints might interest any who were intending to plant Conifers on soils similar to his own. CONIFERS FOR ECONOMIC PLANTING. By Mr. A. D. Wesster, F.R.S.E. Ir is a strange fact that out of nearly two hundred and fifty species of coniferous trees that have been introduced to this country only the following sixteen, so far as is at present known, can be utilised in an economic sense, or for truly profitable planting. Equally strange it is that, with perhaps one excep- tion, the very trees the timber of which is imported in such large quantities to this country for constructive purposes have received but little attention at the hands of the British planter, being found 42, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. unsuitable in one way or another for extensive planting in almost every part of the country. At the outset 1t may be well to clearly set forth my intention of bringing under your notice, and, as far as I can, in consecutive order as to value, only such Conifers as can from long personal experience be confidently recommended for profitable planting in almost any part of the British Isles. The terms ‘‘ profitable’’ and ‘‘economic”’ as applied to trees are used here in rather a restricted sense, and refer directly to the quality of the timber produced and to the value of the tree for purposes of shelter. (1) The Common Larch (Larix europea) has no equal as a profitable timber Conifer in this country, and I make this statement after years of note-taking and comparison of it with three other Conifers whose merits place them high in the rank of kinds suitable for economic planting. In dealing with the Larch I might well sum up its valuable properties as follows : First, no other Conifer is so valuable in a young state, as the thinnings from eight years old can be profitably utilised for fencing and various other purposes, and this can be said of no other Conifer grown in our woodlands; at least the durability of the timber would not in any other tree be sufficient to repay the cost of erecting or otherwise converting. Then the Larch is a hardier Conifer than any other I know of, being in this respect quite equal to the Scotch and Austrian Pines, while it will produce timber rapidly on very poor soils, and timber which, on comparison, is of greater durability, besides being cleaner and more easily manipulated than that of any other coniferous tree grown in this country. Another point or two in favour of the Larch may be briefly pointed out. Comparatively speaking, the trunk of the Larch is neither knotty nor crooked—points that are much favoured by timber- merchants—and I am not now referring simply to such trees as are grown closely in a plantation, but to isolated specimens, for above all trees the Larch is the one that is least inclined to throw its vigour and substance into the formation of ungainly side-branches. One other point in favour of this valuable tree is that a greater number can be grown to the acre, or, in other words, the number of cubic feet of Larchwood that can be produced from an acre is greater than that of any other Conifer I know. CONIFERS FOR ECONOMIC PLANTING. 48 Unfortunately, of late years in particular, this valuable tree has, in certain situations and under peculiar circumstances, suffered much from canker and blight, but now the tide of de- struction seems to be on the wane, and less and less is heard of this fell disease. By far too little attention has been paid to a careful selection of seeds from sound and healthy trees, the result being that weakness and tenderness have got into the constitution of the tree, and it is thus unable to withstand even a few degrees of frost. So weakened, blight, fungus, and ulceration find a footing, and thus the fell disease is generated about which so much has been said and written of late years. My own opinion, strengthened by careful investigation and research, is that induced tender- ness in the constitution of the Larch is the primary cause ot disease, cold winds and frost the destroying agent, and ulceration the direct consequence. If we followed more closely Nature’s method of dealing with the cones and seeds of this, as well, in- deed, as of other trees, we should have less sickly and degenerating forest occupants, and far less cause for the constant wail regard- ing the decline of this noble and valuable timber-producing tree. In its native country, the Tyrol, the seeds of the Larch are never scattered from the cones until March and April, after having been fully exposed and their contents thoroughly matured by a winter’s frost. A comparison of such seeds with those annually procured in this country, from which our stock of plants is mainly raised from year to year, reveals marked differ- ences, for not only are our home supplies of cones collected in November before maturity is nearly attained, and when only partially if at all wintered, but these are kiln-dried, so that the immature cones may part with their seeds—in my opinion a most pernicious practice. With such treatment there can be little wonder why our once healthy Larch is fast becoming unhealthy and gradually but surely degenerating, as the reports from almost every part of Great Britain too truly confirm. To further add to the evil, the large demand for Larch seed creates rather a keen competition for it to be supplied in time for early spring sowing, and so it is that instead of the cones being allowed to winter on the trees, they are collected in the greatest quantity in the autumn or early winter so as to be forwarded in time to meet the demand. 44 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. It is also well known that sickly trees, as if by a last dying effort so as to propagate their kind, bear an unusually large quantity of seed, and as these are in nine cases out of ten col- lected at so much per sack or bushel, can it be wondered at that the bulk of our home-saved seed is partially unfitted for repro- ductive purposes? Itis well known that a diseased tree cannot bring forth good fruit. The durability of the wood of the Larch is well known, and, as compared with that of Scotch and Spruce Firs, is about doubly durable. A fence of Larch cut from trees of from twenty to thirty years’ growth will last from seventeen to twenty years, while that of the Spruce lasts about nine years, and Scotch Fir five years. This refers directly to rails, not to posts, which decay in about half that time. For mining and railway purposes the durability of Larchwood makes it much sought after, its value being still further enhanced by its extreme lightness, a cubic foot of seasoned wood weighing only ‘34 lbs. Substitutes for the Larch have often been recommended, but in the true sense of the word none can be termed substitutes, except, indeed, in the narrowest sense, although doubtless some of those whose claims will yet be set forth might reflect one or more of its valuable qualities, but this is the widest limit of comparison. (2) The Silver Fir (Abies pectinata). is, so far as our present knowledge leads us, the next most profitable Conifer to the Larch that is cultivated in this country. Be it remembered, however, that in a quarter of a century or so at least two other Conifers may be found to be equally profitable as British timber-trees with the Silver Fir, but at present we must deal with facts. On several occasions I have pointed out that the Silver Fir is a neglected forest-tree in this country, and that its timber is of far greater value than is generally supposed. ‘The experi- ments made or conducted on the Highland Railway proved so far that the timber of this tree will bear the wear and tear of rolling-stock and stand the climatic changes equally well with the best Pinewood from Norway ; indeed, when last I saw the experimental sleepers, those of Silver Fir were equally sound with the Norwegian samples. For roofing, few boards can equal those of the Silver Fir; indeed, amongst all the Conifers grown in this country, I consider it to be one of the best, as producing timber that is not liable CONIFERS FOR ECONOMIC PLANTING. 45 t6 be affected by sudden changes from wet to dry. I have used it largely for cleading sheds and strengthening river embank- ments, as it stands the vicissitudes of dry and damp alternately better than almost any other home-grown timber. Another point in favour of Silver Fir timber is that, owing to its being procurable in greater widths than that of any other tree, if, perhaps, we except the Douglas Fir, the cost of utilising is considerably lessened in proportion. The tree itself will grow well beneath the shade and drip of other trees; grows with greater rapidity and of a larger size than almost any other; is, practi- cally speaking, fairly free from disease, and does not require a particularly rich soil to grow it to perfection—all points of great moment in treating of Conifers for economic planting. From long experience of the timber of the Silver Fir grown in this country, it may be safely said to be of great value for constructive purposes, and numerous experiments carried out by those who are practically acquainted with the conversion of our home- grown timbers only serve to show that the wood of the Silver Fir is not employed in anything like the quantity that its merits deserve. (3) The Corsican Pine (Pinus Laricio) is another Conifer of ereat value for profitable planting in this country, and one that I make bold to say will yet outrival in this respect any other of the family to which it belongs. It is of very rapid growth, and is well suited for planting even in the most exposed and wind- swept situations; a non-fastidious subject as to soil, and withal perhaps the most valuable timber-producer, excepting the Larch, that has ever been brought before the British arboriculturist. | Having as yet been tested to no great extent for timber-pro- ducing purposes, it may, perhaps, be premature to speak too loudly in support of its qualities in that respect; but as I have cut up and utilised in various ways some of the biggest logs that have ever keen grown in this country, I may be allowed to at least venture the remark that the timber is of excellent quality, and peculiarly suitable for constructive purposes. Speaking of trees of fully fifty years’ growth, I have found the wood strong, tough, elastic, very resinous, and easily worked. I have experi- mentally used home-grown Laricio wood for many purposes, and always with the most satisfactory results—some of the largest planks employed in this way being fully 27 inches wide, and 46 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. cut from trees with a girth of nearly 9 feet at a yard from the eround. Planks that were used for several purposes both in and out of doors have stood a test of nine years in such a manner as to give one the impression that few of our home-grown coniferous woods can equal that of the Pine in question. The Corsican Pine can withstand long-continued and cold blasts at high alti- tudes in an exemplary way, as note those in a plantation of forty acres extent that I had planted at nearly 1,000 feet alti- tude on a spur of the Snowdon range of hills; those at Blair Athol, in Perthshire, at 700 feet; in Yorkshire, one of the most barren and wind-swept of English counties, as well as on Lord Powerscourt’s estate, where it has been most favourably reported on by that veteran arboriculturist. At Chester, also, the specimens planted by Messrs. Dicksons, which I saw about a week ago, have in a given time produced a large quan- tity of valuable timber, as well as having withstood the fully exposed situation satisfactorily. In summing up, it may be said that the Corsican Pine is perfectly hardy, peculiarly well suited for planting in exposed situations, a rapid and valuable timber- producer, a tree that is cheaply and easily raised from seed, and one of the most non-exacting Conifers as regards choice of soil that could be named—all qualities of the highest value in a timber-producing tree, and such as are rarely so well concentrated in any other species. The Prussian Government has introduced it extensively into the State forests, while in France extensive plantations of the Laricio have been made. (4) The Douglas Fir (Pseudotsuga Douglasw) is, in certain situations, a valuable timber-producing tree; but to grow it to perfection rich alluvial soil and sheltered valleys are quite a necessity. Had we the canons and deep hilly gorges of some of the States of North America, there can be no doubt that the Douglas Fir, from its suitability to our climate generally, would be perhaps the most valuable timber-producing tree that we could plant. In this country, under peculiarly favourable civ- cumstances, | have known the Douglas Fir to produce 240 feet of timber in fifty years, or nearly 5 feet per year for half a century. The tree here referred to as having produced this almost fabulous quantity of wood is still growing at Penrhyn Castle, in North Wales, and as the notes and measurements were all CONIFERS FOR ECONOMIC PLANTING. 47 taken by myself, I can vouch for their accuracy. By way of experiment I had several large trees cut up and utilised for various purposes—fences, door-posts, boat-masts, &¢., and with fairly satisfactory results; but of course it is yet premature to speak with too great an amount of assurance, as only nine years have elapsed since the experiments were instituted. I do not wish to say one word against this my favourite Fir, but the truth must be told, and my own experience, gained principally on a low-lying maritime estate, which favoured the growth of most trees, is that the Douglas Fir must occupy a sheltered situation if either ornament or utility be considered as points of importance ; indeed, a lengthened experience gained on an estate where it is, perhaps, grown in greater quantity than on any other, has now fully convinced me that the Douglas Fir is an ill-chosen subject for exposed ground. Regarding the Douglas Firs in some of the Perthshire woods and plantations voluminous articles have been contributed by Dr. Schlich and others; but it might here be well to point out that scientific knowledge gained without practical experience is rather dangerous, and should be most carefully applied, particularly when dealing with matters arboricultural. (5) The Weymouth Pine (Pinus Strobus), when viewed in an economic aspect, is well worthy of a fifth place on our list. In not a few ill-chosen places throughout the country this Pine has behaved in anything but a satisfactory way; but it should also be remembered that it has succeeded well and produced an unusually large quantity of clean and firm wood in various parts of Britain. This latter result is due to a careful study of the soils, as well, indeed, as of the aspect and altitude, that have ‘been found best suited to the wants of the tree. Planted in rocky débris, largely intermixed with vegetable refuse, the tree has attained to giant proportions at Gwydyr Castle, in North Wales, as also at Longleat and other places we could mention. The Gwydyr trees are nearly 100 feet high, straight as arrows, and branchless for three-fourths of their length, and girthing fully 8 feet at breast high. At Strathkyle, on the western border of Ross-shire, at altitudes ranging from 100 feet to 1,200 feet, the Weymouth Pine is thriving splendidly, while the Longleat trees average 90 feet high, and girth 9 feet at a yard from the’ground. In thinning a mixed plantation of the Douglas Fir and Weymouth Pine of thirty years’ growth, I noted that trees of 48 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. the latter were 57 feet high, with stems girthing 4 feet 2 inches at a yard from the ground. On comparing the wood of the Weymouth Pine produced in this country with that sent to the late Colonial and Indian Exhibition, the differences were slight indeed, and nothing more than what would be expected to exist between an immature and perfectly developed specimen of the tree. The Weymouth Pine dislikes cold and draughty situations, its favourite haunts being sheltered valleys at medium altitudes. (6) The Scotch Pine (P. silvestris) —For economic planting the Scotch Fir will, in all likelihood, hold a high rank, it being of great value for planting on poor land in exposed situations. No doubt this Pine will continue to be planted extensively wher- ever shelter is of first importance, and rightly so, for few others are so capable of withstanding the cold, cutting blasts of our exposed hillsides. The almost valueless timber produced by the tree will always be a serious drawback to the extensive use of this particular species ; but this is in great part counterbalanced by the hardy nature of the tree, the great amount of shelter it affords, and the rapidity of growth on poor, thin soils. Of late ~ years in particular it has been well-nigh an impossibility to get rid of the timber at any price. The best quality of Scotch Pine- wood, such as that produced in some of the northern Scottish counties, no doubt realises, even at the present time, a fair price; but, generally speaking, that grown throughout Southern Scotland, in England as a whole, and also in Ireland, is of so in- ferior a quality as hardly to fetch the price of second-rate fire- wood. (7) The Giant Arborvite (Thuya gigantea).—Being only forty years since the Giant Arborvitz was introduced to this country, we must be careful in sounding its praises; but there can be little question that in it we have, whether for utility or ornament, a most valuable addition to our forest trees, and it is the opinion of most practical arboriculturists that it will be one of the trees of the future in this country. After a fair and impartial trial on my own part, I have found it to be perfectly hardy even at an altitude of 1,000 feet, a fast grower and rapid timber-producer, a non-fastidious subject as regards the quality of soil in which it is planted, and one of the easiest managed and most accommodating of trees. From my note- CONIFERS FOR ECONOMIC PLANTING. 49 book I find that the average annual rate of growth of twenty- six specimens, growing under dissimilar conditions, is 22 inches, but even this is greatly exceeded by young trees in the nursery border. The quality of timber produced in this country is such as to warrant me in speaking highly of it, and as the specimens experimented with were only of thirty years’ growth, better results may be expected from more fully matured wood. (8) The Norway Spruce (Abies excelsa).—The value of the Norway or common Spruce in economic planting is already well known, fully matured timber having been largely cut up and converted for not a few general estate purposes. Though not equal to either the Larch or Silver Fir in lasting qualities, the wood of the Spruce is yet sufficiently lasting to cause it to have been largely employed in fencing and in the erection of temporary sheds. One great point in favour of the tree is that it will grow where many others would fail, while it grows rapidly and affords a great amount of shelter. (9) The Austrian Pine (Pinus austriaca), where shelter is a point of first moment, stands unrivalled by any other tree of my acquaintance. Of fairly good quality, too, is the timber; but it is generally rough, knotty, and hard to work. The tree inclines more to spend its energy in the formation of many weighty side-branches than in the building up of a clean and eradually tapering stem, and I have found that even by growing the tree thickly together the knotty side-branches are hard to remove. The Austrian Pine grows well on almost any class of soil, and bears exposure to rough winds, as I have more than once proved on the Welsh hillsides. Several large trunks I had cut up for the express purpose of testing the quality of the timber turned out well, the planks being remarkably resinous, of a dirty yellow colour, and rather hard to work. It stands the changes from wet to dry as well as any British timber I know, and the experiments I undertook on the Ogwen River nine years ago were perfectly satisfactory. (10) The Cluster or Maritime Pine (P. Pinaster).—So far as the value of the timber of this Pine is concerned the tree might be deseribed as almost valueless for economic planting. That it will thrive well and produce fine bushy specimens where few other trees could succeed has been well exemplified along the Mediterranean coast, as well, indeed, as in not a few maritime E 50 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. districts ot Great Britain. This of itself renders the tree one of great value, and eminently qualifies it for using as a nurse to other less hardy kinds. I have just learnt from a friend that the Pinaster is being largely planted at the Cape of Good Hope, and certainly the samples of wood forwarded to me for comparison with that produced in Britain left little to be desired. (11) Nordmann’s Fir (Abies Nordmanmana).—In a few years, when better known and more readily and cheaply procured, this beautiful tree will, I have little doubt, be largely used in the formation of woods and plantations in this country. It grows rapidly when suitably placed, a number of specimens of which I kept a record having produced nearly two cubic feet of wood annually, while the upward growth was 2 feet 8 inches in the same time. From the appearance of the wood of trees grown in this country, which have been cut up under my own supervision, the quality of that produced in its native country would seem to be well sustained, it being firm, clean, and readily worked. (12) The Redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) is rarely recom- mended as a tree suitable for extensive or profitable planting, and yet my own experience of it in sheltered valleys is far from unsatisfactory. From actual measurements taken by myself in Lord Penrhyn’s woods in North Wales, I have found that the yield of timber by the Redwood nearly equals that of the Douglas Fir. On the banks of the Ogwen River, growing in alluvial deposit, this tree has risen to the height of 84 feet in twenty-nine years, the stems at the same time being bulky in proportion, and clean and smooth as a Norway spar. The timber is very good, and as the tree is one that is peculiarly suitable, from its rapid rate of growth, for planting with the Douglas Fir, I have every reason for believing that in suitable positions it will be a valu- able forest tree in this country. Like the Douglas Fir, it will not succeed in high-lying and exposed sites, sheltered valleys and rich soil being more suitable to its particular wants. 3 (18) Lambert’s Cypress (Cupressus Lambertiana) is a capital maritime tree, and its value in economic planting hes in affording a great amount of shelter where few other trees can succeed, and producing a clean and valuable timber. (14) The Mount Atlas or African Cedar (Cedrus atlantica) has CONIFERS FOR ECONOMIC PLANTING. 51 several good qualities that recommend it as at least a third-rate tree for planting in our woods and parks. Better than almost any other Conifer I know, the Mount Atlas Cedar will grow on cold, stiff soils and where biting blasts are of frequent occurrence. ) (15) Pinus rigida has been turned to good account on not a few estates in Britain, particularly for planting on exposed sandy tracts of land, where it affords a great amount of shelter to other less hardy kinds. The timber is of no particular value. (16) Lawson’s Cypress (Cupressus Lawsomana).—I was agreeably surprised the other day to receive information from a Scottish landed proprietor that the Lawson’s Cypress, when planted as a forest tree, had done well with him and produced a large quantity of excellent timber. On the Churchill estate, in the North of Ireland, this tree has certainly exceeded every expecta- tion, the rate of growth being rapid and the timber of good quality. It requires a certain amount of shelter, fairly good soil, and plenty of room to develop its side-branches, the latter being the most serious drawback to it as a general forest tree. Lecapitulation.—Out of the two hundred and twenty-two species of coniferous trees that have been introduced to this country, the sixteen species just treated of are about the only kinds that I can, from my own experience, recommend for profitable planting in the British Isles, and it is very questionable if any others of equal merit can be added to the list. Nearly all the newer and rarer Conifers have been under my charge and planted by me in quantity, so that I have had ample opportu- nities in three of the most favourable situations in the British Isles for acquiring a good knowledge of their requirements and value whether for ornamental or profitable planting. Some others, such as Abies grandis and A. nobilis, Pinus imsignis, Thuyopsis borealis, and perhaps the Mammoth Tree (Sequoia gigantea), might, perhaps, have been included in my list; but, from my own and others’ experience of these, they are not to be recommended, whether on the point of utility or hardihood, for general forest planting in almost any part of the British Isles. 5a JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, THE DECORATIVE CHARACTER OF CONIFERS. By Mr. Epmunp J. Barut, F.L.S. A GLANCE at the programme giving the titles of the papers to be read at this Conference shows how exhaustively the subject has been considered, and is set down for treatment, and it will be apparent how little room there is to stand upon where the ground is so thickly covered. In the title chosen for my few remarks it will be seen I am not to confine myself to the consideration of Conifers alone as Conifers—that is to say, to the consideration of the characteristics of Conifers, as separating them from other ornamental plants and separating them from each other, in their genera and species—but, rather, we are to look for a few minutes on this interesting and beautiful family of plants considered in combination with surroundings which are of a decorative character, We are to consider the decorative character of Conifers, and, in connection with this, the securing of decorative effects by their judicious introduction. The decorative character of Conifers as a subject therefore includes the consideration of nature and art. The moment you bring in decoration you necessarily touch art. Indeed, from one ' point of view, you cannot touch the Conifers themselves, in the wider sense, without at the same time throwing yourself back upon that discerning and selective process which can only be described as art, and which has brought into Britain the progenitors of this now naturalised family, in its beautiful variation and diversity ; for, with but very few exceptions, Conifers come under the classification tabulated ‘‘ Introduced—not native.” Then, further, let us note, a chance seedling which comes up where the hand of Nature has laid it is the offspring of Nature, so to speak; but the moment you brmg man upon the scene he looks about him and before him, and con- siders what the effect will be when the tree he is now placing here shall fill the place appointed for it. That is necessarily the introduction of art. But art in association with the ideas we are now considering has a wider range. ‘The idea of culture in any of its departments, as applied to aspects of nature—say horticulture, agriculture, or arboriculture—brings us face to THE DECORATIVE CHARACTER OF CONIFERS. 53 face not with a phase of nature alone, but with a combination of art and nature in the various directions more or less indicated by the terms employed. Man in contact with nature thus quickly imposes conditions of art. For the introduction of the Conifers into this country we are indebted, as I have just said, to the exercise ofthis art-faculty. Man has discerned the decorative value of the Conifers and has introduced them to Britain, and they are now not aliens, but so much parts of us that without them our decorative resources would be impoverished indeed. What a botanist regards and describes as natural distribution is the work of nature, but thereit stops. Whenever man selects a place for a plant, or a plant for a place, he is then in the domain of art. He then is exercising the faculty of taste, and he is dealing with that which is to partake of the character we call decorative— though sometimes, through the exercise of a false judgment, through lack of good taste, it is quite the reverse. This faculty of taste—call it estheticism, sentiment, culture, what you will—is an endowment of the human soul. What we term fashion, either in flounces or flowers, either in garb or garden, in the furnishing of the parlour or in planting a park, introduces of necessity this exercise of taste. This displayed determines the status, so to speak, of the person responsible, and tells exactly to the discerning what his views may be on the at times vexed questions which come within range of the canons of ‘‘ good taste.” We are familiar with the ribbon border, the geometrical beds, the floral devices of the flower garden; the gay garters, the ribbons, mottoes and monograms which were in so many places such a conspicuous feature, say, in the Jubilee year. We have seen eagles or peacocks, or the semblance of such, at times cut out, or hacked out, of what would otherwise be an ornamental tree. We have looked upon the wild garden, the evergreen border, the wooded slope, the little bit of nature-weaving here and there, the beautiful single specimen tree in its proper place, and the delicately arranged group of Conifers standing out in the open which one is fortunate enough to find here and there. All these are in their respective places, and upon their several lines, indications of the application of principles dictated by individual taste. The effects of combination of form and colour are considered 54 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. and thought out as an idea, almost unconsciously at times, but the taste-faculty acts and determines nevertheless, and the after- wards materialised fact constitutes the features of the landscape immediately about us. It has been pointed out that man’s actions perpetually bring him out of concealment, and he is then discovered; so no man can plant a tree, or arrange a group, taking survey of the surroundings about him, without so far displaying the bent of his genius, the level of his culture, and the possession of taste. There are few classes of plants in connection with the dis- posal and arrangement of which it is so needful to exercise care and judgement as the Conifere. They are so distinctively decorative, and so decoratively distinctive, that it is readily possible to make a thing of beauty with slender resources, or to mar a beautiful thing or a beautiful place, or both, by putting in plants of the wrong kinds in the wrong way in the wrong situations. A Cedar within a few feet of a main walk, an Araucaria in the town garden where the space available was but a few yards and the branches were thrown out in provoking proximity to the drawing-room window, I have seen within the past few weeks, in each case an evidence of misjudgment, bad taste, and a per- petual eyesore to everybody. The decorative character of Conifers is not confined to the few features which seem at first to constitute the characteristics which may be taken as forming the ornamental endowment of trees aad plants which cannot be classed for decorative effect amongst flowering plants, as, though the Coniferee come within the division Phanerogamia, their flowers are indistinct and nearly valueless as ‘“‘ornament.’’ If we think over what there is to be found in Conifers tending to make them conspicuously beautiful features, either singly or grouped, we should find how rich the family is in points of grace and dignity, of colour-glory, and in other features having, rightly, a claim to be classed amongst the beautiful. Linneus spoke of the Palm-trees as ‘“ princes of vegetable nature.’ Whilst the Palm may claim this regal recognition in the tropics, surely the Pines are princes also. I think in the Gaelic tongue the Scotch Fir—so called, though really it should be the Scotch Pine, as it is strictly speaking a Pine and not a THE DECORATIVE CHARACTER OF CONIFERS. 55 Fir—the Scotch Fir, however, we will consider accurate enough for our reference—in the Highlands the tree is particularised by the title “King of the woods.’”’ It is so. And what a right royal assemblage of kings does a Pine-wood present! A Pine- wood has a majesty and dignity quite its own. There is nothing else in the vegetable kingdom like it. Those stately shafts bear- ing splendidly balanced branches and crowned heads of dense deep foliage, standing back on the hillside, present a grandeur which cannot be surpassed by any other picture in the Book of Nature. Whilst there is the distinctive form so readily observable in the Pines, and whilst they command our attention, and secure our admiration, as they cover the mountain-side, or adorn the crag, or stretch away until, mingling with the purple haze of the horizon, lost in the indistinctness of the distance, there is an equally marked individuality about the Cedars, the Cypress, the Yew—all have their sharply defined characteristics which give variety of a quality which cannot, after all, be secured by deciduous trees, or even by evergreens outside the genus we have under present consideration. But, in addition to this splendid diversity of form in the dignity of the mountain Pine, the stately grace of the Cedars, or the dense rounded symmetrical beauty suggested, rather than defined, by some of the smaller Conifer, there is an indescrib- able richness in the colour tints peculiar to this race. Here it is fitting to remind ourselves that Conifers are not dependent upon the gay glory of inflorescence for decorative qualities. They have no conspicuous flowers to attract, but they possess a wealth of colour-suggestiveness that captivates not merely by the delicate gradations which mark the passing of one shade into another, but many of the species possess a distinctive charm in a marvellously beautiful glaucous haze, equivalent to the bloom on carefully grown fruit, too ethereal almost to be defined as a character of the foliage, so delicate is it that it looks as though it is an attribute of the atmosphere rather than a possession of the plant itself. ‘There is then the grace of the form of feathered plumes in the tenderness of the new foliage standing out distinct and clear against the denser background to which it is such a rich relief, but this background itself has its blendings of beauti- ful colour with the deeper shades where the sharp outlines of defined foliage are lost in the misty shadow, where the greens 56 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. have melted into liquid greys and neutral tints which the eye of the artist discerns everywhere pervading, save in the play of light upon those parts of the plant brought into relief and prominence. If the Pines derive little interest, and no decorative effect, from inflorescence, they have a distinctive gain in their cones. The name of the genus is an indication of the fact that this is a feature which ought not to escape observation, and indeed it is an investiture that cannot fail to arrest attention just at this season. How splendidly studded are the branches of Cedrus atlantica with the soft purple-tinted tips standing up on the flat fields of foliage like mushrooms in the meadows of the fairies ! Take in your hand the symmetrical cone of Pinus excelsa, and see what a study it is in purples and greens. Cast your eye along the straight shaft of Abies nobilis, and see the great cones levelled along the branchlets high up, almost like the tubes of a telescope, directed some this way and some that, a marvel of construction, and filled with that most refreshing odour of balsam which is full of the spirit of the Firwood, and seems to waft suggestions of cleanliness and health—why I never could see, excepting that we seem to have the capacity for uniting certain experiences with certain odours and certain conditions which come within the range of one sense with certain facts suggested through the medium of-another. And how can I attempt to describe the slender grace of the drooping branches of Larch ? Some things by their simple grace and delicate harmony defy description. Nature then will not be brought within the limits of language. The growth and habit of Conifers, again, necessarily enter largely into their decorative character. The Pines love the heights. They seem to have been made for the mountains. The Yew stands fittingly about the corners of God’s acre. The lawn is graced by the sweep of the Cedars. The avenue would look all the tamer, and the poorer, but for its fringe of Austrian Pines, for the brighter green of the tender tasselled Larch, and for the erect presence of the sober Spruce. What should we say of the Araucarias at Bicton, of the Golden Yews, the Junipers, the noble specimens in the Pineta of many of the notable grand ancestral homes of the English nobles, and what dare I say of the topiary work at Elyaston ? THE DECORATIVE CHARACTER OF CONIFERS. 57 The true beauty and decorative character of the larger Coni- fers can perhaps only rightly be seen just in proportion as the trees themselves are allowed their freedom for development in the open and in natural positions, but that is not the particular aspect in which I can, in apaper of this character, and within this limited scope, point out. The Conifer considered in relation to natural adornment is a captivating subject, but we must not be tempted to discuss it now. We must pass on all too rapidly. Time is inexorable. Next to this isolation in native and natural grandeur and stateliness I suppose we might place the Pinetum, which is one of the methods of art to present the nobility of the Coniferze in the majesty of individual isolation, but in a certain order of classification or arrangement, to show, as far as can be shown under such conditions, the true aspect and character of each species, and to secure an artistic effect which shall at once be a permanent source of attraction, of instruction, and of ornamentation. Woburn, Chatsworth, Dropmore, Bicton, and many other places have this splendid additional attraction to the garden resources as ordinarily enjoyed, and it seems useless to attempt to indicate by written word what is the impression produced upon one by such noble collections of noble plants. I had the privilege a few days ago of walking through the Pinetum at the Bache Hall, near Chester, the charming residence of Mrs. Hudson; and whilst the Wellingtonia, the Pines and the Firs were all beautiful, Cedrus atlantica with Pinus excelsa were so captivating as to make one throw aside the pen and the brush as unworthy media to describe these queens at home. And it is the same everywhere, whenever we find them thus enthroned in their stately dignity. I pass along acor- ridor of Conifers every morning in my walk through the Chester nurseries, and 1 am always captivated by the charm of the varied forms which blend so gracefully with the interwoven tints of green and gold. The next decorative feature to which the Conifers readily lend themselves is the adornment of park or pleasure-grounds, where the trees stand out in less solitary grandeur than in the Pinetum ; yet even here we have single specimens here and there and dotted about in groups—Firs, Cedars, and Pines, whilst Thuyas, Yews, and other resources are all brought into requisition for this purpose. Coming now into the closer and more confined quarters 58 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. of lawns and gardens proper, the difficulty of making observations is intensified, as other considerations come in for due attention. In addition to the lawn itself, there is the fringe about the lawn, whichis, perhaps, the most permanently attractive feature of the ordinary suburban garden. Here, it seems to me, for sweep and curve, a border fairly closely planted mainly with Conifers (though I must make room for an Aucuba, with, say, a Silver Birch here and there) nothing could be made prettier. I regret I am not able in this brief paper to suggest varieties by name, yet I cannot refrain from mentioning such indispensable plants as Juniperus chinensis, Retinospora squarrosa, Thuyopsis dolabrata, Cupressus Lawsoniana stricta and variegated forms, Retinospora filifera, Retinospora obtusa, with the Red Cedar, the Trish Yew, the Chinese Yew, and the Golden Yew. But having once permitted myself and committed myself to names, how shall I stop ? These should be so arranged as to give that charm of variety in form and colour which can be so well secured by this means. The deep glaucous green of some of the Cupressus, notably, say, stricta or, better, Alwmii, the deep heavy green of the Yews, the fluffy prettiness of Retinospora squarrosa, relieved with the rich golden glory of foliage for which some of the better variegated forms of the Cupressus and the Yews are conspicuous— these, with a background of the taller Cypresses and with here and there a straight-stemmed plant of Pinus excelsa and Pinus Cembra kept within bounds, leave little to be desired in the way of effective decoration in the form of a dense screen and shelter, which is a thing of beauty and a joy for ever. In the early spring and in the late autumn there is an indescribable freshness and brightness about a border of Conifers of this character which must be seen to be realised, for it cannot be described. Terraces and garden-beds may come in for consideration here also, and I have always thought that there is ample room for the freer introduction of Conifers for the purely ornamental portion of the garden. We have scarcely gone any distance in this direction, but wonderful effects are within reach, and these would add real effectiveness to the brilliant beds and borders hot with Geraniums and Petunias and Verbenas, and glowing with the gold so profuse in the Lady-purses—the flowers of the gay Calceolaria. It would be quite possible to invent a relief to this THE DECORATIVE CHARACTER OF CONIFERS. 59 perpetual repetition by a judicious introduction of an arrange- ment in quieter tone, a harmony in green and gold, or, shall we Say, a nocturne in bronze and silver ? If, despite Mr. Ruskin, Mr. Whistler can command a following of admirers, and show in those fancifully named productions works of art and the creation of genius, and produce points to admire in the subdued tones of browns and greys, may we not put on the canvas laid out before us not strokes and patterns of gay-coloured brightness alone, but here and there some bold outline in those matchless shades of green, some pretty design which will appeal by contrast, and will not seek to offer itself in competition with the dazzle and glitter—which, mark, is in no way condemned, but may be beautiful, often is gloriously beautiful—to the ribbon border, or the geometrical garden, or the other forms and devices which are to be found within the walls, or the hedges, of the flower-garden proper ? If the notion is too heterodox for ready acceptance, might it not be urged that a trial might be made for the winter flower- garden, and for a bed or a corner in the spring garden before the burst of summer brings its wealth of flowers and its festoons of foliage? I saw a few days ago such a bedas I have in my mind’s eye, a bed say ten feet by five, cut out like a panel, upon a rich sward of velvet green; the bed was edged with close-growing plants of Juniperus prostrata, growing each way, that is reversed in the planting, thus securing growth one into the other. The bed contained thirty plants in all, including Retinospora pisi- fera lutescens, obtusa alba, tetragona aurea and squarrosa, Cupressus Lawsomana alba var. and argentea, and a few plants of upright dense Irish Yews. None of the plants exceeded eighteen inches to two feet in height, and others were barely a foot high, but they were graded and arranged as effectively as seemed possible, and produced an effect which the glory of the adjoining border, rich with the autumn wealth of Sunflower, Phlox and Gladioli, could not hurt; it hada quiet impressiveness all its own, and when the eye grew tired of the red and the gold and the shades of purples and pinks in the herbaceous border, it travelled back to this beautiful bed which illustrated, powerfully, in one direction, the decorative character of Conifers. I have not touched upon many other points which suggest themselves, such as the place Conifers may take in the planting 60 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. of avenues, of hedges, of screens for shelter, in the rock garden, about the margins of lakes, on slopes within eye range of the dwelling, where beautiful distant effects may be got, or for memorial trees to stand in closer proximity to the house, to mark in the memory some event with which the planting of the tree has been linked. Conifers might be considered, too, in relation to town gardens, and for the window boxes where even the town garden is not possible. Iam quite aware of the fatal effect of smoke and the heavy atmosphere of cities and centres of dense population, yet in the possession of the knowledge that a few months would probably mark the life-limit, at any rate for decorative purposes, of some of the better kinds, I would advocate a freer use of Conifers for situations and conditions even such as these, for I am an earnest advocate for the introduction of plant- life in all available forms, especially the prettiest, about the homes of the people everywhere. I have, however, come to the limit of my time and feel I have only touched the fringe, and that but feebly and poorly, of a subject wide, interesting, and familiar, for we are familiar with the Pines and the Conifers generally. So common are they that they are about us everywhere. Upon some of the more peculiar types, such as the Araucaria and Salisburia, I have not spoken, and yet upon these and upon all there is so much to say. I am always thankful that these beautiful evergreen types of stateliness of form and splendour of foliage both in character and colour are so abundant and common on every side, and I feel inclined to bring my remarks to a close with the words of Evelyn in his “« Silva ’’—that splendid old English classic with which I hope we are also familiar. Having discussed in his wonderful way over the wide field brought before him, he concludes, as I shall ask to be allowed to conclude, thus: “ Buta wise and thinking man can need none of these topics; everywhere they are before him; and yet we do not admire them sufficiently because they are common and obvious: thus we fall into the just reproach given by one of the philosophers to those who slighted what they saw every day, because they every day saw them. As if novelty only should’ be of more force to engage our enquiry into the causes of things than the worth and magnitude of the things themselves.” 61 CONIFERS AT DROPMOREHE. By Mr. Coartes HERRIN. In the following short paper I have been requested to communi- cate to the Conference notes on the present condition of the Conifers at Dropmore, with a list of the more important ones, their present height and girth, and, as far as possible, their date of planting. Before giving any description of the condition of the trees, I may say the general character of the soil is of a light and gravelly nature, and such as American plants grow freely in, the substratum consisting of gravel and sand, into which the trees root freely. Visitors to Dropmore generally suppose that the soil must be exceedingly rich and good, but it certainly is not, although many of the trees have in the past been occasionally top- dressed with a heavy clayey loam, and any soil or refuse likely to decay is carted away and spread about the roots of the trees. Undoubtedly the top-dressing, especially that of a clayey nature, has very materially benefited them, both by keeping the roots in a moist condition and as a rooting medium, for wherever heaps have remained under Cedars and other trees the roots have worked up freely into it. In taking the present condition of the Conifers into considera- tion, they are, speaking generally, in a flourishing condition and erowing freely, the majority showing no signs of old age or stunted growth. There are some exceptions among the Pines, a few of which have apparently passed the prime of life, although they are really beautiful in their rugged and weird state, and for this reason form pleasing features among other trees. This remark applies to Pinus macrocarpa, planted in 18385, the seed of which came from the Royal Horticultural Society’s gardens at Chiswick; also P. pungens and P. rigida, each of which is about 70 feet high, with many branches. Trees of the Silver Abies (A. amabilis) are also exceptions, and of late years have de- teriorated very much, having no leaders, and the upper branches are partially dead and covered with lichen. One tree, the largest, is 48 feet high, and was raised from a cutting and planted in 1847. The original tree, planted in 1835, is but 385 feet in 62, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. height, and was probably a grafted plant. The lower branches of these trees are quite healthy and sweep the ground. Perhaps the two most remarkable trees at Dropmore are the large Abies Douglasu and the Araucaria imbricata, both kinds of trees growing very freely. It may be interesting to give a few particulars respecting them. The monarch Douglas Fir, planted in 1880, has attained a height of 120 feet, girth of trunk 11 feet 9 inches, with beautiful spreading branches sweeping the ground, covering a diameter of 64 feet. The leaves are also of a glaucous hue, equalling in that respect many of the plants now sold from nurseries under the name of Douglasw glauca. Snowstorms have, unfortunately, broken down several of the upper branches, but the vigorous growth the tree has made the past few years is fast repairing the damage done by snow, young growths of the present season varying from 12 to 21 inches in length. Rubbish, weeds, and soil refuse are continually being wheeled under this tree and spread to decay, which has no doubt produced very beneficial effects. The seed that produced this tree was sent by the Horticultural Society to Lord Grenville in December 1827, and raised, and planted out here in 1830. Many trees have since been raised from its seeds and planted out on the estate; one, planted in 1848, is now 78 feet high, with a girth of trunk of 8 feet 2 inches, spreading 39 feet in diameter at base—a perfect specimen. Although the Araucaria is considered by many to be a formal and heavy-looking tree, it must be conceded that a fine specimen has a grand and imposing appearance. ‘The largest tree here ig now 68 feet 6 inches in height, with abundant and vigorous growth, very healthy branches sweeping the ground, spreading 38 feet in diameter. It is a male tree and annually produces numbers of pollen-bearing catkins. No doubt the position in which the tree is planted suits the requirements of the Araucaria admirably. It is 60 feet from the edge of a piece of ornamental water with a gentle slope of about 7 feet from the tree to the water’s edge. The spot whereon the tree stands was once a gravel pit which was filled up when the lake close by was made. Consequently it enjoys a good depth of soil and perfect drainage, with fairly moist surroundings. It is occasionally top-dressed with a little clayey loam. This tree is supposed to have been purchased at a sale in the Chiswick Gardens in the year 1829, CONIFERS AT DROPMORE. 68 and was one of four Araucarias planted here in 1880. The other three trees have each produced perfect seeds, but are smaller, the highest being not more than 50 feet. As far as I have been able to distinguish, all the trees bearing pollen catkins are of more robust growth than those producing fertile cones. This has certainly been so at Dropmore during the past three or four years. Ina group of Araucarias planted in 1842 the largest is a male tree 50 feet high, 12 feet above either of the others planted at the same time. One of these produced thirty fertile cones this year. The Cedars also form a notable feature at Dropmore. An avenue numbering 140 trees of Cedrus Libam, planted about eighty years ago, average 85 feet in height with a girth of 74 feet. One of the first coniferous trees planted on the estate was a Cedar of Lebanon near the house. ‘This tree, planted by Lord Gren- ville in 1792, is now 104 feet high, with a girth of 13 feet 9 inches at three feet from the ground. The Cedars seen on driving up the carriage approach to the house from the Taplow entrance are very striking ; they have an imposing appearance, and aptly illustrate the effective use of these trees for ornamental planting, especially in large places. Many of the Lebanon Cedars partake much of the atlantica arrangement of branches, the points erect; several are also very glaucous. A very handsome tree is Cedrus Liban argentea—in the sunshine almost like a sheet of silver—and a worthy companion for C. atlantica; indeed it is rather difficult to detect any great difference in the species; the only one perceptible is that the points of the branches are less erect in the former than are those of C. atlantica. There is also a structural difference in the cones of the two trees. The tree here of C. L. argentea is 84 feet in height, with a girth of 10 feet. Cedrus atlantica, planted in 1848, is a perfect specimen, 64 feet high, girth of trunk 5 feet 10 inches. Many specimens of Cedrus Deodara have attained a height of from 60 to 70 feet, and are full of health and vigour. One, planted in 1840, stands 72 feet high, girth 9 feet 9 inches, the diameter of branches 47 feet; another tree, planted earlier (in 1834), is 65 feet, girth 8 feet 9 inches. A cutting from this tree was struck and planted in 18438, but the tree has made a very poor specimen, scarcely 50 feet high, the branches very short 64 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. and thinly disposed. Another, planted in 1838, inarched on the Larch, has made a better tree, although not equal to others raised from seed some years later. It is recorded that the largest Deodar here was destroyed by lightning in 1881; it was supposed to be the largest tree of the kind in the kingdom. Near the eround the trunk was 12 feet 3 inches in circumference, and good boards 38 inches in width were cut from it. This tree was raised from seed given to Lord Grenville by the Hon. Leslie Melville in 1831, who brought the cones from India. Among the Pines, Pinus «insignis is deserving of a few remarks. Here it is but seldom that this noble Pine is injured by frost, or if so, but slightly. During the past winter of 1890-91 a few of the terminal shoots of the lower branches were killed. - There are two good specimens. One, planted in the year 1889, is 90 feet high with a girth of 11 feet; another, planted the same year, is 79 feet high, trunk 12 feet 10 inches in circumference. It is on record that this tree, when only half an inch high, was a present from Mr. Munro, chief gardener at Chiswick, and that my predecessor, the late Mr. Frost, brought it home here in his waistcoat pocket. Pinus Laricio, * the Corsican Pine,” planted in 1829, has attained a height of 94 feet, with a fine clean bole; girth, 9 feet. Another, also planted the same year, girths 9 feet 9 inches, and several others are of nearly equal proportions. The following list includes many of the best trees, with their heights and girths and date of planting (girth taken 3 feet from ground) :— Abies Douglasi, planted 1830. Height, 120 feet; girth of trunk, 11 feet 4 inches; spread of branches, 64 feet diameter on ground. Abies Douglas, planted 1848. Height, 78 feet; girth, 8 feet 2 inches ; spread of branches, 39 feet. Abies Albertiana, planted 1861. MHeight, 58 feet; girth, 5 feet 8 inches. A very handsome tree, of pyramidal habit, the branches gracefully disposed, and spreading 40 feet in diameter at base. Abies grandis, planted 1861. Height, 64 feet ; girth, 6 feet ; spread of branches, 85 feet in diameter on ground. A very fine tree. Abies amabilis, planted 1847. Height, 48 feet 6 inches; girth, 6 feet 6 inches. CONIFERS AT DROPMORE. 