Class SIA He Book NésPe2 Copyright N° COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. . Yea? eae opi Le Lee hae “uy .* PA wi ea ie eh aA Nar” Face, tm } Vai: evn ace ¥ ‘i he ie) nd ares af j Y pene ‘*’ Pines “Sb a ate Fics RF a ake © At ave Sah Pe ar i 1 i + x -" Ae t oy 2 ore | : is ' ix ve ‘ 2 * if LU i ’ 7 poy | * 7 ; i 5 ; [eles Z } : i, ~/ ve | 4 - Wind a : 7 7 i » n> . } a ‘l oar eee 1 2 yO Z 7 ~ = i ’ ’ ’ < a ae ite ~ as 7 4 ‘ i t | MRK EM AT RT ee ee. ue Ww) ea Se | - ii iit 1 \ Al Pa.) ; arr ae Sen es Abid lide hiedh SPN owletnyt np) pte qitied NIN Pip arts foe Poy “© tert ia) \ Wt i ta i " ii : ny o'6 ) fig 4 \ " ae hi | AT / a ene Ay A dt VP Uae el ae Wr ee ‘p isl ii. jc bis i'n hice fh hi by INDEX CENTR Showing areas cov a SS) batik: ARRAN ER CLL 1OoSG AP OF L PARK ed aie maps THK ERRKN EE CER 7 3000 4000 Trees ann Shrubs of Central Park By LOUIS HARMAN PEET MANHATTAN PRESS 476 West Broadway New York LIBRARY of SONSRESS Two Soptes cieceived MAR 22 !909 Copyrignt entry Oct Copyright, 1903, by Louis HARMAN PEET Tur GREENWICH PRESS 186-:90 West Fourth Street New York Co CAROLINE NORTHUP PEET AND CYNTHIA GENEVA PERKINS PREPACE. THE very cordial welcome given to my guide to the trees and shrubs of Prospect Park has induced me to publish a similar handbook for the Central Park of this city. The purpose of this book is to put within reach of the non-technical city nature lover a handy means of identifying the trees and shrubs which he meets in his park rambles. This identification once effected adds immeasurable enjoyment to these rambles. It is exasperating to walk the park paths and see the handsome shrubs and trees and not know what they are. Many of them are of foreign character and, although the rambler may know the native species, when these unusual foreign forms confront him he cannot recognize them, for they are seldom given in the popular handbooks. He has not time, nor opportunity, nor the knowledge, it may be, to hunt them out in the larger botanical works. It is the aim of this book to supply this want. Its plan is simple and direct. Identification is effected largely by locating the trees or shrubs, as they Vill are passed, by maps and by descriptions in the text which point out enough of the salient features of each tree or shrub to make the identification sure. Of course, in using this book, it must be borne in mind that it would be utterly impossible to locate on the maps every tree and shrub passed along the walks. This would result only in a mass of black spots from which it would be impossible to distinguish anything. It was therefore thought best to locate some of the representative types clearly and distinctly rather than to attempt to locate all from which none could be definitely found. Try to find shrubs or trees on the maps at easily distinguishable points and work from these to others, verifying, as you go along, by the descriptive text. If you find you have not judged the distance rightly, the descriptive text should act as a guide to set you right. The best results, in the use of this handbook, will be obtained if the rambler will follow up the identifi- cation effected by it, with a more extended study of each tree or shrub, pursuing the details of leaf, flower, bark and bud in botanical text books or larger works of reference, such as cyclopedias on horticulture. For these more extended studies, I strongly recom- mend Gray’s “Field, Forest, and Garden Botany,”’ revised by Prof. L. H. Bailey; Keeler’s ‘‘Our Native Trees” and ‘Our Northern Shrubs’’; Apgar’s ‘“‘Trees of the Northern United States’’; Dame and Brooks’s ‘Handbook of the Trees of New England.’”’ Any of ix these will make a good field book to take with you on your rambles. Of the larger works, for reference, the following are of great practical value: Bailey’s ‘‘Cy- clopedia of Horticulture’; Loudon’s “‘Cyclopedia of Trees’; Britton and Brown’s ‘Flora of the North- eastern United States’’; and Emerson’s ‘‘Report on the Trees and Shrubs of Massachusetts.’”’ These can be consulted in any good-sized library. In the preparation and completion of this book I wish to express, with considerable emphasis, my acknowledgment of the courtesy extended to me in my field work by the Park Department; especially by Commissioner John J. Pallas, Secretary Willis Holly, Assistant Secretary Col. Clinton H. Smith, Ex-Com- missioner William R. Wilcox, and Ex-Secretary George S. Terry. My thanks are also hereby tendered to Mr. Robert Huhn, Foreman Gardener, of the Park Department, for his very considerable aid, most generously given. My acknowledgments for valuable information regarding rare varieties are hereby tendered to Dr. Charles H. Peck, State Botanist of New York; to Messrs. Ellwanger and Barry of the Mount Hope Nur- series, Rochester, N. Y.; to the Shady Hill Nurseries, Boston, Mass., and to Mr. Theodore Lawlor of Flushing, N. Y. I wish also to express here my appreciation of the very faithful and laborious work of my wife, Nellie Marvin Peet, in the preparation and completion of the index of this book. My thanks are also acknowledged to Mr. Edward Yorke Farquhar, >.< of Brooklyn, for his very skillful work on the maps of this book and to Mr. Gilbert Dennis, of Staten Island, N. Y., for his painstaking efforts to bring out the characteristics of the trees and shrubs photographed for its illustrations. Louis HARMAN PEET. 755 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. CHAPTER Is Tf. BIT. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. General ‘Map No. Map No. Map No. Map No. Map No. Map No. ‘Map No. Map No. CONTENTS. PAGE UPiveg Porareleerris WG (cua 5, a eh ao a eo eae 9 ihe BalliGiroune avd Viemity see Sees ae 61 COPS ayes oe WA rere (pe ras 103 Tene Gree atid! VACHMIG W622 oie. G4 Sis aw ee olde e's 131 East Seventy-second Street to East Seventy- GRIME SERGE | tc co Spee cor bth ene Male lw ik BWal Seasche vos 153 BR eber rae Gi etek i strc ee bie wie ad of CORRE Bis 169 “G20 Rage 9001] 0) Pa ear eR eg Ree ae Pe 187 West Seventy-second Street to West Seventy- PUG GCC ee Bett nde et ot lal nd, oa mapanete th ee es 225 East Seventy-ninth Street to East Eighty-fifth ST ihc ye URE OS ee ene Rapa Bean Ae ae Mei oe 241 West Seventy-ninth Street to West Eighty- CETUS RNS) 8 © LS eg aR age RL RMN Re SRT Pe hs ge ae be 255 East Ninetieth Street and Vicinity............ 270 West Ninetieth Street and Vicinity............ 275 East Ninety-sixth Street to East One Hundred Sale CeO OLTCEL,..5.<.2 (0). , cro ie Sieere wah dion aie 287 West Ninety-sixth Street to the Pool.......... 301 Raticns Meer dnd Vicinity... ..)6.. sou es 282 ss 319 ne Concourse ang Vicinity hs. oo. 8 se ese ot 345 LIST OF MAPS. LSS SIN 0 oan BARS te alle DE Renee) greet a Frontispiece PAGES PAGES Mea Attend fs ka Bie Me go) Mage NO Oy). 3,274), 236-237 AN aR rae a —nigy May INO. TO. se. 5 = 3: 248-249 ave fas bere enan We go-o7. Map No. Tr... ....32.- 268 ane A. it ro SMaAD ING: T2260. a. sos 272 Giese iste ree * Man No. 13. a1 ois 282-283 DEN a be rages .* Map No. 14... ..,.: 294-2905 eee aly a $eo-i6n Ae Wap No.5. :....... 312-313 Bile arte 218-219 Map No. 16........ 338-339 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. FACING PAGE Alder, Pleatt-leawed as 2p fii b)..0 a dha sin os oe 35, 343 ASH: Bese suede tee be oe ead Colle ae 48 Bay, Sweel. A eres ri asd don, eon 132. Beech, Weeping Muropean:. 2) yoissas....cte eee 188 » Birch? Red@, River or Black. Jo... ..ue ke eee 25° Cedar, Japan see ie ic kee. sx ous Oe ee 260 Cedar, Japan (healesprays):. 6 22-4... 22 eco eee 196° Cedar of Gebaneniene .nutet ae Ole Iw ol eee 265 Cherry, Watialelo waa. cae tee acksn. oe ee 78° Cork “Tree CHimese: : te see ke as ae ok 330 im, Cataperco wae ee ei etek was & ae xs 6 Oe 115% ims Siberian: Seonnelsap eee tee ete as oa. I12 Garikeo “ree! 52). creche eeu ec sateees es bc as 119 Flop Tree or Shrubby, Drefoile: ..e: en.. 2 2k eee 227% TO CST BG ors iene doles SG ao eee Fee i 328 Larch, Chinese (Goldem,) eae he aces oes dey aloe ee eee 258 Maonolia, -Greatsleavedtases, ier) as doe es ee 174 Maonolia, Swalipel.2) ra ees ele nas oa 192 Maple, Ash-leavedo(Flowers)..0 5. 