65 Abies Pinsapo, planted 1848. Height, 65 feet; girth, 6 feet 10 inches; diameter of branches at base, 31 feet. Abies Pinsapo, planted 1843. Height, 68 feet. Abies Pindrow, planted 1848. Height, 27 feet. Young erowths frequently injured by spring frosts. Abies Brunoniana, planted 1847. Height, 41 feet; circum- ference of branches, 134 feet. A spreading, bushy tree. Abies nobilis, planted 1835. Height, 71 feet; girth, 7 feet 9 inches. Healthy branches to the ground. Abies pectinata. Height, 94 feet; girth, 8 feet 6 inches. Abies concolor, planted 1857. Height, 51 feet; girth, 5 feet 3 inches. A handsome tree. Abies Smithiana, planted 1848. Height, 61 feet; girth, 7 feet; spread of branches, 38 feet in diameter. A beautiful tree. Abies Smithiana, planted 1848. Height, 51 feet; girth, 5 feet 10 inches. Abies cephalonica, planted 1843. Height, 71 feet; girth, 7 feet. A fine tree. Abies Menziesu, planted 1841. Height, 73 feet; girth, 8 feet 2 inches. Abies Menziesvi, another specimen, planted 1841. Height, 61 feet ; girth, 8 feet. Araucaria imbricata, planted 1830. Height, 68 feet 6 inches ; cirth, 8 feet 8 inches; spread of branches, 88 feet in diameter, sweeping the ground. Araucaria imbricata, no date. Height, 61 feet; girth, 6 feet 10 inches. Araucaria imbricata, planted 1842. Height, 50 feet; girth, 5 feet. | Araucaria imbricata, planted 1830. Height, 50 feet ; eirth, 5 feet. Cedrus Libam, planted 1792. Height, 104 feet; eirth, 13 feet 9 inches. | Cedrus Libani, no date. Height, 87 feet; girth, 12 feet 4 inches. Cedrus Libani argentea, no date. Height, 84 feet; girth, 10 feet. A beautiful tree. Cedrus atlantica, planted 1848. Height, 64 feet; girth, 5 feet 10 inches. A very handsome tree. FE 66 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Cedrus Deodara, .planted 1884. Height, 65 feet; girth, 8 feet 9 inches. Cedrus Deodara, planted 1840. Height, 72 feet; girth, 9 feet 9 inches; diameter of branches, 47 feet. Cedrus Deodara, planted 1840. Height, 67 feet; girth, 8 feet 3 inches. Cryptomeria Lobbu, planted 1848. Height, 52 feet. Cunnunghania sinensis, no date. Height, 39 feet; girth, 4 feet 10 inches. Some branches die annually. Sequoia sempervirens, planted 1845. Height, 73 feet 6 inches ; girth, 10 feet. A handsome tree, with graceful branches to the ground. Pinus Benthamana, planted 1843. Height, 56 feet ; girth, 6 feet 8 inches, One of the handsomest Pines here. Pinus Jeffreyi, no date. Height, 47 feet; girth, 4 feet 6 inches. Pinus wmsignis, planted 1839. Height, 90 feet; girth, 11 feet 1 inch. Pinus insigms, planted 18389. Height, 79 feet; girth, 12 feet 10 inches. Pinus Pallasiana, no date. Height, 96 feet; girth, 11 feet. Pinus Laricio, planted 1829. Height, 94 feet; girth, 9 feet. A fine clean bole. Pinus Laricio, another tree, planted 1829. Height, 96 feet ; oirth, 9 feet 9 inches Pinus ponderosa, planted 1829. Height, 85 feet; girth, 8 feet 9 inches. Pinus pyrenaica, no date. Height, 86 feet ; girth, 9 feet. Pinus Lambertiana, planted 1848. Height, 71 feet; girth, 8 feet 8 inches. A fine tree. Wellingtoma gigantea, planted 1857. Height, 67 feet; girth, 11 feet 8 inches. A fine tree. Wellingtoma gigantea, another tree, planted 1862. Height, 62 feet ; girth, 12 feet. Thuya gigantea, no date. Height, 62 feet; girth, 6 feet 6 inches. 67 CONIFERS AT ORTON LONGUEVILLE. By Mr. A. Harpine. As the Royal Horticultural Society, in promoting this Conference on Cone-bearing Trees and Shrubs, is desirous of information re- specting such plants grown in this country, afew remarks on the collection grown at Orton Longueville may not be unacceptable. The late Marquis of Huntly was a great lover of trees, Coni- fers being especial favourites, and my present noble employer, the Dowager Marchioness of Huntly, is quite as enthusiastic in her love for trees, as also of all other kinds of plants, and to her lady- ship I am greatly indebted for much useful information as to when many of the fine trees here were planted. They have been under my own observation for the last fourteen years, and some of them have made great strides as to height and girth during that time. The soil seems suitable for most kinds; nevertheless, a few of them do not thrive well, notably Araucaria imbricata, or the Chili Pine, and the handsome Silver Fir, Abies nobilis. The soil is a fertile loam resting on gravel, in some places 3 or 4 feet deep, in others not so much. According to the Ordnance Survey, the altitude above sea-level is about 55 feet, and the rainfall averages between 24 and 30 inches. Foremost among the Conifere here stands the Wellingtonia, or Mammoth Tree of California, upwards of 300 specimens being planted in various parts of the grounds, ranging from 45 to 70 feet in height. The Wellingtonia avenue is 86 feet in width, with a gravel drive 12 feet wide up the centre, the trees being planted 30 feet apart on each side. The length of the avenue in a straight line is 700 yards, containing about 140 trees—all of which were raised in the gardens from seed or cuttings (the majority of them from seed) when first introduced, and the first and best batch of young plants were planted in this avenue about the year 1859. Those raised from seed now show a marked difference from those obtained from cuttings. Many of the former are fine symmetrical trees with good leaders, and about 70 feet high, while those raised from cuttings do not grow so freely, and have besides a tendency to form many leaders. The girth of some of the largest at a foot from the ground is 15 feet. A few have been cut down, but the timber does not appear to be of good F2 68 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. quality ; it is coarse-grained and spongy-looking, and noi at all easy for the cross-cut saw to work through. Of the Silver Firs there are some good specimens. Abies Pinsapo, the Spanish Silver Fir, is a fine tree 60 feet high and 7 feet in girth. A. Nordmanmana, 58 feet high and 5 feet 6 inches in girth, a handsome specimen, produces cones freely and some fertile seed. ; Parl. in D: C. Prodr. xvi. 2, 4325 BorbsikineWobs tao. Sieb. and Zucc. Fl. Jap. ii. t. 103, 104; Bot. Mag. t. 2743 ; Hichl. in Engl. and Prantl. Natiirl. Pff. u. 85; C. Koch, Dendr, i. 202, Flowers moncecious, and terminal. Cones small, ovoid or globular, and ligneous. Scales acute-pointed, and without bracts. Seeds three under each scale. Leaves lanceolate, rigid, and flat. Cotyledons two. A small tree, native of China. Maximowicz observed it at Yokohama, where it was most likely planted. Hichler, in his Syllabus (1886), like Bentham and Hooker, refers Cunninghamia and Sciadopitys to Araucariez ; but in 1887, in ‘‘ Die natiirlichen Pflanzenfamilien,” he refers them to Taxodies, which forms a link to Araucariez. C. sinensis, R. Br. in Rich. Conif. 80, t. 18, f. 3. Abies major sinensis, &c. Plukn. Amalth. 1. t. 351, f. 1. Pinus Abies, Lour. FI. Cochin. ii. 270 (excl. syn.). Pinus lanceolata, Lamb, Pin. ed. 1, i. 52, t. 34. Abies lanceolata, Desf. Cat. Hort. Paris, ed. 3, 356. Cunninghania lanceolata, Lamb. Pin. ed. 2, 59, t. 37. Belis jaculifolia, Salisb. in Linn. Trans. vii. 315. Belis lanceolata, Sw. Hort. Brit. 475. Araucaria lanceolata, hort. Habitat.—Southern China ; in Japan it is cultivated. This remarkable tree is a native of China, and was introduced in 1804 by Mr. William Kerr, by direction of the Honourable Court of Directors of the East India Company. It was first supposed to belong to the genus Pinus, and was called Pinws lanceolata, from its sharp lanceolate leaves ; but, on more careful examination, it was made a separate genus by Mr. Salisbury, in the ‘‘ Linnean Transactions,” under the name of Belis, from belos, a javelin—the leaves somewhat resembling in form the head of that weapon. The name of Bellis having been already applied to the daisy, that of Belis was considered PINETUM DANICUM. 301 to bear too strong a resemblance to it, and accordingly it was after- wards changed by Mr. Brown to Cunninghamia, by which name it was first described by M. Richard in his ‘‘ Mémoires sur les Coniferes.” For many years after it was first introduced it was kept in the green- house, but in 1816 a plant was turned out into a sheltered part of the pleasure-ground at Claremont. It was named in compliment to Mr. James Cunningham, who dis- covered it in the neighbourhood of Canton in 1702. Young plants did very well out of doors here in the inter of 1890-91 ; two or three of them were covered with leaves over the roots, ml branches of Fir over the top, but such care seemed quite unnecessary, as the less protected plants succeeded even better. Jt seems rare on the Continent, even in Germany. 27. aaa (or Agathis), —Rumph. Herb. Amboin. il. 174; Lamb. Pin. ed. 2, 70; Endl. Conif. 108; Hook. fil. Fl. of New Zeal. 231; Carr. Conif. 424, 677; Gord. Pin. 77; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 209. Pini sp. Lamb. Pin. ed. 1, i. 61. Abietis sp. Poir. Dict. v. 35. Agathis, Salisb. Linn. Trans. viii. 311; Rich. Conif. 151, t. 19; Parl. in D. C. Prodr. xvi. 2, 374; Forb. Pin. Wob. t. 58, 59; Hichl. in Engl. and Prantl. Natiirl. Pflf, i. 66. Flowers dicecious. Cones ovoid or globular, and axillary. Scales persistent, and without bracts, Seeds unattached and solitary. Cotyledons two. Leaves petiolate or almost sessile, opposite or alternate, and leathery. Name derived from its native one in Amboina, where the Malays callit Dammar °‘ puti,” or ‘*‘ batu,” on account of the large quantity of resin it produces, which at first is soft, viscid, and transparent, but eventually becomes hard and like amber. All large trees, natives of the East Indian Islands, New Zealand, New Caledonia, and New Guinea. The Dammaras are distinguished from the true Pines and Firs by their broad, opposite or alternate, oblong-lanceolate, attenuated, leathery leaves, with parallel veins, and in the male and female flowers being solitary and on separate plants ; they, however, approach nearest to the genus Araucaria in being dicecious, but they differ from it in the form of the scales, in the absence of a bract to each female flower, and in the seeds being winged only on one side, and free, or unattached. D. australis, Lambert, Pin. ed. 2, u. 73, t. 44; A. Cunningh. Ann. of Nat. Hist. i. 211; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2449, f. 2310, 2311, and Encycl. of Trees, 1066, f. 1990; Zuce. in Abhandl. der Mathem. 8382 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Phys. Klasse der Berl. Akadem. iii. t. 1, f. 2, t. 2, 16 (err.) and 17; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 179, t. 59; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 368; Endl. Syn. Conif. 190; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc, v. 221; Knight, Syn. Conif. 45; Hook. fil. Fl. of New Zeal. 231; Carr. Man. des. Pl. iv. 863, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 427; Gord. Pinet, 77; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 211. Agathis australis, Salisb. in Linn. Trans. viii, 312. Habitat.—New Zealand, in the northern parts. Introduced into Europe in 1823. Wintered indoors. The Kauri Pine is a native of New Zealand, and is also frequently designated the Cowrie tree, or the Pitch tree. Itis said to attain a height, in that country, of from 80 to 140 feet, producing a straight trunk, free from branches, to a height of from 40 to 70 feet, and is reckoned a very valuable tree for ship-masts and various other purposes. The branches are thickly clothed with leaves, which are of a lanceolate-oblong shape, erect, of a coriaceous texture, generally opposite, except on the old branches, when they are sometimes alternate, entire, obtuse at the apex, and occasionally slightly emarginate, from an inch to an inch and a half in length, and scarcely half an inch in breadth; of a shining pale green colour, and some- what dilated at the base, not attenuated as in the otherspecies. In Mr. Lambert’s work on the genus Pinus we have some valuable remarks relative to the coniferous trees that are indigenous to New Zealand, by George Bennett, Esq., F.L.8., &. The following is an extract from that gentleman’s observations on the Kauri Pine: “* This magnificent tree, which ornaments the New Zealand forests, is the Dammara australis of Lambert, and is called Kauri by the natives. of New Zealand, which name probably was given on account of the great diameter it attains. It grows very erect, and attains a height of from 80 to 90 feet, and in diameter it is considered the largest tree in New Zealand. It occasionally attains 24 feet in circumference, and I have seen several cut down measuring from 16 to 20 feet. The timber is of excellent quality, close-grained, durable, and valuable for a variety. of purposes, either in plank or spar; as yards and masts for shipping they have been found, by repeated trials, superior to all others, both in their flexibility as well as durability. The wood is of a white colour. The leaves of this Pine, when young, are alternate, but in form lanceolate, which changes, as the tree increases in growth, to an ellip- tical oblong form. This tree yields a large quantity of resin of a white and amber colour, very transparent, burning with a bright flame, and having a very agreeable smell. It exudes spontaneously. and hardens on the trunk, but in much larger quantities on an inci- sion being made in the tree and left for a night. On the following morning a large quantity is usually found to have exuded, and still continues to exude for a long time afterwards. This tree yields the EINETUM DANICUM. 338 largest quaritity of resin of all the New Zealand resiniferous trees. It resembles the resin named Dammara in the Hast Indies, and is, indeed, produced from a tree of the same genus, and might, con- sequently, be employed for similar purposes for which that resin is used in India, as pitch for ships, varnish, &c., and might form an article of commerce from New Zealand to the colonies of New South Wales and Van Diemen’s Land, and England ; from the quantity I have seen obtained from one tree, it may be collected abundantly in a short period of time. The natives name the resin vare, or the wat (water) of the tree.” D. Brownii, hort. D. robusta, Moore. D. Brownii obtusa, hort. Habitat.—New Zealand. Tntroduced into France in 1855. Wintered indoors. D. orientalis, Lambert. D. alba, Rumph. Herb. Amboin. ii. 174, t. 57; Blum. Rumph. iii. 212 (not hort.). Arbor javanensis, Visci foliis latioribus, conjugatis, Dammara alba dicta, Sherard in Rai Hist. iii. and Dendr. 130. Pinus Dammara, Lamb. Pinet. ed. 1, i. 61, t. 38; Voigt in Syllog. Pl. u. 53. Pinus sumatrana, Hort. Belved. ; Mirb. Mém. Mus. xii. 69; Desf. Hort. Par. 356. Abies Dammara, Poir. Dict. vy. 35. Abies sumatrana, Desf. l.c. ; Mirb. l.c. Agathis loranthifolia, Salisb. in Linn. Trans. viii. 812, t. 15; Blume, Enumer. Pl. Jav. 90. W6lss Amie Contiki 415 t. 19; Lindl. in Penn. Cycl. xvii. 173; Hook. and Arnott, Bot. Beechey, 394; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 397; Nutt. Sylv. iii. 122, t. 144, and ed. 2, ii. 180, t. 114; De Chambray, Tr. Arb. Rés. 346; Endl. Syn. Conif. 150 ; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soe. Lond. v. 215; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 307, and ed. 2, 403 ; Bigelow in Pacific R.R. Rep. iv. 21; Torr. in Pacific R.R. Rep. iv. 141 ; Bot. Mex. Boundary Survey, 210; Ives’ Rep. 28; Newberry in Pacific R.R. Rep. vi. 42, 90, f. 14 ; Gord. Pinet. 228, and ed. 2, 307; Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 262; Murray in Trans. Bot. Soe. PINETUM DANICUM. 367 Edinburgh, vi. 369 ; Lawson, Pinet. Brit. i. 47, t. 7, f. 1-7; Bolander in Proc. Calif. Acad. ui. 226, 317; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh, 95 ; Nelson, Pinac. 115 ; Hoopes, Evergreens, 134 ; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 402; Fowler in Lond. Gard. Chron. (1872), 1071; Koch, Dendr. ii. 2, 323; Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 32; Veitch, Man. Conif. 179 ; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 294. _ Habitat.—Oregon, Cascade and coast ranges, from the head of the Mackenzie River and the valley of the Rogue River, south along the western flank of the Californian sierras, through the coast ranges to the Santa Lucia Mountains, and in the San Bernardino and Cuyamaca Mountains. A large tree, 150-300 feet in height, with a trunk 10-22 feet in diameter ; most common, and reaching its greatest development, upon the sierras of Central and Northern California between 4,000 and 8,000 feet elevation ; in the Oregon coast ranges descending to 1,000 feet above the sea-level. Wood very light, soft, coarse, straight-grained, compact, satiny, easily worked ; bands of small summer cells thin, resinous, conspicu- ous, resin passages numerous, very large and conspicuous ; medullary rays numerous, obscure; colour light brown, the sapwood nearly white ; specific gravity, 0°3684 ; ash, 0°22 ; now largely manufactured into lumber and used for interior finish, door-blinds, sashes, &c., and for cooperage and woodenware ; less valuable and less easily worked than that of the eastern White Pine (Pinus Strobus) ; its quality injured by the larger and more numerous resin passages. A saccharine exudation from the stumps of cut or partially burnt trees is sometimes used as a substitute for sugar (Sargent). For the discovery of this gigantic species we are indebted to the late indefatigable collector for the Royal Horticultural Society, Mr. David Douglas, who first found it on the western coast of North America. He has given an elaborate description of its growth, &c., in vol. xv. of the ‘‘ Linnean Transactions,” from which the following is an extract: ‘* This plant covers large districts about a hundred miles from the ocean, in latitude 43° N., and extends as far to the south as 40°. It first came under my notice in August 1825 while at the head-waters of the Multuomah River. In October 1826 it was my good fortune to meet with it beyond a range of mountains running in a south-westerly direction from the Rocky Mountains towards the sea, and terminating at Cape Orford in Vancouver. It srows sparingly upon low hills, and the undulating country east of the range of mountains just mentioned. Where the soil consists entirely of pure sand, in appearance incapable of supporting vegetation, there it attains its greatest size and perfects its fruit in most abundance. The trunk grows from 150 to 200 feet in height, varying from 20 to near 60 feet in circumference. One specimen, which had been blown down by the wind (and this was certainly not the largest 368 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. I saw), was of the following dimensions: its entire length was 215 feet; its circumference, 3 feet from the ground, was 57 feet 9 inches ; and, at 184 feet from the ground, 17 feet 5 inches. The trunk is unusually straight, and destitute of branches for about two- thirds of the height ; the bark is uncommonly smooth for such large timber, of a light brown colour on the south, and bleached on the north side. The branches are rather pendulous, and form an open pyramidal head, with that appearance which is peculiar to the Abies tribe. The leaves are between 4 and 5 inches long, and grow in fives, with a short sheath like those of P. Strobus ; they are rigid, of a bright green colour, but not glossy, and, from minute denticulations of the margins, are scabrous to the touch. The cones are pendulous from the extremities of the branches ; they are two years in acquiring their full growth, are at first upright, and do not begin to droop, I believe, till the second year ; when young they have a very taper figure ; when ripe they are about 11 inches in circumference at the thickest part, and vary from 12 to 16 inches in length. The scales are lax, rounded at the apex, and perfectly destitute of spines. The seeds are large, eight lines long and four broad, oval, and, like those of P. Pinea, their kernels are sweet and very pleasant to the taste. The wing is mem- branaceous, of a dolabriform figure and fuliginous colour, about twice as long as the seed ; it has an innumerable quantity of minute sinuous vessels, filled with a crimson substance, and forming a most beautiful microscopic object. The embryo has twelve or thirteen cotyledons. The whole tree produces an abundance of pure amber-coloured resin. The timber is white, soft, and light ; it abounds in turpentine reservoirs, and its specific gravity has been ascertained, by a specimen brought home by me, to be 0°464. The annual layers are very narrow. In the above specimen there were fifty-six in the space of 44 inches next the outside. The resin, which exudes from the trees when they are partly burned, loses its usual flavour and acquires a sweet taste, in which state it is used by the natives as sugar, being mixed with their food. The seeds are eaten roasted, or are pounded into coarse cakes for their winter store. The species to which this Pine is most nearly allied is undoubtedly P. Strobus, from which, however, it is ex- tremely different in station, habit, and parts of fructification. I have named it in compliment to Aylmer Bourke Lambert, Esq., a vice-president of the Linnean Society, whose splendid labours in inves- tigating the genus Pinus are too generally known and appreciated to require any eulogium from me.” Seems to be hardy. P. Laricio, Poir. Dict. Encycl. v. 339; Loisel. Nouv. Duham. v. t.67,. 74,.4...2 5° Lamb:. Pinet. ed.) 2, 1:9) to-42 Pinet. Wob. 23s Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2206, f. 2081-84, and Encycl. of Trees, 957, f. 1768-69 ; De Cand. Fl. Fr. iii. 274; Desf. Hist. Arbr. ii. 611; Ant. Conif. 3, t. 2, f. 1, 2; De Chambr. Tr. Prat. Arbr. Résin. 245, pl. iii. PINETUM DANICUM. 369 f. 19, 13, and pl. v. f. 6, 7; Link in Linnea, xv. 494; Schouw. Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 3, iii. 234; Spach, Hist. Vée. Phan. xi. 384; Endl. Syn. Conif. 178 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 219 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 27; Carr. Tr. Gén. des Conif. 384; Gord. Pinet. 168 ; Veitch, Manual Conif. 147; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 238. Tlevkn, Homer, ii. 23, 328. Tlev«n idaia, Theophrast. Hist. Plant. iii. 4. Pinaster, Plin. Hist. Nat. xvi. 17. PP. silvestris « maritima, Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, iii. 366. LP. silvestris maritima, Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, ii. 366. P. maritima, Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2, v. 315 (not Lam. nor Lamb.). PP. Pinaster, Mor. Stirp. Sard. Elench. i. 42 (not Sol.). P. Laricio Poiretiana, Ant. Conif. 3, t. 2, f. 1; Endl. Conif. 179. £. Laricio corsicana, or corsica, hort. Habitat.—Southern Europe, and many parts of Western Asia; the islands in the Mediterranean Sea, particularly Corsica, Sardinia, and Sicily. Very common on Mount Etna, from 4,000 to 6,000 feet elevation. Introduced into England in 1759, under the name of Pinus silvestris maritima. P. Laricio has done well at Christiania. It has ripened seeds at the Botanic Gardens of Upsala. There can be little doubt that this is the best all-round Conifer that has yet found its way into the British Isles, and we predict that ere long the number of Corsican Pines to be found in woods and plantations will far exceed that of any other introduced or native species. Itis of very rapid growth, and is well suited for planting, even in the most exposed and wind-swept situations ; is not fastidious as to soil, and is perhaps the most valuable timber-producing tree that has ever been brought before the British arboriculturist. As an ornamental tree it is almost superfluous to say one word in its favour, its light, airy appearance being well known to every tree- lover. We do not wish it, however, to be inferred that it can in point of ornament compare with several other species, although it will be admitted it is worthy of at least second rank. From our own experience of home-grown wood of the Corsican Pine, it is, so far as lasting qualities are concerned, second to none of those we have tried. It is strong, tough, elastic, very resinous, and easily worked, and this is speaking of trees of fully fifty years’ growth. We have used home-grown Laricio wood for many purposes, and always with the most satisfactory results, some of the largest planks being fully 27 inches wide, and cut from trees that girthed nearly 9 feet at a yard from the ground. Recently we examined several planks which were sawn up seven years ago, and find that they are little the worse for the wear and tear to which they have been subjected. In France exten- sive plantations of this Pine have been formed, while the Prussian Government has introduced it into the State forests (Trans. Roy. Scot. Arb. Soc. xii. pt. 2). BB 370 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, P. L. austriaca, Endl. Syn. Conif. 179. P. Laricio y nigricans, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 387. .P. austriaca, Hoss. Monogr. der Schwarzfohre, Wien, 1831. PP. nigricans, Host. Fl. Aust. ii, 628. P. nigra, Lk. in Abhandl. d. Berl. Akad. 1827, 173. P. Pinaster, Bess. Fl. Galiz. 11. 294. P. maritima, Koch, Syn. ed. 1, 667. P. dalmatica, Wis. Fl. Dalmat. i. 129. P. silvestris, Baumg. F1. Transylv. i. 203. This tree has of late years attracted considerable attention, not only from its perfect hardihood, but from its ornamental appearance and the shelter it affords to other less hardy kinds. Asan ornamental tree it is certainly not behind many of its neighbours, with its wealth of dark, glossy, and shaggy foliage and pleasing contour. For planting in clumps or masses it is particularly well suited ; indeed few Pines form a more striking feature in the landscape than this tree does when arranged in irregular clumps. Singlespecimens, when allowed plenty of room on the greensward, are highly attractive, and produce in a short space of time masses of the richest green foliage, which contrast well with other Conifers of a light or silvery appearance. As a timber tree it is not without value, and several experiments made with the wood prove that it is very durable, and one of the few kinds that may be used where it is subjected to wet and dry alter- nately. Seven years ago we cut up two large trees of this Pine, and placed the planks side by side with those of the Scots and Spruce Firs to hold up the sliding banks of a river, each being marked and noted for future observations, and on examining these a year ago the Aus- trian Pine seemed quite sound, but a lighter colour than when placed in position. Sufficient time, however, has not elapsed for us to speak with any amount of assurance as to the superiority of the wood of this tree over that of either the Spruce or Scots Firs ; but from the present appearance of gates, stiles, and posts manufactured some years ago, there can be little doubt that it will, so far as lasting qualities are concerned, be quite equal to either of the other two. It is remarkably strong, tough, coarse of grain, very resinous, works well, and takes a good polish. A native of Austria, and introduced into Great Britain in 1835 (Trans. Scot. Arb. Soc. xii. pt. 2). P. L. austriaca, in Danish gardens, has attained a height of about 70 feet. Plants about fifty years old measure 60 feet high and more ; but among plantations, especially in poor soil, they have been a failure, as the plants, after some years of good growth, have died. It suffers much in many places from Lophodermium Pinastri. P.-L. austriaca is to be found planted here and there in Norway, e.g. at Christiania, Drontheim (Trondhjem), Stenkjor, and even as far north as Kabelvang, in Lofoten (68° 12’), where it has done well for several years. The largest tree I have seen in Norway stands in the Botanic Gardens at Christiania. It was planted in 1842, and was then about a foot high (31 cm.), it being now about 47 or 48 years of PINETUM DANICUM. 371 age. It is 38 feet high, and the stem measures 4 feet in circum- ference. It has several times ripened sound seeds. In Sweden it is also found at Stockholm (59° 10’), and in Finland as far north as Wiborg (60° 45’) (Prof. F. C. Schiibeler, ‘‘ Viridarium Norvegicum,”’ 1886). P. L. austriaca fastigiata. This is a variety characterised by a more or less columnar outline. P. L. austriaca variegata, hort. Pinus austriaca variegata, hort. 3 P. L. calabrica, Delam. P. calabrica, Delam. P. Laricio stricta, Carr. Conif. ed. 2, 492. P. L. ttalica, hort. P. romana, hort. P. L. monspeliensis, hort. P. monspeliensis, Salzm. P. Salz- mannii, Dunal. in Mém. Acad. Scien. de Montp. ii. 81 (cwm ic.). iP haricio tenuifolia, Parl. in° DC. Prodr. xvi.- 2,.387. -P. L. 8 pyrenaica, Gren. and Godr. (not Lap.). P. L. y cebennensis, Gren. and Godr. P. L. leptophylla, Crist. Hurop. Abiet. 15. We have nice piants of this form. Hardy in Denmark. P. L. Pallasiana, Endl. Conif. 179. P. Pallasiana, Lamb. Pin. ed. 2, 11, t. 5. P. maritima, Pall. Index. Taur. LP. caramanica, Oliv. P. Laricio caramanica, Spach. Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 385. P. taurica, hort. JP. tatarica, hort. PP. halepensis, Bieb. Flor. Taur. Oauc. ii. 408 (not Mill.), P. Fenzl, Ant. and Kotsky. Habitat.—The Crimea, forming forests of considerable extent on the slopes of the mountains in the neighbourhood of the south coast. Introduced by Messrs. Lee and Kennedy in 1790. P. L. Pallasiana, planted in 1845, now measures 47 feet in height and 5 feet 2 inches in girth. P. leiophylla, Schiede and Deppe in Linnea, v. 364, and xii. 490 ; Lamb. Pinet. ed. 2, 1. 38, t. 21; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2273, f. 2186-87, and Encycl. of Trees, 1011, f. 1891-93 ; Forb. Pinet. Wob. V4, f. 28; Ant. Conif. 39, t. 18, f. 2; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 401; Endl. Syn. Conif. 155; Knight. Syn. Conif. 33; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 215; Carr. Man. des Pl. 350, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 320; Gord. Pinet. 329; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 100 (excl. syn. Roezl). Habitat.—Mexico, especially in cool regions of the mountains of Angangueo; also on the mountains of Oaxaca, in the province of Necuachan. Introduced about 1839. I do not think we possess this plant in Denmark, but I have cones of it in my collection. P. leucodermis, Ant. in Oester. Bot. Zeitsch. 1864, xiv. 366; Beck, Flor. von Siidbosn. in Annal. Naturhist. Hofmus. Wien, ii. 37 (1887), and Boiss. Fl. Orient. s. 697. Habitat.—Dalmatia, Montenegro, Herzegovina, South Bosnia, BB2 372 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. and in Servia. Prof. Hausknecht, of Weimar, found many plants of this species, always on chalky ground. | Introduced in 1864 by Maly, court gardener, who discovered it and brought it home to Belvidere, in Vienna. Of this interesting species there is given a good description by Prof. Giinther, Knight of Beek von Managetta, in the Wiener Illustr. Gartenzeitwng. We possess only very young plants, but these may prove hardy. P. longifolia, Roxb. Mss. ; Fl. Ind. Orient. iii. 651; Lamb. Pinet. ed. 2, 1. 48, t. 26, 27; Royle, Himal. 32, t. 85, f. 2; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2252, f. 2148-52, and Encycl. of Trees, 996, f. 1865-66 ; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 55, t. 20; Loisel. Nouv. Duham. 247 ; Ant. Conif. 29, t. 9; Link in Linnea, xv. 508; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 390; Hoffm. Bot. Zeit. 1846, 184; Endl. Syn. Conif. 158; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 216; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30 ; Carr. Man. - des Pl. iv. 351, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 332 ; Gord. Pinet. 200 ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 72; Beissn. Nadelh. 251. P. Serena- gensis, Madd. ex Gord. l. c. (?) P. Timoriensis, Loud. ex Henk. and Hochst. l.c. Habitat.—Along the Himalayas from Bhotan to Afghanistan, at an elevation of about 1,625 feet above sea-level ; at Simla on higher elevations ; in Kamaon and Gurhwal, north as far as the Pindur, large forests are to be found mostly comprising this species only. It is called ‘*‘ Cheer” by the hill people in India—a word, according to some, meaning ‘‘ bark,” or ‘‘rind,” so conspicuous on old trees ; but, according to others, from its milk or turpentine, which it produces in great abundance. It is called ‘‘Sulla” by the mountain people from Nepaul to Buschur, a term denoting ‘‘ to spread fragrance,” which this tree does to a remarkable extent. On the upper banks of the Thelum River it is styled by the people ‘‘ Anunder” ; and throughout Kangara and the eastern hills it is named ‘‘Cheel,” ‘ Gulla,” and ‘“‘Thansa,” or ‘‘Tanshing.” There are two varicties: one, which has its woody fibre twisted, but open in the grain, and of a white colour, and called ‘‘ Kutcha” by the natives ; the other, in which the fibres are straight, has reddish and compact wood, and is called ‘“‘Pucka”; but this character is not permanent, as sometimes the wood, though white, is compact and straight-fibred. The reddish wood, however, is preferred by the natives, and sold under the name of ‘‘ Dadar.” The twisted kind, being subject to warp and split, is rejected, and never used for architectural purposes ; but the Cheel timber, found growing in all places at an elevation of 5,000 feet and upwards, with a northern aspect and on poor soil, is invariably the straight-fibred kind, and the timber is good. Again, in southern localities and lower down, it is twisted in the fibre, and of but little use for housebuilding and similar purposes. The better variety, how- ever is extensively used for boat-building in India; but boats built ——- PINETUM DANICUM. Sule of its wood do not last more than six or seven years, the timber being liable to rot if exposed to the weather; while, on the other hand, if protected, it is well adapted for housebuilding purposes, although for shipbuilding and spars it is almost useless, as it resists so badly the effects of the weather, and is so soft; but the quality of its timber differs more, perhaps, than that of any other Pine, in consequence of its growing in high or low situations. The forests near Almorah, at an elevation of 4,500 feet, produce excellent timber for domestic purposes, under the name of ‘‘Surul” (straight), either from the tall, straight, branchless stems of old trees, or from the woody fibre rending freely and quite straight in the grain. In the Sanscrit dialect it is called ‘““Tanshing,” or ‘‘Tansa” (Needle-tree), on account of its long, needle-like leaves. ‘The seeds are eaten in India. This species attains a height of from 60 to 100 feet, and is con- fined in a great measure to the outer or lower ranges of the mountains, commencing as low as 1,000 feet above the level of the sea, and is rarely, if ever, found at a greater elevation than 7,000 feet, but appears to have a very great power of enduring variations of climate, for it seems equally at home in the hot, damp valleys of Sikkim as on the dry, stony hills of the Punjab, where rain hardly ever falls, and it is at all seasons exposed to a powerful and scorching sun. It is very common throughout the whole region of the Punjab, and as far to the east as Bhotan, occurring at all intermediate altitudes, and where, from the diversity of climate and different aspects in which it grows, itis known under various names. It also abounds in all the lower and outer ranges of the Himalayas, from Bhotan to Afghanistan. Dr. Griffith describes it as descending in Bhotan to the low elevation of 1,800 or 2,000 feet above the sea, while on the ranges between the Jumna and Sutlej itis abundant at from 2,500 to 3,000 feet of elevation, and finally it becomes stunted, and disappears at Simla, at an elevation of 7,000 feet, but occurs in greatest perfection and abundance at Kamaon and Gurhwal, north of the Pindur, at from 2,500 to 7,000 feet of elevation, which places seem little else than one great forest of the Cheer Pine. It has a rough bark, divided by deep fissures into large and longish plates, and the stems of the larger trees are about 12 feet in girth, with a clear stem 40 or 50 feet from the ground, and with an exceedingly picturesque head, very irregular in outline, as the branches are irregularly and thinly scattered. A large quantity of tar and turpentine is extracted from the wood, and the chips are used for _eandles in India, and called ‘‘Chamsing” (night-lights) ; and, accord- ing to Dr. Hooker, ink is made in Sikkim from the charcoal of the burnt leaves mixed with rice-water (G. Gordon, ‘‘ The Pinetum”). The wood is made into charcoal. Weight of wood 37 to 45 lbs. per cubic foot (F. M. Bagley, ‘‘ Cat. of Plants, Brisbane Bot. Gardens”). It has been wintered indoors in Denmark. One plant, however, _ exposed out of doors does not appear to have suffered. 874 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. P. macrophylla, Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1839, app. 63; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 402; Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 1006, f. 1885-86 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 153 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 215 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 33 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 315 ; Gord. Pinet. 231; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 106 (excl. syn. Roezl). P. Leroyi, Roezl, ex Gord. l. c. Habitat.—Mexico. Hartweg found it, but sparsely, on Ocotillo, one of the highest tops of the Angangueo Mountains. We have no plant under observation, but there are interesting cones in my collection. P. mandsehurica, Rupr. Hardy. This plant may later on be otherwise determined. P. Massoniana, Lamb. Pinet. ed. 2, 20, t.8. P. sinensis, Lamb. Pinet. ed. 2, ii. 127, t. 53; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2264, f. 2167-69, and Eineycel. of ‘Trees; 999, f. 1873-74; Ants (Conti, ala iter Forb. Pinet. Wob. 39, t. 12; Endl. Syn. Conif. 158; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 216; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30; Carr. Man. des Pl. 351, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 331; Gord. Pinet. 209 (excl. syn. Sieb.). P. Keseya, Royle, Mss. Gard. Mag. 1840, 8. P. nepalensis, Forb. Pinet. Wob. 34; Ant. Conif. 23. P. Cavendishiana, Paxt. Habitat.—South-eastern China, Formosa. P. Massoniana, Lamb., Parl., is well distinguished from the tree thus named by Siebold and Zuccarini (180), and by Endlicher, and which was named by Parlatore P. Thunbergit. This Pine may not be hardy in Denmark. A couple of plants received under this name, and which probably were the true Pinus sinensis, Lamb., died a year after planting. P. mitis, Michx. Hist. Arb. Amer. i. 52, t. 3, N. Amer. Sylv. i 120; 4: 137. ed. 3, mi... 96; t: 137 and Es -BoreAmer! 1204s Barton, Prodr. Fl. Philadelph. 93; Poir. Suppl. iv. 417; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2195, 4. 2072-76; Ant. Comf. 16, 42-55 f. 13 dines in Penn. Cycl. xvii. 171; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 386 ; Torr. Fl. N. York, u. 229; Endl. Syn. Conif. 167 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 26; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 217; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 361, and ed. 2, 472; Gord. Pinet. 173, and ed. 2, 243: (excl. syn. Roylei); Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 275 ; Chap- man, Fl. 8. States, 433 ; Curtis in Rep. Geolog. Surv. N. Carolina, 1860, iii. 19 ; Lesquereux in Owen’s 2nd Rep. Arkansas, 389 ; Wood, Cl. Book, 660, and Bot. and Fl. 318; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 23; Gray, Man. N.U. States, ed. 5, 470; Hoopes, Evergreens, 88 ; Parl. DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 580 ; Young, Bot. Texas, 516 ; Koch, Dendr. ii. 2, 300; Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 30; Broadhead in Coulter’s Bot. Gaz. ii. 60; Engelm. in Trans. St. Louis Acad. iv. 184; Ridgway in Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. 88; Veitch, Man. Coniferz, 158 ; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 216. P. variabilis, Pursh, Fl. of N. Amer. ii, 648. P. echinata, Mill, Dict. n, 12 ; Wangenh. Beitrage, 74; 5 EE Ae OS Pee eis ee am ~ PINETUM DANICUM. 375 Marsh. Arbor. 100; Du Roi, Obs. Bot. 44, and Harbk. ed. Pott. ii. 51. P. Tzxda y variabilis, Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, ii. 363. P. Roylei, Lindl. P. lutea, Lodd. P. turbinata, Bosc. P. intermedia, Fisch. ex Gord. Pinet. 170. Habitat.—Staten Island, New York, south to the Chattahoochee region of Western Florida, through the Gulf States to Tennessee and Eastern Texas, and through Arkansas to the Indian Territory, South-eastern Kansas, Southern Missouri, and in Union County, Tilinois. A tree 80-100 feet in height, with a trunk 2-5 feet in diameter ; light sandy soil, or, less commonly, along the low borders of swamps, forming west of the Mississippi River, mixed with Oaks and other deciduous trees, extensive forests; the only species of Northern Arkansas, Kansas, and Missouri, reaching its greatest development in Western Louisiana, Southern Arkansas, and Hastern Texas. Wood, varying greatly in quality and amount of sap, heavy, hard, strong, generally coarse-grained, compact; bands of small summer cells broad, often occupying half the width of the annual growth, very resinous, resin passages numerous, large ; medullary rays numerous, conspicuous ; colour orange, the sapwood nearly white ; specific gravity, 0°6104 ; ash, 0°29; largely manufactured into lumber, especially in the States west of the Mississippi River, and among Yellow Pines only inferior in value to that of P. palustris (C. S. Sargent). Introduced in 1739. This is the Pine which produces the valuable “yellow pine” timber of commerce. The tree does not often exceed 80 feet in height. Although possessing no special ornamental pro- perty, it should be planted for the sake of its timber. Its habit of growth very much resembles that of Pinus silvestris, and the trunk is almost of uniform girth for nearly two-thirds of its length (Trans. Roy. Scot. Arb. Soc. xii. pt. 2). P. mitis has in Denmark attained to nearly 60 feet in height, but young plants of this species sometimes appear to suffer much. P. monophylia, Torr. and Fremont, Rep. of the Expl. Exped. to the Rocky Mountains, 1842, and to Oregon and North Calif. in 1843-44, 312, 1.4. P. Fremontiana, Endl. Conif. 183. _Habitat.—Near Utah Lake, Utah, to the eastern foot-hills of the Californian Sierras, south along the mountain ranges of the Great Basin to the San Francisco mountains of Northern Arizona: A small, bushy tree, 13-20 feet in height, with a trunk some- times 3 feet in diameter; dry, gravelly slopes and mesas between 3,000 and 6,000 feet elevation (C. 8. Sargent). Seems to do well out of doors in Denmark. P. montana, Mill. Gard. Dict. n. 5. P. Mughus, Scop. FI. Carn. ed. 2, 11. 247, t. 9. P. Pumilo, Haenke, Bot. Bemerk. of Reise ins Riesengebirge, s, 68. P, wncinata, Ramd. in DC. France. ed. 3, ill, 726, oP; 3876 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Habitat.—Mountains of Central Europe, especially in Austria, South Germany, Switzerland, and Southern France; on the Pyrenees, &e. j During the last twenty years and more, many millions of Pinus montana have been planted annually, especially in Jutland, on our poorest ground. No country probably has propagated this plant on such a large scale. The wncinata form is the best. P. Montezumee, Lamb. Pinet, ed. 2, 1. 39, t. 22; Schlecht. in Linnea, xii. 489; Ant. Conif. 38, t. 17, f. 1; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 401; Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 1004, f. 1881-84; Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. i. 234 (cum ic.) ; Lindl. and Gord. I. ¢. v. 215; Endl. Syn. Conif. 154; Knight, Syn. Conif. 33; Carr. Man. des Pl. iv. 349, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 317 ; Gord. Pinet. 232 ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 97 (excl. syn. Roezl). LP. occidentalis, Humb. Bonpl. and Kunth, Nov. Gen. et Sp. 11. 4 ; Deppe in Linnea, v. 76 (not Swartz). Habitat.—In different parts of Mexico, ingreat numbers. Schiede found it between Perote and the Hacienda de Flachichuca, at the foot of the Orizaba. Humboldt found it in South Mexico. Introduced into Europe in 1839. It has succeeded very well out of doors, protected during the hardest part of winter with a mat of straw. P. monticola, Douglas Mss. ; Lamb. Pin. ed. 1, iii. 27, t. 35; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2291, f. 2208, 2209; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 81, t. 31; Ant. Conif. 40, t. 18, f. 3; Hook. and Arnott, Bot. Beechey, 394 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 148 ; Lind. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 215 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 305, and ed. 2, 401 ; Gord. Pinet. 233, and ed. 2, 314 ; Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 262, Pacific R.R. Rep. xii. 2, 27, and Am. Nat. i. 410;. Lyall in Journ. Linn. Soe. vii. 141 ; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 94; Nelson, Pinac. 120 ; Hoopes, Ever- greens, 135; Bolander in Proc. Calif. Acad. ili. 318; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 405 ;,Gray in Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 402; Fowler in Lond. Gard. Chron. 1872, 1071 ; Koch, Dendr. ii. 2, 322 ; Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 32; Macoun in Geolog. Rep. Canada, 1875-76, 211 ; Hall in Coulter’s Bot. Gaz. ii. 91; Engelm. in Bot. Calif. ii. 123 ; G. M. Dawson in Canadian Nat. new ser. ix. 328; Veitch, Man. Conif. 181, f. 41; Lawson, Pinet. Brit. i. 69, f. 1-6; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 293. P. Strobus monticola, Nutt. Sylv. N. Amer. ii. 177. Habitat.—Vancouver’s Island, coast and gold ranges of Southern British Columbia, through the Coeur d’Alléne and _ Bitter-root Mountains of Idaho to the valley of the Flathead River, Northern Montana (Canby and Sargent) ; south along the Cascade Mountains of Washington Territory and Oregon, and the Californian Sierras to Calaveras County. First discovered and introduced by Douglas in 1831; since then collected by many explorers. Jeffrey, Murray, Beardsley, Bridges, PINETUM DANICUM. 377 Lobb, &c., have all aided in introducing it into England (‘‘ Pinetum Britannicum,” 1884, vol. i.). It does not occur in any of the botanical hsts of the different United States exploring expeditions which crossed the continent within the United States territory for the purpose of ascertaining the best route for a railroad to the Pacific. This may have been due to the distribution of the tree being local, as these expeditions only crossed the country transversely from east to west, and did not explore it longitudinally from north to south, while the expeditions which have done so found it. A large tree, 100-150 feet in height, witha trunk 3-5 feet in diameter ; most common, and reaching its greatest development, in the Pend d’Oreille and Clark’s Fork regions of Idaho—here a valuable and important timber tree; in British Columbia generally below 3,000 feet, and in Califcrnia between 7,000 and 10,000 feet eleva- tion; not common (C. S. Sargent). P. monticola is so nearly allied to the Weymouth Pine (P. Strobus), that Loudon thought this might only prove a variety of it, and conse- quently only separated them provisionally, untilan opportunity occurred of examining the male catkins and ascertaining other particulars. This information we now have, and no doubt exists as to its being a distinct species from P. Strobus. The only doubt now is whether two species are notincluded under the name P. monticola. It is ahandsomer tree than P. Strobus, its green is darker and richer, the leaves are stiffer and. less serrulate, while its beautiful orange-coloured cones add to its attractions. It seems less liable to break, and consequently has more rarely double branches or competing leaders than the Weymouth Pine. That such a beautiful and free-growing tree has now, after a fair trial, been found to be well suited for planting in British woodlands is a matter of the greatest importance, for certainly few members of . the Pine family combine the useful with the ornamental in so high a degree. P. monticola is a very handsome tree, about midway in appearance between P. Cembra and P. Strobus. The contour of a fair-sized specimen may be called pyramidal, not so much, however, as in P. Cembra, with an abundance of rather short branches, well clothed with dark rich green foliage. More, perhaps, as an ornamental tree than as a valuable timber-producer is this Pine known to us ; yet in this latter respect it is certainly far from valueless, as fine samples of its timber, as well as the various uses to which it is applied, clearly peint out. The timber, of which a plank 18 feet long, 46 inches wide, and 3 inches thick, was once exhibited, was well packed and firm, not of too deep a colour, and well adapted for using where strength and lasting qualities are of first importance. The value of the wood, as grown in England, has not yet been fairly tested. As an ornamental . tree it, however, occupies the front rank (Trans. Roy. Scot, Arb, So¢. xii. pt. 2), 878 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, Pinus monticola, planted in 1876, is now 19 feet high, with a girth of 1 foot. Iam unable to say if taller specimens are to be found | in Denmark. It has produced cones. P. monticola czerulescens. This is a variety with a more glaucous appearance than the type. P. muricata, Don in Linn. Trans. xvii. 441. P. Edgariana, Hartw. in Journ. Hort. Soc. iii. 217, 226. Habitat.—California, Mendocino County, south through the coast ranges to San Luis, Obispo County. Introduced into Europe in 1846. Is perhaps not hardy in Denmark. This very distinct Pine was first discovered by Dr. Coulter at San Luis, Obispo, in Upper California, to the south of Monterey, at an elevation of 3,000 feet, and within ten miles of the seashore. It grows straight, but rather stunted, seldom exceeding 40 feet in height. Mr. Hartweg found it growing on the western declivity of the mountains near Monterey, and within two miles of the seashore, attaining a height of from 20 to 30 feet, and with a trunk 12 inches in diameter. In this locality it was confined to a small wood half a mile square, and intermixed with and surrounded by Pinus insignis. Mr. Hartweg again met with it at a considerable distance to the south of Monterey, on the ascent to the mission of La Purissima, where the monotony of the bare hills was only relieved by a small forest of it ; the trees, however, not attaining a larger size than those found grow- ing near Monterey. Mr. Jeffrey found ita tree 40 feet high, of a conical form, on the Siskiyou Mountains, at an elevation of 7,500 feet, growing in moist soil, near the summit of the mountain. It was named P. Murrayana by the Oregon Committee, and P. Hdgariana by Hartweg in the Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society. It is the ‘‘Obispo,” or Bishop’s Pine, of the Californians, and has been found to be quite hardy in England (G. Gordon, ‘‘ The Pinetum,” 1875.) This is a very distinct Pine, the irregular appearance of its branches and clustered prickly cones being different to those of any other with which I am acquainted. From its rather unusual appearance it is worthy of a corner in the pinetum. It is perfectly hardy, not at all fastidious as to soil or situation, of the easiest culture, and valuable for planting as game shelter, or for the ornamentation of high-lying and breezy situations (Trans. Roy. Scot. Arb. Soc. xii. pt. 2). P. Murrayana, Balfour, Rep. Oreg. Exped. 2, t. 3, f. 2. P. con- torta var. Murrayana, Engelm. in Bot. Calif. P. contorta, New- berry in Pacific R.R. Rep. PP. inops, Benth. Pl. Hartw. 337. P. contorta var. latifolia, Engelm. in King’s Rep. v. 331. P. contorta latifolia, Engelm. in Porter’s Fl. Colorado. LP. (?) Bouwrsiert, Carr, Conif. ed. 2, 475. Introduced into Europe since 1830, PINETUM DANICUM. 379 Habitat.— Valley of the Yukon River, Alaska (Fort Selkirk, Dall.) ; south through the interior of British Columbia, along the mountain ranges of Washington Territory and Oregon, and the Sierra Nevadas of California to Mount San Jacinto; on the high plateau east of the Rocky Mountains in about latitude 56°, and south through the mountains of Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah to New Mexico and Northern Arizona. A tree 60-80 feet in height, with a trunk 2-4 feet in diameter, reaching its greatest development in the Californian Sierras; in the interior regions in dry, gravelly soil—here the prevailing tree, covering immense areas, and generally replacing other species destroyed by fire ; in Western Washington Territory, and southward, only along the borders of moist alpine meadows between 6,000 and 9,000 feet elevation ; generally confounded with the closely allied P. contorta of the coast, from which it may be distinguished by its longer, broader leaves, very thin, scaly bark, thin sapwood, and less resinous and finer-grained wood, resembling that of the White Pines ; the distribution of the two species in Northern British Columbiaand Alaska is still undetermined. Wood light, soft, not strong, close, straight-grained, easily worked, compact, not durable ; bands of small summer cells narrow, not con- spicuous, resin passages few, not large ; medullary rays numerous, obscure ; colour light yellow or nearly white, the thin sapwood lighter ; specific gravity, 0°4096 ; ash, 0°32 ; occasionally manufactured into lumber, and used for fuel, railway ties, &c. (C. S. Sargent). Hardy. Has ripened cones in Denmark. P. occidentalis, Swartz, Prodr. 103, and Fl. Ind. Occid. ii. 1230; Loisel. Nouv. Duham. v. 250, t. 72, f. 2; Lamb. Pinet. ed. 2, peste 22): Ant. Conif; 40, t. 18, f. 1; Loud. “Arbor. iv.: 2271, f, 2183, and Encycl. of Trees, 1015, f. 1901; Endl. Syn. Conif. 154 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Sec. v. 215; Carr. Man. des Pl. 350, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 318; Gord. Pinet. 234; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 101 (not J. HE. Nelson, Pinac.). Larix americana, foliis quinis, ab eodem exortu, Tourn. Inst. 586. P. foliis quinis, ab eodem exortw, Plum. Cat. 17, and Pl. Amer. 154, t. 161. P. cubensis, hort. ex Gord. l. c. Habitat.—On the mountains in the middle of St. Domingo, parts of Cuba, and the Isle of Pines. Introduced into Europe in 1820. We have no plants of it in cultivation in Denmark, but I possess cones brought home by the Danish botanist and plant collector, Baron Eggers, P. oocarpa, Schiede in Linnea, x1. 491; Loud. Encyel. of Drees; 1012; f. 1894-98; Ant. Conif. 39, t. 17, f. 2; Endl. Syn. Conif. 152; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 215; Knight, Syn, Conif. 33; Carr. Man. des Pl. iv, 348, and Tr. Gén, Conif, 880 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 312 ; Gord. Pinet. 234; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 9- ; J. E. Nelson, Pinac. 122. Habitat.—Mexico. Schiede and Hartweg found it between Ario and the Vulcan Jorullo, and in other temperate parts of Mexico. Introduced to R.H.S. Gardens, Chiswick, in 1840. We do not possess plants of this species, but I have cones in my collection. P. oocarpoides, Bentham Mss. ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 99 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 215. P. oocarpa var. oocarpoides, Endl. Syn. Conif. 152; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 313 ; Gord. Pinet. 235. P. Skinneri, hort. Habitat.—Different parts of Mexico and Guatemala. We have no plants of this, but I have cones in my collection. P. osteosperma, Engelm.; Wisliz. Mem. Tour Nth. Mexico 1846-7, 89. P. cembroides, Gord. Journ. Hort. Soe. 1. 236 (cm ic.), not Zucc. P. Llaveana, Schiede and Deppe in Linnea, xii. 488. P. fertilis, Roezl. Habitat.—Dr. Mayr says it is found in dry, hot parts of Santa Catalina, in Arizona, and in New Mexico. Introduced into Europe in 1848. Perhaps we do not yet possess the right plant in Denmark, as it does not resemble native specimens in my herbarium. P. Parryana, Engelm. Habitat.—California, Larkin’s Station, 20 miles south-east of Campo, San Diego County (Vasey), and southward into Lower California. A small tree, 20-30 feet in height, with a trunk 12-18 inches in diameter ; very rare within the limits of the United States, south of the boundary forming extensive open forests upon the high mesas and slopes of Lower California (Pringle). Is perhaps not hardy in Denmark. P. parviflora, Sieb. and Zucc. Flor. Jap. ii. 27, t. 115; Endl. Syn. Conif. 138 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 292 ; Gord. Pinet. 236 ; Henk. and Hochst. 120. P. Cembra, Thunb. Fl. Jap. 274. Habitat.—Some authors say that it is only to be found in Japan farther north than 35°. Dr. Mayr found it in Shikoku on Kiushiu. How far north it goes is unknown. Hardy. P. p. brevifolia. This is a still more dwarf variety than the type, and is very suitable for small gardens. P. patula, Schiede and Deppe in Linnea, xi. 448; Lamb. Pinet: ed. 2; 1. 36, t. 19; duoud. Arbor. iv. 2266), 2175-76, and Encycl. of Trees, 992, f. 1855-56; Ant. Conif. 35, t. 16, f. 2; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 400 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 157 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 216 ; Carr. Man. des Pl. iv. 351, and Tr. Gén. Conif, 329, and ed. 2, 427; Gord, Pinet, 203; Henk. and PINETUM DANICUM. 881 Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 81 (excl. syn. Roezl); J. E. Nelson, Pinac. 122. Habitat.—Grows in the colder parts of Mexico, Jaya las Couces, between Lerma and Toluca, and around Real del Monte, to 9,700 feet in height. Introduced into Europe about 1820. A specimen in Denmark has kept alive, but it may not be quite hardy. P. Peuce, Griseb. Spic. Flor. Rumel. ii. 349. P. excelsa var. Peuce, Griseb. P. Cembra var. fruticosa, Griseb. Reis. in Rumelien, 189-191. JP. excelsa, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 405. P. cxcelsa, Hook. Journ. Linn. Soc. vii. 145. P. Pewce, Griseb. in Contribu- tions to the History of certain Species of Conifers, by Dr. M. T. Masters, 205. This species has much shorter leaves and sheaths than has P. excelsa. Habitat.—On the Peristeri Mountains in Macedonia, where it was discovered by Grisebach ; on the frontiers of Montenegro, and the Kom, where the Servian botanist Pancic found it. Further, it is to be found at Periamdagh, in the Balkaus, where Janka observed it at an elevation of 5,000-6,500 feet. Introduced into cultivation in 1864. We have plants about twenty years old, which have developed very well, and proved hardy. Cones have ripened in Denmark. P.P.argentea. This hasa more silvery appearance than the type. P. Pinaster, Sol. in Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, iii. 367 ; Lamb. Pimetwweds tl 1, 9; t. 4.5, and ed. 2, i. 21, t. 9: Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2213, f. 2100-2101, and Encycl. of Trees, 961, f. 1781-82 ; Ant. Conif. 18, t. 6, f. 1; Pinet. Wob. 29; Link in Linnza, xv. 498; Schouw in Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 3, i. 235; Endl. Syn. Conif. 168; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 217 (excl. syn. Massoniana) ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 27; Carr. Tr. Gén. des Conif. 365 ; Gord. Pinet. 176 ; Henk. and Hochst. 25 ; Beissn. Nadelh. 221. Pinaster, Czesalp. De Plant. lib. 3, cap. 52, p. 180. P. maritima altera, C. Bauh. Pin. 492. P. silvestris 8, L. Spec. Pl. 1418. P. silvestris, Mill. Dict. n. 1 (not L.). P. maritima, Poir. Dict. Encycl. v. 337. P. Laricio, Savo. Fl. Pis. ii. 353 (not Poiret). - P. nepalensis, Royle and hort. aliq. P. Latteri, Madden ex Gord. Pinet. 176. P. syrtica, Thor. Prom. in Gascogn. 161. P. Nove Hollandiz, Lodd. P. Nove Zealandia, Lodd. LP. St. Helenica, Loud. P. neglecta, Low. LP. japonica, hort. aliq. P. chinensis, Knight, ex Gord. Pinet. 176. Habitat.—The Mediterranean countries of Europe, chiefly in the neighbourhood of the coast ; also in Algiers. It is particularly abun- dant in the South of Portugal, in many parts of Spain, and in the West and South of France. | Introduced into England by Gerard in 1596. ‘‘ The ornamental 882, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. effect of this Pine is not much appreciated ; neither is the quality of its wood. It has often been highly recommended for seaside . planting, but with ruinous results in the following instances. Soon after reading a favourable report upon this Pine which appeared a number of years ago, a landed proprietor on the west coast planted it extensively, with the result that scarcely a plant survived the first year. I have also tried it, and the failure could not have been greater if I had used a tropical plant. There are said to be several varieties of the Pinaster, and possibly we may not have the hardiest one, which grows so abundantly in the West of France. Unless we can import the hardiest variety, I don’t think we shall ever grow the Maritime (or Cluster) Pine in sufficient numbers on our seaboard to supply us with pitch, tar, resin, and other products of the Pinaster. I would advise the British landowner rather not to purchase them than risk their failure on bleak seaside exposures” (Trans. Roy. Scot. Arb. Soc. xii. pt. 2). P.P. Hamiltoni, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 383. P. Hamiltonii, Ten. Cat.; Orton, Bot. Napol. 1845. (7?) P. Pinaster major, Duham. Arbr. ii. 133," t2-285) No: 25-ex DC) Bi kr ie Zia. Lina ster: altissma, Lamb. P. Corteana, hort. It was introduced to England in 1825 by the Earl of Aberdeen, from the neighbourhood of Nice. P. P. Lemoniana, Endl. Syn. Conif. 169 ; Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 963, f. 1783-84 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 217 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 27. P. Lemoniana, Benth. in Hort. Trans. ser. 2, i. 512, t. 20; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 400. P. Pinea, L. Spec. Pl. 491; Du Roi, Harbk. ed. Pott. ii. 52; Lamb. Pinet. ed. 1,1. 11, t. 6-8, and ed. 2, i. 23, t. 10, 11; Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2224, f. 2106-2109, and Encycl. of Trees, 965, f. 1787-89 ; Desf. Hist. Arb. ii. 611; Loisel. Nouv. Duham. v. t. 72, 73, f. 3; DC. FI. Fr. iii. 273 ; C. Gay, Fl. Chil. v. 418; Ant. Conif. 20, t. 3, f. 2; Link in Linnea, xv. 499; Griseb. Spicileg. Fl. Rumel. ii. 347 ; Pinet. Wob. 31, t. 10; Schouw, Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 3, iii. 236; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 375; Endl. Syn. Conif. 182 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 27 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 219 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. des Conif. 402; Gord. Pinet. 179; Veitch, Man. Conif. 154; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 220. P. domestica, Mathiol. Valgris. 87. P. satwa, C. Bauh. Pin. 491. P. ossiculis duris, foliis longis, 3. Bauh.:Hist:1,°248:" Pimus,- Plin. Hist. Natexvie 16.5: maderensis, Ten. in Semp. Hort. Reg. Neapol. 1845. P. Pinea chinensis, hert. P. americana pinea, hort. P. japonica, hort. P. afri- cana, hort. Habitat.—Italy and the Mediterranean region generally, both in Europe and Africa ; also Portugal, Madeira, and the Canary Islands. Introduced into England before 1548, as it is mentioned in Turner’s ‘‘ Names of Herbes,” published in that year. PINETUM DANICUM. 883 A conservatory plant once bore a small cone in the Botanic Gardens, Copenhagen. One winter I observed that a young plant kept alive out of doors, but this species cannot be regarded as being hardy in Denmark. A low tree, with a round, bushy appearance, from 15 to 20 feet high, which produces the ‘‘ Carpathian balsam.” It is found on the sandy coasts of Tuscany, and the States of the Church, to the west of the Apennines, on the hills of Genoa and Tuscany, frequently forming forests with the Cluster Pine (Pinws Pinaster), and is cultivated threughout the whole of Italy, from the foot of the Alps to Sicily, but is not commonly found higher than 1,500 feet of elevation, except in the South of Italy, where it grows at an elevation of 2,000 feet. It is cultivated along all the shores of the Mediterranean, and in Greece attains a height of 50 or 60 feet, where its seeds or nuts form an extensive article of commerce, as well as in Italy and the South of France. It forms a very ornamental small tree, with a rounded head, and is celebrated for producing a fine effect in the grounds of Italian villas (G. Gordon, ‘‘ The Pinetum,” 1875). The seeds are edible ; the wood white, light, and full of resin. The Stone Pine being of aslow growth and rather tender constitu- tion, few specimens of this Pine have attained to large dimensions in Great Britain. As a timber tree in this country it is almost valueless, but its extremely picturesque appearance renders it of great value for ornamental planting. It affords a striking contrast, from its stiff and rounded head, to other trees of an open and informal mode of growth. A native of both Europe and Africa. Introduced prior to 1548 (Trans. Roy. Scot. Arb. Soc. xii. pt. 2). P. ponderosa, Dougl. in Loud. Arb. iv. 2248, f. 2182-37 ; Com- panion Bot. Mag. iu. 111; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 44, t. 15 ; Ant. Conif. feet Oo, 4-00; tindl. in Penn. Cycl. xvi. 172; Link in Linnea, xv. 506; Nutt. Sylv. i. 114, and ed. 2, ii. 173; Spach, Hist. Vég. xi. 389 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 163 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 217 ; Carr. Tr. Conif. 340, and ed. 2, 445 ; Gord. Pinet. 205, Suppl. 67, and ed. 2, 281 ; Newberry in Pacific R.R. Rep. vi. 56, 90, t. 4, f. 12; Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 261, Pacific R.R. Rep. xii. (2), 27, 68, and Am. Nat. iii. 409; Torr. Bot. Mex. Boundary Survey, 209, and Ives’ Rep. 28 ; Engelm. in Am. Journ. Sc. ser. 2, xxxiv. 332, Proc. Am. Phil. Soc. ser. 2, xii. 209, Wheeler's Rep. vi. 261, Trans. St. Louis Acad. iv. 181, and Bot. Calif. ii. 125; Lyall in Journ. Linn. Soc. vii. 142 ; Bolander in Proc. Calif. Acad. i. 226, 317; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 71; Nelson, Pinac. 125 ; Hoopes, Evergreens, 117; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 395 (excl. syn. Sinelairvi); Watson in King’s Rep. v. 331, and Pl. Wheeler, 17; Gray in Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 402; Fowler. in Gard. Chron. 1872, 1826; Koch, Dendr. ii. 2, 310; Rothrock in Pl. Wheeler, 28, 50, and Wheeler’s Rep. vi. 9; Porter 384 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. and Coulter, Fl. Colorado ; Hayden’s Surv. Misc. Pub. No. 4, 129 ; Hayden in Warren’s Rep. Nebraska and Dakota, ed. 2, 121; Vasey, . Cat. Forest Trees, 30; Hall in Coulter’s Bot. Gaz. i. 91; Macoun in Geolog. Rep. Canada, 1875-76, 211 ; Brandegee in Coulter’s Bot. Gaz. iii. 32; G. M. Dawson in Canadian Nat. new ser. ix. 326; Rusby in Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, ix. 106; Veitch, Man. Conif. 167 ; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 260. P. Benthaniana, Hartw. Journ. Hort. Soc. ii. 189, and iii. 2238. P. Beardsleyi, Murr. Edin. New Phil. Journ. 1855, 286. P. Craiqiana, Murr. Habitat.—Interior of British Columbia, south of latitude 51°; south and east along the mountain ranges of the Pacific region to Mexico, the Black Hills of Dakota, Colorado, and Western Texas ; not detected in Central or Southern Nevada. P. ponderosa, Douglas, is a variable and widespread species of western North America, several forms of which have been described as distinct. A large tree, 200-300 feet in height, with a trunk 12-15 feet in diameter, or throughout the Rocky Mountain region much smaller, rarely exceeding 100 feet in height (var. scopulorum) ; dry, rocky ridges and prairies, or in Northern California, rarely in cold, wet swamps, reaching its greatest development along the western slope of the sierras of Northern and Central California ; in Western Washington Territory and Oregon rare and local ; after Pseudotsuga Douglasti the most generally distributed and valuable timber tree of the Pacific forests, furnishing the principal lumber of Eastern Washington Territory and Oregon, Western Montana, Idaho, the Black Hills of Dakota, Western Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Wood, varying greatly in quality and value, heavy, hard, strong, brittle, not coarse-grained nor durable, compact ; bands of small summer cells broad or narrow, very resinous, conspicuous, resin passages few, small ; medullary rays numerous, obscure ; colour light red, the very thick sapwood almost white ; specific gravity, 0°4715 ; ash, 0°35 ; largely manufactured into lumber, and used for railway ties, fuel, &c. (C. S. Sargent, ‘‘ Forest Trees of North America”). It has done well in Sweden at Alnarp and at Gothenburg, and seems to be hardy in Denmark. P. p. var. scopulorum, Engelm. in Fl. Calif. ii, 125. P. ponderosa, by botanists from the Rocky Mountains. Habitat.—According to Engelmann, it is to be found on the whole of the Rocky Mountains. Seems to be hardy. P. pseudostrobus, Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1839, 63; Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 1008, f. 1888 ; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 402 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 156; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 216; Carr. Man. des Pl. iv. 350, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 321; Gord. Pinet. 237 ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 104 (excl. syn.). PINETUM DANICUM. 885 Habitat.—It is a native of the mountains of Angangueo and Orizaba, and other parts of Mexico. Not yet proved hardy in Denmark. P. pungens, Michx. Hist. Arb. Am. i. 61, t. 5, and N. Amer. Sylv. ed. 3, ii. 105, t. 140; Nouv. Duham. v. 236, t. 67, f. 4; Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2, v. 314; Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 6438; Poir. Suppl. iv. 417; Elliott, Sk. ii. 635; Spreng. Syst. ii. 886; Eaton, Manual, ed. 6, 265 ; Lamb. Pin. ed. 1, i. 34, t. 17; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2197, f. 2077-80; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 57, t. 21; Eaton and Wright, Bot. 359; Ant. Conif. 18, t. 5, f. 4; Lindl. in Penn. Cycl. xvi. 171; Nutt. Sylv. 11. 125, and ed. 2, 11. 184; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 387 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 166 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 27 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 217 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 359, and ed. 2, 470 ; Darby, Bot. 8. States, 515 ; Gord. Pinet. 181, and ed. 2, 254 ; Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 257 ; Chapman, FI. 8. States, 432; Curtis in Rep. Geolog. Surv.- N. Carolina, 1860, i. 20; Wood, Cl. Book, 660, and Bot. and Fl. 313; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 21; Nelson, Pinac. 127; Gray, Man. N.U. States, ed. 5, 469 ; Hoopes, Evergreens, 98; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 379; Koch, Dendr. ii. 2, 304; Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 30; Meehan in Rep. Perm. Fruit Growers’ Soc. 1877, and t.; Engelm. in Trans. St. Louis Acad. iv. 183; Veitch, Man. Conif. 158; Beissn. Nadelh. 214. Habitat.—Alleghany Mountains, Pennsylvania to Tennessee. A tree 30-60 feet in height, with a trunk 2-5} feet in diameter ; most common, and reaching its greatest development, upon the high mountains of Kast Tennessee ; here often the prevailing species, and forming extensive forests (C. S. Sargent). A specimen ef P. pungens, planted in 1878, now measures 12 feet 6 inches in height, with a girth of 8 inches. Tt has produced cones in Denmark. P. pyrenaica, Lapeyr. Arb. Pl. Pyren. 146, and Suppl. 63; Loud: Arbor. Brit. iv. 2209, f. 2090-93, and Encycl. of Trees, 961, Pei; 79-30- Ant. Conf. 3, t. 3, f. 4; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 219; Endl. Syn. Conif. 180; Knight, Syn. Conif. 27; David, Rev. Hort. 1852, 416; Carr. Tr. Gén. des Conif. 391; Gord. Pinet. 182; Veitch, Man. Conif. 156; Beissn. Nadelh. 225. Pinaster hispanicus, Clus. Hist. pl. 33. P. halepensis major, Ann. Soc. Roy. d Hort. Par. 1838, 186. Pinaster hispanica, Roxas di San Clemente. P.; Brutia, Ten. Syn. 47, and Fl. Nap. v. 266, t. 200. P. Loise- leuriana, Carr. Conif. ed. 2, 500. PP. Pallasi, Paol. H. Bot. Parol. 1841, 3. P. Paroliniana, Webb. Herb. P. Parolini, Wis. LIllust. delle Piante Nuov. Mem. ii. 7,t. 1. P. hispanica, Cook, Sketches in Spain, ii. 337. P. penicillus, Lapeyr. Hist. Pl. Pyren. 63. Habitat.—The Pyrenees, chiefly on the Spanish side ; also in many places on the sierras stretching across the peninsula ; in the South of CC 886 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, France, especially in the department of Gers; and, according to Parlatore : ‘‘In nemoribus Calabriz ad 2,400-3,000 ped., hine inde solitaria ; in insula Cypro, insula Creta, frequens in Monte Tauro: Caramanico ad 2,500-5,000 ped. ; in Syria et in Bithynia ubi vastas conficit sylvas ” (Prodr. xvi. 384). Introduced into England in 1834 by Captain Cook (afterwards Captain Widdrington). P. nyrenaica, Lapeyr., has, Professor Schiibeler says, done well as young plants at Christiania. At Christiansand (58° 8’) it thrives exceedingly well. Professor Schibeler has seen a plant 11 feet high (3°5 métres). The four top-shoots had together a length of 6 feet. It has also been kept out of doors at Stockholm (Schiibeler). If these plants really belong to the true Pinus pyrenaica it is an interesting testimony to its hardiness. As far as I know we have only young plants in Denmark. They have apparently not suffered from winter cold. P. pyrenaica, Lapeyr., fide Parlatore (P. Brutia, Ten., and with other synonyms), must not be confounded with P. pyrenaica, Loud., which is a form of P. Laricio, to which it is so closely allied as to be often considered a variety of it; but the leaves of P. Laricio are stouter, and the more numerous ducts are surrounded by strengthening cells, which are very scarce in the leaves of the other. ‘The Pinus pyrenaica of English plantations is now generally considered to be this form of the very variable Pinus Laricio, or Corsican Pine, and recog- nisable among other things by the deep orange colour of the young shoots. The name of pyrenaica should be strictly confined to P. pyrenaica, Lapeyr. This is a tree which, on the authority of Parlatore, is a native of the forests of Central and South- eastern Spain, the mountains of Calabria, the islands of Cyprus and Crete, the Caramanian ‘Taurus, Syria, and Bithynia. Not un- naturally, it has received a variety of names, as generally happens when botanists describe a specimen from one locality without having the opportunity of detailed comparison of specimens from other regions. The tree in question has been confounded with P. Pinaster (as in Veitch’s Manual), from which it differs considerably, with P. Laricio, and with P. halepensis. Gay, in a note in the ‘‘ Kew Herbarium,” says it differs from P. halepensis in its leaves, which are twice the length cf those in halepensis ; in the cones, which are oblong, not ovoid ; and in the scales of the cone, which are depressed, aot raised in the centre. We may also add that the stems are less elaucous, and the cones are on much shorter stalks, spreading, not deflected, broader at the base, and with flatter apophyses. Lambert, unfortunately, confounded both halepensis and Laricio under his maritima. He subsequently corrected the mistake in part, so that PINETUM DANICUM. 387 t. 9, vol. 1. ed. 1, folio, represents Laricio, though called maritima. His t. 10, vol.i., shows a detached cone with prominent apophysis = the P. halepensis var. 8 of Tenore, while the cone on the branch has a flat apophysis, hke Brutia. What follows is taken from the ‘‘ Pinetum Woburnense,” p. 27 :— The Calabrian Pine ‘‘ bears a strong similarity to the P. maritima of Lambert, as well as to the P. haiepensis, but is readily distinguished from either of these species by its much longer wavy leaves, which vary from 3 to 5 inches in length, whilst those of the above-mentioned species are seldom above half the size. The cones of the P. Brutia are also quite (nearly) sessile, growing in large clusters (or singly)’surround- ingthe stem. A splendid figure of this is given in Mr. Lambert’s third volume of his ‘Genus Pinus,’ in which he says that ‘ Sprengel has even referred it to P. Pinaster, not even allowing it the rank of a variety ; but no two species can be more distinct. The leaves in Pinaster are straight, rigid, twice as stout, and disposed in interrupted verticils ; and the cones are double the size, with the scales elevated and angular. The specimen represented in the plate was obligingly communicated to me by the Hon. Wilham T. H. Fox-Strangways, Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, who received it from Professor Tenore.’ It, however, appears to me to be more nearly allied to the P. halepensis than to any other of the species. The Woburn collection is indebted for this new and valuable Pine to the Right Hon. the Karl of Mountmorres, who, I believe, was the first that raised it from seed in this country, and kindly sent a couple of plants of it, along with a valuable collection of other plants, to Woburn. It is a native of Calabria (the ancient Brutium), where it attains a considerable size, and produces timber of a very superior quality.” This tree has been highly spoken of for the purposes of reafforest- ing the Karst and the Adriatic coast (M. T. M. in the Gardeners’ Chronicle, Sept. 8, 1888, p. 267). P. reflexa, Engelmann in Gard. Chron. Feb. 25, 1882, 260. P. flexilis var. refleca, Engelm. in Rothrock’s Rep. Bot. Exped. Wheeler. Habitat.—High mountains of South-western New Mexico (Greene, Rusby), to the Santa Rita Mountains (Rothrock, Engelmann, and Sargent), and Santa Catalina Mountains (Lemmon, Pringle), Arizona. A tree 80-100 feet in height, with a trunk sometimes exceeding 2 feet in diameter ; rocky ridges and slopes of almost inaccessible cations between 6,000 and 8,000 feet elevation (C. S. Sargent). Is perhaps not hardy in Denmark. P. resinosa, Sol. in Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, 111. 367, and ed. 2, Peo famp, Pin. ed. 1,27, t. 13, ed. 2, 1.23, 4..15, and -ed. 3, 1.17, t. 13; Willd. Spec. iv. 496, Enum. 988, and Berl. Baumz. ClCH? 388 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 267 ; Poir. in Lam. Dict. v. 339; Pers. Syn. ii. [578 ; Dest. Hist, Arb. 11. 612; Smith in Rees’ Cycl. xxviii. No. 3; Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. i. 642; Eaton, Manual, 110, and ed. 6, 264; Nutt. Gen. li. 220 ;, Hayne, .Dend. Bl 17s); Spreng.) Syst.) tsose elon: Compend. FI. N.U. States, 360; Fl. N. York, ii. 227; Beck, Bot. 339 ; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2210, f. 2094-97; Forb. Pinet. Wob.. 19, t. 6; Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. ii. 161, in part ; Eaton and Wright, Bot. 308 ; Bigelow, Fl. Boston. ed. 3, 384; Lindl. in Penn. Cycl. xvii. 170; Ant. Conmif. 7, t4, fe 1 3 laimk im inna: eaveno0te- endl: Syn. Conif. 178 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 27 ; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 219 ; Parry in Owen’s Rep. 618 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 401; Gord. Pinet. 183 (excl. syn. Loiselewriana), and ed. 2, 256 ; Richardson, Arctic Exped. 441 ; Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 257 ; Wood, Cl. Book, 661, el Bot. and Fl. 313; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 45 (excl. syn. Tbe tana) ;. Sargent, Forest Trees of N. Amer. 191 ; Hoopes, Evergreens, 102 ; Gray, Man. N.U. States, ed. 5, 470 ; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 388 ; Koch, Dendr. ii. 2, 286 ; Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 30; Macoun in Geolog. Rep. Canada, 1875-76, 211 ; Engelm. in Trans. St. Louis Acad. iv. 179 ; Sears in Bull. Essex Inst. xii. 185; Bell in Geolog. Rep. Canada, 1879-80, 50; Veitch, Man. Conif. 159; Beissn. Nadelh. 246. P. rubra, Michx. tf) IN. Amer; Sylvian. Wt25t. 134: Habitat.—Newfoundland ; northern shores of the Gulf of St. Law- rence and Lake Nipigon to the valley of the Winnipeg River ; south through the Northern States to Chestnut Hill, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, the mountains of Northern Pennsylvania, Isabella County, Michigan, and Central Minnesota. According to Michaux, in America it rises from 70 to 80 feet, with a trunk about 2 feet in diameter, and retaining nearly the same bulk for two-thirds of its height. The bark is of a clearer red than that of any other Pine in the United States, and by this the tree may always readily be distinguished. The leaves are 5 or 6 inches long, of a dark green, two ina sheath, and collected in bunches at the extremities of the branches, like those of the Pinaster, instead of being distributed Penutanls, over them, like those of P. se and P. silvestris (J. C. Loudon, Arb. et eae Brit. 1814, iv. 2211). This is an elegant tree when young. Michaux, seeing its trunk covered with red bark, called it P. rubra, a name it has still kept in some places. Wood light, not strong, hard, rather coarse-grained, compact ; bands of small summer cells broad, dark-coloured, very resinous, resin passages few, small, not conspicuous ; medullary rays numerous, thin ; colour light red, the sapwood yellow or often almost white ; specific gravity, 0°4854 ; ash, 0°27; largely manufactured into lumber and used for all purposes of construction, flooring, piles, &c. A large tree, 80-85 feet in height, with a trunk 2-43 feet in PINETUM DANICUM. 889 diameter ; light, sandy loam or dry, rocky ridges, forming scattered groves rarely exceeding a few hundred acres in extent ; common, and reaching its greatest development, through Northern Wisccnsin and Minnesota; rare in the Eastern States, except in the extreme northern portions of New England (C. 8. Sargent). P. resinosa is rare in Denmark. A plant twenty-two years old has reached a height of more than 25 feet, and a girth of more than 2 feet. iP ricida,, Mall Dict. ed. 7; n.-l0; Du Roi, Harbk. ii. 60’; Marshall, Arb. 101; Wangenh. Amer. 41; Lamb. Pin. ed. 1, i. 25, Pets 19 ed. 2, 1. 32, t. 16,17, and ed. 3,1. 28, t. 18, 19 ; Willd. Spec. iv. 498, Enum. 988, and Berl. Baumz. 268 ; Pers. Syn. 11. 578; Desf. Hist. Arb. ii. 612 ; Michx. fil. Hist. Arb. Am. i. 89, t. 8, and N. Amer. Sylv. ed. 3, i. 118, t. 144; Nouv. Duham. v. 244, t. 74; Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2, v. 317 ; Smith in Rees’ Cycl. xxviii. No. 14; Pursh, FI. Am. Sept. ii. 643; Poir. Suppl. iv. 417; Eaton, Manual, 110, and ed. 6, 265 ; Barton, Compend. Fl. Philadelph. ii. 183 ; Nutt. Gen. ii. 223 ; Hayne, Dend. Fl. 175; Elliott, Sk. 11. 635; Spreng. Syst. u. 887 ; Torr. Compend. Fl. N.U. States, 360, and Fl. N. York, ii. 227 ; Beck, Bot. 339; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2239, f. 2123-26; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 41, t. 13 ; Eaton and Wright, Bot. 358 ; Ant. Conif. 26, t. 7, f. 2 ; Bigelow, Fl. Boston. ed. 3, 385 ; Lindl. in Penn. Cyel. xvii. 172 ; Link in Linnea, xv. 503; Spach, Hist. Vée. xi. 388; Griffith, Med. Bot. 604 ; De Chamb. Arb. Résin. 31 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 164; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 217; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 342, and ed. 2, 447; Darlington, FI. Cestrica, ed. 3, 299 ; Darby, Bot. S.U. States, 514 ; Gord. Pinet. 207, and ed. 2, 283; Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 257 ; Chapman, Fl. S.U. States, 433 ; Curtis in Rep. Geolog. Surv. N. Carolina, 1860, iii. 21; Wood, Cl. Book, 660, and Bot. and Fl. 318; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 67 ; Nelson, Pinac. 128; Gray, Man. N.U. States, ed. 5, 469 ; Hoopes, Evergreens, 119; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 592- Koch, Dendr. u..2, 307; Vasey, Cat. Forest .Trees, 31; Engelm. in Trans. St. Louis Acad. iv. 183; Sears in Bull. Essex Inst. xiii. 186 ; Veitch, Man. Conif. 169; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 266. P. Teda rigida, Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, i. 368. P. Fraseri, Lodd. Cat. 1836. P. Loddigesi, Loud. Arb. Brit. iv. 2269. Habitat.—Valley of the St. John’s River, New Brunswick, to the northern shores of Lake Ontario ; south through the Atlantic States to Northern Georgia, extending to the western slope of the Alleghany Mountains in West Virginia and Kentucky (Pineville, Bell County, De Friese). A tree 40-80 feet in height, with a trunk 2-3 feet in diameter ; dry, sandy, barren soil, or less commonly in deep, cold swamps ; very common. Wood light, soft, not strong, brittle, coarse-grained, compact ; 8390 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. bands of small summer cells broad, very resinous, conspicuous, resin passages numerous, not large; medullary rays numerous, obscure ; colour light brown or red, the thick sapwood yellow, or often nearly white; specific gravity, 0°5151; ash, 0°23; largely used for fuel, charcoal, and occasionally manufactured into coarse lumber (C. 8. Sargent, ‘“‘Forest Trees of North America”). Upon the island of Nantucket, Massachusetts, this species is now greatly injured by the attacks of the destructive caterpillar of the pine moth, Retina frus- trana (Scudder in Pub. Mass. Agric. Soc. 1883, and t.). This species seems to have formerly abounded in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, for from the beginning of the eighteenth century till 1776 these States furnished Britain with a considerable quantity of tar. About the year 1705—a misunder- standing having taken place between Great Britain and Sweden, from which latter country the British Government had principally drawn its supply of tar—Great Britain encouraged this branch.of industry in the northern part of America by a premium of £1 sterling for every barrel of tar made from dead wood, and £2 for every barrel made from green wood ; in consequence of which, and of this tree furnishing tar abundantly, its destruction has been so rapid that itis now rarely found in the Northern States. P. rigida was cultivated in England by the Duke of Bedford previously to 1759 (J. G. Lemmon, ‘‘ California Board of Forestry,” 1889-90). In some parts of the Alleghanies, where this tree abounds, houses are built of it, and the wood, if it is not covered with paint, is readily recognised by its numerous knots. It is thought better than the Yellow Pine for floors that are frequently washed, as the resin with which it is impregnated renders it finer and more durable. It is used for ship pumps, and as fuel by the bakers and brick-makers of New York and Philadelphia ; and from the roots is prepared lampblack. The principal use of this tree is, however, to furnish tar and turpentine. The essence of turpentine, used in most parts of America for painting, is obtained from this tree. Dr. Mayr says in his book, ‘‘ Die Waldungen von Nord-Amerika,” that P. rigida is hardly more resinous than other Firs, and that as a substitute the wood of P. mitis and P. resinosa is also called ‘‘ Pitch Pine.” He draws attention to the great error of falsely calling the excellent wood of the Yellow Fir (P. australis) pitch pine, although it is not socalled in America. This mistake has caused the planting of large numbers of P. vigida as ‘‘ Pitch Pine.” Dr. Mayr believes that this species can only be recommended for planting on sandy hills near the sea-coast. A tree of this species planted in 1864 in Denmark now measures 36 feet in height and 2 feet 9 inches in girth. P. Russelliana, Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1839, app. 68; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 402; Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 1003, f. 1879-80; Endl. PINETUM DANICUM. 391 Syn. Conif. 152; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 215 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 33; Carr. Traité Gén. des Conif. 314; Gord. Pinet. 238 ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelholzk. 105; J. EH. Nelson, Pinac. 128. Habitat.—On the highest points of ‘‘Carmen,” in Mexico. Hartweg discovered it on the way from San Pedro to San Pablo, near Real del Monte. Introduced into Europe in 1839. We have not yet obtained the plant in Denmark, but I have cones in my collection. P. Sabiniana, Doug]. in Companion to Bot. Mag. ii. 150 ; Lamb. Pin. ed. 1, ii. 137, t. 58 ; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2246, f. 2188-43; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 63, t. 23, 24; Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. ii. 162; Lindl. in Penn. Cycl. xvi. 172; Ant. Conif. 30, t. 11 ; Hook. and Arnott, Bot. Beechey, 393 ; Link in Linnea, xv. 509 ; Nutt. Sylv. ui. 110, t. 113, and ed. 2, i. 169, t. 118; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 390; De Chambray, Tr. Arb. Rés. 347; Endl. Syn. Conif. 159; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 216 ; Mle des Serres, 1x; 275, t. 964; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 334, / and ed. 2, 430; Torr. and Gray in Pacific R.R. Rep. 1. 1380; Bigelow im Pacific R.R. Rep. iv. 25; Torr. in Pacific R.R. Rep. iv. 141, Bot. Mex. Boundary Surv. 210, t. 57, and Ives’ Rep. 28 ; Newberry in Pacific R.R. Rep. vi. 39, 90, f. 13 ; Gord. Pinet. 208, and ed. 2, 284; Cooper in Smithsonian Rep. 1858, 261; Walpers, Ann. v. 799; Bolander in Proc. Calif. Acad. in. 226, 318; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 75; Lawson, Pinet. Brit. i. 85, t. 11, f. 1-3; Nelson, Pinac. 129 ; Hoopes, Evergreens, 121; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 391; Fowler in Lond. Gard. Chron. 1872, 1826; Koch, Dendr. 11. 2, 312; Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 31; Engelm. in Wheeler's Rep. vi. 9/9, Trans. St. Louis Acad. iv. 182, and Bot. Calif. 1. 127; Veitch, Man. Conif. 169. Habitat.—California, Portuguese Flat, Shasta County; south along the foot-hills of the coast ranges and the western slope of the Sierra Nevada, below 4,000 feet elevation. A large tree, 80-100 feet in height, with a trunk 2-4 feet in diameter ; very common through all the foot-hills region (C. S. Sargent, ‘‘ Forest Trees of North America’’). Mr. Muir, in an article in Harper’s Magazine on the coniferous forests of the Sierra Nevada, gives the following account of this tree, which for its interest is worth transcribing: ‘‘The first coniferous tree met by the traveller in ascending the range from the west is the Nut Pine, remarkable for its loose, airy, tropical appearance, suggesting a region of Palms rather than cool rising Pine woods. No one would take it at first sight to be a Pine or Conifer of any kind, it is so loose in habit and so widely branched, and its foliage is so thin and grey. Full-grown specimens are from 40 to 50 feet in height, and from 2 to 892 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 3 feet in diameter. Ata height of 15 or 20 feet from the ground the trunk usually divides into three or four main branches, about equal . in size, which, after bearing away from one another, shoot straight up and form separate summits, while the crooked subordinate branches aspire, or radiate, or droop in loose ornamental sprays. The slender, greyish-green needles are from 8 to 12 inches long, loosely tasselled, and incline to droop in handsome curves, contrasting with the stiff, dark-coloured twigs and branches in a very striking manner. No other tree of my acquaintance, so substantial in body, is in its body so thin and so pervious to light. The sunbeams sift through even the leafiest trees with scarcely any interruption, and the weary, heated traveller finds but little protection in the shade. It grows only on the torrid foot-hills, seeming to delight in the most ardent sun-heat, like a Palm, springing up here and there singly, or in scattered groups of five or six, among shrubby white Oaks and thickets of Ceanothus and Manganita, its extreme upper limit being about 4,000 feet above the sea, its lower about from 500 to 800 feet. The generous crop of sweet nutritious nuts (seeds) which it yields makes it a great favourite with Indians and with bears. The cones are truly magnificent, measuring 5 to 8 inches in length, and not much less in thickness ; rich chocolate-brown in colour, and protected by strong, down-curving hooks, which terminate in scales. Nevertheless, the little Douglas squirrel can open them. : ‘‘Indians gathering the ripe nuts make a striking picture. The men climb the trees like bears and beat off the cones with sticks, or recklessly cut off the more fruitful branches with hatchets, while the squaws gather them in heaps, and roast, them until the scales open sufficiently to allow the hard-shelled seeds to be beaten out. Then, in the cool evenings, men, women, and children, with their capacity for dirt greatly increased by the soft resin with which they are all bedragegled, form circles around the camp-fires on the bank of some stream, and lie in easy independence, cracking nuts, and laughing and chatting, as heedless of the future as bears and squirrels.” One plant, about sixteen years of age, was killed in the winter of 1890-91, but it was not a healthy or well-cultivated plant. The species may be hardy. P. serotina, Michaux, Fl. Bor. Amer. ii. 205; Lamb. Pinet. ed. 1, 1. t. 19; Pinet. Woburn. 47, t. 16; Link in Linnea, xv. 504; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 217 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 341; Gord. Pinet. 209; Henk. and Hochst. 70. P. rigida var. serotina, Engelm. Revis. of the Genus Pinus, &e. 183 ; Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 979, f. 1824-27. P. Texda B alopecuroidea, Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, v. 317. Habitat.—North Carolina ; south, near the coast, to the head of the St.'John’s River, Florida. A tree 40-80 feet in height, with a trunk 2-3 feet in diameter ; - PINETUM DANICUM. 3938 inundated borders of streams and ponds in low peaty soil; not common. P. silvestris, Linn. Spec. Pl. 1418 (excl. var.); Lamb. Pinet. ed. 2, i. t. 1; Rich. Conif: t. 11; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2153, f. 2043-44 ; Ant. Conif. 9, t. 4, f. 3; Schouw, Ann. Sc. Nat. ser. 3, i. 331; Spach,- Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 376; De Cand. Fl. Fr. iii. 271; Desf. Hist. Arbr. ii. 610 ; De Chambr. Tr. Prat. Arbr. Résin. 142, pl. 1, moro and pl. 5, f. 25 Endl: Syn. Conf. 171 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 218; Knight, Syn. Conif. 26; Carr.. Tr. Gén. des Conif. 372 ; Gord. Pinet. 184 ; Veitch, Man. Conif. 156 ; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 225. Teda, Plin. Hist. Nat. xvi. 19. Pinaster vulgaris prior, Clus. Pannon. 16. P. silvestris vulgaris genevensis, J. Bauh. Misr 1 2, 250. P. silvestris, C. Bauh.. Pinet.. 491.. P. silvestris scariosa, Lodd. PP. silvestris squamosa, Bose. P. rubra, Mill. Dict. n.d. PP. silvestris rigensis, hort. LP. rigensis, Desf. Cat. Hort. Par. Abr. u. 61. Habitat.—Central and Northern, and even parts of Southern Kurope, such as Spain; and the Siberian forest region as far as the Amour River. It is not now found growing wild in Denmark. A tree of this species lately measured in a Danish garden gave a height of 60 feet and a circumference of 4 feet 2 inches ; 1t was planted in 1845. Trees exceeding 70 feet are to be seen in plantations. In reference to the height of this species Prof. Schiibeler says: “The grandest and finest trees, wherever they can be found, are cut down to be used as masts; but even in the South of Norway it is difficult enough to find a Pine that has a height of 100 feet or more. Two such trees, which are to be found in Lower Telemarken (59° 16’ N. and 6° 55’ E.), were measured in November 1872. One specimen was found to have a height of 104 feet, with a diameter at the base of 34 inches; the other had a height of 105 feet, and at 96 feet from the ground the trunk had a diameter of 5 inches. ‘The first-mentioned tree, at the height of 40 feet, had a diameter of 16 inches; at 50 feet, 143 inches ; at 60 feet, 12 inches ; and at 70 feet, 9} inches. The other tree had similar dimensions. The diameters are counted without the bark.” P.s. monophyila, Hodgins (the One-leaved Scotch Fir). The leaves of this variety are attached 1o eazh other throughout their length, and have the appearance of being united, but by giving them a twist they separate into two, like the ordinary Scotch Fir. It is a very singular variety. P. s. variegata, hort. (the Variegated Scotch Fir). This only differs from the ordinary form in the mixture of its pale straw-coloured with the usual glaucous- or bluish-green leaves being produced on both old and young wood. P. Strobus, Linn. Sp. Pl. 1419, and Syst. ed. Reich. iv. 174; Mill. Dict. n. 13 ; Hunt. Evel. Syl. 263 ; Wangenh. Beitr. i. t. 1, f. 1; 394 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Vitm. Sp. Pl. v. 345; Ait. Kew. iii. 369; Du Roi, Harbk. ed. Pott. i, 79; Marsh. Arb. Amer, 10]; Poir, Dict! we 340-3 Wambs eee ed. 2, i. t. 32; Nouv. Duham. v. 249; Pursh, Fl. Amer. Sept. ii. 644; Hayne, Dend. 176; Laws. Manual, 360; Loud. Arb. Brit. iv. 2280, f. 2193-96 ; Pinet. Wob. 83; Gord. Pinet. i. 239, and ii. 295 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. i. 302, and 11. 399; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. 92 ; Beissn. Nadelh. 288. P. folvis quinis, cortice glabro, Gron. Virg. ii. 152. P. foluis longissimis ex wna theca quinis, the White Pine, nos- tratibus, Colden, Nov. Ebor. n. 229 in Act. Upsal. 1743. P. canadensis quinquefolia, floribus albis, &c., Duham. Arb. 11. 127. P. virginiana, comis longis, non wt in vulgari echinatis, Pluk. Alm. 297. Lari« canadensis, &c., Tourn. Inst. 586. Strobus americana, A. S. Oersted, Frilands-Trévoxten i Danmark, 1864, 80. Habitat.—Newfoundland, northern shores of the Gulf of St. Law- rence to Lake Nipigon and the valley of the Winnipeg River ; south through the Northern States to Pennsylvania, the shores of Lake Michigan, ‘‘ Starving Rock,” near La Salle, Ilhnois, near Davenport, Iowa (Parry), and along the Alleghany Mountains to Northern Georgia. Introduced into England in 1705, and has there got its most common name—after Lord Weymouth, who a short time after its introduction planted a great number of trees on his property at Long- leat, in Wiltshire (Ff. C. Schiibeler, ‘‘ Viridarium Norvegicum,” i. 392, 1886). P. Strobus received its name from Linneus, and was, as Loudon says, first cultivated in England by the Duchess of Beaufort at Badminton, in 1705, and great quantities were soon afterwards planted at Longleat. : A large tree of the first economic value, 80-170 feet in height, with a trunk 4-12 feet in diameter ; sandy loam upon drift formations, forming extensive forests, or in the region of the great lakes often in small bodies seattered through the hard-wood forests, here reaching its greatest development; north of latitude 47° N. and south of Pennsylvania, Central Michigan, and Minnesota much smaller, less common and valuable (C. 8. Sargent). Pinus Strobus is found in highest perfection in the extensive territory comprehended between 42° and 45° north latitude. Within this space lie large portions of the provinces of New York, New England, Nova Scotia, and Canada. The principal woods are on the shores of Fundy Bay and of Canso Bay (in Nova Scotia) ; on the eastern side of Massachusetts Bay ; on the shores of the rivers Piscataqua and Merrimac (in New Hampshire), and of the Connecticut and Mohawk ; and from the extreme northern side of the river St. Lawrence towards Montreal and the shores of Lake Champlain. In the more southerly parts of North America this species appears but sparingly, and never in continued forests—a proof that a cold, rough climate suits it best. The soil in which this Pine is found is said to be of the PINETUM DANICUM. 395 best kind, being a clay mixed with sand and other earths ; it is light and moist, preserving these qualities to the depth of some feet. The valleys, the crevices of the mountains, and banks of rivers are the storehouses, as it were, into which the rains and melted snows in the spring carry down the fattest parts of the soil of the higher lands. — : The wood of this species is more employed in America than that of any other Pine. Throughout the Northern States, at the time the younger Michaux published his ‘‘ North American Sylva” (1819), seven-tenths of the houses, except in the larger capitals, were of wood, and about three-quarters of these were built almost entirely of White Pine; and even in the cities the beams and principal woodwork of the houses were of this wood. ‘‘The orna- mental work of the outer doors, the cornices and friezes of apartments, and the mouldings of fireplaces, all of which in America are elegantly wrought, are of this wood. It receives gilding well, and is, therefore, selected for looking-glass and picture frames. Sculptors employ it exclusively for the images that adorn the bows of vessels, for which they prefer the kind called the Pumpkin Pine. At Boston, and in other towns of the Northern States, the inside of mahogany furniture and of trunks, the bottoms of Windsor chairs of an inferior quality, water-pails, a great part of the boxes used for packing goods, the shelves of shops, and an endless variety of other objects are made of White Pine. In the district of Maine it is employed for barrels to contain salted fish, especially the kind called the Sapling Pine, which is of a stronger consistence. Forthe magnificent wooden bridges over the Schuylkill at Philadelphia and the Delaware at Trenton, and for those which unite Cambridge and Charlestown with Boston, of which the first is 1,500 feet, and the second 3,000 feet in length, the White Pine has been chosen for its durability. It serves exclusively for the masts of the numerous vessels constructed in the Northern and Middle States, and for this purpose it would be difficult to replace it in North America. The principal superiority of White Pine masts over those brought from Riga is their lightness, but they have less strength, and are said to decay more rapidly between decks and at the point of intersection of the yards. This renders the Long-leaved Pine (P. australis) superior to the White Pine, in the opinion of the greater part of the American shipbuilders ; but some of them assert that the White Pine would be equally durable if the top were carefully pro- tected from the weather. With this view, an experiment has been suggested, of a hole, several feet deep, made in the top of the mast, filled with oil and hermetically sealed; the oil is said to be absorbed in afew months. The bowsprits and yards of ships-of-war are of this species. The wood is not resinous enough to furnish turpentine for commerce” (J. C. Loudon, ‘f Arboretum ”’). Michaux states that P. Strobus grows in America to the height of 396 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORFICULTURAL SOCIETY, from 100 to 180 feet, with a straight trunk of from 4 to 6, or even 7 feet in diameter. : In England P. Strobus is fast coming to the front, not only as an ornamental, but as a valuable timber-producing tree ; indeed, whether viewed from an economic or ornamental aspect, it must be considered as one of the most valuable Pines that have yet been introduced. A comparison of the wood produced by the Weymouth Pine in this country and that sent to the Colonial and Indian Exhibition revealed but slight differences, and nothing more than would naturally be expected between a mature and a partially-developed tree. The rapidly approaching extinction of this tree is at present causing much anxiety to those who are interested in the timber supplies of America, and is owing partly to the reckless and improvi- dent felling carried on under the impetus of speculation. With such a state of things abroad, it is to be regretted that greater numbers of this Pine are not planted in suitable soils and situations in the British Isles, for that there are vast tracts of almost worthless land that is well suited for its culture is beyond a doubt. I do not wish it to be inferred from anything here said that the Weymouth Pine is suitable for planting at high altitudes and in exposed situations, for such has been long ago proved to be a fallacy ; but that it will grow rapidly and produce useful timber in partially sheltered districts has been proved on various occasions by those who have paid particular attention to the value of exotic Conifers as profitable timber-producers in this country. The Weymouth Pine has much to recommend it to the British arboriculturist, for besides the great quantity of valuable timber it produces, it certainly is the handsomest of the genus that has been found to be perfectly hardy in these isles. Its form is light and elegant, and the silvery glaucous leaves afford a distinct and pleasing contrast to the majority of the cultivated Pines. Whether grown as a plantation tree, or singly for purely ornamental purposes, the stem is always straight and clean, and the branches evenly distributed. The Weymouth Pine is a tree of very rapid growth, numerous specimens (of which I have kept a record) having attained to an average height of 57 feet in thirty years (Trans. Roy. Scot. Arbs Soe) Xl. pts:2): This species has in some parts of Denmark, at the age of about sixty years, attained a height of 80 feet ; while others, planted in 1845, are 47 feet high, with a circumference of stem of 2 feet 8 inches. P. Strobus has been planted on many parts of the coast of Norway as far north as Drontheim (Trondhjem, 63° 26’), where it succeeds very well, and probably it would thrive even farther north. The largest specimen to be found in Norway is to be seen near Christiania, at Bogstad. It was planted nearly a hundred years ago, and is now about 80 feet in height, with a circumference of more than 6 fect. | PINETUM DANICUM. 397 Near Stockholm, in the park of the Royal Castle, Drottningholm, several grand trees of this species are to be found. When paying a visit there I had no opportunity of measuring them exactly, but observed that I could not reach more than about half-way round the stems with my arms. Some of these trees are most likely of similar dimensions to the above-mentioned tree in Norway. P. S. nivea, Knight, the White Weymouth or Snow Pine. P. 8. alba, Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 1018. P. nivea, Booth, ex Knight, Syn. Conif. 34. P. Strobus argentea, hort. This variety differs from the species in having the leaves erectly spreading, more dense, and of a very dark green colour when fully grown, but when young of a silvery white on the upper surface. This kind bears considerable resemblance to P. monticola, but the leaves are less dense on the shoots, and much slenderer; the cones are narrower, and of a bright green colour when young, while those of P. monticola are of a dull purple. P. Teeda, Linn. Spec. 1419; Du Roi, Harbk. Baumz. ii. 63; Wangenh. Beitr. 1787, 41; Lamb. Pin. ed. 1, i. 23, and ed. 2, i. 30; Desf. Hist. Arb. 11. 612 ; Michaux fils, Arbr. For. de Amer. i. 97 ; Ait. Hort. Kew. 11. 368 ; Willd. Baumz. 269; Loisel. Nouv. Duham. v. 245; Lawson, Agric. Manual, 351; Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2237, f. 2118-22, and Encycl. of Trees, 976, f. 1816-19; Forb. Pinet. Wob. 43, t. 14; Ant. Conif. 25; Link in Linnea, xv. 503; Spach, Hist. Nat. Véo. Phan. xi. 391; Endl. Syn. Conif. 164; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 217 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30 ; Lawson, Abiet. 34; Gord. Pinet. 210, and suppl. 67; Oersted, Frilands- Trovoxten 1 Danmark, 1864, 1.77. P. virginiana tenuifolia, Pluk. Almag. Bot. Phyt. 297. P. foliis longissinus, Colden, Nov. Ebor. in met. soc. Upsal. p. 1743, n. 230. P. folus ternis, Gronov. FI. Waretm. 1762, ed. 2, 152. A tree 80-85 feet in height, with a trunk 3-5 feet in diameter ; low, wet clay or dry sandy soil, springing up on all abandoned lands from Virginia southward, and now often replacing in the southern Pine-belt the original forests of P. palustris; in eastern North Carolina rarely on low, rich swamp ridges—here known as *“Rosemary Pine,” and attaining its greatest development and value (C. S. Sargent, ‘‘ Forest Trees of North America”). It is one hundred years since this species was described by Linneeus, and there is no reason to doubt that it was recognised and described by botanists as long as seventy years before that date. It was not, however, brought to England until 1713, when Bishop Compton introduced it. It is doubtless to that period, or not long after, that the fine specimens at Syon House and Pains Hill are to be referred. One of the latter, Loudon says, is doubtless the handsomest tree of the species in Europe. Others at Kew and Whitton belong to a somewhat later period (‘‘ Pinetum Britannicum ”). 898 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Iam stillin some doubt whether we have this plant in Denmark or not. One plant (still to be verified) is perhaps this species. P. Teocote, Cham. and Schlecht. in Linnea, v. 76, and xii. 487 > Lamb. Pinet. ed..2, 1. 37, t. 20; Loud. Arbor. iv. 2266, f. 2173-74, and Encycl. of Trees, 991, f. 1852-54; Ant. Conif. 35, t. 16, f. 3; Link in Linnea, xv. 505; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 400; Endl. Syn. Conif. 156 ; Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 21 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 30; Carr. Man. des PI. iv. 351, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 328 ; Gord. Pinet. 211; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 83 (excl. syn.). Habitat.—Mexico, on the sides of Orizaba, between Cruzblanca and Jalacingo ; also between Angangueo and La Ventilla, and at Real del Monte. Hartweg found it at Ocotillo. Introduced into Europe in 1839. We do not possess living plants of it m Denmark, but I have cones in my collection. P. Thunbergii, Parl. in DC. Prodr. 388; Franch. and Savat. Enumer. 464+; Masters, Linn. Journ. xviii. 504 ; Descrip. Cat. 245 ; Luerssen, Zeitschrift fiir Forst. und Jagdw. 275, 1. P. Massoniana, Lamb. Pinet. ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 1. 378, 73, and u. 478 ; Veitch, Gard. Chron. ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Bue 3, 285 Miquel, Prolusio Fl. Jap. 330, 2; Koch, Dendr. ii. 282,- : Nippee Chumokuschi, 6; Veitch, Man. Conif. 148; Rein, Jap. ii. i. 281, 28 ; Sieb. and Zuce. Fl. Jap. u. 24, 118; Endl. Syn. Conif. 174; Murr. Pines and Firs of Jap. 23.; Hoopes, Evergreens ; Le Japon 4 Expos. Univer. 109, 10 ; Gord. Pinet. 241. P. Pinaster, Loud. Arbor. Brit. 2218 ; Gord. Pinet. 176. P. silvestris, Thunb. Fl. Jap. 274. P. rubra, Sieb. Syn. Plant. Cicon. 1. P. Dime oT Paxt. Flower Gard. P. tabuleformis, Fortune. Habitat.—Most parts of Japan, but especi ially near the coast. In some works it is mentioned that this species also belongs to China, but Dr. H. Mayr considers it doubtful whether this Pine is to be found in China. Seems to be hardy. The following exiract from Siebold’s ‘‘ Flora Japonica” gives a highly interesting description of a practice peculiar to Japanese horti- culture, which appears to have been in vogue for many years, probably for centuries past : ‘‘The art of the Japanese gardener has exhausted itself in the cultivation of this Pine and Pinus densiflora. They clip and cut them in all manner of ways; they stretch out the branches like a fan, upon horizontal espaliers, or give to the branches the form of a flat plate. In that artificial culture extremes meet—surprise is equally sought to be gained by specimens of immense extent as by others reduced to the most minute dimensions.” During Siebold’s sojourn at Osaka he went to see the celebrated Pine before the Naniwaja Tea-house, of which the branches, artificially extended, have a circuit of 135 paces. Another remarkable instance of this artificial cultivation was seen by ih « PINETUM DANICUM. 399 Mr. Maries at Lake Bi-wa, near Kioto, in Nippon. The main trunk of the tree is 28 feet in circumference. At about 10 feet from the ground this divides into three primary branches, which have been made to spread out horizontally, and the circular space covered by them and their appendages is fully 60 yards in diameter. On the other hand, they showed him, in Jeddo, a dwarf tree in a lacquered box of which the branches did not occupy more than 2 square inches. The wood of P. Thunbergii is resinous, tenacious, and durable; it is chiefly used in the construction of buildings. The Japanese also make charcoal of it. The soot which they procure from it by burning its resinous roots with the oil of the turnip (Brassica orientalis) is said to be employed in making the famous Chinese ink, which is manufactured principally in the convent of Nara, in the province of Janato. PR. Torreyana, C. Parry. Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 326 ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 117 (not J. E. Nelson). PP. Sabiniana microcarpa, J. E. Nelson. P. lophosperma, Lindl. ex Gord. Pinei. Suppl. 69; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelth. 112. Habitat.—California, mouth of the Soledad River, San Diego County ; doubtfully reported from one of the islands of Sania Barbara and from Lower California. _ A low, short-lived, gnarled, crooked tree, 20-25 feet in heighi, with a trunk 9-18 inches in diameter; crests of sandy blufis imme- diately upon the sea-coast ; very local, and fast disappearing (C. S. Sargent, ‘‘ Forest Trees of North America”). Probably not hardy. P. tuberculata, Gord. Pinet. ed. 1, 211, ed. 2, 288 (mot Don), and Journ. Hort. Soc. iv. 218, and f.; Fl. des Serres, v. 517, and f.; | Rep. Oregon Exped. 2, t. 2, f. 2; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 78 (im part); Bolander in Proc. Calif. Acad. ii. 262, 317; Lawson, Smet. Brit. 1. 95, t. 13, f— 1-9; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. ed. 2, 441 (qm part); Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 394; Koch, Dendr. ii. 2, 309; Vasey, Cat. Forest Trees, 51; Engelm. in Trans. Si. Louis Wead. itv. 185, and Bot. Calif. 1. 128; Veitch, Man. Conif. 170; Beissner, Nadelholzk. 270. PP. californica, Hartw. in Journ. Hort. Soc. i. 189. _ PP. tuberculata, Gord. Pinet. ed. 1, 211 Mot Don), a name at first erroneously given to a species sent by Jeifrey, is to be retained as now im general use, and because Don’s original tubderculaia is a mere form of insignis {Engelm.). _ Habitat.—Valley of the Mackenzie River, Oregon ; south along the western slope of, the Cascade and Sierra Nevada Mountains, and on the Californian coast ranges from the Santa Cruz to the San Jacinto ' Mountains. A tree 60-70 feet in height, with a trunk 2-3 feet in diameter, or (rarely) reduced to a low shrub, fruiting when not more than 3 feet 400 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOGIETY, in height ; dry, gravelly ridges and slopes from 2,500 (San Bernardino Mountains) to 5,500 (Mount Shasta) feet elevation; not common (C. 8. Sargent). Seems hardy in Denmark. I have kept some cones of it for more than twenty-five years, and they are not yet opened. I have seen a cone-bearing plant in the Northern Netherlands. This Pine was first discovered by Dr. Coulter, to the south of Monterey, near the level of the sea, and growing almost close to the beach, intermixed with P. radiata. Mr. Hartweg found it growing on the Santa Cruz Mountains, sixty miles to the north of Monterey by land. It is a tree of slow growth, and seldom attains more than 30 feet in height, with a trunk 8 or 10 inches in diameter. Mr. Jeffrey found it at an elevation of 5,000 feet, with the cones adhering to the tree ; in several instances with twenty whorls of cones on the trunk, the growth of as many years, the branches being covered with them in the same way as the trunk. The timber is red and hard, and the tree of a conical form, growing about 40 feet high, in poor sandy soil. It is quite hardy (G. Gordon, ‘‘ The Pinetum,” 1875). P. Winchesteriana, Gord. Journ. Hort. Soe. ii. 158 (cum ic.) ; Lindl. and Gord. l. c. v. 215; Knight, Syn. Conif. 33; Carr. Man. des Pl. iv. 351, and Tr. Gén. Conif. 325; Gord. Pinet. 241; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 118 (excl. syn. Roezl) ; J. H. Nelson, Pinac. 137. Habitat.—Mexico, where it was found by the Marquis of Win- chester, who in 1846 introduced it into Europe. Hartweg found it in great numbers on the Cerro de San Juan near Tepic. We have not yet acquired any plants, but I have cones in my collection. 31. CHEDRUS.—Endl. Conif. 135. Laricis sp. Tourn. Inst. 586. Abietis sp. Juss. Gen. Pl. 414; Rich. Conif. 147, t.14, n. 1. Cedrus, Link in Linnea, xv. 537, and pl. Auct. ; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. is Myer IWeyonly, Jens. ils ie ai, ual ae min. t. 51, 52 (Pinus); Forb. Pin. Wob. t. 48, 49 (Pinus) ; Hook. fil. in Nat. Hist. Rev. 1862, xi. t. 1-3; Carr. Conif. 366 ; C. Koch, Dendr. 11. 265 ; Gord. Pin. 39; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 140; Hichl. in Engl. and Prantl, Natiirl. Pflf. ii. s. 74; Willk. Forst. Fl. s. 158; Beissn. Nadelh. 296. Flowers moncecious ; the male catkins solitary, cylindrical, erect, and terminal, female somewhat oval and obtuse, solitary, vee rarely in twos, and erect. Cones oval, obtuse at the ends, quite smooth, erect, onl on the upper side of the branches. Scales very closely placed, rounded on the outer margins, quite thin at the edges, leathery, smooth, and more or less deciduous. Seeds in twos under each scale, with a soft tegumental covering, Bs ae PINETUM DANICUM. 401 full of turpentine, more or less angular, and furnished with a large persistent membranaceous wing. Ootyledons mostly nine in number. Leaves needle-shaped, somewhat four-sided, stiff, persistent, and disposed either in bundles or solitary. | All splendid evergreen trees, found either on Mount Lebanon, in the North of India, or on the Barbary and Atlas Mountains in Northern Africa. The word ‘‘ Cedar ” (‘‘ Kedros” of the Greeks) was not restricted by the ancients to the Cedar of Lebanon, but probably derived from the Arabic ‘‘ kedr,” worth or value, or its derivative ‘‘ kedrat,” strength or power, in allusion to the value of the wood. The Hebrew and Arabic names for the Cedar are ‘‘ Araz” or ‘‘ Arz,” and that of the Romans ‘‘ Arar,” all from the Arabic root ‘‘ araza’”’—‘‘ He was firm and stable, with roots deeply fixed in the ground” (Golius). Other writers derive the name from ‘“‘kaio,” to burn, and ‘‘ drio,” to sweat or distil, a kind of incense being obtained from the split wood, and burnt as a substitute for it in the East; Pliny also describes the pro- cess of making ‘‘cedria” from the Cedar wood by distillation, and affirms its great value as aremedy for toothache, for which cure our modern creosote is therefore but an old remedy revived. Again, others derive the name from Kedron, a brook in Judea, the Cedar of Lebanon being formerly plentiful along its banks. In the Natural History Review for January 1862, Sir Joseph Hooker, after giving a general description of the three Cedars in their several habitats, observes ‘‘ that as species the three Cedars cannot be distinguished, and that they must all have been derived from one common stock. It should be added that, besides the differences in habit, habitat, and colour of foliage, there are no other distinctions whatever between them—of bark, wood, leaves, male cones, anthers, or the structure of these, nor in their mode of germination or duration, the girth they attain, or their hardiness. Also that all are very variable in habit ; so much so indeed is this the case with the Deodar, which is the most distinct of all in habit, that there are several distinct varieties sold by nurserymen, some as stiff-leaved, others as dark-coloured, and others as short-leaved, as the Lebanon Cedar. Also, that though the differences in the shape of the seeds and scales of Libani and Deodara are very marked, they vary much; many forms of each overlap, and further transition between the most dissimilar may be established by intercalation of seeds and scales from Cedrus atlantica.” C. atlantica, Manetti, Cat. Hort. Madoet. suppl. 9. C. africana, Gord. Pinet. 39. C. argentea, Loud. ex Gord. Pinet. 1. c. C. elegans, Knight, Syn. Conif. 42. (C. Libant var. atlantica, J. D. Hook. Journ. Bot. 1880; C. Koch, Dendr. nu. 2, 269. Abies atlantica, Lind], and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. 1850, v. 214. Pinus atlantica, DED 402 JOURNAL OF THK ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Endl. Conif. 137. P. Cedrus y atlantica, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi: 2, 408. : Habitat.—North Africa, on the highest mountains in Algeria, and particularly on the Atlas, near Tairet, and on the Aurés Mountains at an elevation of 3,250-4,000 feet and more ; in thick forests, on the Pic of Tangour, together with some Cedrus Libani ; and on the Tabor and Tababor Mountains. Introduced into Europe in 1842. A noble tree, like the Cedar of Lebanon, growing from 80 to 100 feet high, with horizontal branches and a tabular-shaped head when old, but somewhat pyramidal and open in the head when young. C. atlantica may be met with in Denmark, aged about twenty-five years, and about 25 feet in height. ‘The glaucous varieties seem to be fully as hardy as the species. C.a.cinerescens. A most beautiful variety. C. Deodara, Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2428, f. 2283-86, and Encycl. of Trees, 1059, f. 1975-77 ; Pinet. Wob. 149, t. 48, 49; Link in Linnea, xv. 538 ; Spach, Hist. Nat. Vég. Phan. xi. 430 ; Hoffm. in Bot. Zeit. 1846, 185 ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 42; Carr. Tr. Gén. des Conif. 281; Gord. Pinet. 40, and Suppl. 19; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. 141 ; Beissn. Nadelh. 305. Pinus Deodara, Roxb. Fl. Ind. Or. ii. 651. Abies Deodara, Lindl. in Penny Cycl. 1833, 9; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 214. C. indica, De Chambr. Tr. Prat. des Arb. Résin. 341. OC. Liban, Barr. var. Deodara, Hook. fil. Himal. Journ. i. 257, and in Nat. Hist. Rev. 1861, 11. t. 1-3. Habitat.—The Himalayan Mountains, in a continuous forest from Afghanistan (about 34° N.) to Nepaul, from longitude 68° to 85° E., at various elevations from 6,500 to 15,000 feet. Introduced into Great Britain in 1831, by the Hon. W. Leslie Melville, and produced its cones for the first time in Europe in 1858, at Bicton, Devonshire, the residence of the Lady Rolle. In the Himalayas the Deodar occupies a great vertical belt or range, flourishing from about 5,000 to 12,000 feet of elevation, mixed up for the first 1,500 feet with Pinus longifolia, while for the last 3,000 or 4,000 feet it accompanies Picea Morinda and Abies Pindrow. It is found on all the higher mountains from Nepaul upto Cashmete ; and Dr. Griffith describes it as occurring in vast forests and of great size towards Kafiristan, where it is called ‘‘ Nokhtur,” and flourishes at an elevation of from 6,000 to 10,000 feet above the sea. But to see the Deodar in its greatest perfection, one must visit the snowy ranges and lofty mountains of the interior, far from the influence of the plains, and where for nearly half the year it is enveloped in snow ; there its dimensions become gigantic. In Lower Kamaon there is an extensive forest of very fine trees from 20 to 27 feet in girth, and Major Madden records one tree which in 1830 measured 364 feet in circumference fully 5 feet from the ground: and ona subsequent PINETUM DANICUM. 408 journey he saw several on the northern declivity of the Booram and Roopin Passes not under 30 feet in girth, and from 150 to 200 feet high. The timber has a peculiar and strong odour, so that no insects will touch it ; the grain is open, straight, not liable to warp, even if in thin boards and exposed to the weather, and may be considered the best wood of its class in the world ; but, like all other woods of that class, if cut young it will soon decay when in contact with damp. Next to its timber, the most valuable product is its turpentine, which when rubbed on any other kind of timber renders it less liable to decay and the ravages of vermin. The Deodar Cedar is called ‘‘ Kelon,” ‘‘ Kolan,” and ‘‘ Kolain ” in Gurhwal, all Sanscrit variations for Cedar and its resinous products. In Kunawur it is known as the ‘‘ Kelmung” by the Arian population, and about Simla as that of ‘‘ Keloo,” ‘‘ Kelou,” and ‘“‘ Keoulee,” all vernacular terms for resin or its extracts. The Hindostanee names ‘“‘Devadaru,” ‘‘Deodara,” and ‘‘Dewar” are all derived from ** Deva,” or ‘‘ Derva” (deity), and ‘‘daru” (timber or tree), and rendered by Sanskrit writers as ‘‘ Tree of God,” ‘‘ Spirit-bearer,” **Divine tree,” and ‘‘Lord of Cedars.” In Kafiristan the tree is called ‘‘ Nokhtur,” on account of its prickly or pungent leaves; and the people of Nepaul, Cashmere, and Persia apply the same names and terms as those used by the hill people in India, and hold it in equal veneration. It has not yet been found in a wild state either in Kastern Nepaul or Sikkim, although these gigantic sons of snow fringe the bare rocks and fix their roots where there appears to be very little soil, on the lofty passes from Nepaul to Cashmere ; and, according to Captain Pemberton (in his ‘‘ Report on the Eastern Frontier”), the most southern point to which the Deodar has yet been traced is the summit of the lofty ranges immediately west of Munipoor, an interesting region, which, with the Singfo Mountains, south-east of Assam, carry the zone of perpetual snow farthest south in India. The Deodar also grows to extraordinary dimensions on all the higher mountains throughout the Western Himalayas, and occurs in vast forests in Kunawur, Kamaon, Kooloo, Mussoorie, and on the Chumbra range in Kangara, at elevations varying from 6,000 to 12,000 feet. At Rashulah, in Kooloo, a forest exists with trees from 18 to 24 feet in girth, at four feet from the ground ; and according to Dr. Jameson, of two trees measured by him near Mulari, in Gurhwal, at an elevation of 11,000 feet, one girthed 26 feet at three feet from the ground, and the other 27 feet ; but, as a general rule, the finest trees always are found growing on the north side of barren mountains, in thin, poor soil, formed from the decomposition of granite, gneiss, mica, or clay- slate. Captain Johnson, in his ‘‘ Excursion to the Sources of the Jumna,” states that the peaks on the northern side of the Boorung Pass were completely hidden by forests of gigantic Deodars, some of which measured 33 feet in circumference, and were from 60 to 70 feet DD2 404 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. without a branch. Here, too, the character of the timber was different from that grown in southern aspects and rich soil, being more compact, harder, and of a deeper red, owing to its slow growth. The boat-builders along the Jhelum River distinguish its timber under the appellation of ‘‘ Peliptur,” and consider it the most valuable of all for its durability, both for naval and architectural purposes, the wood being compact, rather close-grained, long-fibred, highly resinous, deliciously perfumed, and lasting for a great number of years, even though much exposed to the elements, being but little affected by water, as boats built of its timber will last for twenty or thirty years, while those built of the ‘‘Cheer” (Pinus longifolia) only last six or seven (G. Gordon, ‘‘ The Pinetum,” 1875). The excellence of Deodar timber is proved beyond all doubt ; but he inaccessible situation of the forests and the cost of transport are at present insuperable obstacles to its general use in Britain. _ Whether the trees growing in this country will yield timber as good as that afforded by native trees, can only be determined by time, and as yet no trees of sufficient age and size exist in England to furnish any criterion of the quality the timber may prove to possess in its maturity. Tt must be remembered also that the Deodars in Great Britain are srowing under climatal conditions very different from what they are on the Himalayas, where ‘‘ for nearly half the year they are enveloped in snow, and where from the middle of March to the middle of June there is considerable dryness in most of the situations; from the middle of June to the middle of September there is a cloudy atmo- sphere, almost continual rain, and great moisture of the climate ; in autumn there is fine clear weather” (Report of Dr. Royle to Her Majesty’s Commissioners of Works). The Deodar Cedar may be justly considered as one of the most graceful and lovely trees that adorn the pleasure-ground or forest, producing long, spreading, pendulous branches that are amply covered with branchlets which, when young, have a lightish grey bark. The leaves vary from an inch to nearly two inches in length, of a light glaucous colour, somewhat three-sided, acute at apex, quite linear throughout, growing in bundles on the old wood, but solitary on the young shoots. Male catkins cylindrical, from an inch to an inch and a half in length; somewhat club-shaped, with yellowish-coloured anthers tinged with red. Cones from 4 to 5 inches long, and from 8 to 9 inches in circumference, on short footstalks, quite erect, generally in pairs. Scales broad, membranous. The wood of the Deodar Cedar is considered to be almost imperishable. It has a strong smell of turpentine, and from the fineness of its grain is susceptible of a very high polish. This species of Cedar is sup- posed by some to be the one used in the construction of Solomon’s Temple, but its never having been discovered on or near Mount Lebanon is a strong argument against this opinion. It is, however, SINETUM DANICUM. A085 redarded by the Hindoos as a sacred tree, and designated by them ** Devadera,” or Tree of God. It is alsoinferred that this is the Aleum- tree brought from Ophir by Solomon, which is represented to possess more valuable properties than the one that came from Lebanon. . Mr. Lambert appears to have received from Dr. Wallich a section of .a trunk of the C. Deodara measuring nearly 4 feet in diameter ; he also quotes the following passage from Mr. Moorcroft’s Journal relative to its durability : ‘‘ A few years ago a building, erected by the order of the Emperor Akbar, was taken down, and its timbers (of Deodar) were found in a state so little impaired as to render them fit to be em- ployed in a house built for my friend Rajah Shah. Supposing that the former edifice was constructed at the same time as the fort of Najurunger, a.H. 1006, or a.p. 1597, its age is two hundred .and twenty-five years. Zenool Abudeen began to reign over Kashmeer A.H. 820,.or a.D. 1417, and died a.H. 878, or a.pv. 1473. | His mother was interred in a domed building of excellent brick and mortar work, reported to have been erected in the time of the Hindoo sove- reigns. Its solid walls, from 7 to 8 feet thick, differ much in character from the facing and rubble work in the reigns of the Mogul Emperors of Hindostan. In this building pieces of Deodar were inserted in the walls—by way, apparently, of strengthening the bond—and their ends, or sides, were left on the same plane with the brickwork. The window frames were of the same material, with the difference, how- ever, of the former being squared, and deprived of the sapwood left, and the surface was only slightly smoothed, and partly retained in its original form. In the latter instance the crust of the wood was generally somewhat crumbly, and had been pierced by the worm about a quarter of an inch in depth ; whilst that of the squared wood, exposed much more to the influence of the weather, was neither crumbly nor worm-eaten, but was jagged, from the softest part of the wood, between the plates or ribs, having often been washed by the rain, though its structure had not been attacked by the worm.” The introduction of the Deodar marks an epoch in the annals of British arboriculture. Its graceful and beautiful form in its young state, and its grand and imposing aspect in its maturity, place it in the highest rank as an ornamental tree, its value as such being greatly enhanced by the readiness with which it accommodates itself to almost all situations. No position and no variety of soil appears to come amiss to it ; on lime or sandstone, rock or clay, it grows with equal facility (Karl Ducie in Trans. Roy. Scot. Arb. Soc. 1874). Cedrus Deodara has only once (1878), to my knowledge, produced cones in Denmark. It was at Valloe, in Zealand. Trees about. forty years old, and 30 feet high, or perhaps more, are met with. In Professor F. C. Schiibeler’s *‘ Viridarium Norvegicum ” (1886) the following account is given at p. 443 : ‘‘In Stavanger, on the S.W. coast of Norway (68° 58’ N. 3° 24’ H.), there is to be found an example 406 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. of this species, which has the following history. In Carlisle, in the county of Cumberland, in the spring of 1855, a cutting was planted in a flower-pot. The owner afterwards moved to Stavanger, taking the plant with him, and planting it out in the garden in the spring of 1857. It was then only 12 inches high. When in 1863 he left Stavanger the tree was 5to6feet high. It has never been protected in the winter time. In August 1877, when the tree was found by the forest- master Gloersen, it had the following dimensions: Height, 14 feet ; at a height of 1} feet the stem had a circumference of 21 inches, and at a height of 3 feet it had a circumference of 17 inches. The greatest diameter of the crown was 9 feet. This tree since then has been twice much damaged, but a measurement which was taken in October 1885 gave the following results: Height, 51 feet; the circumference of the stem a foot from the ground, 284 inches, and the diameter of the crown 11 feet 6 inches. The tree now looks quite fresh.” At Stockholm Cedrus Deodara survived the winters of 1872-76, but in the winter of 1876-77 the crown was much injured. In sheltered situations it has since that year done fairly well, although the tops have in many instances been killed. C. D. crassifolia, hort. Carr. Man. des Pl. 345. This variety differs from the preceding one in having much thicker and shorter leaves, and much shorter and more compact branches, which are less pendulous. C. D. robusta, hort. (the robust Deodar). C. D. gigantea, Knight. A robust-growing variety, with avery glaucous appearance, and much larger in all its parts. j C. D. viridis, hort. (the green-leaved Deodar). C. D. tenuifolia, Knight. SS eer A very distinct variety, on account of its bright grass-green colour and slender habit. It is entirely free from any glaucous appearance, even when young. : C. Libani, Barrel. Icon. 499; Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2402, f. 2267-82, and Encycl. of Trees, 1057, f. 1974; Pinet. Wob. 145; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 427; Link in Linnea, xy. 538; Knight, Syn. Conif. 42; De Chambr. Tr. Prat. des Arbr. Résin. 308 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. des Conif. 283; Gord. Pinet. 43; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. 144; Beissn. Nadelh. 297. Cedrus magna, sp. Cedrelate, Plin. Hist. Nat. xiii. 11, and xxiv. 11. Alta Cedrus, Bel. Conif. 3. Cedrus, > Bel. It. 162 ;- Trew. in-N. A. Nu C. “iii.-app, 445, 4.018, f. 1-7. Cedrus magna, sp. Libani conifera, J. Bauh. Hist. i. 277. Cedrus conifera, foliis Laricis, C. Bauh. Pin. 490. Larix orientalis, Fructu. rotundiore obtuso, Tourn. Inst. 586. Cedrus phenicea, Reneaulm. Specim. 27. © Pinus Cedrus, L. Spec. Pl. 1420. Larix Cedrus, Mill. Dict. n. 3. Larix patula, Salisb. in Linn. Trans. viii. PINETUM DANICUM, 407 314. Abies Cedrus, Poir. Dict. vi. 510. Cedrus patula, Koch, Dendr. 1873, 1. 268. Habitat.—The mountains of Syria and Asia Minor, especially Lebanon, and that portion of the Tauric range which extends through Cilicia. ‘‘In Monte Tauro preesertim Cilicio sylvas vastas construens” (Prodr. xvi. 408). Also in the island of Cyprus on the mountain near Khrysakus. The discovery of the Cedar in Cyprus is quite recent. It appears to be confined to one spot, and to differ from the known form in having shorter leaves and smaller cones (see paper by Sir J. D. Hooker in the ‘‘ Journal of the Linnean Society,” xviii. 517). Also in some parts of Algeria, where it grows together with Cedrus atlantica. In Bellon’streatise, ‘‘ De Arboribus Coniferis,” published in 1553, the author says he was told that the Cedar of Solomon is found on Mount Lebanon, and also on Amanus and Taurus, and on the mountains above Nicea, but nowhere in the Isle of Crete. He then mentions several kinds of Juniper, all of which he calls Cedars ; and states it to be his opinion that the great Cedar of Mount Lebanon was not the wood used for building Solomon’s Temple. On another page, after relating his visit to Mount Lebanon, he says, “ Right true and excellent are the trees of Mount Lebanon.” He afterwards describes their appearance and mode of growth, adding: ‘‘ The Cedars that we saw on Amanus and Taurus were very similar to these. They grewin moist places, like those in which the Spruce Fir (Picea Abies, L.) delights ; and they are also found in moist valleys.” The Cedar of Lebanon has been long celebrated for its majestic growth, and frequent allusions are made to it in Holy Writ. In Isaiah xli. 19, it is thus stated: ‘‘ I will plant in the wilderness the cedar; I will set in the desert the fir tree, and the pine.” In Hzekiel xvii. 22: ‘‘ Thus saith the Lord God; I will also take of the highest branch of the high cedar, and will set it; I will crop off from the top of his young twigs a tender one, and will plantit upon an high mountain and eminent.” Again itis mentioned in the First Book of Kings vii. 2. that Solomon built ‘‘the house of the forest of Lebanon ” with the Cedar tree ; not that the house was erected on Mount Lebanon, but in consequence of the vast number of Cedar trees employed in its construction, especially those that constituted its numerous columns, which were all of the Cedar tree, and gave rise toits being designated “‘the house of the forest of Lebanon.” It is also stated in Ezekiel xxvii. 5, ‘They have made all thy ship boards of fir trees of Senir: they have taken cedars from Lebanon to make masts for thee.” In reference to this passage may be here quoted the following extract from a note relative to it inthe ‘‘ Pictorial Bible” : ‘‘ It is by no means certain that the tree to which naturalists have given the name ‘ Cedar of Lebanon’ is the same as the ‘Arez of Lebanon,’ so often mentioned in Scripture. As the word in the Armenian dialects is applied to 408 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, several trees of the Pine tribe, it may very possibly have been the same in the Hebrew. Under this view it might sometimes denote the ‘Cedar of Lebanon,’ and often other trees of a similar character ; and if so, those equally err who insist that this tree can only be intended, and those who contend for some other particular species, to the exclu- sion of all the rest. Meanwhile it may be observed that the so-called ‘Cedar of Lebanon’ can hardly be intended in this particular text, as, although the trunk of this tree is large, itis neither long nor straight, and therefore utterly unfit to be the mast of a ship; to which may be added, the wood is soft and inferior to the worst sorts of deal.” Mr. Lambert, in his description of this tree, also observes :— “«'The diuturnity of the Cedar we frequently find alluded to. The wood of this famous tree has been supposed to preserve books much better than any other material ; hence the expression ‘ cedro dignus ’ was considered one of the highest compliments that could be bestowed ona literary performance. It is recorded that in the Temple of Apollo at Utica was found Cedar-wood nearly two thousand years old ; and at Saguntum in Spain, in an oratory consecrated to Diana two hundred years before the destruction of Troy, a beam was discovered which has since been removed to Zante ; but, in the relation of the properties assigned to this tree, Professor Martyn says there is much vulgar error and confusion, the Cedar of Lebanon being often confounded with trees which belong to different genera. At least the accounts given by the ancients of the long duration of their Cedar very ill accord with the species now under consideration, whose wood is no more than a very inferior kind of deal, with little or no smell, and of a soft texture, evidently of short duration ” (Pinet. Woburn. 147). “The Cedars are mostly confined to one spot at the head of the Kedisha Valley ; they have, however, been found by Ehrenberg in valleys to the northward of this. The Kedisha Valley, at 6,000 feet elevation, terminates in broad, shallow, flat-floored basins, and is two to three miles across ; it isin a straight line 15 miles from the sea, and about three or four from the summit of Lebanon, which is to the northward of it. ‘¢The Cedars form one group, about 400 yards in diameter, with an outstanding tree or two not far from the rest, and appear as a black speck in the great area of the corry and its moraines, which contain no other arboreous vegetation, nor any shrubs but a few small Berberry and Rose bushes, that form no feature in the landscape. ‘‘The number of trees is about four hundred, and they are dis- posed in nine groups ; they are of various sizes, from about 18 inches to upwards of 40 feet in girth; but the most remarkable and significant fact connected with their size, and consequently with the age of the grove, is that there is no tree less than 18 inches in girth, ’ . oA ae — —_— PINETUM DANICUM: 409 and that we found no young trees, bushes, nor even seedlings, of a second year’s growth. We had no means of estimating accurately the ages of the youngest or oldest tree. It may be remarked, however, + that the wood of the branch of an old tree, cut at the time, is 8 inches in diameter (exclusive of bark), presents an extremely firm, compact, - and close-grained texture, and has no less than one hundred and forty rings, which are so close in some parts that they cannot be counted without a lens. Calculating only from the rings on this branch, the youngest trees in Lebanon would average a hundred years old; the oldest two thousand five hundred years old, both estimates, no doubt, widely far from the mark. Calculating from trunks of English | rapidly-grown specimens, their ages might be estimated as low, re- _ spectively, as five and two hundred years; while from the rate of growth of the Chelsea Cedar, the youngest tree may be twenty-two, and the oldest six to eight hundred years old. ‘*'The positions of the oldest trees afforded some interesting data relating to the ages of the different parts of the grove, and the direction in which it had lately spread. There were only fifteen trees above 15 feet in girth, and these all occurred in two of the nine clumps, which two contained one hundred and eighty trees. Only two others exceeded 12 feet in girth, and these were found in | immediately adjoining clumps, one on one side and one on the other of the above-mentioned. There were five clumps, containing a hundred and sixty-six trees, none of which were above 12 feet in girth, and these were all to the westward of the others. On this side, therefore, the latest addition to the grove had taken place. “The wood. of the Cedar is of a reddish white, light and spongy, easily worked, but very apt to shrink and warp, and by no means durable. The horizontal section, as Loiseleur Deslongchamps justly | observes, exhibits the annual layers very distinctly marked. Each year has apparently two; the one narrow, close-grained, hard, and of _areddish brown, and the other three or four times broader, loose, _ spongy, and whitish. In general, the section of the trunk of a Cedar bears a nearer resemblance to that of the Silver Fir than to that of , any other of the Abietineze. When the tree has grown on mountains the annual layers are much narrower, and the fibre much finer, than when it has grown in plains; so much so that a piece of Cedar- | wood brought from Mount Lebanon by Dr. Pariset in 1829, and | which he had made into a small piece of furniture, presented a sur- | face compact, agreeably veined, and variously shaded, which, on the whole, may be considered handsome” (Hist. du Cedre, &c. p. 48). The date of the introduction of the Cedar of Lebanon into _ England cannot be fixed with certainty; it is not mentioned in Hvelyn’s “Silva,” written in 1664, but there is evidence to show that its introduction was effected very shortly afterwards (Veitch). | The economic value of the Cedar of Lebanon in modern times, 410 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. otherwise than for ornamental planting, is inconsiderable ; the timber of trees felled in Britain is inferior ; ‘‘ the wood is light, soft, brittle, apt to warp, and by no means durable” (Loud. Arb. et Frut. p. 2417). In the expedition to Mount Lebanon, undertaken by Sir J. D. Hooker, Captain Washington, R.N., and other gentlemen, in the autumn of 1860, ‘Sa section of the lower limb of one of the oldest (which lay dead on the ground) was procured, which gave a totally different idea of the hardness of Cedar-wood from what English specimens do” (Gardeners’ Chronicle, 1862, p. 67). Lamartine, who visited the Cedars of Lebanon in 1838, wrote of them: ‘‘ These trees are the most celebrated natural wonders in the world.” The ancients thought they grew nowhere else than upon Mount Lebanon, above all other vegetation—thus being peculiarly set apart— a belief which powerfully affected their religious ideas and at once excited veneration. The Arabs, of all sects, to this day attribute to these trees not only vegetative force which enables them to live for ever, but also a soul having the power to express consciousness and feeling similar to animals, and approaching the intelligence of man; in fact, in the Arab mind they are divine beings in the form of trees. The Maronite Christians inhabiting Lebanon are scarcely less pronounced in their regard for this tree than the Moslem Arabs, for annually the patriarch of that sect, attended by scores of bishops, priests, monks, and five or six thousand of devotees, ascend to the Cedar grove and there celebrate in their shade the ‘‘ Feast of the Transfiguration,’ and ecclesiastical censures are denounced against those who shall injure these consecrated trees in any manner. Ina delightful article published in the Pacific Rural Press, by Mrs. Jeannie C. Carr, of Pasadena, Cal., she states: ‘‘ The oldest Cedar of Lebanon in Europe is growing in the Jardin des Plantes, in Paris, where it was planted by the elder De Candolle, who brought it from Palestine over a century ago.* It is related that the vessel in which he crossed the Mediterranean was unseaworthy, and during the prolonged voyage the sailors and passengers suffered greatly from the scarcity of water, but De Candolle resolutely denied him- self and gave his scanty portion to the little tree, which, thus saved from perishing, has become the living monument of the great botanist.” The oldest Cedar of Lebanon in America is in Philadelphia, raised from seed planted by the veteran American botanist Bartram in his now famous garden (J. G. Lemmon). * A specimen now growing at Bretby in Derbyshire was planted in the year 1676. Vide page 489.—[Eps. ] PINETUM DANICUM. All 32. PSEUDOLARIX.—Abietis sp. Lindl. in Penny Cycl. i. 34. Genus Pseudolarix, Gord. Pin. 292; Carr. Conif. ed. 2, 3638 ; Masters, Contrib. to Hist. of certain Species of Conif. in Linn. Soc. Journ. xxii. 208; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 189; Parl. in DC. Prodr. 412 (Pini sect.) ; C. Koch, Dendr. 265 (sub-genus); Eichl. in Engl. and Prantl, Natiirl. Pfif. ii. s. 77; Beissn. Nadelh. 309 ; H. Mayr, Monographie der Abietineen des Japanischen Reiches, 1890. Flowers monoecious. Cones oblong, pendent, brittle, and, like the head of the common Artichoke, covered with divergent GES Scales very deciduous, extended at the points, heart-shaped at the _ base, and enclosing at the bottom two soft-coated seeds. Seeds irregularly shaped, with a soft, thin, whitish, skin-like covering, more or less enclosed by the wing, but free, and full of turpentine. ; Wings ovate-lanceolate on the outer side, but quite straight on the inner one, and entirely covering the inner face of the scale. Leaves deciducus, soft, linear, flat, and collected in bundles on the adult plants, but scattered singly along the young shoots, and very long on the young plants. Cotyledons from five to seven in number. Name derived from pseudo, false, and larix, the Larch—the false or Chinese Larch. A noble, hardy tree found by Mr. Fortune in the central and north-east provinces of China, and very distinct from the European Larches, in the cones having deciduous scales with divergent points (G. Gordon, ‘‘ The Pinetum,” 1875). P. Fortunei, Gord. Pinet. 292. Larix conifera, -&c., Keempf. Ameen. Bigot: 883. L. Kenpferi, Fortune. Pinus Kempferi, Lamb. Pin. ed. 3,7. Abies Kempferi, Lindl. in Penny Cycl. i. 34. Habitat. The mountains of North-east China, in the prov ince of Che-Kiang, at an elevation of about 1,000 metres. . Btidaced into Europe in 1846 by Robert Fortune. Dr. H. Mayr says in his ‘‘ Monographie der Abietineen des Japanischen Reiches,”’ 1890, p. 64: ‘‘ Kempfer’s Larch is without doubt our leptolepis ; therefore it would be better to change the name Larix Kempferi, and that derived therefrom, Pseudolarix Kempferi, to another name, which would obviate all mistake.” Further on, at page 99, he says: “To that mentioned by Kempfer in 1712 (Larix conifera), Lambert has, in his ‘ Pinetum,’ 1832, given the specific name Kempferi. The description, the locality in which Keempfer had collected it, the name he gave the plant (Kara-matzu-monuw), leave no doubt that he meant leptolepis. Fortune has identified the Larch he discovered in 1840 with that of Keempfer’s, and also given it the specific name Kampfer. But to prevent all errors, I would like to propose to call it ‘ Pseudolarix 412 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY; Fortunei, Mayr.’ Fortune’s Pseudo-larch is neither to be found grow- ing wild in Japan, nor js it at the present day cultivated there.” The Pseudolarix is only to be found as small plants in Denmark ; but I suppose the species will prove hardy. P. Fortune is a highly ornamental tree, the foliage of which in spring is of the most delicate pea-green, and towards autumn assumes a bright or clear golden-yellow. Even when leafless, the beautiful yellowish-green or golden-brown of the young shoots is particularly effective, and as uncommon as it is beautiful. We have found the Golden Larch to be perfectly hardy, to succeed well, perhaps best, on a free, gravelly loam, and to bear stem and branch pruning with impunity. Itis the only deciduous golden Conifer at present introduced, and is the largest in growth. For its ornamental qualities it is certainly well worthy of extended culture (Trans. Roy. Scot. Arb. Soc. xii. pt. 2). 33. LARIX.—Endl. Conif. 128. Laricis sp. Tourn. Inst. 586. Abietis sp. Juss. Gen. Pl. 414 ; Rich. Conif. 147, t. 18. Larix, Link in Linnea, xv. 533, and pl. auct.; Spach, Hist. Vég. Phan. xi. 431; Carr. Conif. 351; C. Koch, Dendr. 11. 257 ; Gord. Pinet. 123 ; Henk. and Hochst. Nadelh. 128 ; Endl. Syn. Conif. 128 (Pinus, sect. Larix); Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 409 (Pinus, sect. Larix) ; Hichl. in Engl. and Prantl Natirl. PAf. i. 75; Willk. Forstl. Fl. 136; Beissn. Nadelh. 314; H. Mayr, Monographie der Abietineen des Japanischen Reiches, 1890, 62. Flowers moncecious ; the male catkins small, without footstalks, and egg-shaped ; the female ones erect, solitary, ovate, and much larger than the males. Cones small, ovate-obtuse, or somewhat cylindrical, and consisting of but few scales. Scales persistent, leathery, thin towards the margins, and a little reflexed or undulated. Bracts either longer or shorter than the scales, unevenly notched on the edges, ovate-pointed, or lanceolate. Seeds very small, with a leathery covering and membranaceous wings. Cotyledons from five to seven in number. Leaves deciduous, linear, obtuse, soft, without footstalks, and either produced in bundles or singly. The name Larch, according tc some authors, is derived from the Celtic word lar (fat), on account of the tree producing an abundance of resinous matter, which flows externally down its stem, and which Ovid describes in the following lines :— ‘¢The new-made trees in tears of amber run, Which harden into value by the sun.” But, according to other writers, the name is derived from the Welsh | PINETUM DANICUM. 413 llar (wide-spreading), on account of its horizontally extended branches. Its Spanish name, ‘‘Alerce,” and its Italian one, ‘‘L’Arice,” are derived from the Arabic ‘“ Al-araz,” a kind of Cedar, or coniferous - tree. All deciduous trees, found in the colder parts of Europe, Asia, and America. L. americana, Michx. Fl]. Bor. Amer. ii. 203 ; Michx. fil. Arbr. Forest. ii. 38, t. 4; Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2399, and Encyel. of Trees, 1057, f. 1973; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. 137 ; Beissn. Nadelh. 329. Pinus Larix rubra, Marsh. Arb. 105. P. microcarpa, Lamb. Pinet. ed. 1, t. 37. P. intermedia, Du Roi, Harbk. Wild. Baumz. ii. 115. P. pendula, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 409. Larix micro- carpa, Pinet. Woburn. 139, t. 47. L. tenwifolia, Salisb. in Linn. Trans. vill. 313. JL. intermedia, Link in Linnea, xv. 535. L. lari- cina, Koch, Dendr. 11. 265. LZ. Fraser, Curt. ex Gord. Pinet. 129. L. americana rubra, Loud. ex Knight, Syn. Conif. 40. Abies microcarpa, Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 215. Habitat.—Northern Newfoundland and Labrador to the eastern shores of Hudson Bay, Cape Churchill, and north-west to the northern shores of the Great Bear Lake and the valley of the Mackenzie River within the Arctic Circle ; south through the Northern States to Northern Pennsylvania, Northern Indiana and Illinois, and Central Minnesota. Introduced in 1739 by Peter Collinson. A tree 80-100 feet in height, with a trunk 2-3 feet in diameter ; moist uplands and intervening lands, or south of the boundary of the United States in cold, wet swamps, often covering extensive areas ; here much smaller and less valuable. Wood heavy, hard, very strong, rather coarse-grained, compact, durable in contact with the soil; bands of small summer cells broad, very resinous, dark-coloured, conspicuous, resin passages few, obscure ; medullary rays numerous, hardly distinguishable ; colour light brown, the sapwood nearly white ; specific gravity, 0°6236; ash, 0°33; pre- ferred and largely used for the upper knees of vessels, for ship timbers, fence posts, telegraph poles, railway ties, &c. (C. S. Sargent). The inner bark of the closely allied EKuropean Larch is recom- mended in the treatment of chronic catarrhal affections of the pulmonary and urinary passages ; probably that of the American species would be equally efficacious (C. S. Sargent). Larix americana—or, as it is often called, microcarpa—is to be found in Danish gardens about 40 feet high. i. dahurica, Turcz. in Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosq. 1838, 101 ; Trautv. Imag. Plant. 48, t. 32; Knight, Syn. Conif. 40; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 270; Gord. Pinet. 123 (excl. syn.); Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 138 ; Beissn. Nadelh. 328. IL. kamtschatica, Carr. Traité Gén. Conif. ed. 1, 279. Pinus Larix americana, Pall. Flor. Ross. i. 2, t. 1, fig. e. P. dahwrica, Fisch, in Endl. Conif. 128. 414 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. P. kamtschatica, Endl. Conif. 135. Abies Gmelini, Rupr. Bietr. Pfl. Russ. Reich. ii. 56. L. amwrensis, hort. Habitat.—Near the Amur River, Amurland, Saghalien, Dahuria, and eastern parts of Siberia. Hardy. L. europzea, De Cand. FI. France. iii. 277 ; Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2350, £. 2258-62, and Encycl. of Trees, 1053, f. 1972 ; Pinet. Wob. 133; Link in Linnea, xv. 534; Desf. Hist. Arbr. ii. 567; De Chambr. Tr. Prat. Arbr. Résin. 277, pl. 3, f. 16, 17 ; Schouw in Ann. Se. Nat. ser. 3, 1. 241; Knight, Syn. Conif. 40; Carr. Traité Gén. des Conif. 276; Gord. Pinetum. 124; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 130; Beissn. Nadelh. 321. Pinus Larix, L. Spec. Pl. 1420. P. L. a communis, Endl. Conif. 184. L. decidua, Mill. Dict. n. 1. L. vulgaris, Fisch. in Spach, Hist. des Pl. Phan. xi. 432. L. excelsa, Link in Abh. Berl. Akad. d. Wissensch. 1827, p. 182. L. pyramidalis, Salisb. in Linn. Trans. vill. 315. JL. decidua a communis, Henk. and Hochst. Syn. p. 180. JL. europxa communis, Laws. Man. 386. Abies Larix, Lam. Illustr. t. 785. Habitat.—On the whole region of the Alps and in Central Europe, chiefly at altitudes of from 3,000 to 5,000 feet, forming dense forests, often intermixed with the Spruce and Silver Firs, and sometimes with the Cembra Pine ; also on the Carpathian and Sudetian Mountains ; also in Siberia, from the Ural Mountains to Kamtschatka. Tntroduced into England prior to 1629, in which year it is men- tioned by Parkinson in his ‘‘ Paradisus.” Larix europea, the common Larch, is considered by many to be by far the most valuable of all our coniferous trees. The wood is applicable to almost any purpose, and weighs when green 68 lbs. 13 0z., and when dry 36 lbs. 6 oz. per cubic foot. It makes a first-class charcoal. The sap furnishes the Venetian turpentine of commerce, the branches exude the manna of Briancon, and the bark supphes excellent tannin. The tree being thus useful in all its parts, we may well ask, Where is its equal or substitute to be found ? The wood of the European Larch, according to Kasthdéffer, lasts four times longer than that of any other species belonging to the tribe Abietineze. The wood of trees produced in a good soil is of a yellowish white, but that of trees grown in a cold and elevated situation is reddish or brown, and very hard. Ina suitable situation the timber is said to come to perfection in forty years, while that of the Pinaster (Pinus Pinaster) requires sixty years, and that of the Scotch Pine (P. silvestris) eighty years (Trans. Soc. Art. xxix. 25). The wood of Larix ewropxa is used in Switzerland for covering the roofs of houses, being cut into shingles of about a foot square and half an inch in thickness, which are nailed to the rafters. At first the roofs appear white, but in the course of two or three years become perfectly black, and the joints are stopped by the resin which the sun extracts PINETUM DANICUM. A15 from the pores of the wood, and which renders the roof impenetrable to rain. The tree is sufficiently frequent in that country to render the covering a cheap one. It is from Larix europea that the true Venetian turpentine is extracted. This substance has been procured in the greatest abun- dance near Lyons, in France, and in the Valley of St. Martin, near Lucerne, in Switzerland. But what is very remarkable, the inner part of the wood of this tree yields a pure gum, scarcely inferior in its qualities to the Arabian gum. In the Russian empire this has been received into the shops, and sold under the name of Orenburg gum, an appellation extremely improper, as Pallas justly observes, Oren- burg being very distant from the Uralensian forests, where the gum is collected from Larix sibirica. Possibly this product is obtained from Larix europea as well. Larix ewropea is to be found in Danish plantations at an age of more than a hundred years, and with a height exceeding 100 feet. A tree of this species planted on the Danish island of Moena hundred years ago now measures over 100 feet in height, witha girth of more than 8 feet; while another planted in 1882 has already attained a height of 35 feet and a girth of 1 foot 8 inches. In Sweden the Larch grows well in Aangermanland and the southern parts of Norbotten. In Finland it has been planted at Uleaborg (65°). At Svartze (60° 8’) a Larch fourteen years old was measured, and found to be 16 feet in height. At the Forest Academy at Evois (61° 15’) a tree eleven years old measured 15 feet in height and 6 inches in diameter (‘‘Catalogue Spécial d’Objets envoyés & PExposition de Moscou en 1882,” Helsingfors, 1882, p. 14). Larie ewropxa does not belong to the Scandinavian flora, as stated in some works on Conifers. A wrong translation of ‘in montibus Sudetris” may have caused this error. In Norway it was first planted at the close of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth centuries. Prof. Schiibeler, in his **Viridarium,” says that the most northern point where he has seen the Larch planted is at Tramso (69° 40’), but there it was only a shrub, as it is rather windy at that place, and the ground sandy and stony. At Reeros (Roros), near the Swedish frontier, where sometimes there is even more than 50° C. of frost registered, Larch trees are to be found as high as 30 feet. t is strange that the name Larix leads to so many mistakes ; for instance, in a German botanical and physiological work recently published it is said that Pinus Laricio is the common Larch ! LL. e. pendula, Laws. Man. 386. Pinus laricina, Du Roi, Obs. Bot. 49. P. Larix nigra, Marsh. Arbr. 108. P. Larix repens, Endl. Conif. 134. P. pendula, Sol. in Ait. Hort. Kew.ed. 1, iii.s.369. Larix pendula, Salish. in Linn. Trans. viii. 313. LZ. intermedia, Lodd. Cat. 1836, 50. 416 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. L. decidua pendula, Regel in Gartenfl. 1871, s. 102. L. decidua americana, Henk. and Hochst. Conif. s. 133. L. americana pendula, Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 1057. By some authors this variety is supposed to be of American origin. Tt is hardy in Denmark. L. Griffithi, Hook. fil. and Thompson. Pinus Griffithi, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 411. Abies Griffithiana, Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 214. Larix Griffithiana, Gord. Pin. 126. Habitat.—The temperate forests in the Hastern Himalayas, and in Eastern Nepaul, Sikkim, and Bhotan, at from 8,000 to 12,000 feet elevation. Introduced in 1850. | A small tree, not exceeding 40 feet in height, with precisely the habit of L. europea var. pendula, which it so closely resembles as to have deceived myself and others. It differs from that plant in the very large cones with very long points to the exserted bracts. It is called ‘‘ Sah” or ‘‘Saar” by the Lepchas of Sikkim, and ‘‘ Boarge sella”’ by the Nepalese, who informed me that it was found as far west as the heads of the Cosi River in Hastern Nepaul. It occurs only towards the heads of the valleys near the snows, many milesfrom the plains of India, at elevations of 10,000 to 12,000 feet, and where I first saw it clothing old moraines; and though subsequently met with on grassy or bushy slopes, it was only where there was much rock and free drainage. The wood is regarded as the most durable of all the Sikkim Conifers, and is easily split into planks ; but all of those that I have met with were small, soft, and white ; I never saw any hard, close-grained red wood, like that of the Larch in Switzerland, which may be accounted for by the extreme wetness of the Sikkim climate. The cultivation of the Himalayan Larch in Kurope has hitherto proved a total failure, at least as far as I have ascertained. I sent quantities of the seed to Kew in 1848, which germinated freely, and hundreds of plants were raised and widely distributed ; but in every case these succumbed, in a few years, to virulent attacks of Coccus Laricis. Repeated importations of the seed into Kew and elsewhere have met no better fate. I have often been shown L. europxa for L. Griffithi, sometimes with the most positive assurance that the tree was received as such from Kew ; but in no instance have these borne the unmistakable cone of the Himalayan Larch (J. D,. Hooker, Gard. Chron. 1886, p. 718). This species is perhaps hardy in Denmark. L. kurilensis, new spec., H. Mayr, Monogr. der Abietineen des Jap. Reiches, 1890, 66, 5, f. 15. Habitat.—It grows in the Kuriles, but not on Kunashiri. It only commences on Shikotan, where it forms a small tree; but on Iturupp (Japanese Etorofu) it grows into a tree of the height and habit PINETUM DANICUM. 417 of the Central Japanese Larch (Larix leptolepis). Hight degrees farther north than Iturupp, in Kamtschatka, in the vicinity of Peter-Paul’s Harbour, Ruprecht found a Larch, which he described as Abies kamtschatica. It may be the same. JL. kurilensis is not to be found on Eso. It grows in the Kuriles intermixed with Picea ajanensis and Abies sachalinensis. : LL. leptolepis, Murr. Pines and Firs of Japan, 89 ; Gord. Pinet. 128 ; H. Mayr, Monogr. Abiet. Jap. Reich. 1890, 63. L. japonica, Carriére, Conif. ed. 2, 353. L. Sieboldi, Zucc. Abies leptolepis, Sieb. and Zucc. Fl. Jap. 12, t. 103. Pinus leptolepis, Endl. Conif. 130. P. Larix, Thunb. FI. Jap. 275. Habitat.—Japan. Dr. Mayr says that Larix leptolepis grows into a tree of great size. In the cooler forests some very strong examples are intermixed, but the greatest number are to be found in the tem- perate regions on volcanic ground ; a few go near to the alpine region. This Japanese Larch only occupies a somewhat small area ; it extends no further south than Fuji-san, at 353° N., its most northern point being 38° N. ; beyond this it is not found, neither is it on the Island of Eso. It is of no greater value as a forest tree than the Kuropean Larch, but in its youth it is certainly more beautiful in appearance. Introduced in 1861 by Mr. J. G. Veitch. Hardy. L. occidentalis, Nutt. N. Amer. Sylv. iil. v. 148, t. 120. Pinas Nuttalli, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 412. Larix americana brevi- folia, Carr. Conif. ed. 2, 357. Habitat.—British Columbia, Selkirk and Gold ranges, south of latitude 53° N., extending west to the head of Okanagan Lake (G. M. Dawson), south along the eastern slopes of the Cascade Mountains to the Columbia River, through the mountain ranges of Northern Wash- ington Territory to the western slopes of the Rocky Mountains of Montana, and on the Blue Mountains of Washington Territory and Oregon. A noble tree of great economic value, 100 to 150 feet in height, _ with a trunk 3 to 5 feet in diameter; moist mountain slopes and ledges between 2,500 and 5,000 feet elevation ; scattered among other trees, and never exclusively forming forests, the thick bark long resisting the action of forest fires ; very common, and perhaps reaching its greatest development, in the region north of the Big Blackfoot River and in the Flathead River, Montana; here the largest and most valuable timber tree. Wood heavy, exceedingly hard and strong, rather coarse-grained, compact, satiny, susceptible of a fine polish, very durable in contact with the soil ; bands of small summer cells broad, occupying fully half the width of annual growth, very resinous, dark-coloured, conspicuous ; resin passages few, obscure; medullary rays numerous, thin; colour light bright red, the thin sapwood nearly white ; specific gravity, 0°7407 ; E Fi 418 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. ash, 0:09; occasionally manufactured into lumber, but principally used for fuel, posts, railway ties, &c. (C. S. Sargent). Citizens of the Hastern States who visit the North-west are surprised to find Tamarack trees occupying dry, exposed ridges on mountain sides, instead of in the low swamps that the eastern species affect, and still more to find the timber of the western species so valuable and popular for all purposes of building, such as the manu- facture of bridges, railroad ties, fence posts, and all other uses where durability is desired. A peculiarity of the tree is the thick, coarse bark, that has the protective merit of long resisting the action of forest fires. Recently surveyors for the California and Oregon Railway dis- covered a grove of Tamarack trees on the upper waters of Luckiamute River, one of the small western branches of the Willamette River, and near the summit of the low range of coast mountains south-west of Dallas, Oregon. Little could be learned of the trees except that they were tail, straight, and seemed suitable for purposes of bridge-building, rail- road ties, and perhaps for general lumber. Examination is desirable to determine whether or not this is a distinct species, but the proba- bilities are that it is an outlying form of Larix occidentalis, the Great Western Larch (J. G. Lemmon, ‘‘ California State Board of Forestry,” 1889-90). A young tree planted out for trial i Denmark some years ago has made splendid growth. IL. sibirica, Ledeb. Fl. Alt. iv. 204. JL. ewropxa B sibirica, Loud. Encycl. of Trees, 1054. L. decidua B rossica, Henk. and Hochst. Conif. s. 182, partly. LD. decidua 6 sibirica, Rel. Gartenflora, 1871, s. 101. Abies Ledebouri, Rupr. in Beitr. z. Flor. Russl. ii. 56. Pinus Ledebourt, Endl. Conif. 131. P. intermedia, Fisch. in Schtshagl. Anz. Entedeck. vii. 3 (not Dur.). This species, Professor Pallas says, is found in cold mountainous places, from the Ural Mountains northwards, through Siberia and Kamtschatka, to the Pacific Ocean. It delights in a middle station on the sides of mountains, where it is sheltered from the north and exposed to the east wind, growing in a gravelly or rocky soil. In valleys and marshes, or on the very tops of mountains, it never occurs. It extends as far north as lat. 68°, where it forms a trailing shrub ; but in the south of Siberia and Russia it grows to the same height and bulk as the European Larch. In the north it has more the habit of the American Larch ; but it differs, he adds, from that species very essentially (Fl. Ross. pt. 1, p. 2). I have seen fine examples of this tree in Russia and in Finland, and I am convinced of its hardiness. JI also think its growth is even better, and more straight and erect, than is the case with the Huropean species, PINETUM DANICUM. 419 34, PICEA, Link.—Endl. Conif. 112. Picea, sec. 14, genuine, Link in Linnea, xv. 516. Picea, Carr. Conif. 236, 317. Abies, Don in Loud. Arbor. Brit. iv. 2293; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 413 (Pini sec.); Engelm. Bot. Calif. ii. 121; Nees. Gen. Fl. Germ. Monoch. n. 7; Reichb. Ic. Fl. Germ. +. 532; L. OC. Rich. Conif. t. 15; Lamb. Pin. t. 25-29, and min. ed. t. 35-39 ; Forb. Pin. Wob. t. 32-36 ; Zaub. and Spach, Pl. Or. ii. t. 14; Ledeb. Ic. Fl. Ross. t. 499; Wall. Pl. As. Rar. t. 246; Sieb. and Zucc. Fl. Jap. t. 3; Nutt. N. Am. Sylv. t. 146-148 ; Newberry, Bot. Williams Exped. t. 9 ; C. Koch, Dendr. 1. 232 (Abies, Don) ; Pancic, Eine neue Conif. in d. Ost]. Alpen, Belgrad, 1876; Eichler in Engl. and Prantl, Natiirl. PAf. ii. s. 77; Willk. Forstl. Flor. s. 65; Beissn. Nadelh. 331; H. Mayr, Monogr. der Abiet. des Jap. Reich. 1890, 43. Flowers moncecious; the male catkins axillary or terminal, the female ones terminal and solitary. Cones pendent, solitary, terminal, and remaining on for a long time. Scales persistent, leathery, thin, broadly rounded, and sometimes undulated on the edges. | Seeds oblong, pointed with a short, stiff, deciduous wing, and bony shell. Bracts small and hidden by the scales. Cotyledons from seven to nine in number. Leaves solitary, four-sided, acute-pointed, and scattered all round the shoots. All evergreen trees, found in the colder parts of Europe, Asia, and America. The ancients called the Spruce Fir ‘‘ Picea,” and the Silver Fir ‘‘ Abies,” but by some inadvertence Linnzeus reversed the names, and thus created great confusion in their nomenclature. The English and some of the American writers still follow Linnzeus, and apply the name Abies to the Spruces, and Picea to the Silver Firs (so also have Don, Loudon, Gordon, Emerson, &c.), while nearly all the French, German, and other Continental authors follow Bauhin and Du Roi, and reverse the terms, applying Picea to the Spruces, and Abies to the Silver Firs. Pliny called Picea excelsa ‘‘ Picea,” and distinguished it from the Silver Fir, as the ‘‘ tonsili facilitate,” on account of its fitness to be shorn, or clipped into hedges ; and Professor _ Link observes that the true Spruces approach nearest to that of Pinus, and that upon close inspection still more so than at afirst glance. He says: ‘‘ For instance, if the leaves that stand singly are examined minutely, it will be seen that several of them have their surface grown together, and consequently they are in tufts, like the leaves of the true Pines ; and as aproof that this is the case, it will be found that there is no upper surface on the leaves of the Spruces, but that the leaves pre- sent only the under surface on both sides, as will be seen on comparing them with the leaves of the true Pines. The seam where the leaves EE2 4920 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. are joined may be distinctly seen, for it forms a line in relief on both sides of the leaves of the common Spruce, which is never the case when such line is formed by the midrib, because it is then either on the upper or under side. Some Spruces have two leaves grown together, others four ; the sheaths at the base of the leaves are not observable, but appear to have grown together in the footstalk.” In addition, Professor Link points out the following differences between the leaves of the true Spruces (Picea) and Silver Firs (Abies). The leaves of the Silver Firs, he says, ‘‘ do not grow together, but are single, and have the usual form of single leaves, the midrib being only visible on the under side ; the upper one, having a furrow down the centre of the leaf, is flat, divided at the point, and dark green, with two white stripes on the under side, one on each side of the midrib, and arranged in two or more rows along the shoots in a more or less lateral position.” P. acicularis, Maxim. LP. japonica, Regel. Habitat.—In the Japanese mountains. Some authors believe it to be a form of P. Alcockiana (P. bicolor). Regel regards it as an alpine form. Hardy. P. ajanensis, Fischer, ex Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. vy. 212; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. 259, 12; lor. Ochot. 87 ; Masters in Linn. Journ. xviii. 508 ; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 6743; Yataba, Catal. of Pl. Bot. Gard. 208; Engl. and Prantl, Natiirl. Pfif. ii. 1, s. 58; Mayr, Monogr. Abiet. Jap. 53, 4, f. 10. Abies ajanensis, Lindl. and Gord. Journ. Hort. Soc. v. 212; Maxim. Prim. Fl. Amur. 261, 686 ; Veitch, Man. Conif. 66. A. jezoénsis, Sieb. and Zucc. FI. Jap. 110; Lindl. and Gord. in Journ. Hort. Soc. l.c. ; Knight, Syn. Conif. 37 ; Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. ed. 1, 255 ; Gord. Pinet. ed. 1, 17 ; Murr. Pines and Firs of Japan, 72 ; Henk. and Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 137, 199 ; Miquel, Prolus. Fl. Jap. 330; Hoopes, Evergreens, 180, 12 ; Sieb. and Zucc. Rein. Jap. 1. 280, s. 25. Picea jezoénsis, Carr. Tr. Gén. Conif. ed. 1,255, 9. Abies microsperma, Lindl. Gard. Chron. Jan. 12, 1861, 22; Henk. and Hochst. 186. A. microcarpa, Lindl. Miquel, Prolus. Fl. Jap. 389. Abies ajanensis var. microsperma, Veitch, Man. Conif. 66. Picea ajanensis var. japonica, Maxim. ii. Reise. PP. japonica, Maxim. Index. Seminum Hort. Petropolitan. 1865, 33; Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 481. Abies Menziesii, Loud. Franch. and Savat. Enum. 467; Cat. of Pl. Koishikawa Bot. Gard. 92. A. sitchensis, Lamb. Koch, Dendr. i. 247, 28. A. Schrenkiana, Lindl. and Gord. Pinet. ii. 18. Pinus Menziesii, Dougl. Parl. in DC. Prodr. 418, 87. Picea obovata var. Schrenkiana, or ajanensis, Engl. and Prantl, Natiirl. Pflf. 79. Habitat.—It is found in Eastern Siberia. Dr. Mayr says that it is at home in Japan on all the mountains of Eso. Ii only reaches the coast in the west of the island, and on swampy ground behind the sand-dunes, where it extends almost to the sea, close to which grows a PINETUM DANICUM. 491 Small vegetation of Roses (Rosa rugosa) and some poorly developed Oaks (Quercus dentata). The greatest forests of this Fir are found in the western and central mountains between Kitomi Kushiro and Nemora, where it is mixed with P. Glehni; from the north-east corner of Eso they go over to the Kuriles. It is also at home on Sachalin, and on the neighbouring continent. Dr. Mayr also says that this Fir, as a profitable forest tree, has no advantage over European Firs ; but seen away from the North American blue-white species and varieties, it is to be considered one of the most beautiful of the blue-white varieties. Introduced in 1861 by John Gould Veitch. Hardy. P. alba, Link in Linnea, xv. 519. Abies canadensis, Mill. Dict. n. 1 (mot Michaux). Pinus canadensis, Du Roi, Observ. Bot. 38. P. laxa, Ehrh. Beitr. iii. 24. P. glauca, Monch. Weissenb. 73. P. tetragona, Monch. Meth. 364. Abies alba, Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. ii. 207 (not Mill.). Pinus alba, Ait. Hort. Kew. ed 1, iii. 371. P. americana alba, hort. Abies americana alba, hort. A. curvifolia, hort. . Habitat.—Newfoundland, northern shore of Labrador to Ungava Bay, Cape Churchill, and north-westward to the mouth of the Mac- kenzie River and the valley of the Yukon River, Alaska ; south to the coast of Maine, North-eastern Vermont (West Burke and Elmwood, Pringle), Northern Michigan, Minnesota to Moose Lake and the W @z¢e HKarth Indian Reservation, the Black Hills of Dakota (R. Douglas), along the Rocky Mountains of Northern Montana to the valley of the Blackfoot River (Canby and Sargent), Sitka, and British Columbia. A tree 50-170 feet in height, with a trunk 2-3 feet in diameter ; low, rather wet soil, borders of ponds and swamps; most common north of the boundary of the United States, and reaching its greatest development along the streams and lakes of the Flathead region of Northern Montana, at an elevation of 2,500 to 3,500 feet ; the most important timber tree of the American sub-arctic forests north of the sixtieth degree of latitude; here more generally multiplied and of larger size than the allied P. nigra, with which it is associated ; its distribution southward in British Columbia not yet satisfactorily _ determined. Wood light, soft, not strong, close, straight-grained, compact, satiny ; bands of small summer cells thin, not conspicuous ; resin passages few, minute ; medullary rays numerous, prominent ; colour light yellow, the sapwood hardly distinguishable; specific gravity, 0°4051 ; ash, 0°32 ; largely manufactured into lumber, although not distinguished in commerce from that of the Black Spruce (P. nigra) (C. S. Sargent, ‘‘ Forest Trees of North America”). A tree of this species planted in Danish ground in 1864 is now 88 feet high, with a girth of 2 feet 3 inches; and one planted at 499, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, Frijsenborg sixty years ago now measures more than 60 feet in height. P, a. echinoformis, Carr. Conif. 321. Abies alba echinoformis, hort. P. Alcockiana, Carr. Conif. ed. 2, 348. Abies Alcoquiana, J. G. Veitch and Lindl. in Gard. Chron. 1861, 23, and 1862, 308. Abies bicolor, Maxim. Mél. Biolog. vi. 24 (1886), in Bull. Acad. Imp. Sc. St. Petersb. x. 488. Pinus Alcoquiana, Parl. in DC. Prodr. xvi. 2, 417 (1868). Abies acicularis, hort. (uot Maxim.). Hookeriana....%.... 22|}15|1 6]16| KH. | Wellsheltered ; very orna- mental. 59 MEET ZIESU y sete 22 | 45/6 2 | 23 | W. | Fine specimen; branches sweeping the ground. SS MENLOTING aw ecteeecene JOA AOM Doe eco He Very handsome _ tree; branches drooping to gd. Hh ab AYO) 8) IIe hnacoubaabee DI LE WG GE ORL Pos INT A grafted tree; well- branched to ground. 3 Nordmanmana....1\) 22 uluope son Oma ve Handsome; and branches sweeping ground. Araucaria imbricata ... | 18 | 32 | 2 4 | 15 |Sheltd.) Beautiful; fast-growing tree in perfect shelter. Athrotaxis Doniana ... | 20 | 10 — — Very ornamental; perfect shelter. 3 imbricata .. | 20) |-1/0 — —_ “5 Ss PF Cedrus atlantica......... 22|40|5 0} 24 4; Beautiful spec.; branches sweeping ground. sy ee Weodatacccems 2238 i We nO Soul NENNE A 0 Cryptomeria elegans ... | 20 | 20] 1 412] N. | Very ornamental. | japonica. We 1730 | .6) 3 ja24 i Beautiful tree; accident- ally lost its leader. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 22 | 31 Very fine specimen. 18) ” Pinus austriaca ......... 18 | 30 | 2 7 | 18 |Sheltd.| Growing freely. a) IC OmDLay ce ecessosees DRO lites meter Lael) INI se s SICXCOl Sana eemneeeaneer 38 | 15 | 2 O| 10 | Fully | Makes little progress ; too exp’d. exposed. SA INSIVNIS 4 epicvscetnees 22 | 35 | 7 O| 31} N.W.| Has been frosted, but now in vigorous health. js MMUATICIOS Wine te cewciee 18 | 835 | 6 5 | 26| W. | Vigorous and healthy. iamonticola, seq. 22} 36]4 51]16] N. | Vigorous; slight shelter. 30 Mn gho). dss. ..cee ses 18 | 20] 1 3] 15 |Sheltd.) Vigorous and healthy. SS DONGELOSacee-. spe 18 | 30 | 1 4 | 12 | Fully 3 @: Sheltd. Sciadopitys verticillata|18| 6|0 8j| 4 ie Very interesting and neat. | Taxodium sempervirens | 22 |} 48; 5 0| 18] N. | Leadersometimes frosted. | Thuya gigantea ......... 22)| 50) | 5; 9 ielg 1 Moved to presentsite when | 30ft. high; mst.vig. grwr. | Thuyopsis borealis ...... 221) 30 | 3 A hardy and most vig. tree. Ot > — bo 30 | N.W. Slight shelter on west;) Wellingtonia gigantea | 22 | 53 |10 vig.; very handsome. —__.__-. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 485 GENERAL REMARKS.—AII the Conifers named in the above list are growing here in vigorous health (except Pinus excelsa, which is exposed to every wind that blows, and suffers in consequence), and finely feathered to the ground with branches, the picture of luxuriant growth. Besides those in the list, many kinds of beautiful ornamental Conifers have been planted, including numerous fine varieties of Retinosporas, Junipers, Thuyas, Cypresses, and Yews, which all thrive well in our humid climate, the average rainfall being nearly 60 inches in the year, and the number of wet days 150, often more! As an instance of the rapid and vigorous growth made by some of our Conifers, it may be mentioned that a tree ot Abies nobilis raised here from seed 22 years ago, is now 48 feet high; 6 feet 11 inches in girth at 5 feet up; with a spread of branches 26 feet in diameter; growing in a heavy loam. Lest the description of the soil given in the table may mislead (although correct), it may be as well to state that in addition to the natural soil, a special preparation was made for each individual tree, by taking off the surface loam about ten inches deep and ten feet in diameter, and adding to it about one- fourth of rich peat and a substance obtained from the garden furnaces. This substance, before it is used for fuel, is made from about two-thirds of coal, reduced very fine in the process of digging the anthracite coal, and one-third of clay, properly mixed and dried for burning. Before mixing it with the loam and peat, it is passed through a fine sieve, and then the whole is thoroughly mixed and returned into the circular hole—having previously broken up the bottom, composed of the upper strata of the Silurian rock—and the compost made very solid by firm treading. In this mixture the Conifers make an excellent start, and crow with great vigour; but doubtless they have now taken full possession of the natural soil, and they are thriving with undiminished vigour. CARNARVONSHIRE. PENRHYN CASTLE. LORD PENRHYN. Correspondent : Mr. WALTER SPEED, The Gardens, Penrhyn Castle, Bangor. 5 8 Botanical Name Age | Height BS s Remarks A A Years | Feet Feet mies Cephalonica.............--+0. — 60 14 | Fine healthy tree. PD OU CI ASIT co oicts ss viciisiee tne son sc i — 60 34 | Very fine specimen. CL ATICUIS le cioicis sce enic.esisZees 40 70 15 op Ap PRP NICTIZCSIIs., scectevctwoceccses — 72 14 ap Ss PICO US casa cin ces ease occccss ass — 70 19 6 7 ae NOrdmanniana ..45.....3.. — 70 21 | Fine specimen. PEEMOTACTIEANS. coc cveccesscs’vses 40 58 13 of 99 PME PEMTISADO! oc ccecccccsetescraves — 40 13 < 3 PR STMICVATIA 2.2. cicccn e+e 40 54 13 | Very fine specimen. eraucaria imbricata............0. — 40 12 % 53 Wedrus atlantica .............+..0. — 52 16 | Good specimen. PE DI COGRTA). 55. ccceasccteoseeee — 50 15 “ oF Cupressus Lawsoniana............ _— 42 9 | Very good specimen. RNS ATISETIACA ... 6.5. Cryptomeria japonica... | — | 40 | 5 6 | 32] W. | Thriving; fine specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana | — | 45 | — | 14 | N.E. 5 55 Pinus austriaca ......... — | 40] 4 6] 20] W. | Good specimen. syn WMERCOLSAe cone. ececs 30 | 34 | 3 O| 26 N. s ” Ao) ELST OAS teeeeeeee ee 40 | 60 |10 0 | 48] S.E. | Branched to the ground; a handsome tree. Taxodium sempervirens | — | 46 | 7 6] 24] ,, Requires sheltr.from wind. Thuyopsis borealis ...... — | 26} — | 12 x Fine bushes; gracefl. habit. Wellingtonia gigantea | 35 | 52/9 0O| 23 35 Not to be recommended. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. - 487 GENERAL REMARKS.—In this place Conifers grow freely and make very fine specimens when sheltered from the fierce winds that sweep over us. Abies Smithiana and A. Webbiana are good in shelter; and so are Cryptomeria japonica and Taxodiwm sempervirens. MENABILLY. J. RASHLEIGH, Esq. Correspondent : Mr. W. BENNETT, The Gardens, Menabilly, Fowey. GENERAL REMARKS.—I have sent two branches of Mexican Pines: one is labelled ‘‘ Pinus oocarpa or Russelliana,” as Mr. Rashleigh is not quite sure which it is, but it was sent hither under the name of Ruwsselliana; the other is Pinus Montezume. P. oocarpa or Russelliana is a tree 21 feet high, and covers an area 69 feet in circumference with its irregular pendulous branches, some of which are resting on the ground. It bore three cones this season, and although there were male blossoms on the tree at the same time, they withered and dropped off. P, Moniezume is 16 feet high and covers an area of 66 feet. It is bearing cones, which are about 4 inches long and 2 inches in diameter at the base, slightly incurved at the point. These trees have been growing here for about eighteen years. We have also a number of young plants of Pinus Montezume Lindleyana— about four years old, raised from seed received from the British Consul at Mexico ; they are from 1 to 4 feet in height, and some of them have made 1 foot 7 inches growth this season. We do not protect these during the winter months, as we find the more they are exposed the freer they grow; in fact, several of them are planted on an exposed place, with a north-east aspect. Pinus monticola is 21 feet high, and bears cones freely. Pinus parviflora, 8 feet high, has been planted here about four years, and has borne cones the last three seasons ; it is looking well. Picea Pindrow, 25 feet high, covering 50 feet area, bore cones last season. Abies ajanensis, 25 feet high, covering an area of 44 feet. Picea grandis, 30 feet high, planted about eleven years (it was about one foot high when planted), covering an area of 55 feet. Picea lasiocarpa is 27 feet high and 54 feet in circumference of branches. Picea religiosa is 24feet high. This tree felt the severity of last winter, but is now looking fairly well. Retinospora leptoclada, about 4 feet high, and has borne cones for some years. All the above are growing in a deep loamy soil, about 140 feet above sea level in a north-by-east aspect. Pinus insignis, sent hither by the Horticultural Society under the name of P. radiata, and planted by J. Rashleigh, Esq., in the year 1843, is now 61 feet high and 10 feet 6 inches in girth at 3 feet from the ground. Pinus insignis, sent hither and planted by J. Rashleigh, Esq., in 1846, is 61 feet high, and 114 feet in girth at 3 feet from the ground. The Pines we find grow fastest here are Pinus insignis and P. muricata; and the two fastest-growing Firs are Picea or Abies grandis and A. Douglasiz. Athrotaxus laxifolia, 14 feet high and covering an area of 21 feet, is planted on a slight mound in peaty loam; this has fruited for several years. I have sent these notes to give an idea of the growth which some of these plants have made in a few years. 488 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. CARCLEW. Colonel TREMAYNE. Correspondent: Mr. J. StmMons, Carclew, Perranarworthal. Botanical Name Height ees seas Sree ce | Feet Ft. In. Feet Abies Albertiana, \\.....-.tsesceaccuseruser 68 5 5 36 RCE Pal OMIGA sascesecebeaeeemeens 59 6 0 40 bs MIDOUCIASIS. Gone cesiecwrasetoseete es 84 an 55 Se Ap STAs « oisis,c sansa cleats cee ae 45 2 8 — ae HGCA ZIESII scaecac saseosee here teens 75 6 0 38 so) Moning ay et oh se eke c ence cee s 80 7 7 32 see NOLGmanniana: 5. ) Solas Sa] 3 Botanical Name. Age S cae E : 5 Remarks AA A Years! Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 30 | 68 | 4 3 | 32 |Sheltd.| Very ornamental. 3 cephalonica ...... 45 |70|9 4) 65 S. | Agrand specimen; full of cones, EMECONCOIOL ce. ss c0cs0. S0NEGE 8 7 1232 HS A grand tree. POMETO DUIS) Senin acces. « 45 | 72 | 6 4 | 85 Sheltd.| Quite a picture. 55 IRILINSBFOO osoanoendaKe 40 | 60/6 6] 42 5 Fine ornamental tree. Smithiana......... A leds | Sh. O47, a Very hardy and graceful. Araucaria imbricata ... | 45 | 47 | 4 9 | — = Lost branches to 10 ft. up. Cedrus Deodara ......... 50 | 60/9 61 52 55 A feature in the grounds. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 30 | 47 |4 65 | 17 99 A dense green column. ay macrocarpa 37 | 61 | 8 O |} 48 5 Always in good condition. Pinus austriaca ......... 50.) 7418 0 | 56 5 Bare stem to 14 ft. up. PC eIMmbTa, je secees 30 | 68 | 5 O | 12 3 Very uniform trees. Pe RCXCCISA) sicnecccecine 48 | 60/8 O|} 70 Fy Splendid tree. PP MUMIST OMNIS 3.0/0 0/5!0 12:61 45 | 62 10 0} 52 a Suffered badly from the severities of last winter. se MACLOCAT PA, ...0<. 25 | 44/4 6) 24 8. Very fine tree. ponderosa ......... 36 | 63 | 9 2 | — zy Bare stem to 20 ft. up. Taxodium sempervirens | 47 | 60 |11 0) 48 S Lost 3 ft. of top last winter. Thuya gigantea ......... 30 | 65 | 6 O| 19 |Sheltd.| In perfection. Wellingtonia gigantea 30 | 72 |10 6 | 33 x Very symmetrical. GENERAL REMARKS.— Every care has been exercised to have the dimensions of the above specimens of Conifers taken as accurately as possible, so that the figures may be relied upon. All the trees are grown on a southern slope, well sheltered, but generally open to the south. The soil is a strong heavy loam, resting on the Kentish rag, which forms a thorough natural drainage. The last severe winter, when we had two feet of snow in Kent, with the thermometer down about zero, severely tested the hardiness and suitability, or otherwise, of the various kinds of Conifers, and those which have survived it may be considered tolerably hardy in ordinary seasons. Here, Pinus insignis suffered severely in all its stages; the oldest trees having huge branches torn off and twisted about in the most.curious way by the weight of snow and the force of the gale, while the younger trees looked as if they had been severely singed all over, their foliage was so browned. They have mostly made a fair effort to grow during the past summer, but I am afraid few, if any, of them will ever wholly recover. Fine specimens of Abies Webbiana have had their tops killed for several feet down ; and the tops of Taxodiwm sempervirens have been killed back 2 to 3 feet. The Weymouth Pine has also suffered severely, and the foliage appears as if scorched. Cryptomeria elegans is very apt to lose its branches by the weight of snow lodging upon them, and our finest specimen was snapped clean off in the middle during a heavy snowfall. We saved many fine specimens by going round with long poles and shaking off the snow before it accumulated to a great weight upon them; but the snow at times is like a thief in the night—it comes without warning! Pinus excelsa, with its widespreading head, got much broken by the weight of snow ; and P. ponderosa loses a limb or two with almost every snowstorm. The erect- growing Biotas, Junipers, and Thuyas are very liable to damage from a snowstorm, 492 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. as the weight of snow lodging among the branches bends them over, and eventually splits them off. All the following came through last winter without the loss of a twig from snow, frost, or wind:—A dies Albertiana, A. canadensis, A. cephalonica, A. lasiocarpa, A. Nordmanniana, A. orientalis, A. Pinsapo, A. Smithiana, Cryptomeria japonica, Cupressus Lansoniana, C. macrocarpa, C. nutkaensis, Pinus Cembra, Retinospora pisifera and all others, Thuya gigantea, and Thuyopsis dolabrata. Wellingtonia gigantea never loses a branch from severe weather, but it sometimes loses its young sappy leading shoot if a gale occurs while it is growing. It does not appear to be a tree that will last many years ina well furnished condition. They are growing here as anavenue, as groups, and as single specimens, and all of them are showing a tendency to lose their lower branches. Iam afraid our soil is not deep enough nor our hills high enough, and our rainfall is not great enough, to suit the Wellingtonia and grow it in perfection to maturity. LINCOLNSHIRE. REVESBY ABBEY. Right Hon. EDWARD STANHOPE. Altitude, 130 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, chalk and red sand. Correspondent: Mr. JAMES ALEXANDER, The Gardens, Revesby Abbey, Boston. oOonm o Botanical Name Age Ee rea EE g Remarks 3 a ae ic) Years) Feet ; Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 30. | 28 | 2 2) 18 | S.H. | Healthy ; nice tree. 9) cephalonica ean. 43 |} 45) 6 3 | 33 As A fine specimen. a DW Ouclasii: a. eee. 43 | 62 | 7 1 | 30 e Healthy ; very dark green. Apia PARTON) “oslsopndoodas 43 |70]6 6] 32 if Vigorous and very healthy. 35) Ma guiliCa mesae se 36 | 40} 5 OF; 15 33 Beautiful specimen. spc POTS Meee 40 | 46|}3 4); 18 5a Doing fairly well. » Nordmanniana ... | 40 | 50/4 O 1} 380 =i Hy 3 sei SA DORM cae te | 43 | 49 | 6 6} 25 si Healthy and thriving. Araucaria imbricata ... | 40 | 40 | 4 2 | 25 a Fine spec. ; bearing cones. Cedrus atlantica......... 43 | 5216 0 /|-25 f Healthy and thriving. 5 Deodaraw-ns.ssee 43 |50|6 6 | 380 4 oF a ‘ave JOOP BAD Gc cosoosnouS 43 | 45/9 6 | 83 As Healthy, bearing cones. Cryptomeria elegans ... | 30 | 20/110] 8 +3 Healthy and thriving. as japonica... | 40 | 37 | 5 3 | 20 ae ss e Cupressus Lawsoniana 307 25-\" 2) 1) s12 Ss 5 ¥ Libocedrus decurrens... | 40 | 86 | 4 O 9 es = 4 Pinus austriaca 4....2.e6. 40 | 45 | 7 3 36 = a a Ay KO ano) Guoncobadeoe 40 |} 50/3 64 14 sd st = Pa EXCelSaiis ).oc4k atic 40 | 44 | 6 6 | 30 “a ee 2 PTA STONIS soso sseaceer 40 | 52 | 6 38 | 20 k = me spike VCTITNG VAT a. cosseccers 36 | 48 | 6 8 | 36 3 x “A >», Lambertiana...... 43°|50/6 8 | 34 ss “s 5 Bah AGATE ClOsee ascceeksss 43 |50/4 0] 18 is a a 5 MOMLICOlamaeteste 43 |56|4 4] 18 43 3 a sy PONderosay eaacee ee 431.48 | 4 2 | 12 s 5 * SST ULODMS eae eesce see 48 |50|5 O}| 25 3 eS » sae DAUTICa: Fans Sareea 43° | 455100 6an29 = Healthy, very branchy. Taxodium distichum ... | 40 | 27 | 3 8 | 20 53 Healthy; pretty tree. : sempervirens | 43 | 63 | 9 6 | 35 x Fine thriving specimen. Thuya gigantea ......... 36 | 46/3 3 | 12 8 Useful tree for covers. Thuyopsis borealis...... 36 | 40 | 2 6 | 20 = Beautiful tree; very hardy. Wellingtonia gigantea | 34 | 65 | 8 8 | 18 : Fine healthy specimens. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 493 GENERAL REMARKS.—The finest of the above trees were mostly planted between 1848 and 1851, and on the whole have thriven wellin the interval. Nearly all hardy varieties of Conifers are grown in more or less numbers; Cypresses, Thuias, and Junipers thriving well, and attaining a considerable height. Variegated Cypresses, Retinosporas, and Yews grow well and assume rich colours, and the dark-green erect variety of Lawson’s Cypress is very effective among them. Thuyopsis dolabrata is another species that does remarkably well, and is much admired. NORTHUMBERLAND. Howick HALL. EARL GREY. Altitude, 80 to 130 feet. Soil, stiff loam; subsoil, clay. Correspondent: Mr. DAVID INGLIs, The Gardens, Howick Hall, Lesbury. On pe: ga} # Botanical Name Age a eee z 5 2 Remarks = S ia % Aes fe Dales 2 eel /Years! Feet Ft. In.) Feet Abies Douglasii............ 45 |60|7 4] 51 S. | Thriving well; fine tree. Pe MCTIZICS Loo ocx co5.- 00 53, 1.90 |-9) 0-1 60 » | Very fine specimen. Pee Worinda: J, .5....-s. 45 | 56|6 2] 30 9 cs - n PEE MONIIS =. 205-s00<0: eee cOn | SOR ee Ont? »» | Moderate growth. » Nordmanniana ... | 25 | 45/4 0 | 18 » | Beautiful specimens. JETIS8 TT) “cesdosesades 20) | 230882) Set 1b 9 Doing well; nice tree. we wWebbiana...:...... 50 | 51 | 8 O} 36 » | Fine specimen. Araucaria imbricata...... SDaleoO ie eae » | Beautiful ; bearing cones. Cedrus Deodara ......4- 40 | 48 | 6 0} 30 »» | Fine specimen. SEP AATIL, 02. 7cc00ese 70 | 51 |12 O | 63 | Open] Grand; girth at 2 ft. up. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 25 | 28 | 2 8 | 12 » | Fine specimen. ba macrocarpa... | 35 | 48 | 5 4] 24 % ‘9 99 Pinus Cembra 2 ....2-.00<-. 40 | 45)9 O| 22 »» | Not very thriving, PEP CHTCV Ic. ees scceus 35 AD aisoy e421 S. | Doing well. »» ponderosa ......... 35 | 36) 4 21 18 3 iene Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 47 | 4 0] 20 » | Not thriving well. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 34 | 60; 9 0] 12 » | Fine specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—Some of the finest specimens of the Conifers here are growing within a quarter of a mile of the German Ocean, and about 80 feet above it. Among others thriving well in such near proximity to the sea, and only moderately sheltered, are Abies Douglasti, A. Menziesit, A. Nordmanniana, A. Webbiana, Araucaria imbricata, Cedrus Deodara, Cupressus Lamnsoniana, and C. macrocarpa. Farther inland, in the grounds and policies, there are many fine healthy specimens, but few are beyond a mile from the sea, or over 130 feet above it. 494 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. PEMBROKESHIRE. STACKPOLE CouRT. EARL OF CAWDOR. Altitude, 60 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, limestone formation. Correspondent : Mr. W. FISHER, The Gardens, Stackpole Court, Pembroke. om o : a Girth at 8 2 8 Botanical Name Age 3 | 5ft. up g = o Remarks jen eu 4 5 oa aa Years] Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 35 | 56 | 6 5 | 18 | S.W. | Thriving specimen. » Nordmanniana... | 20 | 30} 2 11 | 14 5 p ‘5 Cupressus macrocarpa Adel osjalpese 2b | Us) 3 Free growing & healthy. Pinus WNSip MIS —eeeeee cs 20 | 2514 2 | — 3 55 3 Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 52|8 9 | — = see a Wellingtonia gigantea BOM FOOT RS? Gm ele 5) A fine healthy tree. SHROPSHIRE. CHETWYND PARK. J.C. B. BOROUGH, Esq. ' Altitude, 360 to 550 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, gravel, and clay. Correspondent : Mr. N. SHERWOOD, The Gardens, Chetwynd Park, Newport. om © » uO u : = ir 23 B Botanical Name Age | wae : z, Remarks Aa aa = Years! Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii ......... 30 | 54 | 4 3 | 27 | Open| Succeeds well; best in shelter. Ae TKO OVUDIS) Goecdanosoa0des 36 | 32 | 4 O | 21 | N.E. | Not thriving too well. » Nordmanniana... | 40 | 65 | 5 6 | 27 » Thriving splendidly. Cedrus atlantica......... 30 | 45 | 4 6 | 24 | Open | Thriving well. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 34 | 36 | —— | 18 | N.E. | A grand specimen. Pinus austriaca ......... 35 | 40 | —— | — | Open |} Fine for making cover. sy MOXCOISAM Reet e se ecce 30° | 40 |. —— | 30 | S.W. | Thrives well. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 30 | 38 | —— | 22 | Open | Makes a grand specimen. co on bo So A ics Wellingtonia gigantea 34 | 65 Thriving ; fine specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—We have not a very large collection of Conifers, but among the number are some that thrive remarkably well, and form very fine specimens, particularly Abies Douglasiit, A. Nordmanniana, Cypresses, and the Weilingtonia. Neither the Araucaria nor the Deodar, however, seems to thrive well, the soil probably being too light for them. Pinus excelsa makes fine growth for a while, but eventually loses its leader when it rises beyond the protection of other trees, and then becomes squat and branchy. Most of the other free- growing Conifers make handsome trees in sheltered places. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 495 CHESWARDINE. C. DONALDSON HUDSON, Esq. Correspondent : Mr. WM. WEEKS, Cheswardine, Market Drayton. GENERAL REMARKS.—The following Conifers are growing here at an altitude yf 550 feet, mostly in loam that has been well trenched, resting on an open gravelly ubsoil, through which water passes freely. Abies concolor.— Does well in sandy loam, and keeps its colour in any open place. A. Douglasti.—Succeeds well in trenched loam, on an open bottom, in any -xposure; but the colour is much richer in sheltered places. We have cut down rees of the Douglas Fir for cabinet work, and found the wood excellent for such 1 purpose. A fine specimen, thirty years old, is 50 ft. high, girths 4 ft. at five feet 1p, and its branches have a diameter of 27 ft., forming a very handsome tree. A. grandis.—Grows fast in similar soil, but is best coloured when grown in the pen. r A. magnifica.—Grown in the same soil, in an open spot, forms a beautiful and ‘ich-coloured specimen. A. Menziesii.—Thrives well, and retains a good colour, especially on a rough xravelly subsoil. A. nobilis.—Is quite a success; but it makes the best growth in an open clayey loam, with a damp clay bottom. A. Nordmanniana.—Grows most luxuriantly, and is a complete success, even in exposed places ; and its bright, cheerful colour makes it very suitable for a memorial specimen tree. A. pungens.—Grows successfully in any good loam, with an open, clayey subsoil, and forms a most beautiful specimen, retaining its rich glaucous hue all the year round. It is the finest of all the spruces for producing a stately and picturesque effect in dressed grounds. Araucaria imbricata.—Thrives well in a deep sandy loam, on an open subsoil ; but it does not do so well on a cold, clayey subsoil. Cedrus atlantica.—Does fairly well on any soil, but assumes its best glaucous blue tints when planted in a free loam on an open gravelly subsoil. A fine tree growing here is thirty years old, 45 ft. high, 4 ft. 6in. in girth at five feet up, with a, spread of branches 24 ft. in diameter; a very handsome specimen. C. Deodara.— Does not thrive so well on the gravelly subsoil, and soon loses its colour ; requiring evidently a strong soil to get it in its best condition. Cupressus Lawsoniana.—Thrives remarkably well, and is not in the least parti- cular as to either soil or subsoil, but is most vigorous on a moist but open clayey subsoil. A grand specimen is 40 ft. in height at thirty years of age. C. macrocarpa.—Thrives luxuriantly, and makes fine, clean growth, in a friable loam, on a clayey subsoil, and has attained a height of 40 ft. in twenty years. Pinus austriaca.—Grows vigorously on trenched ioam, on any kind of subsoil ; but from its coarse growth and heavy top it is rather liable to be blown over in exposed places; still it is one of the best kinds for quickly making a game covert. It is 40 ft. high at twenty-five years old. P. excelsa.—Thrives well and retains its colour best in strong loam, on a porous clayey subsoil. A tree twenty-six years old is 40 ft. high, and the branches have a spread of 30 ft. in diameter. P. insignis.—Thrives tolerably well in a free loam, on gravel, and assumes a better habit than when grown on a richer soil. P. Lambertiana.—Succeeds well, grows fast, and makes a fine specimen. Taxodium sempervirens.—Does fairly well, but requires a sheltered spot. Thuyopsis borealis.—Makes strong, healthy growth, and forms a beautaful specimen, standing the exposure well at this elevated spot, so that it is planted everywhere. A fine specimen at thirty years of age is over 40 ft. high. Wellingtonia gigantea.—Thrives best im sheltered places, in deep loam, on a sandy subsoil, where it makes a fine clean growth, with foliage of a good colour. On a thin soil and dry gravelly subsoil, or in places where it is exposed to the cold, cutting winds, it soon begins to turn rusty, and the branchlets die off next the stem. On deep soil and an open rocky bottom it thrives so remarkably well that it is difficult to conceive it to be the same tree. 496 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. WARWICKSHIRE. RAGLEY HALL. MARQUIS OF HERTFORD. Altitude, 250 feet. Soil, marly loam; subsoil, rocky. Correspondent: Mr. ALEXANDER D,. CHRISTIE, The Gardens, Ragley Hall, Alcester. om 0) : + |Girth at| 2'6 | Botanical Name Age “eh 5 ft. up Og 3 Remarks a | (24) A Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii............ 16 | 32 | 2 6 | 20 |Sheltd.| Very healthy & thriving. J) OOLOINS de ctoooscundbce Keys yb) | be! Zeit 39 Doing fairly well,healthy. » Nordmanniana <.. | 1840245) 1 10.16 p Splendid specimens. i LEUOSENTO cecossoonas LOWE Z oa eo malts 5p Very beautifulspecimens. is a PHO eco | Sy Aa ks UO per 53 5 wi he UAVIOLGC hilauere tiers hetcicies 17 | 24/1 10 | 16 - Handsome and vigorous. Cedrus Deodara............ UST 2a a Oks Bs ki Bs Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 17 | 25 | 2 0 | 12 45 Many fine specimens Thuya gigantea............ 18 | 386 | 2 6} 15 fe ws os Wellingtonia gigantea... | 17 | 34 | 3 O| 14 se Very handsome; healthy. GENERAL REMARKS.—These are all fine specimens, of about the same age, and in the most vigorous health. On the strong marly loam here, we can show that Abies Douglasii, A. Nordmanniana, A. Pinsapo, Cupressus Lansoniana, Thuya gigantea, and Wellingtonia gigantea have really made much better trees than Common Spruce, Larch, Scots Fir, Beech, and other hardwoods, all planted at the same time and in the same way. Many other varieties of ornamental Conifers have also been planted, and they are generally in a fine thriving condition. WORCESTERSHIRE. EARDISTON. GEORGE WALLACE, Esq. Altitude, 100 to 200 feet. Soil, rich loam; subsoil, strong marl. Correspondent : Mr. HENRY RITCHIE, The Gardens, Eardiston, Tenbury. On o a ga) 8 Botanical Name Age| -2 |Girth at) oq S Remarks Hj |5ft.up| 2s fe a —Q sa a Feet | Ft. In.| Feet Abies nobilis .......0060+ 40 | 56 | 4 6) 20] W. | Doing well; vigorous. [years » Nordmanniana 25 | 38 | 3 2) 22) ,, | Doeswell; butfailsat25o0r30 Araucaria imbricata... | 30 | 30 | 2 6| 14] ,, | Very good specimen. Cedrus atlantica ...... 30: | 40 1 4° 6.20.) 5 » Deodara........ — |55!17 0O/| 36] ,, | Very fine specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 25 | 28 | 2 3 VOM ies " s Libocedrus decurrens | 30|16|2 0] 6] ,, | Good specimen. Pinus austriaca ........- 40 | 45 | 6 O | 30 |Open| Branchy tree; healthy. 5» INSIQNIS ....+000. 28 | 42-13 997) 39) |e, * 9) ate Thuyopsis borealis ... | 30 | 33 | 2 6 | 20] W. | Beautiful specimen. Wellingtonia gigantea | 30 | 35 | 5 0 | 20] ,, | Good; but now going back. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 497 GENERAL REMARKS.—It may be mentioned that the Cedars, Cypresses, and Thuyopsis borealis are the most thriving Conifers on the deep rich loam of the Teme Valley. Most of the Firs and Pines seem to go back after their roots penetrate to the stiff marly subsoil, although for a few years after they are planted they grow vigorously. From the same cause good specimens of Wellingtonia are showing signs of failing health. HEWELL GRANGE. LORD WINDSOR. Altitude, high and exposed. Soil, light loam; subsoil, rocky. Correspondent : Mr. EDWARD WARD, The Gardens, Hewell Grange, Bromsgrove. on fos) 2 lla ores | Botanical Name Age & aes 3 3 3 Remarks FB Sa| a A Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies cephalonica......... 40 | 55 | 5 O | 30 | Fully) Fine specimen. exps’d PP OUCUASM sat ved oo aie BOO GO BB 9 HO | Feathered to the ground. of. CARY OC UISNC RAE ana See 20' |-36) 2° 6 | 24 55 A very fine tree. PP MAST CAS. 20.0060 200622260 210) 3,; 0 ” 15.) THOT paeke gee eeaanee 35 | 50/5 6 | 30 55 A good thriving specimen. » Nordmanniana...... 30 |45)3 6) 40) ,, ” 9 ” OFIEMUANIS 5256506 35 | 35 | 2 6 | 25 99 9 ” Pee ITA OWe ai.) ei0%s sae 30 | 42 | 3 6 | 20 "9 A fine healthy tree. Pe SMMAUMTATIA " s.c000 30 | 45/5 0} 25 56 Handsome specimen, Webbiana............ 40/451} 4 0} 25/ ,, | Good specimen. Peanearia THOM OVE CZH IF lgargee SO 254s On =30 x Me Cedrus atlantica ......... 45 |55|5 6 40 3 Very fine trees. i WNCOGATA. .ccues.0se. 40 | 55 | 7 61 40 sa i *, Pe yi vave see 100 | 50 16 0] 80 of Fine old specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 25 | 35 | — | 18 59 Fine ; used for hedges. BS 5 pendula | 28 | 40/2 0O/ 15 99 Beautiful var. ; does well. macrocarpa... | 25 | 30/3 6 | — 60 Good specimen. WATIX CULOPLA .....06..00s 75 | 80 11 O | 60 " Fine straight timber. Libocedrus decurrens ... | 25 | 30 | — 9 ) Good specimen, ipinus;Cembra <........06. MOF Lon iede (On| 225 55 i PAPE XGOISAN Yackecee cess 60 | 50) 7 6 | 52 i; Wide-spreading tree. PME INCI OM a vice: sidiclcloie cs vs COT ior iid. 26" | 20 3 Fine straight stem, So allasiana ....6c.... 30 | 30 | 4 6 | 30 5 A good specimen. Pye IASLC coc .siees vale 80 |} 68 {10 0 | 20 i A grand tree. PP OMAN C Aree scccussccsecsc 50 | 30] 4 0O| 20 55 A good specimen. PE PONGETOSAL.t.. 22.0. 30 | 35 | 3 0 | 20 5 9 99 2 DLTODUS soca sees sesso 40 |} 35 | 5 6 | 25 29 99 a9 SIVESETIS ceiecestscss 155) 90) 9" 6") 30 3 Fine clean straight stem. Taxodium distichum pendulum HOM PDO IG: OF 15 3 Beautiful tree. ‘sempervirens | 50 | 65/8 0O | 30 55 Fine specimen, Thuya OPO ase tines ce ce 40 | 560 | 3 O |} 20 33 ie Wellingtonia gigantea... | 35 | 50 | 7 6 | 20 99 53 GENERAL REMARKS.—The Conifers above noted are growing in fully exposed positions on the highest table-land in the Midlands. ‘The soil is a light sandy loam, resting on limestone rock, on which most Conifers do well. The grand old tree of Pinus Pinaster grows on an island in a Jake of thirty-two acres, and is fully exposed. KK 498 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. YORKSHIRE. MULGRAVE CASTLE. MARQUIS OF NORMANBY. Altitude, 50 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, clay. Correspondent: Mr. J. CORBETT, The Gardens, Mulgrave Castle, Whitby. 2 Girth at 23 5 Botanical Name Age | 2» aL i & E 3 Remarks aa) An bd iS) A Years) F eet] Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasil.......0.... 60 | 66 | 7 10 | 54 |Sheltd.| Beautiful specimen, Araucaria imbricata...... SOF STAs tb ale82 5 oa _ Cedrus atlantica ......... == | GONlonlOn| 285s, Thrives well; very fine. a DD COCATA s rycmace 56 | 45 | 5 6 | 27 5 ss “3 Pinusi Cem bray ga.tmisceceate 63.) 40) | 0274. 22525 on 3 Wellingtonia gigantea... | 25 | 40| 410] 15] ,, Vigorous ; fine specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—The above trees are all in vigorous health. The Douglas Fir is a splendid specimen, growing as it does so near to the East Coast. The Araucaria is said to be one of the first planted in England and coeval with the oldest specimen at Kew. STUDLEY ROYAL. MARQUIS OF RIPON. Altitude, 280 to 320 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, limestone. Correspondent: Mr. JOHN CLARK, The Gardens, Studley Royal, Ripon. go] & Botanical Name Age EI BAe E o Remarks a Sa) Qa | Years} Feet | Ft. In, | Feet Abies canadensis ......... Agd.| 60 |10 0 | 66 |Sheltd.| Very fine specimen. peucephalomicar sas. 4. COR Oonlso Sal S * Pe aCOMC OlOT At E ec stte-a- 30 | 40;3 0;—]| S. Fine specimen. Re MIE COIS Ala ase conereniace Agd.J132 |12 6 | — |Sheltd.| Very fine specimen. Bo IMETOWALESINL 5 Ohopeonnor —= || 2 |) 4 MO sh Not a good specimen. ss eNOS ey Pee easeee — | 12 — a ie Thriving young tree. » Nordmanniana ... | 30} 40/2 9j|—J] &. Fair specimen. IPANSADOF eee eeee ee 30 | 35 | 3 0} — = Fe 33 Araucaria imbricata...... Ol 2 0 - af 3 Cedrus Deodara............ OO IP TO tO Get Very fine specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 30 | 40} — |— | ,, Hardy and free growing. Juniperus Virginiana ... Agd.| 70 | 6 0 | — |Sheltd.| Very fine specimen. IPRIMUS AUS ERIACA mn eaeeecerne 9 LO MINOMe Oni. |ae Large, but not choice, ag @eMMbKAa, Uri eccseheles 60 |} 60|4 O0}—|] ,, Good specimen. = OXCelSae vente as 60 | 70} 6 0} — 2 Fine specimen. Re MG ATA CIOs acyeseat cess 60 | 70 | 5 O | — |Sheltd.| Fair specimen. FH OINCKEHRORER Gagoasbec 30 | 80 | 3-6.) — Ss. - a SVIVESCUISeemcecceees Agd.| 90 {11 3 | — |Sheltd.| Very fine specimen. Taxodium sempervirens | — | 30} — |— | S8S Not a good specimen. Thuya gigantea............ 30} 42|/2 6/—| ,, Nice specimen. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 30 | 30} — |—! ,, : = Wellingtonia gigantea... | 28 | 72/8 0/| 15] ,, A perfect specimen. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 499 GENERAL REMARKS.—Of the above-mentioned Conifers, Abies canadensis, A. excelsa, Juniperus virginiana, and Pinus sylvestris, all very fine specimens of their kind, are growing in the public pleasure grounds at Studley Royal. All the others grow in the private pleasure grounds, and most of them are good specimens in vigorous health. SCOTLAND. II.—STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN SCOTLAND. ABERDEENSHIRE. BALMORAL. HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN. Altitude, 900 to 950 feet. Soil, varied, from sandy loam to moorish; subsoil, gravelly with boulders. Correspondent: Mr. JOHN MICHIE, Forester, Danzig, Ballater. col 8 Botanical Name Age oy ae 32 2 Remarks A Years Feet| Ft. In,| Feet Planted by H.R.H. Prin- Abies Albertiana......... 2OP eS 17206) |e, N. cess Beatrice in 1863. One of the best Firs. PCONCOLOL ) 2.0.72... Ze |FSle i) a = On elias a Very healthy and vigorous. Pe DONS aa.c.035. 25 |47|4 3 | 36 | W. | Most satisfactory. Pe MeOLATI CIS: i ejesis 0 cinco NOP EZOs |e el” 14 Very vigorous. Pe AMASMINICA, 22... +6- GH POR oe LO 3 Fine ornamental tree. Ee HOWMMS!: .e..56-000 3 ZO FAO eS spoon le be a re RinusiCenvra) .5.)0.0caes' 42 | 42) 4 11 20 Me Ove of the hardiest & best, PSC TIT EAA 32 Sais's\! Beis 0 PA ea al Gea os Hardy and ornamental. PeeTMOME COLA, 55 ..0<.5- 2pm Zot lek LO 9 oa Fine hardy Pine. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 25 | 29 | 4 1 | 15 », | Often browned in winter. GENERAL REMARKS.—Among the newer Coniferze which have been tried at this high altitude, three species have proved themselves to be decidedly hardier than any of the others, and have successfully withstood the severest winter, spring, and even summer frosts which prevailin this district. These are Abies Douglasii, Pinus Cembra, and Thuyopsis borealis, all of which take kindly to the soil and climate, and seem to thrive anywhere here. Abies Albertiana is not far behind them, although it does not stand exposure to wind so well, and sometimes gets slightly frosted, owing to the tender young shoots beginning to expand before the season of early summer frosts are past. Abies concolor, A. grandis, A. magnifica, and A. nobilis all grow vigorously, but occasionally suffer from frostbite in spring. A. Menziesii does not thrive on the poor thin soil; and A. Nordmanniana, as a rule, becomes unhealthy and infested with insects after a time. The severity of the winter proves fatal to Araucaria imbricata; and from the same cause none of the Cedars can make any headway, but, after struggling a few years in a crippled state, ultimately die out. Pinus excelsa and P. insignis are also too tender Ka Ke, 500 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. for this district. P. austriaca grows slowly, is very coarse, and is not suitable for a timber tree; P. Zavicio is in the same category, stunted in growth, and not ornamental here. Cupressus Lansoniana has been planted in considerable num- bers, and thrives well, but is not promising to make a useful timber tree; the finest specimens have only reached a height of 20 ft. in thirty years, forming beautiful, healthy, and well-furnished large “bushes or small trees. Wellingtonia gigantea grows fairly well, but suffers much from the severity of the winter. HADDO ESTATE, HARL OF ABERDEEN. Altitude, 190 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, open sand and gravel. Correspondent: Mr. JOHN CLARK, Forester, Haddo, Aberdeen. 2 nal & Botani © iGirth at] © § S cal Name Age 3 @ By ee : g é. Remarks A faa & Years| Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana............ Vig OF | 6 | Open} Healthy. ae sbalsameay cesses scons Be | 8} —- 8'| ,, | Vigorous. ae Copaalonicame-eerecer Bailie J bh a 10 . Healthy and thriving. 55. JDO WIBIASI oo nangosnn6b » | 24) — | 138-| 4,- | Very vigorous: Wh Bex CelSatt Rewer aur te » | 25; — Salinas ” se SEANCUS Hae meesietetess splece — Wy e - sy er GMZiCSil jose actsa.s PAO) — 9 ee ut Sg rape DDL OT ay mee ecrreen deme s Ae lakes -— 7 55 Healthy. yf) DO bIIS) Pasecenrascene » | 24) — 138 ),, |Very wizorous: ‘3 wee lauca, Seen el) PAW — 10 Ap A EN OrGmlanmilaiayeenen. Pal ecl — 10 AF SE OLlenGalicnseenesseee etal leOal a s— 9] ,, | Healthy and thriving. pecuimata eens aece op. It 2Al — Sul on Ie OrOus: eine @emibraysscsseonsonese seed td LE — 5 EA es Asay ISVAVESULIS) Metaoiec ene: SmnliecOn | he Taiko ” Thuya gigantea ...../:.c... oy 2 SO py r Thuyopsis borealis ......... Pei es Ik ee 6] ,, | Very healthy. GENERAL REMARKS.—The above trees were planted as ordinary plantation trees in 1874, all under similar conditions, and they are in general thriving well and growing vigorously. a = _ “ eee ee . Mee STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 501 HADDO HovusE. EARL OF ABERDEEN. Altitude, 110 to 190 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, sandy clay and gravel. Correspondent: Mr. JOHN Forrest, The Gardens, Haddo, Aberdeen. on orl. Bal & Botanical Name Age = ee g E g Remarks ss Sm ZI Q ic Years! Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 35 | 45 | 3 9 | 380 | S.E. | Healthy and vigorous. Se RATMAOUTSNC?)\: dsves's 20-1529) 2) 0) 0 a 53 »ecephalonica, .....: 40 | 48} 6 0} 24 | S.W es 6 eC OUCOLOMS «jcecnsiioss 22 | 40/4 0O | 40 W. = 3 SR DOMCIASH. o. scieea' 40 | 73 | 8 1 | 44 |.S.E = % Bee CEONGIS oo caouiirs = PAY Pate | Ab aut 8 AA a 56 Be SIMA OMILICA, cance sse PAY) |) Pisy |) 22) 9 a es ss >» Menziesii ......... By 1 OG | Ds ORG || elle 3 9. PIN ONSINTS raecicte o4 «sieinie 35 | 64|6 6) 25 | S.E. ‘3 ” wiNordmanniana... | 36 + 42.| 3 -0 | 17 7 vs ay Araucaria imbricata ... | 30 | 28 | 2 4 | 13 | N.W. | A fine specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana 30 | 29 | 4 8 | 14 | N.E. | Healthy and vigorous. Banus CemMpra ss... cco AOD PSO 4a Da a liganlenselee 5 3 ee PMASLOT sc ofc cease ADT E4356) BOM E27 was 9 = Thuya gigantea ......... PAU HW aslk Wy ILO) | IG is Pe a Thuyopsis borealis ...... La ee 9 Bs me % Wellingtonia gigantea 35 | 50; 8 2 | 25 | S.W. | Pltd. by Queen Victoria. a A BY G0) ote) = ZB B83 Ba 53 Prince Consort. GENERAL REMARKS.—The new Conifere are thriving well here, and making fine specimens, of which those in the table are among the best. Abies amabilis was received from the nurseries under that name about twenty years ago, but it - ren like A. magnifica; both growing vigorously here, and forming very beauti- ul trees. 502 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. ARGYLLSHIRE. INVERARY CASTLE. DUKE OF ARGYLL. Altitude, 15 to 70 feet. Soil, deep loam, and light loam; subsoil, gravelly and rocky. Correspondent : Mr. GEORGE TAYLOR, The Castle Gardens, Inverary. Sm © 2 |gi Bal ¢ Botanical Name Age eI Seer B E c Remarks a j ee} a faa} ca) Years| Feet | Ft. In.| Feet Abies Albertiana ......... 30 3.10 | 24 S. | Very vigorous. PCONCOLOG mee eee tate Ga e205 es 9 as Healthy specimen. 5 LDromedlasibtsocodasosses 45 | 60-|6 3:'| 40 3 Grows fast in shelter, are OLAM GMS ects seers RY Buby WTS Ik NB 4 Growing freely ; exposed. Fee MAMI CAcmyaseee eee Uf if — — us Promising well. vo MievIZTeSIIN ase soc SOP Ooo) lino 5 Grows very strongly. Fl MODIUIS I snsease cone 33 | 46 | 4 3] 23] W. | Doing well. 3 Nordmanniana 972. |/"269/-34 172) 49 | 10 S. | Generally grows slowly. Araucaria imbricata ...... 35 | 85 | 4 3 | 18 | S.W. | Fine specimen. Cedrus atlantica ......... 30 | 34 | 3 7] 23 | W. | Growing freely. eo aD COG ALA sca seeneurs | we ob 2a ai 4 Slow growing; exposed. Cryptomeria japonica ... | 83 | 25 | 4 43) 23 S. | Healthy ; not grwng. fast. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 34 | 49 | 4 9 | 18 | 8.E. | Making fine growth. s macrocarpa... | 30 | 85 | 4 1/18 |’ S§S. | Healthy; growing well. Pinus: Cemlbray. cc. cesses. SUS eels Onis $ Slow growing. sy MALI CIOL ae mene eet 40 | 45 | 2 4) — |- W._| Rough, straggling tree. SL AMOMUICOlal: eaesecee 16 | 26 | 2 2] 15] S.E. | Vigorous, fine tree. Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 39 | 6 3 | 30 S. | Often loses its leader. ibnuya SAC aAMbeay.. nese 24 | 25 | 3 3 | 20 | S.W. | Very exposed. Thuvopsis borealis ...... Pa PAS) Ni PH 2 Ot AUS) S. | A very beautiful tree. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 28 | 51 | 5 1 | 21 | S.E. | Vigorous; handsome tree. GENERAL REMARKS.—Most of the specimens of which details are given above are growing in the grounds here, in a deep friable loam, in which they thrive well, at a comparatively low altitude on the western shore of Loch Fyne. Nearly all the Spruces and Firs grow with vigour, especially when sheltered; as do also the Cypresses, Arborvitzs, and the Wellingtonia. The Araucaria thrives well, and so does the Redwood; only the latter is apt to lose its leading shoot from wind, frost, or other causes. Pines do not grow well in most situations here—Pinus monticola being about the best of the newer ones; they generally present a bare scrubby appearance. Thuya gigantea and Thuyopsis borealis grow fast in shelter, and form beautiful trees. Cupressus Lansoniana and C. macro- carpa thrive well and make fine specimens. The Adies grandis in the list has several times lost its leader; and Taxodium sempervirens suffers from the same cause whenever it is exposed to high wind. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 5038 POLTALLOCH. JOHN MALCOLM, Esq., of Poltalloch. Altitude, from 120 to 200 feet. Soil, loam and peat; subsoil, gravel and rock. Correspondent : Mr. JAMES RUSSELL, The Gardens, Poltalloch, Lochgilphead. ° mn z ee) 8 Botanical Name Age| & |Girth at] o 3 rs) Remarks fy |5 ft. up 4 ES Ey | A Years Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... — 5 0} 25 EK. | Growing vigorously. amabilis.(7) «..... — | 24/2 0] 12/ S.E. 5p % PECATVAGETISIS) 5 2cf 06 — |55|4 0} 25 N. a op pecephalonicar ..:... — | 30/2 0O| 20 /|N.W. a . PEC OMCOLOT rans stern cise — | 40/5 0} 20 E. a om om DOUCIASIS Assos. 6s — | 85 10 O| 34] S.E. 69 sf Pp MAIMCISH Soe cies «0% — |64/]7 91] 30 5 . me pee) MICNZICSH | occ ..c0. | —— 35) 2) <6 1924 e » moderately. » Nordmanniana... | — | 70/6 0 | 35 S. » vigorously. Pee PUI SATION cris «e)2icisinpe's — |40|7 0}; 33 | S.W. »» moderately. s5- SVGIOISTEN Oy aera — | 30/2 6,16; N. Mi 53 Araucaria imbricata ... | — | 55 | 6 O | 30 S. _ o Cedrus Deodara .....,... — |45|4 Oj 30] S.E. 5 MA AAT 6 Sep eae — | 35|3 0} 30 ss - - Cryptomeria elegans ... | — | 24|1 016] N. » weakly. r japonica... | —- 30 | 2 6.16), We » moderately. Cupressus Lawsoniana | — | 20 |2 0O/| 12] S.E. ms f Pinus Lambertiana...... — | 45|)9 0} 35 K. » vigorously. PIMONLICOlA. 62.5. cies — |45|3 0O| 25 | N.W. 3 . Prumnopitys elegans... | —|13]1 0] 9]| 58.W. »» moderately. Retinospora obtusa .../--—|12/;1 Oj] 8] W. », weakly. Taxodium sempervirens | — | 85/5 6 | 24 S. », moderately. Thuya gigantea ......... — |65/}5 O| 85 | N.W. » vigorously. Se. eorientalis aurea == | 30 | 2-0 | 12 |. W. »» moderately. Thuyopsis borealis...... — | 30| 3 0; 20 | N.W. »» vigorously. * dolabrata ...| —|12/1 0 8 W. » moderately. Wellingtonia gigantea | — | 45/19 6] 28 | S.H. » vigorously. GENERAL REMARKS.—Conifers generally thrive well here, and most of them are growing vigorously; especially Abies Douglasii, A. grandis, A. Nordman- niana, and Thuya gigantea. The Araucaria, Cedars, and Cypresses, as well as the Cryptomerias and Wellingtonia, are thriving well, in sheltered places in the grounds and woods. 504 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. TORLOISK, ISLE OF MULL. MARQUIS OF NORTHAMPTON. Altitude, 30 to 100 feet. Soil, loamy and peaty ; subsoil, porous rock. Correspondent : Mr. CHARLES GRIERSON, The Gardens, Torloisk, Tobermory. » ‘© nm | oa < ae 5 Botanical Name Age| |Girth at 32 3 Remarks im | 5ft.up| 82 5 | | Years| Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii ......... 35 | 43 | 5 2 | 27 | &.E. | Grows vigorously. oy OS Pe erases PYN CCI Bes 0) Ip US) A a 5 Sy eWiebbianaycsisan.. See) peaks MG) ae Sk ie ee . Araucaria imbricata ... | 40 | 39 |6 2) 29) ,, A perfect specimen. Cedrus Deodara ......... Sella ek. (Ball Bs} are Doing well. Cupressus Lambertiana | 35 | 43 | 9 31 50!) ,, Girth at 1 foot up. % Lawsoniana | 35 | 84] 8 6 | 23 i 5 = =) macrocarpa SOMA) ede tO. see El any, oe 7 Libocedrus decurrens... | 35 | 37 | 6 3 | 28]. ,, 45 5 Pinus insigmis..5...-.-s0e- SOM bo) tow Onl) 30 | a 5 ks Retinospora obtusa...... i eel Pee ON oo ee| ales *: Fs Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 82|5 4|19) ,, Leader often broken. Thuyopsis borealis ...... BOL Role Om Omiece | e Girth at 1 foot up. GENERAL REMARKS.—The above Conifers, and many others, grow and thrive well here, especially when sheltered from the direct blast, off the Atlantic Ocean, which sweeps over us from the west with great force. The soil is a good sandy loam, or of a peaty nature, both resting on a porous, rotten rock, through which water percolates freely, so that the heavy rainfall of the district never sours the soil and is beneficial to the Conifers. Abies Douglasii, A. nobilis, and Taxodium sempervirens grow very freely, but they are very liable to get their leaders injured by the Atlantic gales, whenever they rise above the surrounding shelter. Cupressus Lambertiana and C. macrocarpa grow with great vigour, and seem to luxuriate in the saline blast, forming remarkably healthy and wide-spreading trees. Araucaria imbricata and Pinus insignis also grow vigorously, and seem to be very suitable for the soil and climate. Abies Wedbiana, Thuyopsis borealis, Cupressus Lanwsoniana, Libocedrus decurrens, Cedrus Deodara, and others, all thrive well and make beautiful specimens. Abies Webbiana is perfectly hardy, and the tree of which the dimensions are given in the table is a splendid specimen. The Araucaria mentioned above is a splendid tree, well furnished with healthy branches from top to bottom, and this season bearing eighteen fine large cones, from which we expect to get some fertile seeds. The Deodar is also bearing cones, for the first time here. Some of the oldest and finest specimens of our Conifers, especially the Cypresses, fork into several stems at a short height above the ground, an objectionable feature which can be easily remedied if the trees are properly looked after in their early stages of growth. Such forked and branchy trees are very liable to be twisted and broken, or split to the ground, by high winds or a heavy fall of snow. A careful attention to stopping all the leaders but one when the trees are young will cause them to grow with a single stout stem closely furnished with shapely compact branches and proof against injury from either wind or snow. Among a fine healthy collection of Conifers growing at Duart House, the seat of A. C. Guthrie, Esq., under the care of Mr. J. Macphail, the gardener, there is a grand specimen of Araucaria imbricata in luxuriant health, and also bearing STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 505 about a dozen cones this season. Its dimensions are: 34 feet 6 inches high; 6 feet 11 inches in girth of stem at 5 feet up; and 8 feet in girth at 1 foot from the ground ; diameter of spread of branches, 40 feet, and well furnished from the ground to the top. It is growing at an altitude of about 40 feet; in a light loamy soil, on an open subsoil; exposed to the south-east, but sheltered in other direc- tions; and is about 60 years of age. A fine specimen of Thuya gigantea also grows at Duart in a similar soil, at an altitude of about 20 feet, and in a western exposure. Itis 30 years old; 46 feet high; girths 5 feet 4 inches at 5 feet up; and has a spread of branches 29 feet in diameter. Many other Conifers are thriving well at Duart besides these, and the best specimens of Cryptomeria japonica and Pinus excelsa in the island are among them. BANFFSHIRE. CULLEN HOUSE. DOWAGER COUNTESS OF SEAFIELD. Altitude, from 50 to 250 feet. Soil, from light to heavy loam; subsoil, gravel and clay. Correspondent: Mr. C. Y. MIcHIE, Forester’s Lodge, Cullen. © o 2 Ss| 8 Botanical Name Age c) Hae 5 E 3 Remarks = Za| & Years| Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana ......... 30 | 20 0 | 13 |Shltd.| Healthy; confined, N.side. PC OMCOLOE © iri. s0.5005' 30 | 43 | 3 9 | 20 5p Vig.; lost top by frost when young. DOUCIASTI (i. .ciccice cee 30 | 60 |6 0O | 28 9» |. Vig.; leader aver. 2ft.yrly. PR WETAMOISS evans sce. 30) (24 23) 20 as » Slow grower ; top frosted. PM IMACMIMCAN oi... 30>} 30) 4 one 9 3p Sickly ; soil unsuitable. PME MICNZACSIN. 2s s'sc50000% 40 | 65 | 8 6] 40 50 Vig.; branches super- abundant. Pe TOMS e265. caeeees 40 |55|6 4 | 25 »» | Vig.; branches deficient. » Nordmanniana ... | 40|65/]5 3} 42 99 », beautif. symmetrical. Araucaria imbricata...... 50 | 43 | 3 4) 18 » | Healthy; afew branches failing. Cedrus atlantica ......... 35 | 39} 4 11] 27] 4, | Vigorous; beautiful; bear- ing cones. MEO IDCOGATOA. vrcsds «wane 40} 40|4 0} 18 », | Very healthy; wellsheltrd. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 35 | 30 | 3 6 | 15 », | Vigorous; many branches at base. Pinus austriaca ............ 34 | 28 | 2 6 | 14 |Exp.N.) Hithy.;conesoccasionally. PO CiMOTa ec cicec scores 33 | 32 | 3 6 | 18 |Sheltd.| Vig.; well branched. By EXCESS coc cscesenteees 35 | 34 | 3 6 | 24 »» | Hlthy.; branchs. rambling. PME MISICMIS so ,.06050.> 500s 40 | 47|6 2) 34] ,, | Vig.; liable to pine beetle. MTGE VIN sc ccccecs sees 25/19|)1 7)|10| 5, |Stunted;attenuated form. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 15 | 22/110 | 44 » | Vigorous; fine feathery appearance. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 35 | 57 | 410/471) ,, |Hithy; deficient of brnchs. GENERAL REMARKS.—The above specimens are generally doing well and making good growth. There are very few cones on any of the trees this season, although last year they were in great abundance on many of them. 506 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. BUTESHIRE. ISLE OF BUTE. MARQUIS OF BUTE. Altitude, 50 to 120 feet. Soil, gravelly loam and clay; subsoil, rocky. Correspondent : Mr. JAMES KAY, Forester, Bute Estates, Rothesay. Ow o clk |e aes! |e Botanical Name Age| «3 ae BW om 2 a Remarks H area SQ fea] A Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 34 | 61 | 4 11 | — S. | Fine healthy tree. nie Douelasiigess-cnes 34 | 80 | 6 4 | — |Shelt.| Very fine healthy tree. He eadeNaUC WIS onsasondod —=| 33.172) -65) — 96 Very fine specimen. oe Morand armmrenseetce — | 52785) 25) — na Vigorous; beautiful tree. Speen MAR hab enncbacceoaae — | 46/3 5 | — % Moderate growth. soe GALOIS: eeeccena nas — | 54) 2 113) — Fe Vigorous ; a grand tree. Araucaria imbricata ... | 34 | 34 | 3 103} — " Vig.; beautiful specimen. Cedrus Mitbamipnsececssce —|—|7 5|— Ph Mod. growth; fine tree. Cryptomeria japonica... | — | 388 | 4 73 — 55 Vigorous; a very fine tree. Cupressus macrocarpa — |-57 | 5) 85) —-)| “,, Vigorous ; splendid tree. Pinus Hartweeil s..s.c..- =) BB IL UO) —= i Sickly. ss a pELUST OMNIS een eres 34 | 57 | 4 11 | — we Healthy ; very fine tree. Taxodium sempervirens | -— | 46} 4 1 | — .5 A 3 Thuya gigantea ......... — | 44/3 43) — a 4 one Thuyopsis borealis ...... — |27);1 9| — 9 Mod. growth; beautif. tree. Wellingtonia gigantea — | 46/3 5) — 3 s fine tree. GENERAL REMARKS. —The Conifers named are among the best in the Island of Bute. Most of them are growing at Mount Stuart, and a few in the neigh- bourhood of Rothesay. The locality is favourable, and the soil fairly good, so that, when they are sheltered from the blast, most hardy Conifers thrive well in the comparatively mild climate of this island. JI have not observed any cones on them this year; but in most seasons they bear a good number, many of which produce fertile seeds. Abies Albertiana and A. Douglasii are very fine trees, in vigorous health, and the Araucaria is a splendid specimen. Cryptomeria japonica and Cupressus macrocarpa, as well as Pinus insignis, Thuya gigantea (TL. Lobbit), and Thuyopsis borealis, thrive well and are making very handsome specimens. The Redwood and Wellingtonia are also very fine trees. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS, 507 DUMBARTONSHIRE. ROSsDHU. SIR JAMES COLQUHOUN, Bart. Altitude, 20 feet to 50 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, gravel. Correspondent : Mr. FINLAY MCPHERSON, The Gardens, Rossdhu, Luss, on © 2 : wv uy Botanical Name Age 30 pirat 33 Z Remarks *) -Up| ga 2 ee Seal | ys A Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana............ — | 40; 3 0 | — |Sheltd.| Vigorous. AM OTESC 1): ween aces — | 20; 2 0; — a Healthy. er PCCP UalOniCa, 2.425... —=— | 09 | 6 9°) — - Vigorous. PICHINCI CAN nese aso. -<0' — | 10) 0! - 6.) — “ Healthy. PECONCOLOT ey. coccseses —/118;0 6] — > 73 PE DOUCTASIL eves cc. =| 70 WO a3 = vs Vigorous. BS RATA) oiteicn coe eae « —/|45/5 4) — S. | Moderate growth. PIMICTZACSIT: cc. ccics esse — | 90 |10 1 | — |Sheltd.| Vigorous. Ae MONUNS? Es csekconccess — | 48;4 3) — S. FA ~ Nordmanniana ...... — |35|2 6] — be A Se PeChMiatar s.5..-.2... 108 |110 {17 9 | — |Expsd.| Very healthy. Pe EAMSAOO) csriiatre «oso 0s ee ee Oe ae ee Oe S. Vigorous. Araucaria imbricata ...... == |) B74 h BB) pe 5 < Cedrus atlantica ......... — | 24;4 0} — 93 Moderate. EO COMATAN caiocec. cone — | 55 | 4 10 | — |Expsd. “4 Cryptomeria japonica ... | — |} 385); 2 4 | — 8. ” Cupressus Lawsoniana ... | — | 20 | 2 3 | — 55 Vigorous. 5 iusitanica ...... — | 39 | 2 9 | — |Sheltd.| Moderate. Fitzroya patagonica ...... ele 6 x 59 _LigHeib (ei 0) Oo Sanaa — {100 10 O | — 35 Vigorous. inus AUStriaca .........->+ —-|25|}2 9| — S. Moderate. ECW CIUMNOLA) Co.cc ane veovese — | 25 |2 7 | — |Sheltd. a POROUS A So... ele ccccen e — | 40.) 4 © | a Vigorous. ee AMOMEICOLA <2 2.22.25 0 — | 50/3 8 | — |Expsd.| Healthy. BEUISWIVIESLTIS |, “cc sceuccn- 0 — | 65 j11 O | — |Sheltd.| Vigorous. Retinospora pisifera ...... —|18/;2 0|— a e af plumosa aurea | —|15],1 8 | — - 5 Taxodium distichum ...... — | 30]}3 5] — Pe As Bs sempervirens... | — | 44) 3 0| — 3 Maus DACCALA <...:c.s...s+ se £00 | 40 |\13 0 | — < Healthy. Thuya gigantea ............ — | 35|2 8] — 99 Vigorous. Thuyopsis borealis......... —|}14/2 1] — y Moderate. 55 dolabrata ...... —i{/11/1 6|] — 9 Vigorous. Wellingtonia gigantea ... | — | 65 11 0 | — - 3 GENERAL REMARKS.—Some of the above are extra fine specimens. Nearly all hardy Conifers thrive well here, and also some of those considered to be rather tender in many parts of the country. 508 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. DUMFRIESSHIRE. CASTLEMILK. SIR ROBERT JARDINE, Bart. Altitude, 230 to 250 feet. Soil, light and heavy loam; subsoil, gravel and boulder clay. Correspondent: Mr. WILLIAM KING, The Gardens, Castlemilk, Lockerbie. on x.) +» fy SS H Botanical Name Age ce Sere 2 g g Remarks ; Ba| a A Years} Feet} Ft. In.} Feet Abies Albertiana......... 24 | 37 | 3 6 | 22 |Sheltd.| Healthy; free growing. Se CONCOlORB anaenn ae: 30 | 40 | 4 O | 20 an a e er Douclasinenern eee. 30 | 45 | 6 O | 34 a Vigorous and fine tree. . an 00) ONUAKSY Memanncocode 24 ool e427 A Last 10 yrs. growth, 213ft. sy) Nordmanmianar ssa u2Oeead2) | ele Oeste x 2Odibs Araucaria imbricata ... | 15 | 22 | 2 0 | 14 |Expsd.| Fine vigorous tree. Cedrus atlantica ......... 25 | 25|)3 3] 11 %) Moderate growth. a Deodararennsec. PND || FAL PA eh NG as Cupressus Lawsoniana | 25 | 30 | 2 10 | 13 |Sheltd.| Very fine specimen. Pinus austriaca .......... A | AUS || as (3) mp Moderate growth. 45 PROXCCISA. Aa wer can cccets 2A ZOn 2. LONE, 7 a atl 0 CIELO VA conics: oy ASS] MO) ie Last 10 yrs. growth, 13 ft. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 25 | 30 | 2 10 | 15 .; Vigorous and beautiful. | Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 35 | 5. 3 | 21 3 Handsome, vigorous tree. GENERAL REMARKS.—Conifers thrive very well in this part of Dumfries- shire, and many of the recently planted species are growing vigorously—Abies grandis, for example—and promise to make fine specimens at an early age. All the hardy Abies seem to do extra well, Abies nobilis and A. Nordmanniana making fully two feet annually of a leading growth. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 509 DRUMLANRIG. DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH. Altitude, 200 to 700 feet. Soil, medium loam ; subsoil, clay, gravel, and whinstone. Correspondent: Mr. JOHN FINGLAND, Forester, Drumlanrig, Thornhill. on o a) oyes| | Botanical Name Age 3 Soe E é Remarks 5 ~Q <3) Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 21 |} 31 | 2:10 |} 24 S. | Vigorous growth. ap ey eaeN opUnIG) (GY) Banaee 17%. 32 | 3) 0: } a2 E. ss i PICO COLOT, «yectaciculie DN WAS 4s 16 20nd an 2 Pe WOUSIASIC voces <0 26) | 52° 6 0.) 44 (NE: i - - » taxifolia | 24 | 43 | 5 4 | 35 K. ni a PROM AMS saicloicieso else's 20°| 49 | 4 9 | 25 | S/W. - A Pe pA CMT CAN es cipe)nioe US Be38 e210) alse Naw 3 A} pan, MIE ZICSI ccecsces 22 |49/17 8/38 ss a a STOW INIS) Sethe. ceca 17 | 42|3 414 18 K. a at » Nordmanniana... | 26 | 51 | 4 2 | 23 | S.E. ee r Pee MPIRSA DO! ve ccwesiess ~ Nordmanniana.- 145 4/768 16 1) 30>), Beautifully shaped tree. GP inSapOye. scsccee SOSA 2am ale 21 63 Fine specimen. Webbiana 45|45)4 8/29) S x Araucaria imbricata ... | 45143 |5 1/18] S$ e Cedrus atlantica......... 45 | 59 | 6 61} 30 mi Vigorous ; fine tree. Pe eOdaraie saa 45 | 4418 0] 42 | Open i ss Cryptomeria japonica... | 30 | 30| 4 65;]18] W. | Healthy; beautiful. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 33 | 42 |3 0} 12 a Fine handsome tree. as macrocarpa... | 35 | 45 | 4 9{|39] S a Pinus austriaca ......... 45.| 51]6 91] 32 3 Healthy ; branching tree. Hy E@emibray.js.csesees bdie|| Ge |G) ts) || JIS) 5 HERS pn sy, BUCRGCCIS Aes teman esos 35 | 45 | 4 6 | 20 3 Sy MOEHEROVIS) soncosmoondd CS Ra eee ene aay Reais : pei) Wari ClOpee asa ceise 35 | 45 | 3 0} 14 | S.W.| Healthy ; coarse. 5 PONGEeLOSae esse 45 |50)4 6 |18] W. | Vigorous. Meeodine sempervirens | 30 | 49 | 4 9] 24 | S.W. = well sheltered. © Thuya gigantea ......... 25 | 40 | 3 1] 20 | S.E. | Handsome tree. __ | Thuyopsis borealis ...... LOM IDLO (te if Df Ai a Wellingtonia gigantea 34] 64/7 9118 - Very fine handsome tree. d13 STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. GENERAL REMARKS.— Most kinds of hardy Conifers do well on our warm red joam, resting on an open gravelly subsoil overlyingred sandstone. The ages given of the older specimens are only approximate, but as near as can be found out. The Araucaria bore about 120 cones this season, containing seeds which have ripened and, we hope, will produce young trees. FIFESHIRE. FORDELL. Hon. H. H. DUNCAN. Altitude, 200 feet. Soil, a free loam ; subsoil, open till. Correspondent : Mr. GEORGE RAMSAY, The Gardens, Fordell, Inverkeithing. 2 ® Ba Poss oq : fs iS 5} Botanical Name Age| 2 eee 3 E So Remarks ss }ES] & 5 faa) A Years! Feet} Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 35 | 50 | 4 9-1 35 W. Luxuriant ; very fine tree. 5» cephalonica ...... SouieoOr 4s 1G. 1.24 a Vigorous tree: ee AeCOMCOlOL .... 2.03. NOM LZ le sO Es 55 Very healthy & promising. 55 - Lowiana | 35 |-55 | 4 O | 30 ay Very handsome tree. ee Dowelasil .,.....-- 30° | 60) |-5 O08) 28 9 Planted extensively ; doing well. FOAM CIS 2s oo nc owes 3 40, | SGe| ahs » | Lhriving well. me Menziesit, .:...... 35 | 45 | 3 O| 23 » | Fine specimen. SOTA TITS. To ves.. sods OOPESOF 22) Gels 23 Fine thriving specimens. Nordmanniana.. 35 | 40 | 3 0 | 26 4. Hundreds thriving well. Jeemescn imbricata ... | 45 | 40 | 3 6) 20 5S SE well furnished trees. 5 Many fine trees; two Cedrus etlansie EeBisele oe s oe ; He all f acres, planted 25 years, 5% COGS scien eae 5) 5) Ze 9 i doing well. Cryptomeria japonica... | 30 | 40} 1 9) 20} ,, | Fine healthy tree. Cupressus Lawsoniana RO BO Be a » | Planted extensively ; growing remarkably well. Libocedrus decurrens... | 35 | 25 | 3 O 8 i Fine specimen. Pinus austriaca ......... Saae On Ons |. ., Doing fairly well. 5) (Wt Ce eee SpElvoonle2 2a} 12 Very fine specimens. PEP CXCOISAT weccc nesses 3D | 40,/°3 0}. 20 3 Fine when young, does not stand the wind. 4 dCi) So oOo 260! 15 9 Doing fairly well. Be WATICIONM .c.coccec-s 1 1 2 Ot a Doing very well. PE SPONGCTOSA occu. coe Sone 4on mec Or | elo Pe Doing fairly well. Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 45 | 7 0 | 22 5 Very fine specimens. Thuya gigantea ......... Bone 4 oe 2 ecGah ke aS Handsome specimens. _ Thuyopsis borealis ...... BD). If GO| dk 1) os Many graceful trees. Wellingtonia gigantea | 35 | 55 | 7 6/; 18 > Thriving well; handsome. GENERAL REMARKS.—The Conifers, as a rule, thrive remarkably well here, but scarcely receive the attention they deserve, and many leaders have been damaged or lost by storms, shooting, squirrels, &c. manniana, A. nobilis, Cedars, Lawson’s Cypress, Thuya gigantea, Wellingtonias, Abies Douglasii, A. Nord- LL 514 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. and others were planted in the young woods of Scots’ Fir about 18 years ago, and, with the shelter afforded by the Firs, they have grown vigorously and form fine trees. Within the past few years many thousands have been planted out from the home nursery, and are already growing fast and promising to do as well as the older trees. KILMARON CASTLE. EDWARD A. BAXTER, Esq. Altitude, 250 feet. Soil, heavy loam; subsoil, rocky. Correspondent: Mr. WILLIAM Brow, The Gardens, Kilmaron, Cupar. on oO » a) Lan] Botanical Name Age = Sema a: g |Remarks a sa| 8 A | /Years|} Feet} Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 20: |i ouleo) Olas S. Handsome tree. COR COLOR Meron eens 26 | 42) 4) 6 20 * Be on a ay WOugd ast eae: 264-53: 196-07) -on 3 Growing vigorously, fine. Ay) MOWANGIS ssa ce | 24/4514 4 | 32 es 3 ye hy w aI@ DUlAG eet een ete | 25 | 46/3 2] 21 5. im - 5 Nordmanniana... | 24 | 45 | 2 73! 18 cf a “A Araucaria imbricata ... | 22 | 32 |3 5 | 21 3 Very fine specimen. Cedrus Deodara ......... Do] SOKO meets css = <3 5 Cupressus Lawsoniana | 26 | 33 | 3 6] 11 : ss ie Libccedrus decurrens... | 23 | 23 | 3 6 if 54 Fine specimen. Pinas 2ustriacap eee eeee Us) S35 loss. WIG eg! a ay a 33 Cembr acteeees 24) 2oa\ezr ol 6 53 5 s ssix OXCEISa 7 goe ee sais oo | 42°14 Gel 2s ze. 5S Pr AMAL ges Ale Se hare tae se 260 | 40h eBay -Os\ 6 a Vigorous. 35> DOMGErOSay ee aeee 26 | 40|4 4) 21 = = Taxodium sempervirens | 26 | 45 | 5 9 | 27 », |: Wery fine tree.* Thuya gigantea ......... D2" e374 193) 168) 9% », | Fine specimen. Thuyopsis borealis ...... WO ae Pi Sal (el » | Fine feathery specimen. Wellingtonia gigantea | 26 | 51|)7 4 | — 3 Very fine tree. | | GENERAL REMARKS.—The Conifers here are growing on a southern slope, well sheltered from the north and west. They have all been planted by myself, and generally speaking are healthy and thriving, particularly those noted in the above list, Or STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 5l FORFARSHIRE. GLAMIS CASTLE. EARU OF STRATHMORE. Altitude, 150 feet. Soil, a medium loam ; subsoil, clay and gravel. Correspondent: Mr. JAMES WHITTON, The Gardens, Glamis Castle, Forfar. leo | iSiesliey Sen! Wiege «(pes ot Games| Botanical Name Age .= Girth at oS ona Remarks | 5 fe gee | i | | Seale Years, Feet | Ft. In. | Feet'| Abies Albertiana......... 130)\-) 52/53 99-| 26 |. H. ;| Handsome tree. ete CONCOLOP s.,5- 4205.3 - 1130 39n) 4 2 41-16 | », | Fine specimen. EO OUCIASM YE. oc.tee. 2 ie Aiea Sv O= 23 | 5. | Dense, fine specimen. Pe SLAM CUS y oe. so. Ss Weise ks a4as (0 23 < | Beautiful specimen. eA CMUICa ose: 62. | 3 2m ooon |p eealay ae oLlandsomestree. » Mienziesit “3c... 30 | 44 | 4 9 | 26) ,, | Fine specimen. PE NODIUNG is ..iaotaceces | 80 | 47 | 4 10 | 25 | W. | Fine glaucous variety. See Nordmanmiana,:...—| 30 | 25) |: 2-) 7-|. 1d S. | Dense habit: fine tree. PPRORLCMEQIIS? svicck oi: 30) 38 14-6 1-20 | 5, | Handsome tree. Anaucatia tambricata’... | 3 SO sianeO) leZa | a Fine specimen. Cedrus atlantica......... OX) | -AOy | BP UG % 5 Pe DCO ATA sas..c.. 30) Lon eZ On sie | Not thriving. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 30 | 30 | 4 O | 12) 8.H. | Fine healthy specimen. itibocedmsideenmens::- | 30 | 20'| 2. 44-6 |" S:, | A nice specimen. Pinus austriaca ......... 30 | 2413 0] 161! ,, | Dense bushy tree. Wy MMATUCIO We fioaas. bac 3 Opler as (Om paece tian een VA tainly oodatree: Pe POWGEROSA ~...2.4%.. SOs 2 Sulla ei ellOs eae | . 5 i PVECOAICA “2.2.05. BON oZnlo, WO ato Sei AG fines tree: Thuya gigantea ......... 3 AD | 3 2))) 14 W. | Very handsome tree. Thuyopsis borealis ...... S027 2) OU Ess Saw): 4s Beautifull specimen: Wellingtonia gigantea 3020 3 3) |Z | We Moderate specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—The ages given above are calculated from the year the plants were raised from seed. They have all been planted out here since the year 1865, or within the past twenty-six years. The greater portion of them were planted between 1868 and 1870, and I assisted at planting the Abies Douglasii and A. grandis in 1871. In regard to the growth and characteristics of the best of the Conifers here, I may state that Abies Douglasii is the one which has been planted in the greatest quantity, and which does remarkably well. Whether it is the superior strain of Douglas Fir that has been used, or the soil in which they grow, I cannot tell; but they have a more compact and neater habit altogether than we are accustomed to see in most other places. It is quite likely the soil has something to do with it; a free loam, resting on a cool open subsoil. I mea- sured many trees of it higher and thicker than the one of which the details are given, but I consider it the best furnished specimen. aS “3 GENERAL REMARKS.—The newer Conifers grow well on the strong soil here, resting on an open clayey subsoil, with the ground sloping rather steeply to the south-west. Besides those of which the dimensions are given, there are many fine trees of the same and other species, particularly Cupressus Lawsoniana, Thuya gigantea, and Thuyopsis borealis, which all grow vigorously and form* very handsome specimens. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. KINCARDINESHIRE. Durris. T. GRAHAM YounG, Esq. Altitude, 100 to 200 feet. Soil, dark loam; subsoil, open clay. Correspondent: Mr. ALEXR. LAWSON, Forester, Durris Estate, Aberdeen. an On, o 2 les] 5 Botanical Name Age ‘® |Girth at o& 6 Remarks i 5 ft. up EE Be A ; \Years| Feet | Ft. In, | Feet Abies Albertiana......... |— |50|3 9 | 26 | N.W.| Every tree healthy. PEC OM COLON eas) csisciscai's — | 3 Ae Ss i 3 4 5) LDYOUWICAIEIS TOU ee sHeeese = FO WO) 3: 750. ie Thrives very well. 5 RPEVOCUICT Sguaaaaaeece —— OO) be 728 ; “5 3 pea AIM CAle a etaieile'e leer Ae all ls ae us a ner Men ZileSt “sis5:.. Ween OON letuelalen| «2.6 oe Won’t stand crowding. PROMISE vie sete 0 | a ay) Sa BS 5 Requires prfct drainage. ; Nordmanniana .:. | — | 40 | 3 3 | 22 aA Liable to ““ bug.” Ayaucaria imbricata... | — | 30 | 3 10 | 21 i Bearing cones. Cedrus Deodara.......... = BO 1B |) 2S & Thrives fairly well. Cupressus Lawsoniana | — | 30 | 2 10 | 16 3 Thrives very well. PimUs, Cemibtan..: ic... ==) | 00) oO. Lo a ts f Wellingtonia gigantea | — | 37 | 7 9 | 22 - 33 3 35 A variegata | — | 14 | 1 6 8 ee 5 s GENERAL REMARKS.—Large numbers of hardy Conifers are planted in the policies here, which cover 200 acres, and most of them are thriving very well. Cedrus atlantica and the more tender Pines, &c., do not succeed, but all those mentioned in the list, and some others, grow luxuriantly, and make remarkably fine growth every season. An avenue, a mile long, is pianted with Abies nobilis and Birch, Lime, or Chestnut alternately, and the effect is very fine. 518 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. KIRKCUDBRIGHTSHIRE. MuNcHES. WELLWOOD H. MAXWELL, Esq. Altitude, 20 to 50 feet. Soil, heavy loam, light loam, and peat; subsoil, clay, gravel and rock. Correspondent : WELLWOOD H. MAXWELL, Esq., of Munches, Dalbeattie. | 2 na 2 | Botanical Name | Age | 3 eae E z | z | Remarks | my aoe i | | Sela pe | | | a ee |Years) Feet | Ft. In. Feet | | Abies Albertiana......... | 25 | 69 | 4 93 |20)| SE. | Vigorous: PEC ONCOLOL ee aastreaee Fea ey eli ad bien ((aoll PAO DI ets 0 i Pal wDomedasiiter gene. PSs ay PaO Pep i | Ielealiclayy. yl ReNea te WANOUIS, LesaGengooen |) OhO) I!) Piel Wty alien Vigorous. AA AIORKeR ONUTICEW cocscocce WO A) aD) ; ss ee eWlemziesinas cen ee b BaP CL Bre) bo a ano bilish sere soecg PO» | LOM 2 BP SB Tes 5, » Nordmanniana... | 20 | 48 | 3 6 15 [tier a = : Araucaria imbricata ... | 35 | 35 | 2 5114) ,, Healthy. Cedrus Deodara ..... pe g2 00) SOU eee Le ssa eae Not doing well. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 30 | 38; 3 1,10) ,, | Vigorous. Pinus Cemibotars: ectocetce azn |p LO aise eo) ale ieee ete a a ay GXOElSeh cBoachoocccs || OW CO © db) 2s Me = Se IDENEIEMOY anctodne Seno oie Ales AO aaa | 55 Phwyasieambeay eee acne 30 | 59°) 3.11 |.16 |) *,, | | Vernypiiastrerowine: Thuyopsis borealis ..... lp AO BBN yA AAD): Po Very graceful. Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 40) 9 4 | 30 | As Vigorous. { | | GENERAL REMARKS.—The ages are as near the time the trees have been planted as possible, and generally small plants were used. The spread of branches depends greatly on the situation, and whether they are crowded by other trees or not. All that are named above are thriving vigorously, except the Deodar, many of which, growing on a dry hiliside, are fast failing. Most of the specimens of which the measurements are given grow at an altitude under 50 feet above sea-level, and are well sheltered; but many fine younger trees of most of them are thriving remarkably well on the hillsides adjoining, at an alti- tude of several hundred feet. The Scots Fir is indigenous, and a number of fine old natural trees of it are growing in the woods and policies. The Araucaria in the list is the only one which survived the severe frost of the winter 1860-61, and has thriven very well since. Taxrodium sempervirens does not succeed here, although some very healthy specimens are growing in the neighbourhsod. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 519 LANARKSHIRE. DOLPHINTON. JOHN ORD MACKENZIE, Esq. Altitude, 800 to 850 feet. Soil, a free loam; subsoil, open, gravelly. Correspondent : JOHN ORD MACKENZIE, Esq., W.S., of Dolphinton. = |cirth at a : Botanical Name INO | Ber ias g 5 zs Remarks on 3 4 5 aa ca Years} Feet | Ft. In.| Feet Abies Albertiana......... 27 | 55 | 3 6] 28 | S.E. | Vigorous, very promising. Pe IC OGUMAM a ccs +s. 10; 14; — 8 a Pretty, promising; hardy. », cephalonica ...... NS SR eee ire Ms Requires a sheltered site. PM DOUCTASI | 3. ..4c35. ANE OZ) eeOrle® 3 Very promising in shelter, SE PTANGIS ¥ 15.8% esr O OSs be soL 82a G5 Promising and desirable. 550, LASIOEATPA, Very promising tree. pe MA OMMIMICA, 00s sie « 15) 285 )2" 45 | 11 | Ne \Acpretty tree; very hardy. 55 UIGATE SSO soee seenne 30 | 60 | 5 6 | 30! 8.H. | Vigorous and fast growing. Pee HOWOUISH {Sect oscnce 30 | 574) 4 9 | 26 rf Very thriving; afine tree. PoeNordmannianay...).30! (50) 310) 18 Ak Very handsome specimens. POLTEMUALIS! (.o..52.5 leo) 2 ee Ouenllsy 43 Close habited & effective. Araucaria imbricata ... | 40 | 28 | 2 5 |17]| W. | Morecurious than pretty. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 28 | 29 | 2 4 | 15 one Thrives everywhere. PINUS MANICIO: see seeccen. « 30 | 36 | 3 6 | 15 | S.W. | Vigorous and hardy. Thuya gigantea ......... 20 | 21 | — a i (Libocedrus decurrens). SPM ae LL OLOOUI .taichtsBoiovee-< « Se Ae 2 A eS § (Thuya gigantea)vigorous. Thuyopsis borealis ...... —— | 2a | Bet8 4) 125) SW. | Very hardy and sraceful:. Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 32}5 6/15] S. More curious than pretty. GENERAL REMARKS.—AII the Conifers named in the list thrive well at this high altitude. Of Abies Albertiana there are numerous promising trees, which have been raised from seed ripened at Carstairs, in this county, and at Scone Palace, near Perth. Abies Douglasii, A. grandis, and A. lasivcarpa are thrifty and desirable trees. Abies magnifica does not show young growth till near Midsummer, and is thus safe from frost. The lower branches of A. Alenziesit were damaged last winter, though it is a vigorous and generally hardy tree. Of many fine trees of A. nobilis, none are bearing cones this year; some thriving youne trees of it were raised from seed ripened at Scone. A. Nordmanniana forms a very handsome tree, but signs of disease are appearing among them. A few plants of Araucaria imbricata were raised from seed ripened at Strath- fieldsaye, Hants, and are healthy and promising. Cupressus Lawsoniana isa great acquisition, thriving under almost any treatment if fairly sheltered, and from its drooping branches the snow readily falls off, which it does not do from the common hardy Arborvite, a fine specimen of which, of twenty years’ growth, was torn to pieces here by a heavy fall of snow. Pinus Laricio is apt to get wind- bound and stunted in early life, but afterwards recovers and grows freely. Thuya gigantea, Lobbii, or Menziesii is a hardy and very desirable tree. Thuyopsis borealis is one of the hardiest and most graceful of all the coniferous tribe, and thrives everywhere, although when exposed to strong winds it is apt to grow bushy and out of shape. Of Abies alba, A. nigra, and A. pichta there are many specimens which enjoy greater immunity from hares and rabbits than other more valuable varieties seem to possess, but in other respects they are inferior. Abies Pinswpo exists, but it does not thrive well, and seldom makes a good leader. Pinus austriaca and P. Cembra are not thriving well; and Cedrus atlantica, C. Deodara, Pinus excelsa, P. insignis, P. monticola, P. ponderosa, and Taxodium sempervirens have all been tried and failed, some of them failing after growing well for ten or twelve years. 520 MIDLOTHIAN. DALKEITH. DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH. Altitude, 150 to 200 feet. JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Soil, ight loam; subsoil, gravelly. Correspondent: Mr. MALCOLM Dunvy, The Gardens, Dalkeith. Botanical Name Abies canadensis ...... cep ualomica sae ae COM COLOR a eenectes 5 DODACI, oSococo00 » grandis ............ we NODS nenesesones » Nordmanniana... Araucaria imbricata ... Biota orientalis aurea... Cedrus atlantica ......... op LDISOCENE ccooucood hla DSH OPH OU ear scacdnan Cryptomeria japonica... Cupressus Lawsoniana ¥ macrocarpa >, torulosa Juniperus sinensis ...... Pinuss@embrajee: eaeeaee SA EX COISH viehcnect pie SAMGMIORE\ All Senpoacne oo ay MOM bICOlaleeecsece 3) |OOUNOKEOSE) ancnocaos Retinospora plumosa Salisburia adiantifolia Sciadopitys verticillata Taxus adpressa ......... pe) \ORYOCRNE ecu ssccooane a 9) « MUYCA Seems 33 », Dovastonii bs » fastigiata Thuya gigantea ......... afta Gusts cctce. Thuyopsis borealis ...... . », variegata Wellingtonia gigantea 9 » pendula s Age 2 a0 Years| Feet 80 | 42 30 | 40 WA es 3D 71 20 | 38 Icy) Diss 30 | 35 30 | 30 30 6 35 | 36 35 | 38 AD | G2! 30 | 25 30 | 32 30 | 48 20 | 11 25 | 16 30 | 29 30 | 35 20 9 20 | 27 30 | 35 || 2) 40 | 482 12 6 30 | 10 150} 48 30 8 30 6 80 | 22 18 | 30 18 | 15 30 | 28 10 | 12 32 | 42 15 | 132) | Girth at 5 ft. up | Ft. In. | 10 6 ALD | 1 2h AL (5 | BF 3 (O 2 103 2 64 3 8) 6 6 See, ies 3 0 5 0 i esl ieee 5) 1@ | 1 10 | B® 2 10 ik 8 A 2 9 8 irs) iL -@) 5. A i> @ Diameter of Branches Tixposure Remarks Fine tree; girth at 2 ft. up. Moderate grower. A », fine svecies. Vigorous. 9° Very ornamental. Free growing; exposed. Handsome tree; sheltered. Fine old tree; well sheltrd. Healthy; top exposed. Handsome specimen. Vigorous, & fast growing. Nice small tree. 99 3? Slow growing ; healthy. Not very suitable. Slow grow’g; very healthy. Healthy ; tree grower. 39 ” ” Very beautiful. Fine healthy tree. Very interesting. Fine specimen. Large and healthy tree. Very ornamental. Fine specimen. 39 33 Free growing. A nice small tree. Beautifulandshapely tree. 5 variety. Goodspecim.; top exposed. | A very distinct variety. GENERAL REMARKS.—The deep Jight soil and rather dry climate of this dis- trict suit some Conifers admirably, while others do not thrive so well as they do STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 521 in cooler soils and moister localities. The Araucaria, Cedars, Cypresses, Thuyas, Wellingtonia, and Yews all thrive well, and many of them have grown into fine specimens, although the growth is not so luxuriant as a moist climate produces. Generally speaking, Firs, Pines, and Spruces thrive fairly well for a time, but the aridity of the soil and atmosphere ultimately tells its tale, and the trees become ragged and unsightly, especially where they are exposed to the blast. The best Conifer for withstanding the blast here is Araucaria imbricata, which in the most exposed sites shows no sign of being wind-swept, and appears to thrive best in open airy spots. Most of the hardy Conifers of Japan do well, and in course of time they will make effective ornamental specimens. The Maidenhair tree grows freely, and its characteristic foliage is always effective and interesting. Golden and variegated Conifers—such as Yews, Cypresses, Retinosporas, and the like— thrive well, and assume in the season their richest colours. MortToN HALL. Colonel HENRY TROTTER. Altitude, 450 feet. Soil, peaty and stiff loam; subsoil, sour wet clay. Correspondent: Mr. D. F. MACKENZIE, Factor, Morton Hall, Liberton. on oO eS ae 5 5 Botanical Name Age ) Giana, 3% o Remarks = 8) & Years] Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies cephalonica ...... | 32 | 36 | 4 2 | 20 |Sheltd| Soil unsuitable. PUR SMAICIS: sc. 00008 AG | BPA | 40) pees | Bh ae Balt of re ewlenziesi ...... coo) |) By | 5] OB ao :. Does very well; fine tree. Ae MOrINGaL.sc....s16% « BAA) eed all ap alat 9 Handsome specimen. Fe LONOUTS| | 215.010 010 «+ « 32 | 67/4 4) 18 3 Fine tree; lost leader twa years ago. PIMs AUStACA, |....2.-. By |, AO) 4b 7) BX IP es Kough bushy tree Pe CCUNDTAL so. c..0 6 soo68: | BA SE I Bee) ily 55 569 MR ATACION soddecioe + ssi0 44/54) 4 7] 9 zs Plantation tree ; crowded. GENERAL REMARKS.—AII these trees, except Pinus Laricio, are growing in the pleasure grounds here, close to, but generally clear of, each other. Crypto- merias, Taxodiums, and Wellingtonia are not thriving well in the wet “sour” soil. Young trees of Cupressus Lawsoniana, seven years planted, are 12 feet high; and of Zhuya gigantea, nine years planted, 18 feet high; both thriving well and very promising. 522, JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. — = OXENFORD CASTLE. EARL OF STAIR. Altitude, 250 feet. Soil, heavy and light loam; subsoil, clay and gravel. Correspondent : Mr. WILLIAM SMITH, The Gardens, Oxenford Castle, Dalkeith. x) 2 (ears Z ; eet 5 Botanical Name Age iS eae g 5 3 | Remarks ss sa| of A ware are | Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet AIbIES | CONECOLOG eeaacceos 30 | 40 | 2 9) 16 | S.E. | Fine specimen. » Dougilasii glauca | 40 | 60) 3 4/ 21 3 Drooping habit. Beautiful | specimen. ise MOTAIGIS WSe see secu: DOPE GO soe eo een ts Handsome tree. ye lookeriandaesc. PAY) eBay We BEING) ap hee 8 Beautiful tree. so eNienziesie nse... SOROOT On e2 3m ae Vigorous & free-growing. Seon Obillispmeceaetens Bag SYS) I Ab i IB mn “s fine tree. a Nordimanmianayeee | oOm totale im eel (anl ane Handsome tree. PR OMCMLAUGE eames 20) Aa) cay 0) play. Be Araucaria imbricata ... | 40 | 48 | 310) 22) ,/ Fine specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 85 | 45|4 0|]19 ,, Very fine and vigorous. Libocedrus decurrens... | 30 | 3 39 Gaile. Fine specimen. IeTOHIS) SHOR A BIC) Sodbosese S10) | BY 4h. OP | ke Plantation tree. Fae Olson olde aren yaaaes 30 | 3 Dien a1) eA a Fine specimen. ad UE Male eas ouneas SOR AON 2000 a Irregular. Sei | GATICTO Gneaeee es DOP Aon oy On| = — | 4% Coarse and irregular. Taxodium sempervirens | 45 | 48 |5 0j|19) ,, Good specimen. 2 Thuya gigantea ......... SOM OMe mms Aaa. Vigorous & free-growing. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 30 | 36 | — |} Il | as Beautifully healthy tree. Wellingtonia gigantea ao | 42) 6. OF] 18 I jaa Handsome specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—The above are the finest specimens of their kind among a large number here. On the heavy soil, which predominates, Firs, Pines, and Spruces thrive best; while on the lighter loam Cypress, Thuya, and Wellingtonia do well. A fine avenue in the grounds is formed of Abies nobilis glauca and Wellingtonia gigantea, planted alternately, which has a very pleasing effect. a STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN TdE BRITISH ISLANDS. 523 RIccARTON. Sir JAMES H. GIBSON CRAIG, Bart. Altitude, 300 feet foil, loam; subsoil, hard blue ‘ pan.” Correspondent : SIR JAMES H. Gipson Cratia, Bart., of Riccarton. o | 2 c= Hd 2 @ ee lS NRe Botanical Name Age| -2 |Girth at) © 2 zB Remarks rH | dit. up a S Se eer AR ae a Years} Feet | Ft. In | Feet Abies Albertiana (1) ...... — | 55} 4 13) 30; S Hardy & free growing. 2 — | 683; 3. 24) 26 | E 99 ” (2) cor ese 2 2 | e 99 ” », _, Dowelleisini sssocqdconc. — |—/710)|40) ,,. | Lost its top; vigorous, Meonamdisy J...2%<..2.-.% SS cog lo 83] 30 ., | Very vigorous. no JAOJOWINS obaptindonsossoe —|49|;5 2) 35) S&S. Lost top 15 years ago. | Formed another and : | lost it. Not healthy. » Nordmanniana ...... — | 65 | 3 23) 24 | S.K. | Handsome tree. Araucaria imbricata ...... | — | 353) 3° 0/19 | K. 4 | : ° ° a eee ee Be og apeGueicl| LS. Growing within 30 yds. Cryptomeria jJaponic Oy) let eee Nea ieee [ of each other, under os i 2) | — | 484) 2 8 | 13 wi “tae ae Z similar conditions. MISH ATHCTO! sais sales oo. | SSS) a eer/ le Fine tree. Taxodium sempervirens(1) | — | 48 | 4 23) 19 | W. -. Fine specimen. (2) | 4351 Oe S226 Ee 9 ” 99 3 hua) Craicjana:z....2)..... PAS) pee Web 83 | aY/ S. Handsme, free growing. y g1 sep feet d 8 8 5 _itjololoms set eeeeeeee nee Sire 563 3 OS elit | EK. | Vigorous. Wellingtonia gigantea (1) | 386 | 54 | 5 9 | 14 | 4s . i Pyrenean S318 ie, ‘ cs 5 CE) 26 Were MOL) wee | 8 5 GENERAL REMARKS.—The soil is a good free loam, and the subsoil generally a hard blue pan. Conifers of most kinds thrive well, and some are making extra fine growth. The specimen of Abies grandis given in the table has made the following growth in recent years :— Growth in last 7 years 30 feet 4 inches. 9 99 ” 10 ” 43 29 6 ” 99 ” 9 ie 29 53 99 Another Abies grandis, about 55 feet high, has grown 21 feet 6 inches in five years. A corner in an old wood was blown out in 1865, and in 1866 it was re- planted. The Abies grandis now run from 58 to 66 feet, and the other Conifers, including A. Albertiana, Cupressus Lawsoniana, Thuya Lobbii, &c., are also good in proportion. This is interesting, as showing how the new Coniferz will thrive after old woods have occupied the ground for many years. 524 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. MORAYSHIRE. ALTYRE. SIR WM. G. GORDON CUMMING, Bart. Altitude, 60 to 100 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, open gravel. Correspondent : Mr. WILLIAM MCLAREN, Fcrester, Altyre, Forres. 2 |. Seat | Botanical Name Age | ‘a0 ea ation eal Remarks o |oft.up/; && S. = Son is ey Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii ......... 30 | 80| 6 O| 45 | N.E. | Vigorous. 55) NES TANGIS: cere etecesee 22 COR Eh O30 53 Healthy ; free growing. 5) Nordimanmianay 2211208 eG le 2ie li ee,, Vigorous. PimMUsSiaustiaca eeeseers a 2 oom eeen oie = | % < ao) MGATICION aseceseeeees 22" 40 1°30 |" s, ” eo MOMbICOlA. cece es 22 | 60) 3 10 | — Pe %5 Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 50/7 3/38) ,, %: — GENERAL REMARKS.— Besides the above, the following Conifers are growing vigorously here: Abies Albertiana, A. magnifica, A. Morinda, A. nobilis, A. Pinsapo, Araucaria imbricata, Pinus Cembra, Thuyopsis borealis, and T. dolabrata. Abies lasiocarpa, A. Menziesti, A. orientalis, A. Webbiana, Cryptomeria japonica, Cupressus Lambertiana, C. Lawsoniana, and Thuya Lobbii are healthy, and make moderate growth. They are all growing in a gravelly soil, and a well-sheltered situation. BRODIE CASTLE. BRODIE OF BRODIE. Altitude, 50 feet. Soil, light ; subsoil, gravelly. Correspondent : JAMES MCKENDRICK, Forester, Brodie Castle, Forres. ——— on © = Be/ 3 Botanical Name Age 5 ee g E a Remarks =a Be poe Years| Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii ....... .. | 50 | 80 | 6 2 | 85 Sheltd.| Splendid tree. so PEAMGIS cee eee | 30; 50 | 4 6 | — 5 Growing in clump ; vigor. » Menziesii ......... | 50 | 80 | 8 4 | 45 | Open.| A grand specimen. S eeEMODIUTS 4 sentee acetic 30 | 50 | 4 7} — Sheltd.) Vigor.; growing in clump, » Nordmanniana... | 30 | 45 |4 G | — a a Cedrus atlantica ......... A511) 48) On Ones ene Fine ; growing among others. Pinus) Pallasiana ....ce..- 10 BOR Toto le Fine clean bole of 15 ft. Wellingtonia gigantea | 30 | 48/6 6 | — 2 The finest of several grow- | ing in clumps. —= GENERAL REMARKS.—The newer Conifers are generally doing well and grow- ing fast in the light warm soil, and many of them promise to make useful and handsome trees. “tt STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 52 Gt DARNAWAY. EARL OF MORAY. Altitude, 100 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, gravelly clay. Correspondent: Mr. D. Scott, Forester, Darnaway Castle, Forres. on, 2 » - 0 5 Botanical Name Age| ‘ao he a 29 S Remarks m Sex| # an Years] Feet | Ft. In. |} Feet Mies WOUslaSi1.-.......... 18 | 43 | 4 O | 24 |Sheltd.| Very vigorous. Sp LASIOCALDA: 22.66. Zs) ||) |) Ze MS 2: - * a =) = IGKATICCINA RARE eee TS je 2h 8s Oa RO A | Fine; fast-grow ing. TO DIT Stati cass oles SPW eSoMi oe: oko i Very vigorous. Pinus monticola ........ sae zor OOo 4 ats els so IN: A fine fast-growing tree. Wellingetonia gigantea... | 18 | 28 | 4 2 | 12 |Sheltd.| Fine specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—Most kinds of hardy Conifers do well and grow vigorously here, when due attention is paid to planting them in well-drained ground. They chiefly delight in a free open soil, and a porous subsoil; the Spruces and some others preferring a cool subsoil, but not a wet, sour, or imper- vious one. Abies nobilis, A. Douglasit, and some others of the fast-growing Conifers, are Hable to lose their leaders from high winds, and should be planted where they can be sheltered from the prevailing storms. The Wellingtonia thrives remarkably well, and many fine specimens grow in this district. GORDON CASTLE. DUKE OF RICHMOND AND GORDON. Altitude, 70 to 200 feet. Soil, deep loam; subsoil, gravelly clay. Correspondent: Mr. CHARLES WEBSTER, The Gardens, Gordon Castle, Fochabers. Orn 2 slice Be | 2 Botanical Name | Age ise eae Ee g Remarks q z & O 2 3 Vi igorous; ; fine tree. GENERAL REMARKS.—Most of the Firs and Spruces do weli, and form fine specimens on the stiff soil. Abies Menziesii, A. Albertiana, A. grandis, A. Douglasii, and A. nobilis grow with the greatest vigour, and make annual growths of two to three feet, or more, in length. 528 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. CASTLE MENZIES. SIR ROBERT MENZIES, Bart. Altitude, 300 to 350 feet. Soil, loam ; subsoil, gravel and rocky. Correspondent : Mr. J. Ew1Nnc, The Gardens, Castle Menzies, Aberfeldy. Sa) 2 Botanical Name Age & Bees eB 5 3 Remar ss 2a| 8 A Years} Feet | Ft. in. | Feet Abies Albertiana ......... 382 > 19) 1238 S. | Ripens seed freely. oy WOuslasite ec wecesece £601 9257 AL} 3b 9 Grows vigorously. 5 | GARTCEISS Ge sooseonsec ys | (s) |) Be Wp as 59 Growing rapidly. fog SOWA uiaeeenceteceaies Be Ne yd) By By A) IS) a Handsome tree. eemilenziesiiae seems 46 9635/11 0:| 56 6 Very healthy ; fine tree. be MODUS cence oceania ne 2A OO ina) Gr) Zl es 2 = 0 Nordmannianan cee 3o) 1) Lome ome “3 i. Ayraucaria imbricata...... EPC Wek see Tie Aus) - a =! Cedrus Deodara ......... 36 | 38 | 4 10} 31 % és =, Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 36 | 36/5 3/191] ,,, | $ - Pinusi@embra is:05s-0-se- PEG | OO Bs 6) | Wet 5 In a confined place. sty OCLC Sincateeacers | 3 Be) a3) UE 289 » | Healthy. | enonticolay. esc eber [Pe des eh @ ie Growing very fast. axodium sempervirens 43/74] 4 6] 21 » | Growing in old quarry. Rhiuya Sasantean-enise- oe. , 34) 36/4 3 | 18 45 Very healthy ; fine. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 35 | 52 13 9 | 27 Been » very fine tree. GENERAL REMARKS.—The Conifers growing in the grounds at Castle Menzies are well sheltered from the north by a steep hill, and most of them grow rapidly, and with great vigour. Abies Menziesii, of which the exact height and girth at the present date, October 1, 1891, are given, has grown and is still growing fast,and has produced, ina given time, the largest amount of timber of any Conifer here. The Wellingtonia, Taxodium, Cryptomeria, and the like, grow very freely. Several kinds freely ripen seed, from which many young plants have been raised and are thriving well. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 529 CULTOQUHEY. JAMES MAXTONE GRAHAM, Esq. Altitude, 297 feet. Soil, light loam ; subsoil, red sandstone. Correspondent : JAMES MAXTONE GRAHAM, Esq., of Cultoquhey, Crieff. Exposure OS ‘ * ‘& (Girth at! 58 Botanical Name Age a o Hsp | 2 E a) 1 em |} Weve Years, Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... | 18 | 57 | 4 O| 34 | ER CONCOLOLS. ccc esess«: Polk) 44°32 0: 14 PE DOUCIASIIA occas... AT ie GS G6 4-51 Pe STAMOS cain sicieisein se (Po Oe, 467/528 PEECRZTESID ..5s0cc0s 40 | 64/16 3-| 36 | SOC TING ae Sica 3° 8. | 19+ » Nordmanniana... | 36 | 68 | 6 6 | 25 Araucaria imbricata ... | 41 | 44 |5 0O | 25 Cedrus atlantica......:.. inion Or) 0) 228 ee OCOUAED csoere.. ss soo eon Olek Cupressus Lawsoniana 30 | 30) 4 6 | 20 MES CCMIDEA,.......:-c+ | 64 | 48 | 6 8 | 20 Taxodium sempervirens | 31 | 45 | 6 6 | 21 Thuyopsis borealis ...... 30 | 30 | — | 23 Wellingtonia gigantea | 33 | 50/9 0 | 23 DUNKELD. Altitude, 100 to 200 feet. Botanical Name Age | Height | Abies Albertiana......... Re DOMSLASH, | 55. one AST C Ago occa so. NOMIC) orc sects case » Nordmanniana... orientalis 9 Araucaria imbricata ... Cedrus atlantica......... Ee COGATA), .5..05 +04 Cupressus Lawsoniana Pinus Cembra ..:.....++.. Thuyopsis dolabrata ... Wellingtonia gigantea Years 19 Feet Remarks | Vigorous & fast growing. Handsome. Spreading tree; very fine. Vigorous ; fine tree. 39 33 9 33 | Handsome specimen. 9 %” Thriving well. | Very graceful. | Very fine specimen. DUKE OF ATHOLE. Soil, hght loam ; subsoil, gravelly. Correspondent: Mr. P. W. FAIRGRIEVE, The Gardens, Dunkeld. Girth at 6 it. up aaNet fae ke =) wwrmr We bd b& — PWOORrRNOO!H Ole ee OL po|RLo| feel orFON bole * bof Remarks Vigorous. | Vigorous; very fine tree. Moderate growth. | Vigorous. | Very strong growing. Vigorous ; handsome. Sheltered ; very fine tree. Planted by the Queen; vigorous ; lost top. Vigorous ; fine tree. Sheltered ; very vigorous. Moderate growth. Vigorous. Very healthy; fine specim. M M 580 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. GENERAL REMARKS.—AIl kinds of hardy Conifers grow vigorously in this district, and many fine specimens stand in the grounds here. ‘The above Abies Douglasti is a very fine tree, and girths, at 1 foot from the base, 14 ft. 6 in.; at 3 feet, 12 ft. 6 in.; at 8 feet, 9 ft. 10in.; at 40 feet, 5ft.9in.; and at 75 feet, 1 ft. 6 in.; the exact total height being 94 feet. DUPPLIN CASTLE. EARL OF KINNOULL. Altitude, 70 to 230 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, clay, and rocky. Correspondent : Mr. JOHN BROWNING, The Gardens, Dupplin Castle, Perth. ——+ | | S pa e alae = | . on Botanical Name | Age} .o Girth at) 3 ra) Remarks o | d5ft.up| ses 2. | ae Sa] g A /Years| Feet | Ft. In.| Feet Abies Albertiana ......... 32) | O0nleo! fon e420 S. Sheltered ; fine tree. ECON COLOMPER Eee eeteee 28-| 29) |\23 10 |-21: |S! W.) Nicerspecimen: ea DOUG ASIN esa cea SPA We eg Ii 25% K. Open to E.; very fine tree. 9 | TAM CUSW one-act 30) 265) (eo Sr B2Plea se Sheltered ; vigorous. vy, CAMICRZICSUI emma sorte 28 | 50 |.4 5 | 35 | S.H. s a MODUS ma aceacss tees 32) | DOM por Sn Zain lame Exposed all round; fine. Nordmanniana ... | 29 | 48 | 4 0O | 23 z Sheltered ; pretty tree. Araucaria ranereveewey a5 SU yh obs (Ql ov 9 » very fine specimen. Cedrus atlantica......... 30) | BS | B iQ | Qe “5 Slow growing. a Deodaray sa--ceee eo 2i AO Rey Aa 3S 3 Sheltered ; fine specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana Bt Gayl) 4b Bs i) TAL ie * as Pinus-austraca e.--ess- ORY LE Ny Fa AE |e Exposed. s, \Cemibnads. snctoe 280) 24 s\15 19>) 12 6 “5 eA = Gall Cli weseseemceels | PAS) 3X0) fh PEW Isha) 5 SamMonticOla, sansa Pe Per Si is) 920) S. ps sy SPONGEKOSA s.6050. ZR | GAS) || By <—ay 1 ON is 53 Taxodium sempervirens | 32 | 60| 7 9 | 38 » | Sheltered; fine specimen. Thuya gigantea ....:.... | 30) | 50 1742 *8:7320 4s > 5 Thuyopsis borealis ...... Fe) |) 745) | SE Sie AL} es ac 5 Wellingtonia gigantea | 28 | 55|8 6] 24) .,, Exposed; very fine tree. GENERAL REMARKS.—The newer Conifers have been planted in considerable numbers on this estate, and on the whole they are growing very satisfactorily. Abies Albertiana, A. Douglasii, A grandis, and A, nobilis grow most vigorously, but scarcely any of the hardier species fail to make a good average growth. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 531 KEIR. SIR JOHN M. STIRLING MAXWELL, Lart. Altitude, 200 to 300 feet. Soil, heavy loam ; subsoil, red sandstone. ‘Correspondent : Mr. THOMAS LuNT, The Gardens, Keir House, Dunblane. Botanical Name Abies Albertiana PE COMCOLON < clcics% 01 DOUG MASI sc ces op. CAREROCHIC): “GUE AR Bannen Pe NICMZICSIIE cee eic> PE NODMWSt nec sc cece « » Nordmanniana ... a, IPOH OC) “eRdenopeooee PES MAINA MA, 5 ossn«<. Pe VCD DIAN A: -ocis geass Araucaria imbricata...... Cedrus atlantica, <...:.... Pe DEC OCALA ccicncc » s%.«.< Cryptomeria japonica ... Cupressus Lawsoniana... aa macrocarpa... =f sempervirens . a thyoides Juniperus recurva......... MMS AUSURIACAN cc. et: <6 Pe CTO A) years ieee asco so EPOX CEI SA oso. c odeciieinid PUTO MS selon weininse.e » Lambertiana PM ATICIO. Societe conse » monticola » Pallasiana Pa VECIAICA: os .00 a. Ma SISAL... .s...'s... «6 Thuyopsis borealis ...... Wellingtonia gigantea... eecvecsescee Age Feet | Ft. In. 30 37 45 55 GL 82 47 37 46 30 44 45 48 Girth at 5 ft. up itt 3 — He RE 00 OH OL OT OU BE OT OUN CO bh OU St OL OL’ OU mM © OLR 1 AOrRPROWOOrRNW OC bo 6 or) wwooenmoorovomnwlds Diameter of Branches Exposure Remarks Healthy. Handsome specimen. Fine sprdg. tree; lost top. Vigorous ; fast growing. Very fine specimen. Vigorous. Fine specimen ; top lost. Graceful habit. Nice tree; top lost. Fine tree; Ist. lwr. brchs. Nice thriving trees. Fine specimen. Vigorous & free growth. f Clipped into long cone- ) shaped trees. Nice specimen. Very fine bushy specimen. Branchy ; rough. Fine specimen. 99 ” Vigorous ; rough. Fine tree. Branchy ; rough. ” 9 f Handsome specimen. 7 39 Very fine specimens. GENERAL REMARKS.—The fine collection of Conifers formed here about forty years ago by the late Sir William Stirling Maxwell, Bart., is nowa leading feature in the pleasure grounds and gardens. dimensions, as the table shows, and, except where they have been allowed to become crowded, most of them are very handsome specimens. Many of the species have attained to large All the newer hardy Conifers have been added to the collection as they appeared, and are mostly doing well, especially those of Japanese origin. MM 2 532 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. METHVEN CASTLE. WILLIAM SMYTHE, Esq. Altitude, 260 to 280 feet, Soil, loam; subsoil, till, and rocky. Correspondent : Mr. PETER WHITTON, The Gardens, Methven, Perth. ae 2 Botanical Name Age| © |Girth at. oe a Remarks i |5ft. up| Es sy | | Years| Feet | Ft. In. | Feet | Abies Albertiana......... 23 | 68 | 4 7 | 27 | KE. | Beautiful specimen. sf, LDOWAEISIL A55550G00 33 | 65 | 6 10 | 33 | open.; A grand tree. OTA GISu eee aetna 21° | 35 | 4.~ 0; | 12 sada ‘2 » Hookeriana ...... | 34 |15|1 1) 8 jsheltd.) Slow growing; pretty. Se) LodeeKen abtIKCR » GaSsnacone Bal 9 | open.| Handsome; promising. aoe Moranday casei 50 | 50 | 6 11 | 25 |sheltd.| Beautiful tree. Bots NO) OW BISAS Se Susnier ane 21 | 385 | 2 7 | 12 | open.| Thrives well here. » Nordmanniana ... | 22 | 35 | 2 5 | 15 |sheltd., Fine specimen. sa bbOMIAN Assan ms o4 | 20) (22). 27-1) 10 » | Small tree; pretty. Araucaria imbricata ... | 35 | 35 | 4 3 | 16 | open.| Fine; leaves sometimes injured. Cedrus atlantica......... 35 | 20 | 3 O | 10 |shéltd.| Slow growing. ps Weodaraye cass. 25 | 30 | 2 8 | 10 | open.| Many fine trees. Bist Aine Bill Of OU Mises se oot — | 90 | 9 10 | 25 |sheltd.| Fine tree. Cryptomeria japonica... | 35 | 30 | 5 5 | 12 35 Fine; best in shelter. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 33 | 45 | 5 4 | 15 | open.| Grand specimen. Libocedrus decurrens... | 30 | 25 | 3 5 | 8 |sheltd.| Beautiful tree. Pimus*Cemlbraecesensscee-s 50 | 35 | 3 9 |. 10 | open.| Very slow growing. », Lambertiana...... NO | BO ee 7 kD) - Fine; requires shelter. Thuyopsis borealis...... 33 | 37 | 3 4 | 12 |sheltd.|) Grand specimen. Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 61/7 5 | 16 i Very handsome tree. GENERAL REMARKS.—The above are the measurements and particulars of some of the finest specimens of the Conifers growing here, and as a rule they are all thriving well. I have planted all of them that are under forty years of age; and have raised them from seeds, cuttings, or two-year-old seedling plants, nothing older being got. In many cases the plants from cuttings are thriving as vigor- ously as any seedlings and forming as fine specimens; but, when they can be had, seedlings are to be preferred. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 53 Go MURTHLY CASTLE. W. STEUART FOTHRINGHAM, Esq. Altitude, 100 to 300 feet; soil, ight and heavy loam, and peaty; subsoil, gravel and clay. Correspondent : Mr. JAMES LAURIE, The Gardens, Murthly Castle, Perth. 2 | =e | Botanical Name Age a haw 23 | 3 Remarks | a #a| @ A a | a | Se \Years Feet Ft. In.| Feet | Abies Albertiana......... | 32 | 56 | 5 8 | 32 | E. | Fastgrowing; beautifultree. PEeeanadensis. ~....2. | 50 | 30) 2 7 | 22 | W. | Healthy; slow growing. » cephalonica ...... 45 | 36|5 10) 26 N. | Best on north aspect. MEEEOMCOION ..02--- on 85 32 | 16:6. BH. Very handsome; hardy. Pee bouclasie........- | 45 | 76 |11 9 | 49) ,, | Very vig’rous; gr’ws3ft.yly. Re OUAMCIS He ccs woes) PAOBN G34) 2 Sa|222 42 | Fast grower; very vigorous. woreookeriana. ...... | 30 | 30 | 4 0) 15| SS. | Fine ornamental tree. PEMA OMUNCA <...-2.. POM DOr eee nil ae \\h os5 Very ornamental and hardy. a -Menziesii ..:/..... | 47 | 86 | 9 6 | 45; ,, | Will supplant the Spruce. i) O01 ee eee | ion Os An) 24s lee Fast growing: very fine tree. >» Nordmanniana... | 38 | 50 | 3 11); 18 ,, | Very fine, well-clothed tree. eRGmientalis: is... | 40 | 30; 2 7|12) ,, | As freeas the Spruce; fine. Pe eALHONTANA, |< .2''06 aOR ao.) tee KOR ae | Fine ornamental tree. PMSA sc. v2 | 45 |46 | 5 5 | 28-) ,. | 9 3 Peomiuliana.........: Ob POSTS ealet® lea wl 4, - Araucaria imbricata... | 45 | 45/4 81,18) ,, | ,, many bearing cones. Cedrus atlantica......... |40 | 45;5 7 | 28} ,, | Very fine; grows freely. PVC OO ATA, 2 55. (3) emenncnened 34 | 624 | 3 11 |j)18 acres, and was planted in = ES Ce oe: B4 | TOE | 4 33) | the spring of 1857. It is very o % (CD eae eater 34; 59 | 5 13 {healthy and thriving well, as PE CO) tcccss.c- 34 | 621 | 2 114 \the measurements show. a. duleriavaessiit GB aaeeaaaer re AT) 6022) 6" 1 This plantation is very much We es (Zao eaeareee 41 | 61 6 82 exposed, so much so that a Pee eNoramanniana .......<. 41 | 492 | 4 8 | |good many Larch and Scots PE EATISAON 5055. 6064005 vokes 41 | 37 | 3 2/||¥ir have been blown down. i UgiMiin< GILLRS) oe yaaa ee ae 41 | 564 | 3 9 |< There isno Douglas Fir in this PAVMS HAUS EMIACH 2 c0cse 25-00 41 | 37 | 4 © | |plantation. It willbe observed 5, OGIER G1 ae a 41 | 39 | 2 44 |that Abies Menziesit has far PPM ATN OVO! co. ciciecs sckiclets oi 41 | 50 | 3 11 | {outstripped the dimensions of Be SWIMESHTTS o: 2p et accession ct 41 | 48 | 8 8} \the other species. Larix europeea.................. — | 97; | 8 1 Fineold Larchin Scone Wood. EAMUISES WA VESEMISI 2: os. he aeie nase — | (A ai Oe! ‘3 Scots Pine $3 2. GROWING ON LYNEDOCH ESTATE. Altitude, 340 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, till. Ve Botanical Name Age | Height Perea Rennes Years) Feet | Ft. In Page oebonelncin dyn... a7 | zon | The Scone & Taymount plantations eas) |b were raised from seed of this tree. ¥ " DY nc: BT 2 49 This fine tree has two leaders at ©) ie 2 “ 58 feet 4 inches up. » excelsa (3)...... — | 106 10 0 | The largest Spruce on the estates. » pectinata (4)...... — | 1042 13 8 i Silver Fir 5 | 538 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. SCONE ESTATES— continued. 3. GROWING ON TAYMOUNT ESTATE. Altitude, 262 feet. Soil, moorish; subsoil, tilly. Botanical Name Age | Height Bee. Remarks Abies Douglasii (1)...... 31 68 | 5 4 | Plantation tree; 27 ft. to 1st branch. 3 (Maecdae 31 69 Del 28 ft. 5 fs x Berenice 3 635 | 4 9.| R. 23 ft. * a a CD) anes 31 675 | 4 10 | Be 23 ft. . a Sy (ba) eee. 31 UT 4 4 | 5 35 ft. rs | 4. GROWN ON LOGIE ALMOND ESTATE. Altitude, 450 feet. Soil, light loam ; subsoil, tilly. Botanical Name Age | Height Sees Remarks Years} Feet | Ft. In. Abies Douglasii (1)...... —} 54 | 311 Plantation trees; healthy and a a C2) seas: — 50 4 0 thriving well. » Nordmanniana(1)} — | 25 | 2 4 Growing in the Nursery; fine 5 3 (2) —| 25 | 2 2 | | handsome trees. Pinus Strobus (1) ...... — | 85 6 7|f Growing on “Almond Bank”; 3 ase Ce) auasiseee —} 90 |7 6) \ ten in number; age unknown. GENERAL REMARKS.— All the Douglas Fir trees on the Scone estates have been raised from seed borne by No. 1 tree at Lynedoch, which was planted in 1834, and has produced fertile cones freely for many years, and is known as “the Parent tree.” It contains about 200 cubic feet of timber; and its neighbour, No. 2, which stands close by and is much the finest tree, contains nearly 300 cubic feet. The large Spruce, No. 3, at Lynedoch, is a very fine tree, and contains 347 cubic feet ; while the gigantic Silver Fir, No. 4, contains 480 cubic feet. The Scone Douglas Fir plantation, about 13 acres, is on sloping ground, with a north-western exposure, and rather open to the prevailing gales. The Douglas Fir plantation at Taymount is about the same in extent as that at Scone, 13 acres, on nearly level ground, with a northern exposure, and the trees are in vigorous health and growing fast. Both those plantations are solely of Douglas Fir. The Douglas Firs at Logie Almond are somewhat sheltered by old trees. The other Conifers on the Scone estates are generally growing on a western aspect, and exposed to strong gales. Many thousands of the newer Conifers, large and small, are grown as plantation trees, and are generally of a very thrifty nature and promising appearance; but as, in most instances, only young immature trees, full of sapwood, have been available for timber purposes, it will require the experience of another generation or two to place them in their relative positions as useful timber-producing trees. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 539 THE CAIRNIES. Major R. MALCOLM PATTON. Altitude, 500 to 630 feet. Soil, sandy loam and moorish; subsoil, gravel and tilly, Correspondent: Mr. JOHN McCLAGAN, Overseer, The Cairnies, Perth. on co) » ; Pe = Botanical Name Age = eee PE S Remarks as eee 1A Years] Feet | Ft. In, | Feet Abies Albertiana ......... 30) 4) (033) G8) ee tS Vigorous and thriving. » cephalonica ...... SOBA al on 0) obi. » 99 ECONCOIOR cscs 26.22. SO Oo | O Wap BO os 39 99 Ee DoUcTASI c.c.2.cs SOR) SOI Ros a2 on ee, 9 99 PRSTAMCIS 32. :4 5.506 30) Olle) 28) leo 2a y 9 eelookerianal..,..<. 30 | 25/1 6 9 is Beautiful small tree. ppeinaguiica ei... p BOM OO eis Ga a Vigorous and thriving. ee ICTAZACSII co. 0in0's« 35.| 77/6 8 | 25 - aa 4 POMOC 0. le, diese S535) 435) Has Oat) a Hi 53 is Ho TO eae 305/765) 5,89) |924 | 9 » 5 Nordmanniana ... | 35 | 57 | 410/22] N., * sf OTIC MPALIS 3.1. ccc sss Hay | 0) 1B} Sel?) s Fine ornamental tree. ee ebattoniana: ...4...., 30 | 30; 3 0; 14 N: Beautiful tree. pee TOMO? sk seco scee « 30 | 25 | 3 0; 14 S: is slow growing. PE IMG AWOL s.6:) . dco SORE ZO alto re ils BS AG a: PV ebbianar ioc0.... 5 SOn| SOm 2 eon) le Bs Fairly hardy; thrives well. Araucaria imbricata ...... SOM Ome) 2) Ky bs Thriving ; very ornamntl Cupressus Lawsoniana ...| 30 | 836; 3 414; N. | Very hardy & ornamental. Pinusi@embray 2.2.50. 2-6 30 | 45); 4 O07; 15 a Doing fairly well. ey MONtICOla:.....00..5% B10) | (0) || fy dP aL Vigorous ; fine tree. Taxodium sempervirens | 30/ 42/3 2,17) S. Doing well in shelter. Thuya gigantea....... eee B01 29 | Be Gp le | ee Fine fast-growing tree. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 30 | 45 | 7 2,16} ,, Doing well; healthy. GENERAL REMARKS.—The trees mentioned in the above list comprise the finest of the numerous species of Conifers growing on this estate. The fastest growers are Abies Albertiana, A. Douglasii, A. grandis, A. Menziesri, A. nobilis, and Pinus monticola; and closely following them in vigour and rapidity of growth are Abies cephalonica, A. concolor, A. magnifica, A. Nordmanniana, A, orientalis, and Thuya gigantea. Abies Pattoniana and A. Hookeriana are to all appearances here the same species, and both thrive well and make very beautiful slow-growing trees. Abies Morinda, A. Pindrow, and A. Webbiana are fairly hardy and interesting trees at this altitude. Abies Fraserii and Pinus Strobus fail to thrive after 15 to 20 years’ growth. The Araucaria, Taxodium, and Wellingtonia do fairly well, and are quite healthy. Lawson’s Cypress does well everywhere, and is one of the hardiest of Conifers. 540 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULURAL SOCIETY. ROSS-SHIRE. ArRpDRoss. SIR KENNETH J. MATHESON, Bart. Altitude, 450 to 600 feet. Soil, loam and peaty; subsoil, till, gravel, and | sandstone. Correspondent : Mr, JOHN CUNNINGHAM, Forester, Ardross, Alness. 2 | cal 9 Botanical Name Age | & one au 28 & Remarks es eae Aitae fea Sie oles | =) | Years Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies cephalonica ...... 38 | 40 | 6 O | 27 | S.W. | Thrives fairly well. sr WOU Vasil Wee ose. 38 | 50 | 4 0 | 20 5 Vigorous ; fine tree. se NE MZIeS Illy poem tee (A256 8620s ON Ws ie cn A AOD ULIS posure tegen Weayes CeCe By uy All 1 ah Le zs ,» Nordmanniana ... | 38 | 36 | 4 38 | 21 | S8.W. | Makes a pretty tree. oy @HIEIMAATIy3 3 Soca Some SOs ee Oal nalts A by ws yo MEIMSA Olen senate 24 | 14 — 15 , uf “a Araucaria imbricata <2.) 138 382 5.7% | 720 ap Good specimen. Cedrus Deodara ......... Be le Ou 1 , Slow growing. see Dilley: Wall Rear Necadne 38 | 2613 6) 15 y Does fairly well. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 24 | 27|3 4 | 15 5 Vigorous ; fine tree. PAMUsvausbLvacauesecee Bio) | 0) Weal lb JUS % Doing fairly well. aR Cermlora wee wee | Bid) Bee, BD I ILS) : i 5 eo ne) CLE ery lame try Sosa ESP a SO: Wid) 18 lallG iB 3 3 iricion. wees 1 ee 80 4 O ae ¥ c Thuyopsis borealis ...... 52 ON 2 9 2 Very beautiful and hardy. Wellingtonia gigantea | 32 | 26 |7 6 | 18 % Vigorous and healthy. | GENERAL REMARKS.—The exposure is south-west, from which quarter the heaviest gales blow past Ben Wyvis, twelve miles distant, and strike this district with great force. Still the newer Conifers, when sheltered from the direct blast, thrive well in general, and those recently planted, such as Abies Albertiana, A. concolor, A. grandis, and A. magnifica, Cedrus atlantica, Pinus monticola, and Thuya gigantea, in addition to those named in the list, are growing vigorously. Late spring frost is apt to kill the pushing buds of Abies Morinda, A. Pindrow, and A. Webbiana, and in consequence they do not thrive. Larch and Scots Fir grow up to an altitude of about 1,600 feet on the mountains; but in the higher parts the young growth is liable to be injured by late spring frost, except where the ground is covered with heather, which seems to be a great pre- ventive of injury from that cause. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 541 BRAEMOREF, LOCH BRooM. LADY FOWLER. Correspondent : Mr. WILLIAM GUNN, Factor, Nutwood, Strathpeffer, »- GENERAL REMARKS.—The growth of our trees, especially the Conifers, in 25 years, is really surprising. They grow with the greatest vigour and luxuriance, and beside the Common Larch, Scots Fir, and Spruce, which thrive well in the plantations, we have very beautiful specimens of Wellingtonia gigantea, Abies Douglasii, A. lasiocarpa, A. nobilis, Cupressus Laivsoniana, and other choice Conifers, all thriving well in our northern climate. BRAHAN CASTLE. Colonel STEWART MACKENZIE. Altitude, 160 to 200 feet. Soil, loam ; subsoil, tilly. me bance : Mr. GEORGE Simpson, The Gardens, Brahan Castle, Conan Bridge.. Botanical Name Age | "e Girth at! 5 2 8 Remarks ry | 6 ft. up RE | in | + Q A A Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet | | Abies Albertiana......... 20 | 40 | 4 6] 381 S. | One of the finest. PRPMECOUCOLON ccisiiss sions 30 | 40 | 7 0 | 30 | S.W. | A grand tree. ry od DO DEREISLOE RO sees 45 | 85 | 8 6) 50 K. PROT ATC” seicins'cs vince 23 | 26/5 2 | 25 8. Healthy. Pe OTIC Ayancts sicive bio 26125) ede Qiie2ie || tS. Wi PPEPTIO TUS Weccrcs ctsp seis « BD) | OD) |) f= O | ae Very fine tree. a Nordmanniana ...|.23 °|°32-!°3 6-| 14 S. IEAM AO OWels eisere cisyers sie SOG 25 oe Sew lSn le Seen a ViETY, ornamental. ‘Araucaria iMTICAtAyea | oO UnaOu lo (O. | —— S. | Fine; lost lower branches. Cedrus atlantica......... a 4S | DO) = IP aie ek eood specimen. “5 ISOC eI) Socaeenne 23 |, 36) |) ——. | = 8. | All dying out. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 23 | 30) 3 0 | 16) S.W.| A fine thriving tree. PainimisiCemUorayssesc..6s5<6 Zug) || 740) 1) 9 By 4 Bs Slow growing. Pe EXCEISAY acs cudtcaes 23 | 30 | 3 9] 24! SS. | Good specimen. Taxodium sempervirens | 30 | 32) 2 8 | 23 | S.W.| Doing moderately. Thuya Craigiana......... 30))| 35, 349 |, 21 5 Growing freely ; ; fine. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 30 | 45 | 6 8 | 38 By Beautiful tree ; very fine. Wellingtonia gigantea | 30 | 40/8 0 | 21 ms Thriving specimen. 542 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. CASTLE LEOD. Altitude, 100 to 250 feet. EARL OF CROMARTY. Soil, sandy and heavy loam; subsoil, gravel and clay. Correspondent : Mr. WILLIAM GUNN, Factor, Nutwood, Strathpeffer. is Se| 2 : | oa 5 Botanical Name Age & Sie ae| 5 z 3 Remarks = 2a |. 4 |A Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... — | 35.| 1 9|.— |. N. | Healthy and fine tree. 7 a Wonelasiivim cesses: — |60;510}—/ 8 Vigorous tree. a) IWIGALESEY Ge0d6500 — |65/16 4) — 40 , cas Se MODIS erected — | 36; 310; —| S8.E. . : » Nordmanniana... | 13 | 20|1..4.) — “i Beautiful young tree. Araucaria imbricata ... | — | 35 | 4 2)— | W. | Fine specimen. Cedrus Deodara ......... — | 33)5 0) — | S.E. a g Cupressus Lawsoniana | Om oO wa a re a Libocedrus decurrens... | 13 | 10) 0 8 — % Fine young tree. Pinus Cembra ............ — | 3b) 5. 347) 8. Fine specimen. Taxodium sempervirens | — | 42 | 6 6) — a 5 a Thuyopsis borealis ...... }— | 35/3 0) — % A very beautiful tree. Wellingtonia gigantea.. — | 61 110 3 | — | W. | A splendid specimen. | CoNAN House. Sir KENNETH 8S. MACKENZIE, Bart. Altitude, 200 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, sandy. Correspondent: Mr. WILLIAM HILLOAK, The Gardens, Conan House, Conan. oye Botanical Name Age ‘So ae 32 8 Remarks 4 ial | 5 (oa) A Years, Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies cephalonica ...... 34 | 48/4 9|—| N. | Good specimen. 2 Wouglasi aoc. 28 | 77 | 5 4 | — |Shelt.| Vigorous; fast grower. Foe OP AICMG acess unetise 18 | 52)5 OO} — N Vigorous; fine tree. ap Nienzitesily ners. 22 4253 40 LO e\ —— m5 ss - bat AODMAS otto caeias 20503) 43))) —— 3 Bf ' ny INIGichaneavOENAe sou) BO |) 2B |G | ee i a : Aah HOCCEIMALA NT tence. 80 | 65 10 1) — “fi Fine old tree. Ve MPINGTOW Tc cet es seen: 2 1831.) 3) 27) # A good specimen. Neue EASA OO nero eee 25 | 35/3 6) — 5 Ornamental; lost leader. Araucaria imbricata ... | 48 | 42 | 4 2);—| S&S. | Fine specimen; bearing Cedrus Deodara ......... 35 | 35 | 5 1 | — | Open. 93 FS [ cones. Cupressus Lawsoniana.. | 22 | 33 | 2 6 | — N. a on Marix! CUNOP2Ay wees. «10 80 | 96|}8 4); — 5 Fine old tree. Sciadopitys verticillata | 15 7T)/ — |— es Slow growing; interesting. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 15 | 23}; — | — S Healthy and very graceful. Wellingtonia gigantea.. | 18 38 |5 3) — S. | Vigorous and healthy. | STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 5438 GENERAL REMARKS.—The Araucaria has at present 52 cones, which are get- ting brown, and promise to ripen. About ten years ago a cone ripened seeds, from which young trees were raised that are now about 3 ft. high, and very healthy. The Douglas Fir succeeds best in sheltered places; when exposed the trees lose their symmetry, and the leader is apt to be broken off by the wind. CouL Housk, STRATHPEFFER. Sir ARTHUR RAMSAY MACKENZIE, Bart. Altitude, 100 feet. Soil, ight loam; subsoil, sandy. Correspondent : Sir ARTHUR RAMSAY MACKENZIE, Bart., of Coul, Dingwall. : Silage a Oa a Botanical Name Age| © |Girth at| © 3 2 Remarks mm | 5 ft. up AS i ras —Q ea Years) Feet | Ft, In. | Feet | Abies Douglasii ......... 60 | 72 |10 10 | 51 | S. | Very fine specimen. PeeeOUlisperresten.... (200) | «e7\'¢ JO) | 34)) SW. 3 4 Cupressus Lawsoniana DE BO Bh abe SUS) Beautiful tree. Thuya gigantea ......... 30 | 42 | 3 3 | 24 4 x 5 Wellingtonia gigantea 30 | 55 | 7 10 | 23 ‘5 Handsome tree. GENERAL REMARKS.—Both Abies Douglasii and A. nobilis are beautiful and healthy trees planted by Sir George Mackenzie of Coul, seventh Baronet, and are believed to have been raised from the first seed of them imported into this country. All the specimens are of remarkably healthy and vigorous growth. DUNCRAIG. SIR KENNETH J. MATHESON, Bart. Altitude, 30 to 100 feet. Soil, loam and peaty; subsoil, gravel and rocky. Correspondent: Mr. ALEXANDER STEWART, The Gardens, Duncraig, Strome Ferry. On o ne) a) y Botanical Name Age ‘20 Girth at) 33 2 Remarks = 5 ft. up | 8 s S a | Years} Fect | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii ......... 23 | 38 | 4 O | — | N.W.| Fine thriving tree. SP TLOWMISE. cod see eess 23 | 46/3 6); — s Very flourishing. » Nordmanniana ... | 23 | 45)4 4 | — 55 3 us Araucaria imbricata ... | 23 | 36 | 3 1 | — | N.K. 5 a Cupressus Lawsoniana | 23 | 15|1 6 | —/|N.W.| Nice tree. WiMuUSvexCelsSal c../..c.2-+.6 23 | 25|,2 0|— i Free growing. Wellingtonia gigantea | 23 | 40| 5 6 | — ‘3 Fine tree; very flourishing, GENERAL REMARKS.—AII the Conifers here are in a remarkably healthy and flourishing condition. They are among the finest in West Ross-shire, and are greatly admired for their free growth and vigorous appearance. 544 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. SELKIRKSHIRE. SUNDERLAND HALL. Mrs. ScoTt PLUMMER. Altitude, 150 feet. Soil, light loam ; subsoil, gravel. Correspondent : WILLIAM G. PIRIE, The Gardens, Sunderland Hall, Selkirk. O m © : = a | irth a Ba 8 Botanical Name Age @) ie teas 2 : 2 Remarks ca 6). a A | Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet | Abies Douglasil............ 21) 44; 3 2/18) W. | Very vigorous & healthy. » Nordmanniana ... | 26 | 36/3 3 18 S. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 25 | 33 3 0 | 16 | N.W. Grows freely & graceful. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 30 | 51 | 6 2 | 15 | S.E. | Vigorous and handsome. GENERAL REMARKS.—Many younger plants are thriving well, and promise in time to be fine trees. STIRLINGSHIRE. BUCHANAN CASTLE. DUKE OF MONTROSE. Altitude, 120 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, tilly. Correspondent : Mr. ALEX. CROSBIE, The Gardens, Buchanan Castle, Drymen. On o 2 i Ho Ea Botanical Name Age ce eae aah 32 & Remarks |Years| Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana ......... 1 DS 4 4b 4) SSG OY S. Fine elegant habit. Pe CAMACECM SIS apne: — | 45 | 6 10 | — 7 A fine clean stem. se) Wouglasiizesstess. 3: | — | 85 |12 0O | 50 |Sheltd:.| Fine healthy tree. Hye CINICrabAVeSilE a conasuans | Bs PO) || BD Or Biss Ps Tine specimen. 2 TAO OU cosbotode sous [soon liz \eOy at 120 5 Very fine specimen. Nordmanniana ... | 35 | 50 | 7 2 | 35 3 A handsome tree. Neca Tal) SAKCEKUE) cobaac BI) Gens | Bee Very fine specimen. Cedrus atlantica ......... 35 | 55 739 | 24 95 Healthy & free growing. St WD COC ATA e.caennecs Sal Aes by es 3 Fine specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | 30 | 42 | 3 7 | 20 5 Thrives vigorously. » 9 erectaviridis! 7| 9/4 0| 4] ,, .| Very pretty and effective. Pinus austriaca............ 3550. 3 92-1 — bs Healthy. ,» Benthamiana...... | 30 | 43 | 2. 7 | — A Slow growing. shy MOK COIS A RN Sasetis BOw oO Ole een ee 0) a Very good specimen. 5 MAG AMCOEY sangsaneo Sh toa) |) AE DY a Very fine tree. Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 33 | 7 8 | 30 ms Healthy tree. Mhawyay SiSAnNbEa waweme nse: DADE PX) WEB 35 |) M5) * Fine specimen. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 200/22 On eZ BS Beautiful tree. 5 dolabrata ...... 25/12) — 4 4 Beautiful small tree. Wellingtonia gigantea... | 34 | 60 | 9 8 | 20 + Vigorous and healthy; very fine. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 545 GENERAL REMARKS.—Besides those noted above, many Biotas, Retinosporas, Thuyas, Junipers, and Yews are thriving well, and forming fine specimens. Abies excelsa Clanbrasiliana forms a very neat “ table-topped” dwarf tree, 4 feet high and 5 feet through. Among the older trees in the Castle grounds are a Yew, 40 feet high and 11 feet 6 inches in girth ; a Silver Fir, 10 feet ; a number of very fine Scots Firs, from 8 to 9 feet ; an Oak, 19 feet; Ash, 17 feet 6 inches, and a Spanish Chestnut, 12 feet 6 inches, all at 5 feet up. SUTHERLANDSHIRE. DoRNOocH. DUKE OF SUTHERLAND. Correspondent: Mr. JAMES B. KIDD, Forester, The Poles, Dornoch. GENERAL REMARKS.—In 1878, when I came to Dornoch, there was not a Conifer beyond the common trees—Larch, Scots Fir, Spruce, and Silver Fir—in the Dornoch, Criech, Linside, Lairg, Lochinver, and Tongue districts, an area of about sixty square miles. Within recent years, however, we have planted exten- sively of Abies Douglasii, A. nobilis, A. Nordmanniana, Pinus Cembra, and Thuya gigantea, with highly gratifying results. Among others that have been planted, and all of which are thriving well, are Abies Albertiana, A. Alcockiana, A. ama- bilis, (2) A. canadensis, A. cephalonica, A. concolor, A. Engelmannii, A. excelsa fin- donensis, A. Fraserii, A. grandis, A. Lowii, A. magnifica, A. Menziesii, A. Morinda, A. Parryana glauca, A. Pinsapo, A. Schrenkiana, A. Webbiana; Cedrus atlantica, C. Deodara, C. Libani; Pinus austriaca, P. Jeffreyi, P. Laricio, P. monticola, P. Strobus, Thuyopsis borealis, and Wellingtonia gigantea. I may say that the more tender kinds are always planted in well-sheltered spots, and none at a greater altitude than 430 feet. Some of them make remarkably fine growth, and all of them are in vigorous health. The Douglas Fir has made over 38 feet of leading shoot in a season, and A. nobilis about 2 feet. Even Webb’s Fir, a native of the Himalayan mountains, and not usually considered hardy in Britain, thrives splendidly, and makes a very robust terminal growth of 18 to 20 inches in the year. Altogether, the success which has so far attended the planting of the newer Conifers in this district gives great promise of good results when they attain their full size and maturity. DUNROBIN. DUKE OF SUTHERLAND. Altitude, 20 to 60 feet. Soil, ight loam; subsoil, gravelly. Correspondent : Mr. DAVID MELVILLE, The Gardens, Dunrobin Castle, Golspie. on o a \eiy sae Botanical Name Age| 2 Saas iS S g Remarks, - al 4 Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii ......... 40 | 58 |10 10 | 62 | N.W. | Healthy spreading tree. +) SRO DIS) See ene NSM EeZS) |e 2a Sa la2o % Fine vigorous tree. Araucaria imbricata ... | 38 | 33 | 5 4 | 28 - One of a row of fine trees, allabout thesame height. Cedrus atlantica......... 30 | 27 | 2 11 | 18 | 8.W. | Planted by Chas. Sumner. “ Deodara .......5 35 | 34] 5 1 | 25 | W. | A nice specimen. -5 |) Lui oc eae 30 | 29 | 3 103) 30 | S.W. | Planted by Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Wellingtonia gigantea | 30 | 38| 5 1/ 1d A Planted by H.R.H. the Prince of Wales. GENERAL REMARKS.—Dunrobin is so near to the German Ocean, and so fully | exposed to the parching easterly gales which blow from off the sea with injurious | effect in the summer months, that Conifers require to be grown in sheltered places to succeed well. In such places the specimens of which I have given details are.thriving admirably ; andso are many others of these and other species NN 546 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. which have been more recently planted. Abies Albertiana, A. Menviesii, A. nobilis, A. Nordmanniana, Cupressus Lanvsoniana, C. macrocarpa, Thuya gigantea, Thuyopsis borealis, and others, are fine healthy young specimens from 10 to 20 feet high. Farther inland, in Sutherland, Conifers thrive well, and a considerable extent of Larch and Scots Fir has been planted inlater times. In making plantations of Scots Fir on peaty ground, it has been observed that where the roots get hold of the gravel, or firm subsoil, the trees come away freely and thrive well ; but on deep peat, where the roots cannot soon reach a firm subsoil, the trees make little progress, and in many instances die off entirely. In the Dornoch district there are some fine old woods, now yielding good returns, which have been planted on fairly level ground, in a somewhat thin, peaty soil. Natural re-afforestation is being tried there to a considerable extent. WEST LOTHIAN. HOPETOUN. EARL OF HOPETOUN, Altitude, 250 feet. Soil, sandy loam; subsoil, tilly. Correspondent : Mr. JAMES SMITH, The Gardens, Hopetoun House, South Queensferry. fone, & = las | 3.2 5 Botanical Name Age| Cae a : 3 Remarks B 26) @ A Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... Sh D2 Sri s |Z Gol Very healthy and fine. PEE CONCOlOM Ct eeeeeee ace 30) | So ay 4p ARs) a Not very healthy. Ee Douctasin asses: = 82) i240 s Very healthy; does not | stand the wind. nL CT ANGIS sare aetecs se 308 | 407 2> tora 2k Ps Vigorous and healthy. Seek Loe Vea oul iKeey Sh s65, 556 1) WMO. pb) 23 9 3 Healthy ; pretty tree. Be Mien ZeSii tect: 305i noon on OnleZ4: ee Moderately vigorous. spe MODIS RN: seecgeece 35 | 45,4 8 | 24 si Very healthy ; fine tree. yy Smithianal@)) AO 76138) 80 38383 3 One of the orig. seedlings; a very fine healthy tree. a ‘ Q\y 3b 4 485) GO 7 28 2) 5 Grftd. on Norway Spruce; fine, fairly healthy. Araucaria imbricata ... | 30 | 33 | 3 6 | 22 a Healthy ; fine specimen. Cedrus atlantica......... — |59;6 8 | 45 . Very fine and healthy. son a DCOdATA: sncmescie. — | 48/8 -9 | 36 af Very healthy. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 23 | 26|2 9 | 12 . % Pinus austriaca ......... 30 | 35 | 4 7 | 28 55 = ie eCembrancarncccessc 25) 28 21) 2), 45) 16 »» | Good specimen. yy SOARES cés0sqs03000 | 25 | 30/3 9 | 23 ae 9 Sy) WUREIG)“Scango500d55 CO beef 83, 4).240) % Fine tree; very healthy. sy OG KES MOVE) Soncegusc 745) || As) || 74 te) Nh 1 »,_ | Not very healthy. ParOeroObus Manan t|oOn| eee 10 7 » | Healthy; dwarf tree. Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 46 | 4 6 | 18 » | Fine graceful tree. Thuyaeiganteay seces.-61 (NO! aos eae ORG + Free growing; tine. Thuyopsis borealis...... DOE By 2 ee fy 3 Very hlthy.; graceful tree. Wellingtonia gigantea SD 40) 86) “Sai, a Healthy ; good specimen. GENERAL KEMARKS.—The above specimens are all growing in the Pinetum and grounds at Hopetoun, and most of them are in a healthy, thriving condition. The specimens of Abies Smithiana, or A. Morinda, are interesting from the fact that No. 1 is one of the first six plants raised in this country from seed sent to the Earl of Hopetoun by Dr. Govan of Cupar, Fif>,in 1818. The seeds were STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 5AT sown and the plants raised by a namesake of my own, James Smith, then gardener at Hopetoun. He afterwards planted two of them in the grounds here; one was sent to the Royal Horticultural Society; and the other three to the Edinburgh Botanic Garden. To increase their number at Hopetoun, he grafted it upon the Norway Spruce, on which some did fairly well. No. 2 is the finest of the grafted trees still extant, and is mentioned by Loudon as being grafted in 1826, and 10 feet high in 1837. Wallich named the species Smithiana, after the raiser. WIGTONSHIRE. CASTLE KENNEDY, EARL OF STAIR. Altitude, 100 feet. Soil, sandy loam; subsoil, gravel. Correspondent : Mr. JAMES HOGARTH, Forester, Culhorn, Stranraer. | ef. ef 5 Botanical Name |Age| 2 ees 2 5 = Remarks | A 24] A Years Feet | Ft. In.) Feet | Abies Albertiana......... | 35 | 32 | 3 6 | 24 | S.W. | Vigorous and graceful. Pee AICoGKIANA ....-. ZONES Va 9* | TO9! =" 55 Ornamental; rapid grower. fae vbractentar.....:... S00 25a 2 On| Perle Fairly hardy ; interesting. = Gephalonica ...... | 42 | Ao TOs, 3b “ Healthy ; good specimen. DE OHCOLOE: . ccs c..652- ao |L oo 4-07) 15 5 <2 handsome tree. 2 Dane lasis:.....:... AO eb asta 45/2015, Loses leader from gales. Dp EAMGIS: --. .2...05 Peles Or As - Te) 14 a Fast grower ; fine tree. a ees. 2s. . 3 | pOov NG Orb: aa. x ‘8 Cryptomeria japonica ...| — | 56|3 6/20] ,, Most ornamental trees. 3” ” Lobbii — | 54 > 203/216 | +B 23 33 Cupressus Lawsoniana... | — | 20| — | 10] ,, fe ss macrocarpa... | — | 76|-— |45| ,, | sf i Pinus excelsa............... nab) S120) 17 ¥ is BP ANSIOMIS. 250... ces os fe —iee>elySer Os tooele = 3 ARI GUO 8.05 6o 4c + }—|70| — | 30] ,, Not very ornamental. BL PONderosa, ......... | Sao (|e 740) eo eid He 5 > Taxodium sempervirens | — | 75 |7 6/25) ,, | Free growing; fine tree. Ehwya SISANbes, ......s2.+0. |—|56)4 0} 27! ,, | Quick growing; beauti- | | | ful tree. Thuyopsis borealis ...... liege 22 | — | 12 » | Most ornamental tree. Wellingtonia gigantea... | — 60 | 5) eel ee A > GENERAL REMARKS.—AII the Conifers at Fota are growing at a low altitude, some of them only a foot or two above high-water mark. Sequcia (Laxodium) sempervirens is growing in swampy land reclaimed from the sea, and does remarkably well, being among the largest of the newer Conifers growing on Fota Island. Pinus insignis is the handsomest and freest-growing of all the Pines we have, and thrives well near the sea, making sometimes a growth of 4 feet in a season. Cupressus macrocarpa also grows vigorously along with P. insignis, and forms a very beautiful tree. All the Cypresses that grow in Britain thrive well here, and are very ornamental. The Cedars and Araucaria imbricata bear cones and ripen seed regularly. Most of the Abies are lovely trees, and are indispensable in all ornamental grounds. In addition to those named in the list, l may mention that fine trees are growing here of Abies Alcockiana, which should be in every collection; A. bracteata, a very quick- growing ornamental tree, which has borne cones here; A. Engelmannii glauca, a most desirable and perfectly hardy Spruce; and A. numidica, a beautiful deep green, dense-growing species cf Fir of the most ornamental character, Thuya 550 gigantea, a very quick-growing tree, and Thuyopsis borealis are among the very tinest of ornamental species. Among Pines, P. excelsa forms a fine silvery- tinted tree and grows freely; but, perhaps, of all the Pines growing here P. Devoniana is the most beautiful, its graceful outlines and long drooping grass- JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. green foliage never failing to attract the notice of the most careless observer. DOWN. CASTLEWELLAN. EARL OF ANNESLEY. Soil, light loam and peaty; subsoil, gravel. Altitude, 100 feet. Mr. T. RYAN, The Gardens, Castlewellan. Correspondent : Botanical Name Abies Albertiana............ | hy YNI@OGRIGING ‘sabds0600 ie », brachyphylla | Had IOEENOUGRNEEY “cocdoondnase | », concolor violacea... » Douglasii 99 9 5 METAMGIS eee aiystceces » Hookeriana i TES@OSTY OE coocodooonc | — Hy LARICRONIORY aaonibdabobes | Fh) LOO) OVUNSS Gansayaoodoosss | » Nordmanniana...... 5 NUOOUICIIGEY senoncescoce | Meltchiniianeesmsae. Araucaria 0001 OVC NEN. Gannoe Athrotaxis selaginoides... | Cedrus Deodara | japonica sate. Cupressus Lawsoniana . is See cra: viridis ve », gracilis aurea | re Sonllibleeh” Wossopsed | macrocarpa... | Dacrydium Franklinii ... J wMIpeKUSMeCURVane.sceeeee bebe, IkGeeyonyostevewl ss ooncocacos Libocedrus chilensis ...... IRINUSMNSIS MMS Reese seeeeee Podocarpus andinus Retinospora filifera...... plumosa aurea | Sciadopitys verticillata... | MhuyaWobbiieeesccaeseecs | oy 9) atrovirens... Sy.) UENALSINSI ON oponaooo0e yoo) WELVENCANA ..cae ess: Thuyopsis borealis ......... | 5 dolabrata Wellinztonia gigantea ... » Variegata © ecocoe Height Diameter of Branches ty | ® i) ct i) bo =r) WwW ws ISloal bo co S py) ps Remarks A most graceful tree. Very distinct ; Fine ornamental tree. ” 39 A good variegated variety. Very fine; Beautiful tree. Not IAG. One of the best. sheltered. Very fine specimens. Beautiful specimen. Very effective variety. ”? 39 99 39 Very fine vigorous tree. A famed Tasmanian tree. Fine spreading specimen. Handsome, healthy tree. A fine ornamental tree. Very fine specimen. 99 99 Very interesting specimen. Very fast growing tree. ” a9 Beautiful specimen. Fine variety of 7. occidentalis. Very graceful and free growing. Very handsome specimens. 16 ft. girth at 5ft. up; grand tree. Very fine healthy specimen. requires shelter, healthy. does well. Splendidly feathered specimen. coned two years ago. Handsome; cones frequently. Beautifully feathered to ground. Very distinct, and free growing. Fine tree; coned this season. Good specimen; requires shelter. Very fine specimen; on cool bottom. Exposed; one of the best of Pines. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 551 GENERAL REMARKS.—Conifers on the whole do very well here. They have been planted somewhat extensively by the Earl of Annesley, who takes a keen interest in their progress, and many of them are making splendid growth. The Wellingtonia mentioned in the list is a very handsome tree, and growing vigorously. Itis considered to be the finest specimen in the kingdom. Most of the specimens named in the table are growing in the gardens, at an altitude of about 100 feet, and well sheltered with old deciduous trees; the Mourne Moun- tains rising to the north and west and affording great protection from those quarters. It is doubtful if in this climate many of the newer Conifers will ever become useful timber trees; but for all landscape work, and the decoration of pleasure grounds, they are indispensable, and ought to be extensively used for such purposes. GALWAY. CLONBROCK. LORD CLONBROCE. Altitude, 200 feet. Soil, yellow loam; subsoil, stiff mar’. Correspondent : Mr. JAMES MCKENZIE, The Gardens, Clonbrock, Ballinasloe. fo) S nf} 3 Botanical Name Age| - |Girthat}og)} 2 Remarks ry =| oft.up Es ba aA, A Years| Feet | Ft. In, | Feet Abies Douglasii ......... 12 | 24 | 2 5 | 21 |Sheltd.| Fine fast-growing tree. me MEMZIESIT 25.0520 10 | 24 341 15 : Weny: 3, Fa ~~ eNordmanniang, - ae 4a8 a 4) 12 i Makes a fine specimen. Cedrus Deodara ......... 35 | 4714 6) 27 a Very handsome. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 12 | 22 | 2 1 | 22 ' Gracefuland fast growing. Pinus excelsa ..........4 35 | 5816 3 | 43 os Beautiful tree. go UPSATNTS ool sense Soe |) L087 |) 50 5 Very fast grower. Taxodium sempervirens | 35 | 40 | 6 0 | 21 53 Good specimen. Thuya gigantea ....,.... AAD) || 338} 8} Bs) A Beautiful specimen. Thuyopsis borealis...... PS) |< Pa WW 9). te a) re A “4 Wellingtonia gigantea | 35 | 42|8 4 | 28 i. a 5 GENERAL REMARKS.—Most of the above specimens are growing in the woods here, generally in well-sheltered spots, and they are growing with great luxuriance. We have many more younger trees of the same and other species of Conifers, planted out in the woods, where they are thriving well, and promise at an early period to be useful as well as very ornamental trees. 552 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. GARBALLY. EARL OF CLANCARTY. Altitude, 150 to 250 feet. Soil, light loam ; subsoil, gravel. Correspondent : Mr. JOHN COBBAN, The Gardens, Garbally, Ballinasloe. 2 Lo, 2 Botanical Name Age c) Girth at| 22 Z Remarks ty [5 ft. up B 5 E a Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Aibiesiconcolonse...-s:60 36 | 40 | 3 6 | 20 | open.| Very handsome specimen. np) PARANOICUIEY. eSoBod600 00 36 | 43 | 3 6 | 20 - ee re eNO DIS se wo aeeuee ene 33 | 42 | 8 O | 16 |sheltd.| Good specimen. » Nordmanniana 3.. | 22-| 33.) 2, 4 316 ss Very fine, in perfect health Araucaria imbricata ... | 25 | 30 | 2 2 | 12 a - a Cedrus atlantica......... BO || EO] Bal |, ak AE ey 2 Vea eedara tin acss. 50 Wob ti 68071033 NS 5 i Cryptomeria japonica... | 35 | 45 | 2 3 | 17 se re Cupressus Lawsoniana NS 83a) [65 ZEN BAS) Bs oe: es 9 erecta viridis | 25 | 24 | — 7 39 A striking variety. a eeracilisn|(e16) |-5 — 9 », ’| A perfect specimen. py IRKMOCAIGENGKg |) DS | BB] = |) Bil 55 9 99 Pinus) Cembran eee 40 |60|6 8 | 46 2 ” » Thuya gigantea ......... Boe POOR Ane 4 43 . sa uF Thuyopsis borealis ...... Wie) 205 12 5 Beautiful specimen. Wellingtonia gigantea | 33 | 50/6 4 | 33 5 A perfect specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—The newer Conifers have been planted here in consi- derable numbers within the past dozen years, and in the light gritty loam with an open gravelly bottom, they are almost without exception thriving with remarkable vigour. The specimens of which the details are given in the table are among the earliest planted, and the largest here of their kind ; and, generally, they are extremely handsome trees, in perfect health. The first two specimens men- tioned in the table, Abies concolor and A. grandis, have had their side branches pruned in slightly several times, owing to want of space to allow them to spread, and they seem to like the treatment, as they are beautiful, close, well-furnished conical trees, in perfect health, and very attractive objects in the spot where they grow. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 653 KYLEMORE CASTLE. MITCHELL HENRY, Esq. Altitude, 100 feet. Soil, peaty; subsoil, gravelly clay. Correspondent: Mr. WILLIAM FARMER, The Castle Gardens, Kylemore. Onn hela Brora Botanical Name Age| -2 ae § E S Remarks A ea| & s | Years; Feet | Ft. In, | Feet Abies Albertiana........ Pe lon Ue OOS 10 S. | Doing well; healthy. Pe Woucdasi ......: DOR Ol Seen aill », | Fine vigorous specimen. Pe TOUTS. cccccceceas 25 | 45|4 9 | 24 se Fine; lost lower branches. Pe Nordmeanniana.,. | 25) 40) 3 2) 22). -,, Nicely furnished spec. PROD GA pore oiSe nics sis'n0 sis 15 On| OG 8 Bs Doing well; healthy. Araucaria imbricata ... | 20 | 28 | 2 5 | 18 a Very fine specimen, Wedrus Weodara -...:..+.» T3715) pS eG 5 Does fairly well. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 20 | 20/2 4 | 14 a Healthy and thriving. . macrocarpa 20 | 48 | 6 O |} 30 5 Very vigorous specimen. Pimms Excelsay ....s.6s0 TS UA OSes a Doing well. SADISTIC IS) 21.0 ci00s Pe Del DON Om OMleos me Very vigorous growing. Pee COM: siaiswisiaieiowas's 25 | 35 | 2-6 |-16 ss Lost lwr. branches; rough. Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 40|4 6 | 20 5 Fairly good specimen. GENERAL REMARKS—The Pinetum here, in which most of the above specimens are growing, is well sheltered from the north, but fully exposed to the south, east, and west. The greatest evil which Conifers have to contend with in the west of Connemara is the strong salt-laden breeze which sweeps in from the Atlantic, and where it hits them with its full force, comparatively few of them thrive well under it. By far the best of all the species of Conifers growing here for withstanding the salt breeze are Pinus insignis and Cupressus macrocarpa, which seem to grow with increased vigour under its influence, and have far out- stripped all other Conifers in their growth. Both are perfectly hardy here, and the saline-laden gales which we so often experience have no injurious effect on these two valuable trees. Abies polita is among the best of the Spruces for standing the salt breeze. Where they are well sheltered from the maritime gales, most of the newer Conifers thrive well in Connemara. 554 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. KERRY. KILLARNEY. EARL OF KENMARE. Altitude, various. Soil, loam and peat; subsoil, gravel and rock. Correspondent: Mr. GEORGE M. BREESE, The Gardens, Killarney House, Killarney. Sel oag = A Ho Ss Botanical Name Age "59 eae 3 a Remarks ® oUp | aia s se] aa Bios] <3) A Years) Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Douglasii............ — | 65 |7 61 44 |Sheltd.| Very fine tree. sy. MlenZieSil cacueeesscce — |50|5 11 | 26 os Not thriving well. SU LODILITS Miecrmmcciaeeet — |46|7 6] 36 », | Very fine healthy tree. » Nordmanniana ... | — | 50 |10 6 | 60 an as ns Araucaria imbricata ...... — | 40-4 6 1 25 3 Splendid specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana... | — | 46| 6 2) 21 zs 4 a PINUS AUStLIACA....-....0¢° — | 45 | 8 6 | 55 | Open.| More exposedthan others ori MMANISTOMTS secon ess — | 65 12 2 | 66 |Sheltd.| A magnificent tree. Wellingtonia gigantea... | — | 55 {12 O |} 33 53 A handsome specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—Conifers, as a rule, thrive well in sheltered places in the County of Kerry. The specimens of which the details are given above are among the finest in the neighbourhood. Many other species are planted and thriving well, but they are yet too young to record their dimensions as being of special interest. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 555 KILDARE. CARTON. DUKE OF LEINSTER. Altitude, 80 feet. Soil, deep loam; subscil, clay. Correspondent : Mr. ALEXANDER BLACK, The Gardens, Carton, Maynooth. eelest te » HO y Botanical Neme Age S heebeces PE 2 Remarks = | 25| & ee [se Years) Feet | Ft. In.| Feet | Abies Douglasii............ — |63|6 0); 29 | W. | Very fine specimen. PE EAMOIS coc ccscase000. — |80/6 0} 34 e = rapid grower. Pe RIONIEOS oces. ss aeesac — | 33/4 0/21/85 Handsome tree. 5 Nordmanniana ... | — | 34/2 6) 15 Ss. - “3 i spectinata..:......2.. — {111 15 6 | 97 | N.W.} Fine old specimen. IIESADO, sa cacos <5 — | 38; 3 6 18 | N.E. | Handsome tree. Araucaria imbricata...... —{15/1 9j|12] S. | Thriving. Cedrus atlantica ......... — | 56} 8 0} 53 | S.E. | Grand specimen. Pe CORALS: Cyzecceee — | 37|}2 6) 28 i Beautiful; doing well. Set ND ANG 5 5500./s0 200. — 76 114 (0) 79:|" S. Grand old specimen. i De. eee casts — |72 14 0) 88| SW e 5 Cryptomeria elegans =| ignite coun S Very effective. Cupressus Lawsoniana,.. | — | 35 | 4 0/19] ,, Free growing ; graceful. Juniperus excelsa......... —{17;1 0; 5} W. | Handsome. IF MIS) CEMA: oo. .cececees <= Bilis) 2 | Uy) He x Sie) Se — | 40|4 0] 20} SE. ie Be OMISIPINIS: 22.0605 3ss | — | 47|6 0} 38] W. | Strong growing; fine tree Taxodium sempervirens | — | 28 | 5 6) 30/ S.W.| Doing well. Taxus baccata ............ — | 32) — | 66 | N.W.| Fine specimen. a < fastigiata | — | 18 = 10 Ss. af Thuyopsis borealis ...... | — | 28; 2 6 | 15 W. me Wellingtonia gigantea... | — | 45 | 7 0 | 21 | S.W fs } GENERAL REMARKS.—The above specimens are among the largest of their kind growing in the grounds here, and they, as well as many others of the hardy Coniferze, are very healthy and thriving. There are other specimens of those in the list fully equal in beauty, and exceeding them in girth of stem and spread of branches: an Abies Pinsapo, for instance, girths 4 feet, with a diameter of branches of 25 feet—a very handsome specimen. There are also many other fine specimens of Cedars and Yews, which are a special feature of the place. Cupressus macrocarpa afew years planted grows very fast, and is doing re- markably well. 556 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. KILKENNY. WoOoDSsTOCK., LAbDy Louisa TIGHE. Altitude, 400 feet. Soil, light loam; subsoil, sandy. Correspondent : Mr. WILLIAM GRAY, The Gardens, Woodstock, Inistioge. P| os | Botanical Name Age = Girth at] © § S Remarks fy | ott. up g & i Cal eal aes Years! Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies cephalonica ...... | — | 61 | 8 6 | 48 | N.E. | Very ornamental. 4 re Dou lasitearer-cae — |560/4 9 34 * Fine specimen, sy en Ziesite Mestre 42 | 6218 0O| 40 - = os ye NOMING ay eeeescaeecns 42 | 57 |4 6] 24 5 Very ornamental. Be) 1X0) S)U DISmearnagtenacocnG — | 3014 01 26 - Fine; but loses leader. » Nordmanniana ... | 40 | 49 | 4 10 | 27 53 Handsome tree. Araucaria imbricata ... | 59 | 6418 41] 31 ea Grand specimen. Cedrus atlantica ......... 30 | 40 | 4 2 | 26 | open.| Fine; very much exposed. 7 W eOd ar aricceseteces 46 | 52) 4 9] 23 | N.E. | Splendid specimen. ened illo Pou aeminanodar 66 | 78] 9 0 | 46 ss Fe = Cryptomeria japonica... | — | 48 | 6 2 | 28 5 a . a TGOp Wilgeeces — |52|5 0O|} 21 - 3 . Cupressus Lawsoniana 28 | 34) — 18 ‘ Fine; fast growing. Pinus austriacal ......:.. —|45/5 6) 28 a Fine specimen. as 0) OX CEISA ieaseeseris — |48 | 4 6 | 24 ar as i 45, | ASICMMIS a eee: — | 78 110 9 | 42 M Most ornamental of Pines, » Lambertiana ... | — | 50/4 0O| 2 a Very fine specimen. a eeINOntCOlame eee — |45|)4 8 | 28 - e # Sihcn IM ASUCT unites were ss — |60|7 9] 84 = re i Taxodium sempervirens | — | 68 |10 4 | 36 =“ A handsome tree. Thuya gigantea ......... — | 60/7 9] 34 - i quick grower. Thuyopsis borealis ...... —|50;, — | 27 5 A perfect pyramid. Wellingtonia gigantea | 27 | 60|6 4 | 29 sy Very fine specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—The newer Conifers were planted here in considerable numbers soon after they were introduced or became popular, and many of them have reached a good size and form beautiful specimens. Those given in the table are among the most ornamental trees of their kind here, although they may not always be the very largest. ‘The exact ages of many of them are not recorded, and are omitted in the table. Most of the coniferous family that are hardy in Britain thrive well in our light sandy loam, on an open sandy, or red sandstone, subsoil, of a very poor quality. Some species make remarkably well-furnished and very ornamental trees, particularly Abies cephalonica, A. Morinda, Araucaria imbricata, the Cedars, Cryptomerias, Cypresses, Pinus insignis, Taxodium semper- virens, Thuyopsis borealis, Wellingtonia gigantea, and some others. In looking through some old records to find the ages of the Conifers, I came across the following note about Abies Douglasii, which may be of interest: “An Abies Douglasii, planted in 1839, was cut down in 1870, being too near the fine specimen of A. cephalonica. It measured 62 feet in height, with a girth of 9 feet 4 inches at the butt, and 5 feet 10 inches at 4 feet from the ground’—a large bulk of timber for a growth of 31 years. A few years ago, we cut down a good- sized tree of Taxodiwm sempervirens (Redwood), and used the timber for cabinet work. The wood was found to be smooth, of a beautiful colour and grain, and took on a fine polish. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 5dT KING’S -COUNTY. Bree CASTLE. EARL Rosse. Altitude, low. Soil, heavy loam; subsoil, clay. Correspondent: Mr. T. J. Hart, The Castle Gardens, Parsonstown. “A | 2 g B Sola: | 54 5 Botanical Name Age | -= acca 38 S Remarks 5 ft. up a A ee] ge 2 aie | = | Years! Feet} Ft. In. | Feet | Abies grandis ....... ss... | —- | 65 | 6 O | 29 |sheltd.' Splendid tree. =, 29080) Srl) eeeeeaneee — | 83,6 0}; 32 3 Hu = Araucaria imbricata ... | — | 30 2 6 | S| es | Lheivanerwell: Cupressus Lawsoniana —}40 4 6) 3 Seal - _ Taxodium sempervirens; — | 35 | 3 0 Peat’, Ms 45 Wellingtonia gigantea — | 45 | 9.0) 30 » | A fine specimen. GENERAL R=MARKS.—There are bus few large specimens of the newer Conifers growing here, but those of which the details are given above are fine thriving trees. A goodly number of young trees, of these and other species, have been planted within the last 15 years, most of which are in a fine healthy and vigorous condition ; although the soil is of a very heavy nature, resting on a stilt clayey subsoil. LIMERICK. ADARE MANOR. EARL OF DUNRAVEN. Altitude, 60 feet. Soil, loam; subsoil, limestone. Correspondent: Mr. ALFRED BARKER, The Gardens, Adare. SOE ee Botanical Name Age 3 eel 2 z 5 Remarks £9 A A ) icowas tee Senet . Years Feet | Ft. In. | Feet | Abies Morinda............ | 40 | 32 | — | 22 | N.H. | Thriving; graceful tree. | 5 pectinata......... 80 | 90 | 7 6 | — 5 Many huge specimens. Araucaria imbricata ... | 28 | 26 | 2 6 | 15 ° Fine thriving specimens. Cedrus Deodara ......... HORIE4LG. |b G85 25 x 3 ws 55. Lin) Geiatl Saeeee ose LOM eS SOE OF 60 45 Several fine specimens. Cryptomeria japonica... | — | 45 | 3 2) 15 55 Doing fairly well. Cupressus Lawsoniana 32 | 43 | 4. 3x) 30 » | Several as fine specimens. a macrocarpa... | —— | 5d — | 58 , | Many fine vigorous trees. Pinus excelsa ............ AO DOL NG = 2) | ae AS Thrives vigorously. PE MSPOMIS. oo. c... oc BO FOE tO) 7 i . x Taxodium sempervirens | — | S0R | OF Onieoo ie Thrvng; gales brk leader. Thuya gigantea ......... — | 27 | 5 10} 12 < Wellingtonia gigantea | — | Hon Ole Tal a2 » | Lhrives remarkably well. GENERAL REMARKS.—Most Conifers that will grow ina strongly calcareous soil, on a limestone or gravelly subsoil, seem to do well here. The following species grow very freely, and are the most remarkable for the dimensions they 558 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. have attained: Cedrus Deodara, grows very freely wherever planted; Cedrus Libani, many of which are probably 100 or more years old, and immense wide- spreading trees; Cupressus macrocarpa, a most rampant grower, of which there are many fine specimens; C. Lawsoniana, C. L. erecta viridis, C. nutkaénsis, free growing and very handsome; Pinus eacelsa, and Pinus insignis, strong growing vigorous trees; P. Pinaster, and P. sylvestris, many fine specimens of both ; Sequoia gigantea, and S. sempervirens, many specimens as fine as those noted ; several Junipers, particularly J. recurva; and many others of lesser note. The worst foe with which Conifers have to contend in this locality is the strong south-westerly gales which so frequently blow with great force, and are very liable to injure the leading shoots while they are sappy and growing. QUEEN’S COUNTY. ABBEY LEIX. VISCOUNT DE VESCI. Altitude, 300 feet. Soil, yellow loam; subsoil, sand. Correspondent: Mr. ALEXANDER BARNETT, The Gardens, Abbey Leix. — || || — — Botanical Name Age St as Years} Feet ADIES|CONCOlOTs.s-6cecee 3 45 SWOUG ASHI teescncee 25 | 60 Sai MACIMUIICA aaeclacieetsls 30 | 40 55) MICNZAESIT 5. scecss 55 | 60 Sy ARO UTS I eciaeetecteee 20 | 35 » Nordmanniana... | 40 | 50 Araucaria imbricata ... | 18 | 18 Cedrus Deodara. ......... 25 | 30 Rims) Cem aesesceleeec 25 | 30 ssi, WORCElSA te. scjp iais see 30 | 40 Taxodium sempervirens | 20 | 40 Thuyopsis borealis...... 30 | 40 Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 45 Girth at 5ft.up OWEN RHENWORaAaAT eH SWOIANNINANORCOSB Diameter of Branches Exposure 39 99 Remarks 39 Vigorous young tree. Fine specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—The details of some of the finest Conifers growing here are given in the table. especially where they have room and are well sheltered. They are all thriving and making fire svecimens, STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS, 559 ROSCOMMON. ROCKINGHAM. Miss KING HARMAN. Altitude, 180 feet. Soil, strong loam; subsoil, clay. Correspondent : Mr. JAMES CLEWS, The Gardens, Rockingham, Boyle. Om o re) : H a 4 Botanical Name Age S ae 2 s 2 Remarks a Sia) | 72! A Years| Feet | Ft. In, | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 12 1 9 | 10 |Shltd.| Doing well; fine tree. pW OUPIASIL. «66.5.0 22 | 39 | 3 2 | 22 |Expsd.| Doing splendid ; very fine. Ge Mlenziesit 2.3... 20 | 84 | 4 6 | 22 | Shitd.| Thrives very well. SeNoramanniang... | 12-| 16-| 1 2-4 10 es BS a Cedrus Deodara ........ ee ae 4b Weg Oni 40 As Beautiful tree. Cupressus Lawsoniana | 18 | 22 | — | 16 + Doing very well. PanyslaustHaca*s..%..6. ZO s0re2 eOMetG - . “ SIMORCCISA: ciceccescens 20 | 26|2 4 | 22 - 9 x Mo LATICIO“..~2; 5806800 22 | 34|2 9 | 17 |Expsd. ¥ ns Taxus baccatafastigiata | 45 | 30 | — | 15 |Shltd.| Very fine specimen. Thuya gigantea ......... 22 | 36 | 4 6 | 25 |Expsd.| Thrives well; fast grower. Thuyopsis borealis ...... 2218260 | 3) OF as es Very beautiful tree. Wellingtonia gigantea | 22 | 42 | 6 2 | 25 » | Handsome specimen. GENERAL REMARKS.—Nearly all the newer Conifers at Rockingham have been planted by me within the last 22 years, and those I planted soon after coming here in 1869 are growing splendidly, especially Abies Douglasii, which was planted freely in the woods, where it is thriving remarkably well, and will, I think, become a valuable timber tree. Thuya gigantea, and Abies Menziesii,a handsome Spruce, are also growing very freely; and so is Pinus Laricio. Abies Albertiana and A. Nordmanniana are very promising, but the latter requires shelter, while the former is one of the hardiest of Conifers. Cedrus Deodara and Thuyopsis borealis are among the most beautiful of Conifers; and Cupressus Lansoniana, with its variety C. LZ. erecta viridis, is among the most useful of ornamental trees, 560 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. SLIGO. MARKREE CASTLE. Colonel EK. H. Coorrr. Altitude, 130 feet. Soil, heavy loam and peat; subsoil, marl and limestone. Correspondent: Mr. FREDERICK BOTTOMER, Steward, Markree, Collooney. ee eee Botanical Name Age| 2 ee e f o Remarks - cai “ea A Years} Feet | Ft. In.| Feet Abies Douglasil ......... BE | SOB BBB S. | Very fine specimen. SH NII VAIESIN anGAo 5500 PH | TS AE TON BX) Wf De dB ie es ;, Nordmanniana... | 27 | 50 | 2 10 | 18 Pr 5 net zi Cedrusiatlanticaracs-ne- 30) 240) 2 2819 Be Healthy ; good specimen. Cupressus Lawsoniana 20 | 24 — 5) % Very fine; several stems. Taxodium sempervirens | 27 | 45 | 4 0} 25 s Very fine specimen. Thuya gigantea ......... 23 | 40) — | 382 5 oh 45 Thuyopsis borealis ...... Pile rey 2 7 |p DB} ae _ s Wellingtonia gigantea.. | 30 | 55 |; 4 5|16| HE. GENERAL REMARKS.—-In the very heavy and retentive soil which chiefly predominates on this domain, comparatively few of the coniferous family continue to thrive for any great length of time, although many of them promise well for a few years after they are planted. As will be seen, however, from the measure- ments given, Abies Douglasit, A. Menziesti, and A. Nordmanniana are thriving remarkably well. These, as well as the Zaxodium sempervirens and Thuyopsis borealis, were planted by me in February 1867, and the progress they have made in the time is very satistactory. The same may be said in respect to Cupressus Lawsoniana and Thuya gigantea—two quick-growing, hardy, and useful Conifers. The Wellingtonia gigantea of which details are given is the only really good speci- men among many, and generally they are not doing at all well. Most kinds of the newer Conifers have been planted here from time to time, but, except those mentioned, they have all proved more or less unsatisfactory. J may add, the Scots Pine and Silver Fir, as well as Ash, Beech, and other hardwood trees, grow remarkably well in the strong soil and moist climate of this district. | TIPPERARY. SHANBALLY CASTLE. VISCOUNT LISMORE. Soil, heavy and light loam; subsoil, stiff clay and gravel. Correspondent : Mr. JOHN FRASER, The Gardens, Shanbally, Clogheen. 2 sf] 8 Botanical Name Age| -= ae e eS 3 Remarks m Se| g A | Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet NibiesM) oucdlasiie sess 30 | 67 | 5 61] 38 | N.E. | Very healthy tree. AMP LOUIS aeenmenetas 27 | 44/4 6 1224) N. Thriving well. Cedrus Deodara ......... 27 | 51 | 4 O| 24 |N.W.| Very fine specimen. Wellingtonia gigantea.. | 34 | 70 | 8 6] 30 % x 5 STATISTICS OF CONIFEKS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 561 GENERAL REWARKS.—The majority of the newer Conifers at Shanbally Castle are not in a particularly thriving state, owing probably to the excess of lime in the strong retentive soil. The above Abics Douglasii and A. nobilis are notable exceptions, and are very fine trees of their age. The specimens of the Welling- tonia gigantea and Cedrus Deodara, of which the dimensions are given, are growing in a glen at the foot of the Galtee Mountains, where they are thriving remarkably well, in a deep red sandy soil, on a gravel subsoil, in which Rhododen- drons are also doing extra well. TYRONE. BARON’S CouRT. DUKE OF ABERCORN. Altitude, 200 to 300 feet. Soil, deep peat, and loam; subsoil, gravel. Correspondent : Mr. ROBERT BELL, Steward, &c., Baron’s Court, Newtown Stewart. Om o Botanical Name Age | Paes & 5 3 Remarks ‘i 2e| 8 A Years} Feet | Ft. In. | Feet Abies Albertiana......... 32 | 48 | 3 0} 22 |Sheltd.| Growing 24 ft. above lake. Pe DOW MASIT cocci +6 29 092) 4205530 us Very vigorous grower. ny = CARAVOUCITS) VaR een ann 25 | 48 | 2 10 | 18 in Growing close to lake. TMA C AY oo, eA. we oe i Oee9 5 xs Healthy and handsome. PE NUCTAZACSUL ajo ccinieis NS Ip BS A) ao a Very vigorous grower. op LOOICTUNS, 22 ohare amerae 20° "42 | 210) ) 16 as Very vigorousand healthy Pee Nordmanniana 2. | 25 | 35 | 2-0 | lo ‘ Vigorous grower. Araucaria imbricata ... | — | 385 | 3 10 | 20 op Healthy ; fine specimen. Cedrusrablamtica, secs... . SOM GAS fu eline2i 5 a a Be WEOMCATA wessdes >. 40 | 5 S| Bo oe <3 us Cupressus Lawsoniana | 22 | 22 | 110} 12 55 Healthy and free growing PeECKe cba vinicig.. 20 #181. . 7 7 », Beautiful erect trees. SMUG OD) scicticvssis 16 3 | O 6 6 ia Very richly coloured. HPAUIS AMISETIACA 35... 251/932 | 3 5) 14 | S:W: | Bad grower. Pe ROOM Al a tslelvs vos ss 25 | 40 | 2 8 | 12 |Sheltd.| Unhealthy. PEE AUITST OMS reaiey « <0 SB 4s @ ty 99 Very healthy and vigorous op) je DURUM OS) Bananernaaane 35) || DO) D0) || AW 56 Fine tree; branchy. Taxodium sempervirens | 25 | 38 | 3 6 | 23 55 Fine ; rapid grower. Thuya gigantea ......... HS AD) Pee ey al Af i i Thuyopsis borealis ...... DO PO a ay A Very graceful trees. Wellingtonia gigantea | 25 | 54) 6 2 | 21 55 Beautiful healthy trees. ..... trae, em eee) 1 , Albertiana... | Castle Menzies Pertln cee - 52 OS] ames 56 is s ..- | The Cairnies ... 2 = Sanbe cee [oe Do: Oe eS ats ;, Alcockiana Castle Kennedy | Wigtown ... 32. O}4 Vea a iss ; amabilis?... | Drumlanrig Dumfries 32 OM" 3a 5 5 balsamea ... } Saitou, 2522-2: East Lothian 68 0; 9 O 2 , brachyphylla | Castlewellan ... | Down ......... 144 0; — i fe (OP SreTeh B50) DOCOMO So455- Cornwall...... 49 6 4 6 6 ;, canadensis... | Studley Royal Vorkts asics. 60° 0 0) 0 Ff » cephalonica. | Powderham ... | Devon......... ht ame Um a 8) 26 Be otitetary pea. | aossdhw x:.. 202. Dumbarton... 10. 0 /- @-6 1 - -Goncolor...... fanton Park ...-|. Kent 2i2.22..- 64° OO) S8rag 42 ,» Douglasii ... | Dropmore ...... Buckss sce 120: (Ot S£ Se sf et | tynedechy es. Berks ences 91 Baie —= = ,, Stairii | Ochtertyre ...... Rea iahins 5 20 07" fea 2 » ngelmanni. | Curraghmore... | Waterford ...}--24 0] 2 1 2 >, cexcelsacl 5. Lynedoch ...... Pert so secce 106." 3H AG ae a2 spades FI iL th pe ered Carclew 225 .c:s<- Cornwall...... 45 0} *2 8 1 35 Ja TASErl <5. .c: Powderham DEVON... nee 12. O17 29a 2 37 frandis —..-2- Riccarton’, ...:.. Midlothian... 83 3) 3 84] 56 te SS otee Oe Poltalloch: <.-... Argyll cc. 2s-- 64.-.0)) Seo — . Hookeriana Muarihily"sc.cee: Perhla’ 23620... 30 0 4 0 8 | imacnilica, ... | Uhe Caimies <:: Sey eae tee Coe 50 O Seo 38 ~ 5 ‘4, | Revesby ios. .25c Lincolas.<..; 40-"0-) 55-6 — ;, Menziesii ... | Curraghmore... | Waterford ... | 110 0j;10 O 56 3 Boconnoc ....... Comwaill.—--- ; Sb. 3 |-ea —— » Morinda Carclewareo oss: 5 sae | =80— "On 28 = a Hopetoun ...... West Lothian 76 «(OO 8 0 = RAMP TA eee pocens Mount Stuart... | Bute .......... | 46. 07) S35 2 , ncbilis 2... Birr Castle...... HONG Sis eee | 83°90: aa 76 ie Pa Rae se Conk. te ROSS. ck cen cee 77 «6 | 7 10 —- .. Nordmanniana) Poltalloch ...... Aroyll ecco. 70°04 6°49 78 re 55 Killarneycetes- KRETry, Sok. 50-0 1 S10 eis — 5» numidica ... | Pampisford...... Cambridge :.: | 20) 0 [7 aa 2 » Orientalis :....| Penrhyn .......: Carnarvon ... 58 0; — 13 “5 Ss GlamuIS 2. .-ccse see Portar.-5s..-6 | 38 0O 4 6 ae * Girth at 3 feet up. Botanical Name Abies Pattoniana », pectinata 3) x 3° eee em WAGEOW, <0 » Pinsapo...... SE MOOLU As cece. » religiosa > Veitchiana... PE ebblana’ <.. 93 99 HOO Araucariaimbricata >) ob) 399 99 Athrotaxis laxifolia », selaginoides Biota orientalis aurea Cedrus atlantica... 99 eee ae Deodara ... . » ° Re Ibi oe naleaee sae pacea Cryptomeria elegans of japonica 39 39 CupressusGoveniana Pe Lawsoniana 3” erecta viridis gracilis aurea Pub UHC Aisa cc'es's 3 pendula ee lusitanica.... 55 macrocarpa ~) we 7) vy v i) ~) 39 PP) » Sempervirens », thyoides » torulosa Dacrydium Franklinii Vitzroya patagonica Juniperus chinensis es .excelsa ee EeCULVA. a virginiana Larix europza...... 39 ” STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. 569 LIST OF CONIFERS AND LARGEST SPECIMENS—continued. Place County Height Girth No. of Sevan WG. = in: Wie Ibo, Whose adby aagcescas Berths a scacee SON OMe ral O 4 Cartonescencss Kaldare: 2.5: Dre =O sjiotd <6 is) Rossdhnw 7 ss..t-. Dumbarton... | 110 0} 17-9 a Powerscourt ..._| Wicklow...... Aes) 1) 4 0 5 Pampisford...... Camibnridee cca), so2) OF) 9 O 24 Kinnettles...... HORA seacsec aoe O 6 3 AOU Mules es cies Conkere tiene 60 O SiO Y IREWRIEN! \ccbecadnd Warwick...... BE GS fe NO 3 Couttowne ys... Wexford ...... OF. (Veli Gas 12 Howick Hall... | Northumber- HL) Se 0 ie land DroOpMOrew esa... 1BADKG ISI Oababas CS OR eS: 0 74 Woodstock ...... Kilkenny 54° 0.) 58a 4 airs Menabilly ...... Cornwall...... 14 0 — 2 Golden Grove... | Carmarthen iG © — Tt Castlewellan (2. |MDowne 2.25.44. 14 0 = 1 Walkeitla set ccaacs Midlothian... (0) = 3 Mitnilera versace: WOK eee saiases 66 O 5 10 45 JBI NON Gookennec ROSSt os ateaciecers 48 O GES ak SEBOVEN TRON ML I SCONE @ ecosboace OS SO 68 Coolllatiinys aces Wicklow...... 46) (0) |10" 6 = Wiethiviemss.ssscc es ae sie ee 90 O 9 10 14 BRE t DD Vergece. tcc. Derby aa. nasser. 82 0,16 2 ane: Powderham OVE Olab aoa hee Sa) — 1 oltalilechaen-c Ae yllie cease Zone (Val SE) 6 Coolllattiny +.....2 Wicklow...... Ge 10 BS ) 28 IRR a Ree eee Retin jsaeesee 42 6 3) eS Curraghmore... | Waterford 1G © —— i Duplin seca Benth sonscac. 0) ) OME es} 72 TROMIOISIR Aebeeaaee Am oay dll ees aero B42 OE eG _ Curraghmore ... | Waterford ... me) -O 3} 8 Garbally: .5..c2-.: Galway ...... 0 — 2 Castlewellanoz..3| Down: .:24.0...._| Wi @ — 3 he Welle. sa.cncccre | Worcester ... 40 O 2250) 1 OSSC Ia see assole Dumbartons.. | 4.39 0 2 9 1 @arclew. -./5....- | Cornwall...... ee S2e ONO) 2a 26 Coollathnwts...5 Wicklow 64 O Ga3 a. IX GIDE PEEP eae alert larigeseranee 40 O eae9 2 Minti: soca oh cetoee be Aus) Da 3 Dalkeith ...<.-.. Midlothian ... eG (rae ee 2, Castlewellan... | Down ......... 8 6 a= 1 Powerscourt ... | Wicklow...... 18 0O OG 3 Viti) sane sees erties secn eres re je ds 4. C@anrtonncen cose Keil aneweras leja © ee @ 2 HREM chose scosce IRE reese 30 0O — 4 Studley Royal Nionka sacecoke CO PODS EG 2 Rossdihtt ...4.k <2 Dumbarton. | 100 0.) 10) x0 6 LOW Clio. nueeeone Worcester ... SORO: lan @ — @anelewermnessc oy. Cornwail...... aOR 0 Sk 4 », Kempferi ... * Girth at 3 feet up. LIST OF CONIFERS AND LARGEST SPECIMENS — continued. JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL EORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. Botanical Name Place Libocedruschilensis a decurrens bb 39 Pinus austriaca ... bb) . banksiana.. Bolanderii... Appear Cresanloniaheaeane bb] Wy) aA SOXCOlSAi aaecns eH) ” Sa eelanbwieOtere. SSO IS ce sene 3° 39 Z 5 eR eHreyi ates. 39 39 s 5, Koraiensis .,. > Lambertiana °° > 5p) EAIATICVO) Gaeses >) 33 » macrocarpa > montana > Montezume 35 amonticola ... ape OOCAUN A cence 5 ~wallasiana:.. =) |. paxvitloral. a Patollane gece 5, mInasteri...¢ oe PeePAN CA ee. coos ce 5» ponderosa... PpyLenaicar.. ee Sa pimianarac. 33) ID LLOWUS. cass. PP 99 Fe sylvestris... Podocarpus andinus Prumnopitys elegans 9° 99 Retinospora filifera leptoclada A obtusa . pisifera 55 plumosa aurea Salisburia adianti- LOMA oneseen ae eemane faxe-gothea con- OAT) Goagesetosos | Coollattin Mount Stuart... Castlewellan ... Orton Shane’s Castle Pampisford...... Ochtertyre Howick Studley Royal Ihinton’ Parke =. Linton Parks; seeteecee encase Dropmorey cease: | Boconnoec Fordell Boconnoc Riccarton Menabilly Scone IBYOdIOMAN eee. Menabilly Carclew Hewell 99 Linton Park ;.. Een ei ere Pampisford ihogies Scone =. Murthly Studley Royal Castlewellan ... Tortworth Poltalloch Menabilly Carclew Rossdhu 99 DMalkeithee cess: Ochtertyre eee eeenee IGMENWERIONY oemcosas Ochtertyre ...... IETS ONG snoneacas Poltalloch e..: Linton Park ... Drumlanrig ... eerersoocese eSrasrase Castlewellan ... eresee County Height Ft. In. sD OMG Seer wee L220 | Huntingdon 50 O eA Te villas coeces ot O alenity sot seasee 74° 0 e@ACTG ITO) eceee Hi (5) Cambridge ... 26 0 Rerthie eee WS) pice: C5. ees 68 6 | N’thumberld. 45 QO Meio ik = 28. eee: [Fe OO I Wicklow esas: 44 0 Bute. este 33 9 0) Bucksie eee 90° 6 Cornwall...... 68 0 aa ha Wee otaltra baa cc HOG Phincoln’ Ye: 48 0 (ebentinger- eer 13 0 telnimcolniaeee 50 O IeArrcony Illia 450 | Cornwall...... He | Midlothian ... C923 RIXe iG ee orce | 44 0 (Dumrites ee i 24a) i-Cormvwalli-<.p. 16 0 Renter. KAO Cormwalleeee ale aX) Mi Oraivdsceneceee 50 0 le @ormvyaile ee 8 0 cog AMES aes 45 0 Worcester 68 0O | = 300 ls Gentip tees eee 63 0 ert neler see Bi (0) | Cambridge... | 24 0 VIP ert eracectee 30>40 ete aie SOP GO) dl cater es | “90550 Wowace (LOas6 Gloucester ileal 7a eeAeoay le Nettie: 13 0 FDO wnemen cs 12°76 | Cornwall.....: AS 0 ee ee ne 323 2=6 Dumbarton | 18 0 | hes pete C | Midlothian... | 48 6 Perth | 10 * Girth at 3 feet up. ea No. Giron nea ins le lipey 2 = 12 G3 = S20 42 ib iy) = i? 1 Thal 1 ey) 52 30 — 6F 0 40 16,50 — ipale) 2 TL 0) 33 {3.0 — Sal 18 6 8 — ers 1 Ort o D om) — 5) sey 34 (had ea 4 6 + 2 10 3 — 2 5 ll 26 — i Th eh = — 1 Zo, 0 it TOF ZO 3 AS A0 1 8 fa 24 5 4 3 2 6 i i OO 8 (ioe) — fies 7 -= 2 —- 3 1 10 —- _- 2 _ if sr Sed Gee fas? 2-0 14s 128 3 42 PON es. STATISTICS OF CONIFERS IN THE BRITISH ISLANDS. LIST OF CONIFERS AND LARGEST SPECIMENS—continued. 571 ——— Botanical Name Sciadopitys verti- Gr) 2 Sequoia semper- Virens | variegata | 33 9 Taxodium distichum $9 3”) = » pendulum Taxus adpressa ey) DAeCaAba 2... ee ie Kanes ee ,, Dovastonii » 9», Lastigiata Thuya gigantea ... 39 39 » occidentalis pendula s 5) Verveeneana » >, Wareana » 3, Standishii Thuyopsis borealis 3) 33 53 », variegata 5 dolabrata = ») variegata Torreya myristica Wellingtonia gigantea 39 > Pb) es, pendula » >», Variegata 39 3? 33 lq | ig Vir No. Place | | County | Height | Girth | No nce #t. In. | Ft. In. [pCastlewellang<.- |, Down \..J<-... ROR “= 4 Boconnoe ...... | Cornwall......| 75 0|13 0 | 52 Pampisford | Cambridge... | 16 0} 1 10 | iH iRessdinuis.s.:2--. Dumbarton...4| 30.07) 3 9 Be |20.3 Revesby... 23. Tancoln 7.5.-- eee OL eS — iRvemelhors S660 - Wioreester =< |) .00- 0°), G).0; | 1 Dalkeith......... Midlcthian... | 10 O | -2 ROSS. 25. = 5s Dumbarton... | 40 0/13 O 3 Dalkeith. ...5..: Midlothian... | & 0 3 “ 9 6 0 1 Rockingham ... | Roscommon 30 0 —- 3 PimtoneParke 2.75) “Kent, 2.2.02: fae Gos20. | 680 | 58 Woodstock...... Kilkenny PRGOKs Osa 7ees Oi ths Va Powerscourt ... | Wicklow...... Lop eGal ae OL ek Castlewellan ... | Down ......... 12050 kappa | Curraghmore... | Waterford... | 12 6) 53 0 | 1 Dalkeith. c.as: Midlothran-s |) 15...0')) -1- OL. |, 63 Murthy. 2s. dc. IPerbli grec. 2u25. TA ig a Nae 56 Brahamie csc. EOSSSrssieuee £5. Oeleo27 48 Pampisford...... Cambridge...| 22 0) 1 0 {| 2 Boconnoc ...... Cornwall...... Pie ee I I (ee aes Carclew™ s....e.< Sar bese sacs i aed Bey Gat 0) — 2 Tortworth ...... Gloucester=.. [4 21, 0 | 2/10 1 Shanballay...... ipperarye <2 00) 0s! S76 86 Castle Menzies | Perth ......... e520) Oni. 13) 79 _ Daliketthines. se. Midlothian... | 13 0 L.-0 2 Castlewellan ... | Down ......... Hees. © 4 IBIPEIS 2. 228:2-20e: Kaneardinesy. (It 67). te 6) (es 572 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. SUNDRY STATISTICS. At the time of the Conference a paper asking for statistics and for a consensus of opinion on various points was issued by the Society inde- pendently of—indeed in ignorance of—the paper issued by Mr. Malcolm Dunn. A large number of returns were sentin. Some of the statistics, where they traverse the same ground gone over by Mr. Dunn’s re- turns (see p. 481), are not repeated here ; but the following tables drawn up from the consensus of opinion as to Conifers suited for particular uses will be found of much value to planters. In the following tables the names adopted are those of Dr. Masters’ synopsis (see p. 188), and they are placed in the order of merit which results from a tabulation of all the returns. Order of Merit TABLE I, CONIFERS MOST SUITABLE FOR PARK TREES. Varieties receiving less than 5 votes are omitted. Name Abies nobilis : ; Pseudotsuga Douglasii Abies Nordmanniana . Sequoia gigantea Cedrus Libani Abies grandis Pinus Laricio nigricans Thuya gigantea . Cedrus atlantica Pinus Strobus 5 Cupressus Lawsoniana Tsuga Mertensiana Pinus Cembra . 5) LETIOO® 6 Cedrus Deodara . Araucaria imbricata Cupressus macrocarpa Pinus excelsa . Picea Morinda No. of Votes 28 26 23 re) 22 21 IY) 19 18 Ne 16 16 3155 15 14 12 12 11 iL Order of None Merit 20 Abies pectinata . Pah », cephalonica 21 », magnifica . 21 Picea sitchensis . 21 21 26 26 26 26 26 26 32 32 o4 34 36 36 36 Pinus insignis », Silvestris . Abies concolor . Larix europea Picea excelsa Pinus monticola . : »» ponderosa. : Sequoia sempervirens . Abies Pinsapo Picea Alcockiana Cupressus nootkatensis Picea orientalis . , Abies lasiocarpa . » Lowiana : Cryptomeria japonica. ANMIAGNAMNDMNMHMDAUDUME DY SUNDRY STATISTICS. 5738 TABLE II. CONIFERS MOST SUITABLE FOR LARGE GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS. Varieties receiving less than 5 votes are omitted. Order of No. of | Order of No. of Merit NaS Votes | Merit Nene Votes 1 Cupressus Lawsoniana Seo, ay Jenannis; Orns) 3 5 6 2 Thuya gigantea . ; . 22 | 22 Abies Lowiana 9 3 Araucaria imbricata . rete ay ee 26 », cephalonica 8 4 Cupressus nootkatensis 55 Ake) 26 », amabilis 8 5 Abies nobilis ; : 17 26 Picea Morinda 8 5 Oryptomeria japonica elegans 17 26 Thuya occidentalis 8 5 Tsuga Mertensiana . areas 30 Picea pungens glauca . 7 8 Cryptomeria japonica . LG 30) Pinus excelsay) 2 : Sane 8 Abies Nordmanniana . = 16 30 » insignis 7 8 PEAMSApO! 5 a 6 30 Tsuga canadensis Het G 8 Cedrus Deodara . 5 LO 30 Abies magnifica . ; 5 aes 12 Tsuga Pattoniana é - 1d 35 » Webbiana . ; 6 13 Thuya dolabrata . : os ile 35 Cupressus pisifera plumosa. 6 14 Libocedrus decurrens . w13 35 Juniperus virginiana . 6 14 Piceaorientalis . ; fans} 35 Picea Alcockiana 6 14 Pseudotsuga Douglasii ah 35) », sitchensis . 6 14 Sequoia gigantea. : es 40 Cupressus obtusa 5 14 ») Sempervirens. . 2 13 40 Juniperus chinensis 5 19 Cedrus Libani . ; elt, 40 Picea Engelmannii 5 HOF WNbilestorandis. . : a a2 40 Pinus Laricio 5 21 Cupressus macrocarpa. 5 LO) 40 » Silvestris 5 22 Abiesconcolor . Sas) 40 Sciadopitys verticillata 5 22 Cedrus atlantica . . Peg 40 Cedrus atlantica glauca 5 PA Bin Tie CONIFERS SUITABLE FOR SMALLER GARDENS. Varieties receiving less than 4 votes are omitted. 1 Cupressus Lawsoniana » 22 13 Abies nobilis. 5 2 Cryptomeria japonica elegans 16 13 Araucaria imbricata 5 3 Thuya dolabrata. : . 14 13 Cupressus obtusa . 5 4 Juniperus chinensis . rel 3 13 Juniperus recurva. 5 5 Cupressus nootkatensis cS) 13 Picea excelsa 5 6 Sciadopitys verticillata sa 8 3 Thuya occidentalis 5 6 Taxus baccata . , 778 13 Tsuga Pattoniana . 5 8 lLibocedrus decurrens . Seed 20 Abies Nordmanniana 4 9 Abies Pinsapo . : 4206 20 Cupressus pisifera. ue 9 Cedrus Deodara . ; Sake) 20 Taxus baccata adpressa A 9 Picea orientalis . 3 2 O 20 Thuya orientalis 4 9 Thuya gigantea . : 6 20 Tsuga canadensis. 4 TABLE IV. CONIFERS SUITABLE FOR Rock GARDEN Varieties receiving less than 3 votes are omitted. 1 Ficea excelsa Clanbrassiliana 14 11 Cupressus Thyoides 4 2 Juniperus Sabina ‘ » 10 11 Juniperus japonica 4 3 Cupressus Lawsoniananana 9 Jul 9%) squamata 4 4 'Thuya dolabrata. 6 Rane 11 Picea excelsa pygmea 4 5 Cupressus obtusa nana Be 6 16 Cryptomeria saree elegans 5 Thuya orientalis aurea oO nana ee ce 7 Cupressus pisifera : gr) 16 Cryptomeria japonica | nana. 3 7 Juniperus communis =e 16 Juniperus recurva 3 7 Picea excelsa pumila . tae 16 » Sabina variegata. 3 7 Taxus baccata : 5 16 Pinus montana 3 11 Cupressus nootkatensis 4 Jt ~] be JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. SAB GH Ne. CONIFERS SUITABLE FOR WIND-BREAES. Varieties receiving less than 4 votes are omitted. ie Came Voies | Merit See Voies 1 Pinus Laricio nigricans . 24 9 Abies pectinata . : = oO 2 .. silvestris . ; epee: 9 Larix europea . . SLO 3 SS eeuaAric1o : ‘ ft EKG: 9 Pinus Pinaster . 4 ot eas 4 Cupressus Lawsoniana 5 eel 12 Pinus Cembra . 7 =) 5 Picea excelsa < : ee ®) 12 Thuya occidentalis . = Sea hie 6 Thuya gigantea . : Ae) 14 Abies Nordmanniana . ee OEE 7 Pseudotsuga Douglasii oh eS 14 Cupressus nootkatensis cone 7 ‘Taxus baccata . : sh ae 14 Tsuga canadensis 5 a ACB i) evel CONIFERS SUITABLE FOR EXPOSED POSITIONS NEAR THE SEA. Varieties receiving less than 3 votes are omitted. {Pinus dariciomoricanssas.. 110 6 Pinus Pinaster . ; RO 2 Cupressus macrocarpa 5) 7 Sequoia sempervirens. Me 3 Pinus Laricio .. : Sy 8 Abies Nordmanniana . Laie 3 » silvestris . 2 so wie 8 Abies pectinata . a aor ee Gates 5 » ~InSienis= . : eer TABLE VII. THE BEST VARIEGATED AND COLOURED-FOLIAGED CONIFERS. Varieties receiving less than 4 votes are omitted. 1 Cupressus Lawsoniana lutea 16 | 10 Thuya orientalis aurea ae Pak 2 Ns ee plumosa 12 » Golabrata variegata. 6 aurea ; . Sell 12 Taxus baccata fastigiata 3 Taxus baccata aurea . 5 i153 aurea : 6 4 Cupressus obtusa aurea . 11 14 Cupressus Lawsoniana albo- 4 Juniperus chinensis aurea. 11 variegata . 5 5 hal. 6 Taxus baccata elegantis- 14 Cupressus Lawsoniana:; aurea sima : 10 variegata ; 5 ih Cry, ptomeria japonica elegans 8 16 Pseudotsuga Douglasii Stairii 4 7 Cupressus pisifera aurea . 8 16 Thuya occidentalis aurea sk 7 ‘Yhuyaorienialiselegantissima 8 16 Abies nobilis glauca . Spi 10 Picea pungens glauca. Eine TABLE VIII. CONIFERS MOST SUITABLE FOR TIMBER TREES IN WOODS AND FORESTS. Varieties receiving less than 5 votes are omitted. 1 Pseudotsuga Douglasii . 3d | 1% Cupressus Lawsoniana g2258 2) ePimnuswGacciowg : 5 1) 12 Pinus Strobus . : ef itrs 3 Abies grandis. : Ae ke) 12 Tsuga Mertensiana . oneS 4 Thuya gigantea . : eee bys 15 Abies pectinata . : em df 5 Picea sitchensis . : + Ld 16 Picea excelsa . : ho 6 Abies nobilis ‘ . =, 14 17 Cedrus atlantica . ed) 6 » Nordmanniana . Sh gti 17 Cupressus macrocarpa dd 8 Pinus silvestris . : pedi Ak 17 Pinus Cembra . : Stun aed 9 Larix europea . 3s RO ALOUE AT a <3 eansionis mean : ae 10 Pinus! baricioniericans, .. sno oe en » monticola . 5 ae 10 Sequoia sempervirens. xa | Or Or LiST OF EXUIBITORS, AND AWARDS RECOMMENDED BY THE JUDGES. Awards Recommended :— For GROUPS AND COLLECTIONS OF Cut SPECIMENS. Silver Gilt Flora Medal. To Sir Patrick Keith Murray, Bart., Ochtertyre, Crieff, Perthshire (gardener, Mr. George Croucher). Silver Gilt Kmghtian Medal. To the Right Hon. the Earl of Mansfield, Scone Palace, Perth (forester, Mr. Lewis Bayne; gardener, Mr. Alexander McKinnon). To the Right Hon. the Earl of Stair, Castle Kennedy, Stran- raer, Wigtownshire (forester, Mr. James Hogarth). Silver Kiughtian Medal. To the Director, Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh. To F. W. Cornwallis, lisq., Linton Park, Maidstone (gardener, Mr. John McKenzie). To W. H. Maxwell, Esq., Munches, Dalbeattie, N.B. To Mrs. Ford, Pencarrow, Bcdmin, Cornwall (gardener, Mr. Henry Jones). To Messrs. Dicksons, Chester. Silver Gilt Banksian Medal. To Messrs. J. Veitch & Sons, King’s Road, Chelsea. To Mr. A. Waterer, Knap Hill, Woking. Silver Banksian Medal. To Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen, Balmoral, Dallater, Aberdeenshire (forester, Mr. John Michie). To the Right Hon. the Karl of Aberdeen, Haddo House, Aberdeen (forester, Mr. John Clark). 576 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. To the Right Hon.the Earl of Devon, Powderham Castle, Exeter (gardener, Mr. D. C. Powell). To I. Acton, Hisq., J.2., Dl. Kalmacurrach, “Rathdnum:, co. Wicklow. To W. Steuart Fothringham, Esq., Murthly Castle, Perth (gardener, Mr. James Laurie). To A. Stirling, Esq., Keir, Dunblane, Perthshire (gardener, Mr. Thomas Lunt). To Messrs. C. Lee & Son, Royal Vineyard Nursery, Hammer- smith. To Messrs. Paul & Son, Cheshunt. Bronze Banksian Medal. To His Grace the Duke of Buccleuch, Dalkeith Palace, N.B. (gardener, Mr. Malcolm Dunn). To the Right Hon. the Earl of Hopetoun, Hopetoun, Linlith- cow (gardener, Mr. James Smith). To Sir R. Menzies, Bart., Castle Menzies, Perthshire. To A. H. Smith-Barry, Esq., Fota Island, co. Cork (gardener, Mr. W. Osborne). To R. 8. Holford, Esq., Westonbirt, Tetbury, Gloucester (forester, Mr. Rattray). ; To Mrs. Malcolm Patton, The Cairnies, Perth (forester, Mr. John Mchaggan). To Mrs. Williams, Scorrier, Cornwall (gardener, Mr. H. Hutchinson). To Messrs. Jefferies & Son, Cirencester. To Messrs. W. Barron & Son, Elvaston, Borrowash, Derby. To Messrs. W. Cutbush & Son, Highgate. Other Exhibits. Besides the above, collections of Conifers were contributed by the following :— His Grace the Duke of Sutherland, Dunrobin Castle, N.B. (gardener, Mr. David Melville). Wis Grace the Duke of Argyll, Inverary Castle, Argyll (gardener, Mr. George Taylor). His Grace the Duke of Buccleuch, Drumlanrig, N.B. (forester, Mr. John Fingland). LIST OF EXHIBITORS AND PRIZES RECOMMENDED. 577 His Grace the Duke of Devonshire, Chatsworth, Derbyshire. The Right Hon. the Earl of Cromarty, Castle Leod, Ross- shire. The Right Hon. Lord Poltimore, Poltimore, Exeter. The Right Hon. Lord Kinnaird, Rossie Priory, Perth (gardener, Mr. John McKiddie). The Countess of Seafield, Cullen House, Banff (forester, Mr. C. Y. Michie). Lady Fortescue, Dropmore, Bucks (gardener, Mr. Charles Herrin). Sir James H. Gibson Craig, Bart., Riccarton, Midlothian. Sir R. Jardine, Bart., Castlemilk, Dumfriesshire (gardener, Mr. William King). Sir T. D. Acland, Bart., Killerton, Exeter. Sir Simon Macdonald Lockhart, Bart., Lee Castle, Lanark, N.B. (gardener, Mr. T. Galbraith). Sir J. Colquhoun, Bart., Rossdhu, Dumbartonshire (gardener, Mr. Finlay McPherson). The Hon. H. H. Duncan, Fordell, Fifeshire (gardener, Mr. George Ramsay). Colonel Hammond, Pampisford Hall, Cambridge. J. Ord Mackenzie, Esq., Dolphinton, Peeblesshire. Colonel Balfour, Balfour Castle, Kirkwall, Orkney (gardener, . Mr. Thomas McDonald). | W. H. Nicholson, Esq., J.P., Basing Park, Alton (gardener, Mr. W. Smythe). R. G. Lake, Esq., Trevarrick, St. Austell, Cornwall. C. J. Lucas, Esq., Warnham Court, Horsham, Sussex. W. Gunn, Esq., Nutwood, Strathpeffer, N.B. J. Rashleigh, Esq., Menabilly, Cornwall (gardener, Mr. William Bennett). W. Barrow, Hsq., Hollowmead Lodge, Bishops-Teignton, Devon (gardener, Mr. J. Willis). Messrs. Little & Ballantyne, Carlisle. Messrs. Fisher, Son, & Sibray, Handsworth, Sheffield. The Director of the Royal Gardens, Kew, sent a collection of specimens, photographs, and drawings of Conifers. Dr. Maxwell T. Masters, I’.R.S., contributed specimens of eones of rare species, a splendid collection of photos and PP 578 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, engravings from the Gardeners’ Chronicle, and many works treating specially on Conifers. Mrs. Robb, 46 Rutland Gate, sent original paintings by Chinese artists, a drawing of the Maidenhair Tree (Ginkgo biloba) attracting much attention. Some very fine photographs of cones and branches of Danish Conifers were sent by Professor Carl Hansen, 6, Svanholmsyvei, Copenhagen. Photographs of great size and excellence were also contributed by W. Steuart Fothringham, Esq., Murthly Castle, Perth. Conifer literature was sent by W. H. Blandford, Esq., 8 Wimpole Street. Messrs. J. Veitch & Sons, Chelsea, exhibited their valuable ‘¢ Manual of Conifere.”’ Prizes :— Conifers, Collection of Fresh Cones and Branches with Foliage. Amateurs. First Prize, Veitch Memorial Medal and £5, to the Dowager Marchioness of Huntly (gardener, Mr. A. Harding). Second Prize, Silver Knightian Medal and £2. 10s., to Right Hon. Lord Wimborne, Canford Manor, Wimborne (gardener, Mr. T. H. Crasp). 579 CONIFERS EXHIBITED AT THE CONFERENCE. Tue following is a complete alphabetical list of the Conifers exhibited at Chiswick. In many instances the same species was shown under a different name, and in others under names altogether unknown and followed by a query (?) in the list below. The accepted botanical names, according to Dr. Masters’ Synopsis, are printed in ordinary type—the synonyms in ztalics. ABIES acicularis = Picea Alcockiana aqjanensig = ,, ajanensis Albertiana =Tsuga Mertensiana Alcockiana = Picea Alcockiana amabilis Annesleyana = Picea pungens glauca balsamea a albo-variegata brachyphylla bracteata Brunoniana = Tsuga dumosa canadensis = ,, canadensis cephalonica Clanbrassiliana = Picea excelsa var. compacta concolor (Picea) 5 violacea (Picea) Douglasit = Pseudotsuga Douglasii Engelmannii = Picea Engelmannii » Glauca= 45, » glauca excelsa = Picea excelsa finedonensis= 5, ee VATS firma » bifida (Abies and Picea bifida) Fraserii (Picea) grandis (Picea) Gregoriana = Picea excelsa var, Hovkeriana=Tsuga Pattoniana Khutrow = Picea Morinda lasiocarpa (A. subalpina ; Picea) argentea (A. subalpina var.) 3? Lowiana (Picea) magnifica - glauca ABIES majestica (?) Menziesit = Picea sitchensis Morinda = ,, Morinda Nigra = , nigra nobilis (Picea) » glauca (Picea) Nordmanniana (Picea) numidica Omorica =Picea Omorica orientalis = ,, orientalis Parryana= ,, pungens parvifolia (7) Pattoniana = Tsuga Pattoniana pectinata 7 pendula s pyramidalis metensis Pichta=A. sibirica Pinsapo (Picea) . Hammondii polita = Picea polita pumila (?) pungens = Picea pungens pygmea= ,, excelsa var. pyramidalis (?) religiosa Remontit = Picea excelsa var. rubra = Picea nigra sibirica (Abies and Picea Pichta) sitchensis = Picea sitchensis Smithiana= ,, Morinda subalpina = A. lasiocarpa Tsuga = Tsuga Sieboldii Veitchii (Picea) Webbiana (Picea) A Pindrow PP2 580 JOURNAL OF THH ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY AGATHIS australis (Dammara) ARAUCARIA Cunninghamii imbricata ATHROTAXIS cupressoides Gunniana laxifolia BIOTA aurea = Thuya orientalis var. elegantissima = Thuya orientalis var. japonica filiformis=Thuya occiden- talis var. orientalis = Thuya orientalis semperaurescens = Thuya orientalis var. CALLITRIS australis ( Frene/a) cupressoides = Widdringtonia cupressoides rhomboidea (Frenela) CEDRUS atlantica AK glauca Deodara A aurea Libani CEPHALOTAXUS drupacea Fortunei pedunculata compacta fastigiata ( Podocarpus Koraiana) ” CHAM ZCYPARIS glauca = Widdringtonia glauca spheroidea = Cupressus thyoides CRYPTOMERIA elegans =C. japonica var. » nana=C, japonica var. japonica - albo-spica 3 compacta oe elegans ” ” nana ss Lobbii es spiralis CUNNINGHAMIA sinensis CUPRESSUS arizonica Benthamii Corneyana =C. torulosa var. Geveniana Lawsoniana Sy alba a »,. maculata op albo-spica CUPRESSUS j Lawsoniana albo-variegata a Alumii argenteo-variegata ie aureo-variegata 3 compacta 53 erecta ty 3 Hraseril Ke me elauca: - ey bevels ats 0 » aureo-varie- gata 9 5 » variegata Pe ericoides “9 filiformis (C. ZL. filifera, C. L. fil. gracilis, and C. L. filiformis elegans) 3 clauca 3 gracilis (C. Z. gracilis — pendula) | i gracillima =C. li. gracilis | 3 intertexta Ss juniperina, a lutea 3 lutescens 3 nana albo-maculata compacta gracilis 39 39 “29 39 a » glauca be Milford Blue Jacket 3 minima glauca i psi monumentalis glauca ba pendula ; 3 plumosa o pulcherrima % pygmaa fe viridis 5 pyramidalis ” » alba ~ aA a albo-spica is “A argentea Shawii Be Silver Queen . Smithii a stricta Pe variegata 3 versicolor < Youngii es Waitzii ( a Westermannii lusitanica macrocarpa - Crippsii ( A variegata ( nootkatensis (Thuyopsis borealis) ! _ albo-variegata = argentea Bf aureo-variegata CONIFERS EXHIBITED AT THE CONFERENCE. CUPRESSUS nootkatensis compacta (Thuyopsis borealis var.) ss lutea(Thuyop. borealis var.) 35 nana ‘f $ % variegata nutkaensis = C. nootkatensis | obtusa (Retinospora) » aurea (Retinospora). pisifera (Retinospora) » nana (Retinospora) sempervirens thyoides (Chamecyparis spheroidea) 5 aurea (Chamecyparis) torulosa Corneyana (Juniperus pen- aula) DACRYDIUM cupressinum elatum Franklinii DAMMARA australis = Agathis FITZROYA. Archerli (Diselma) patagonica FRENELA australis = Callitris australis rhomboidea= ,, rhomboidea GINKGO biloba (Salisburia adiantifolia) JUNIPERUS Bermudiana canadensis aurea = J. communis var, chinensis alba (J. japonica alba) albo-variegata (J. japonica albo-variegata) albo-variegata foemina argentea aurea (J. japonica aurea) aureo-variegata (J. jap. aureo-variegata) foemina (J. feevesiana) japonica (J. japonica) procumbens (/. procumbens) - variegata communis aureo-variegata canadensis aurea hibernica (J. hibernica) 3 As compressa compressa = J. com. hibernica var. _ drupacea excelsa reflexa hibernica = J. communis var. japonica = J. chinensis var. macrocarpa (J. neoboracensis) neoboracensis = J. Macrocarpa 9 99 581, JUNIPERUS pendula=Cupressus torulosa Cor- neyana procera =J. excelsa var. procumbens=J. chinensis var. (fide Beissner) prostrata =J. Sabina recurva Sy densa Ae squamata (J. sguamata) Reevesiana = J. chinensis femina (fide Beissner) Sabina » albo-variegata », tamariscifolia(J.tamariscifulia) Schottii = J. virginiana, var. sinensis = J. chinensis squamata = J. recurva var. tamariscifolia = J, Sabina var. virginiana 5A albo-spica aureo-variegata ns compacta as elegans elegantissima glauca plumosa alba 5 5 argentea Schottii (J. Schottit) Triomphe d’Angers LARIX Kempferti = Pseudolarix Kempferii leptolepis LIBOCEDRUS chilensis decurrens (Thuya Craigiana) Doniana (Thuya) tetragona MICROCACHRYS tetragona PHYLLOCLADUS asplenifolius PICEA ajanensis (Adies) alba (Abies) » glauca », nana fastigiata Alcockiana (Abies acicularis) brachyphylla = Abies brachyphylla bifida = Abies firma var. bifoia= ,, lasiocarpa canadensis pendula=Tsuga cana- ~ densis var. Caroliniana = Tsuga Caroliniana concolor = Abies concolor 3 eiolacea = Abies concolor var. Douglasii glauca pendula = Pseudo- tsuga Douglasii var 582 PICHA Engelmannii Be glauca (Abies) excelsa » aurea (Abies) », Clanbrassiliana (A dies) » Dumettii (4dies) » dumosa (A dies) », finedonensis (A dies) » Gregoryana (Abies) » Maxwellii (Adtes) » monstrosa (Abies) » hana (Abies) iy) pendula » pygmea (Abies) » Remontii (Adies) 3» Viminalis erecta Fraserit = Abies Fraserii grandis = ,, grandis lasiocarpa=,, lasiocarpa Lonviana= ,, Lowiana Menziesii = P. sitchensis Morinda (Abies Smithiana,A.Khutrow) nigra (Abies) » Mariana » nana (Abies) nobilis = Abies » glauca=Abies nobilis var. Nordmanniana = Abies numidica = Abies Omorica (A dies) orientalis (Abies) a aurea (Abies) » polita (Abies) » pygmea (Abies) Parsonsiana = Abies Lowiana. Pichta =Abies sibirica Pindrow= ,, Webbianavar. Pinsapo = Abies polita (Abies polita) pungens (Abies Parryana, A. pungens) re argentea (A dies) 5 glauca (Abies Parryana var.) religiosa = Abies sitchensis (Abies Menziesti, A. sitch- ensis) sub-alpina = Abies lasiocarpa Veitchii = Abies Webbiana = Abies PINUS aristata=P. Balfouriana austriaca =P. Laricio nigricans Ayacahuite Balfouriana (P. aristata) Benthamiana = P. ponderesa Bolanderii =P. contorta Cembra a helvetica JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. PINUS contorta (P. Bolanderii) densiflora excelsa flexilis inops ~ insignis Jeffreyi koraiensis Laricio 3 aurea - nigricans (P. austriaca) montana (P. Pumilio) Montezumze monticola muricata palustris parviflora Parryana patula Peuce Pinea ponderosa (P. Benthamiana) Pumilio =P. montana pyrenaica rigida Russelliana=P. Montezume silvestris An argentea ae globosa nana A) pumila ‘sy pygmxa ; pyramidalis Strobus cs nana PODOCARPUS alpina andina coriacea = Torreya nucifera elongata Koraiana = Cephalotaxus pedunculata fastigiata nubigena PRUMNOPITYS elegans PSEUDOLARIX Kempferii (Laria Kempferit) PSEUDOTSUGA Douglasii (A dies) Ae glauca (Abies) € » pendula (Picea) RETINOSPORA ericoides = Thuya occidentalis var. and Cupressus thyoides var. filicoides = Cupressus obtusa var. filif cTa= ” 3 9 9 aUTEa =yy ” ry) elagans. == ” 99 9 CONIFERS EXHIBITED AT THE CONFERENCE, RETINOSPORA filifera gracilis = Cupressus obtusa leptoclada = », thyoides var. tycopodioides = » obtusa var. magnifica = (1) obtusa = 9” ” », alba = ef eae peas », albo-spica = = 7 % » aurea aa ‘a » aurea » compacta = 5 +3 var, » jiltifera- argentea = os A WEE » Jlavescens = "9 ” ” ” gracilis = 99 99 99 » gracilis aurea = 99 ” 99 » Nana aurea = Aj fs 9 2» 99 . COM- pacta = » 8” » »gracilis= ” 9 ) » pyramid- alis = 39 39 ov pisifera = 2°) -pisifera. 9 aurea = 2 ” 9 o» MANAAUTER = a9 -99 7 ss 99 AUER variegata = On us ss » sulphurea= " Ses plumosa = ee ns se » alba varie- gua = ry) 99 99 3, albo-picta = is ae es » argentea = 9 yes 2» Aurea = ” 39 99 pyImea = (1) SQUATTOSA = ss a of » sulphurea = a a ie tetragona aurea = » obtusa -,, SALISBURIA adiantifolia = Ginkgo biloba SAXEGOTHEA conspicua SCIADOPITYS verticillata SEQUOIA gigantea ( Wellingtonia) KD erecta os pendula sempervirens (Taxodium) ne albo-spica TAXODIUM distichum ue pendulum semperrirens = Sequoia sempervirens albo-spica = ae 5 var. | ! 588 TAXUS baccata 3 adpressa stricta ae A variegata 3 aurea * » variegata ‘5 argentea variegata ae Devastonii Hs r aurea i a variegata 33 elegantissima nova ” ” erecta aurea variegata ¥ fastigiata a s aurea f is 2 variegata i 3 grandis 99 ” lutea Be 1 variegata 5 foemina Fe glauca *5 gracilis pendula is hibernica aurea variegata horizontalis aurea Barronii canadensis (7. Washingtonii) Dovastonti =T. baccata var. elegantissima = . a5 grandis = » tastigiata var. Washingtonit = T. canadensis i THUYA : Craigiana = Libocedrus decurren dolabrata (Thuyopsis) + leetevirens (Thuyopsis) ‘5 robusta (Thuyopsis) 9 variegata (Thuyopsis) Doniana = Libocedrus EHilwangeriana =T. occidentalis var. gigantea (7. Lobbii, T. Menziesii) F3 aurea variegata *5 gracilis es, semperaurea (7. Lobbit var.) japonica pygmea Ae Standishii (Thuyopsis) Lobbit =T. gigantea Menziesii=T. gigantea minima glauca=T. plicata pygmea glauca occidentalis * albo-spica $s argentea os aurea oe Boothii ae Hllwangeriana ae globosa, 6 japonica filiformis (Biota) efi lutea i nana compacta 584 THUYA occidentalis pendula - recurva nana Wie ovanieccaca ‘ Verveniana * Wareana orientalis 55 argenteo-variegata (Biota) Ps aurea (Biota aurea) » elegantissima (Biotz) -; 5 picta ( Biota) as lutea e minima (PBicte) + semperaurescens (Biota) plicata lutea » Minima S » pygmea glauca semperaurescens ='T. orientalis var. Standishii = T. japonica Verveniana = T. occidentalis var. Wareana= ,, THUYOPSIS borealis = Cupressus nootkatensis dolabrata = Thuya dolabrata 99 9 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. | TORREYA | THUYOPSIS Standishii =Thuya japonica var. drupacea = Cephalotaxus drupacea Myristica nucifera (Podocarpus coriaeea) | TSUGA canadensis (Abies) 5 albo-spica (A dies) is dumosa(A bies Brunoniana) ‘5 gracilis (Abies) 5 macrophylla (Abies) 55 pendula (Abies, Picea) ms variegata (Abies) Caroliniana (Picea) Mertensiana (Abies Albertiana) Pattoniana (dbies Hookeriana, A. Pattoniana) WELLINGTONIA gigantea = Sequoia gigantea WIDDRINGTONIA cupressoides (Callitris) glauca (Chamecyparis) Amongst the vast number of specimens exhibited at the Conference there were some to the names of which the exhibitors added a query (?), as if being themselves doubtful as to their correctness; others, again, had no name attached—the exhibitor probably being desirous of obtain- ing the right one; while others, again, had a name attached which on examination proved to be wrong. Dr. M. T. Masters, F.R.S., very kindly went carefully over all the specimens with a view to confirming, adding, or rectifying the names, with the following result :— HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, Balmoral. No. 2, exhibited as Picea Alcockiana=P. ajanensis. Abies firma bifida = A. pectinata. No. 7B, exhibited as The DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH, Drumlanrig. No. 11, specimen exhibited = Cupressus Lawsoniana. The DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH, Dalkeith Palace. No. 2, exhibited as Juniperus occidentalis = J. communis. Specimen exhibited as Abies concolor=A. magnifica. The DUKE OF SUTHERLAND, Dunrolin Castle. No. 3, exhibited as Picea Engelmannii= FP. pungens. No. 10, exhibited as Abies grandis = A. magnilica. No. 14, exhibited as Abies lasiocarpa=A. Lowiana. CONIFERS EXHIBITED AT THE CONFERENCE. 585 The MARQUIS OF NORTHAMPTON, Torloisk. Specimea exhibited as Cupressus MacNabiana = Thuya gigantea. The EARL OF ABERDEEN, Haddo House. No. 1, exhibited as Picea Alcockiana =P. ajanensis. No. 2, exhibitedas Preca Engelmannii=P. pungens. No. 3, exhibited as Picea Engelmannit glauca=P. pungens glauca. No. 14 and 18=Abies Lowiana. No. 20=Pinus Banksiana. A specimen exhibited as Abies grandis=A.amabilis. A specimen exhibited as A. amabilis = A. magnitica. The EARL OF MANSFIELD, Scone Palace. No. 3, exhibited as Picea Engelmannti=P. pungens. No. 77= Picea excelsa var. The EARL OF STAIR, Castle Kennedy. No. 71=Cupressus Lawsoniana. No. 82 and 83=Thuya gigantea. The COUNTESS OF SEAFIELD, Cullen House. No. 4=Cupressus macrocarpa. No. 27=Thuya gigantea. No. 37=Cupressus Lawsoniana var. No.42=Juniperus communis. No. 57 =Tsuga Pattoniana. Sir JAMES H. G1Bson CraliG, Bart., Riccarton. No. 4=Athrotaxis selaginoides (A. Gunniana). No. 10, 28, 30, and 31= Juniperus spp. No. 29=Taxus baccata adpressa. Sir PATRICK KEITH MuRRAY, Bart., Ochtertyre. No. 77, exhibited as Cupressus MacNabiana = Thuya gigantea. No. 79, exhibited as Cupressus thyoides = Juniperus sp. No. 104=Pinus muricata (P. Murrayana). Sir R. JARDINE, Bart., Castlemilk. Specimen exhibited as Picea Alcockiana=P. ajanensis. No, 1=Cupressus Lawsoniana. No. 3=Cedrus Deodara. Sir R. Menzizs, Bart., Castle Menzies. No. 11, exhibited as Pinus Parryana= Tsuga Pattoniana. No. 18, exhibited as Pinus muricata =P. contorta, No. 19, exhibited as Pinus Jeffreyi = P. ponderosa. The Hon. H. H. DuNCAN, Fordell. No. 3, exhibited as Cupressus Lamwsoniana=C. macrocarpa. No. 8, exhibited as Abies lasiocarpa=A. Lowiana. No. 28, exhibited as Cupressus Lansoniana=C. obtusa. No. 29, exhibited as Cupressus Lansoniana=Juniperus sp. No. 43, exhibited without name=Juniperus sp. No. 48, exhibited as 7huya gigantea = Libocedrus decurrens. No. 61, exhibited as 7huya Lobbii=Cupressus (Retino- spora) pisifera. W. STEUART FOTHRINGHAM, Esq., Murthly Castle. No. 37=Cupressus obtusa. No. 66=Juniperus sp. Specimen exhibited as Podocarpus andina = Cephalotaxus pedunculata fastigiata. C. J. Lucas, Esq., Warnham Court. Specimen exhibited as Picea Engelmannii = P. pungens 586 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. W. H. MAXWELL, Esq., Munches. No. 15, exhibited as Abies Webbiana=A. bracteata. No. 37, exhibited as Pinus pyrenaica=Abies grandis. No, 65, exhibited as Thuya magnifica=T. gigantea. J. ORD MACKENZIE, Esq., Dolphinton. No. 12, exhibited as Thuya gigantea = Libocedrus decurrens. No. 13, exhibited as Thuyopsis borealis = Cupressus Lawsoniana. No. 19 and 28, exhibited as Picea Engelmannit=P.pungens. No. 20, exhibited without name=Tsuga Pattoniana. No. 21, exhibited as Picea jessoensis=P. ajanensis. No. 22, exhibited as Picea obovata =P. sitchensis. No. 42, exhibited as Abies abchasica =A. cephalonica, W. H. NIcHOLSON, Esq., Basing Park. Specimen exhibited as Cupressus pendula = Thuya orientalis. Messrs. DICKSONS, Chester. Specimens exhibited as Picea Alcockiana =P. ajanensis. INDEX. Generic names are printed in small capitals (as ABIES) ; specific and varietal names in ABIES ajanensis, 26 Albertiana, 78, 116 Alcockiana, 27 amabilis, 68 brachyphulla, 20, 25 bracteata, 23, 68 canadensis, 117 cephalonica, 68, 79 concolor, 79 Douglasii, 80, 117 excelsa (Norway Spruce), 49, 68 Jirma, 24 grandis, 68, 82 lasiocarpa, 68 List of, 188 Lowiana (Parsonsiana), 9 magnifica, 83 Mariesii, 25 Menziesii, 84, 117 Morinda, 68, 85, 118 nobilis, 86 Nordmanniana, 17, 50, 86 orientalis, 118 pectinata (Silver Fir), 44, 69 Pinsapo, 68 polita, 26 sachalinensis, 20 Tsuga= Tsuga Sieboldii, 27 Veittchit, 20, 25 AcTINOSTROBUS pyramidalis, 196, 265 African Cedar, 50 AGATHIS, List of, 196 Antiquity of Conifers, 2 ARAUCARIA Cunninghamit, 337 excelsa, 338 imbricata, 62, 87, 118, 340 List of, 197 Arborvite, Giant, 48 ATHROTAXIS, List of, 198, 310 Awards for Conifers, 575 Bibliography of Conifer, 179 BioTa orientalis, 276 CALLITRIS, List of, 199 gquadrivalvis, 262 CEDRUS atlantica, 50, 69, 88, 118 Deodara, 63, 69, 88, 118, 402 - robusta, 37 Libani, 63, 69, 406 - argentea, 63 List of, 200, 401 CEPHALOTAXUS Fortunei, 33, 317 List of, 201, 316 Chafer-grubs, 159 CHAMCYPARIS, List of, 202, 278 spheroidea, 38, 281 Collectors or Introducers of Conifers— Compton, Bishop, 14 Douglas, David, 14, 74 Evelyn, John, 14 Fortune, Robert, 15, 75 Hartweg, Theodor, 14 Jeffrey, John, 74 Lobb, William, 15, 74 Maries, Charles, 15, 20 Collectors or Introducers of Conifers—cozté. Menzies, A., 14 Murray, William, 15 Veitch, John Gould, 15, 75 Conifere of J apan, 18 Conifers as Forest Trees, 76 » at Dropmore, 61 » at Orton Longueville, 67 »» Decorative Character of, 52 » Diseases of, 124 » Harly Planters of, 76 » exhibited at the Conference, 579 » tor Chalky Districts, 37 55 » Economic Planting, 41 a 3» Parks, 35 a 3, Rockwork, 40 = » the Seaside, 39 = »» Warious Purposes, 572 = » Wet Grounds, 38 »» Insects Injurious to, 150 Small Growing, for Lawns, 36 Corsican Pine (P. Laricio), 45 CRYPTOMERIA japonica, 15, 30, 88, 119, 203, 300 CUNNINGHAMIA sinensis, 203 CUPRESSUS Cashmeriana, 284 Sunebris, 284 Goveniana, 284 guadalupensis, 284 Knightiana, 285 Lambertiana, 50, 119 Lawsoniana, 51, 70, 89, 119, 278 List of, 203 lusitanica, 285 MacNabiana, 286 macrocarpa, 70, 90, 119, 286 nootkatensis (nutkaénsis), 91 sempervirens, 287 torulosa, 287 Cypress, Deciduous, 70 Cypresses, Curiosities of, 9 DaAcRYDIUM, List of, 209 David, Abbé, 17 Delavay, Abbé, 17 Diseases of Firs, 136 + », Junipers, 148 “- 3, Larches, 142 3; Lines, 127 Douglas Fir, 46, 80 Dropmore, Conifers at, 61 Economic Value of Conifers, 16 Epinasty, 8 Exhibitors, List of, 575 Fir, Douglas, 46, 80 » Grecian, 68, 79 s» Lrince Albert’s, 78 » silver, 44 Firs, Diseases of, 136 FITZROYA patagonica, 210, 266 Form and Colour of Conifers, 10 FRENELA, 263 Fungi, Injurious, 131 Genealogy of Conifers, 3 Giant Arborvitaz, 48 588 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. GINKGO biloba (Salisburia adiantifolia), 34. Pinus—cont. 70, 210, 319 halepensis, 39 GLYPTOSTROBUS heterophyllus, 21), 305 insignis, 64, 92° Growth of Conifers, 3 Jeffreyi, 69, 94, 120 Henry, Dr., 17 koraiensis, 28, 366 Hyponasty, 8 Laricio (Corsican Pine), 45, 64, 69, 95, 121 Indian Spruce, 68 368 Introduction of Conifers to Cultivation, 13 List of, 224, 344 Junipers, Diseases of, 146 longifolia, 372 JUNIPERUS Bermudiana, 289 macrocarpa, 61, 69, 95 californica, 290 | monticola, 95, 121, 37€ chinensis, 33, 290 parviflora, 28 communis, 290 | Pinaster, 39, 96 drupacea, 293 Pinea, 39 excelsa, 293 | ponderosa, 69, 96, 121 Jiaceida, 293 pyurenaica, 96, 121 Satidissima, 293 | rigida, 38, 51 List of, 211, 290 | Sabiniana, 69 macrocarpa, 294 | Strobus, 47,97 + } sana, 294 Thunbergti, 28 occidentalis, 295 | Pissodes, 163 rigida, 33 | PODOCARPUS, List of, 242 virginiana, 298 { macrophylla, 20 Kempfer, 19 | Prince Albert’s Fir, 78 KETELEERIA, List of, 216 PRUMNOPITYS elegans, 244 Lambert’s Cypress, 50 PSEUDOLARIX Fortunei, 411 Larch, 42 Kempferii, 9, 244 = Bugs 70 | PSEUDOTSUGA Douglasii, 46, 62, 245 » Diseases of the, 142 Redwood, 50, 70, 121 » Miner, 165 RETINOSPORAS, 4, 31, 245 Largest Specimens, 568 | SALISBURIA, 320 LARIX americana, 39, 413 Savin, 297 dahurica, 413 SAXEGOTHEA conspicua, 246 europea, 42, 414 Griffithii, 416 kurilensis, 416 SCIADOPITYS verticillata, 29, 246, 343 SEQUOIA gigantea, 15, 37, 74, 98, 122, 247, 306 sempervirens, 51, 97, 121, 247, 309 leptolepis, 23, 27, 417 Siebold, 19 List of, 216, 412 : Silver Fir, 44 occidentalis, 417 Snake Firs, 9, sibirica, 418 Spruce-gall Aphis, 170 Lawson’s Cypress, 51 » Hemlock, 79 LIBOCEDRUS chilensis, 267 » Indian, 68, 85 decurrens, 69, 119, 268 » Norway, 49 Doniana, 268 Stature of Conifers, 11 List of, 218 Tallest Specimens, 568 tet7'agona, 269 TAXODIUM distichum, 70, 248, 302 Maidenhair Tree, 34, 70 mucronatum, 248 Mammoth Tree, 51, 67, 76 sempervirens, 70 MICROCACHRYS tetragona, 219 TAXUS fastigiata, 70 Mount Atlas Cedar, 50 List of, 249, 312 Movements of Conifers, 5 TETRACLINIS articulata, 250 Murray, Andrew, 15 Thunberg, 19 5 William, 15 THUYA gigantea (Lobbii), 9, 15, 71, 97, 270 Nomenclature of Conifers, 11 japonica Standishii, 20, 274 Orton Longueville, Conifers at, 67 List of, 250 PHYLLOCLADUS, 219 occidentalis, 9, 272 Physiology of Conifers, 5 plicata, 71, 274 PICEA grandis, 119 W hipcord, 71 lasiocarpa, 119 Thuyas, Curiosities of, 9 List of, 220, 419 THUYOPSIS borealis, 9, 91 nobilis, 120 dolabrata, 275 List of, 253 TORREYA drupacea (=Cephalotaxus), 33 List of, 254, 317 Myristica (=T. californica , 70 » Beetle, 167 TSUGA canadensis, 39 5, Cluster or Maritime, 49 List of, 254, 441 Nordmanniana, 120. | >» sawfly, 163 | Utility of Conifers, 11 } | | | Pinsapo, 120 pungens, 9 Pine, Austrian, 49 3, scotch, 48 WELLINGTONIA gigantea, 15, 37,74, 98, 122, 247, » shoot Moths, 166 306 > Weevil, 160 » Weymouth, 47 Pines, Diseases of, 127 PINUS austriaca, 49, 69, 92,120 Cembra, 92, 120 contorta, 38 densiflora, 23, 28 excelsa, 69, 92, 120 Weymouth Pine, 47 WIDDRINGTONIA, 256 cupressoides, 265 Wireworms, 158 Woodwasps, 176 Yew, common, 70 ,, — foetid, 70 3 Jrish, 70