2225.20.00. ea eee ee 2 ar Maple, ‘Norway (Blowets)tas se 2 ae. a. 87 Maple, Striped (Mlowers)inais pe scah dies... ae 20% Ninebar. . 2.04 oh dut ene ie ete eee Rg se Oe 5 259 Oats, Wallow «2.5. isu enon: dacs oy 5 156 Pine, Bliotan’s-Aanictic ae ee eae me =. A ccs ee 257- Pine, Swiss Stoney ca. gee ees. sor 263 Pine, Western Yellowarmqers at 0...) oo. aa Pond, Fite: ..... 1233 Speen eats be cya 32 Spiraea, Reevels:.. “een tee to Lh oh 262 White Beam Tree. 2 ee es se oh 139 Vellowwood .. ....: sino rer 159 TREES AND SHRUBS OF CENTRAL PARK [DUIS YY WY. "ALINIDIA GNY GNOd SAL [ON ce eR DS ee ret oR 00!) eh fe nie iy OE kN ee ‘ * “ - Jie we oh ¥ 4 7 *) f BS : \ v 7 PPA ~~ a. ‘ 1 a ih solemn | Sree res tee a ~- a 4 = _ soli tli lettne erO aa ; *. : 2 — z = rie : _ a e- : a -— ft ‘ " = Rn e wy " 4 ' } : ‘ne . i ( ae F a oF + i * iat ; . i Pret ie ee vil, pfs. ha 8 apat — is a te 4 fe) © ON ANA DH Explanations, Map No. 1 ComMMon NAME. American or White Elm. European Flowering Ash. . Silver or White Maple. Wild Red Osier. White Pine. . Weeping Willow. Bald Cypress. Japan Quince. . Common Sweet Pepper Bush. . American Hornbeam, Blue Beech, Water Beech. , Black Haw. wooiack Cherry. . Japan Hedge Bindweed. . Common Privet. . Arrowwood. . Austrian Pine. . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . Golden Bell or Forsythia. . Koeelreuteria or Varnish Tree. . California Privet. . Globe Flower, Japan Rose or Kerria. (In- correctly, Corchorus.) . Rhodotypos. . Weigela. (Light pink flowers. ) . English or Field Maple. . Ninebark. . Golden-leaved Ninebark. . European Honeysuckle. . Slender Deutzia. BoTANICAL NAME. Ulmus Americana. Fraxinus ornus. Acer dasycarpum. Cornus stolontfera. Pinus strobus. Salix Babylonica. Taxodiwum distichum. Cydonia Japonica. Clethra alntfoliza. Carpinus Caroliniana, Viburnum prunijolium. Prunus serotina. Polygonum cuspidatum, Ligustrum vulgare. Viburnum dentatum. Pinus Austriaca. Populus moniltfera. Forsythia viridissima. Kelreuterta paniculata. Ligustrum ovaltfolium. Kerria Japonica. Rhodotypos kerrtoides. Diervilla amabilts. Acer campestre. Physocarpus (or Spirea) opultfoliza. Physocarpus (or Spirea) opultfolia, var. aurea. Lonicera caprifolium. Deutzia gracilts. ComMon NAME . Fern-leaved Beech. . Japan Arbor Vite. (Plume-leaved.) . Paulownia. . River Bireh, Red Birch, Black Birch. . Sycamore Maple. . White Mulberry. . scotch Elm. . Scarlet Oak. . Dwarf Mountain Sumac. . French Tamarisk. . Honey Locust. . English Hawthorn. . Common Buckthorn. . Ailanthus or ‘Tree. of Heaven. A Sascaitas: . Ash-leaved Maple or Box Elder. . Common Locust. . Bristly Locust, Rose Aca- cia or Moss Locust. . American Hornbeam. . European Purple Beech. . Red Maple. . Heart-leaved Alder. . Smooth Sumac. . Lombardy Poplar. . Cockspur Thorn. . Bay or Laurel-leaved Willow. . English Elm. . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Red Oak. . Hardy or Panicled Hy- drangea. . English Oak. . Staghorn Sumac. . Scotch Pine. . Weeping Golden Bell or Forsythia. BoTANICAL NAME Fagus sylvatica, var. hetero- phylla. Chamaecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pustfera, var. plu- mosa, Paulownia impertalis. Betula nigra. Acer pseudoplatanus. Morus alba. Ulmus Montana. Quercus coccinea. Rhus copallina. Tamarix Gallica. Gleditschia triacanthos. Crategus oxyacantha, Rhamunus cathartica. Adlanthus glandulosus. Sassafras officinale. Negundo acerotdes. Robinia pseudacacia. Robinia hispida. Carpinus Caroliniana. Fagus sylvatica, var. atropur- purea. Acer rubrum. Alnus cordtfolta. Rhus glabra. Populus dilatata. Crategus crus-gallt. Salix pentandra (or laurt- folza. Ulmus campestris. Lonicera fragrantissima. Quercus rubra. Hydrangea paniculata, grandzflora. Quercus robur. Rhus typhina. Pinus sylvestris Forsythia suspensa. Uar. COMMON NAME . Large-thorned Hawthorn . Common Horsechestnut. . Van Houtte’s Spirea. . Indian Bean Tree or Southern Catalpa. . European or Tree Alder. . European White Birch. . European Beech. . Large-flowered Mock Orange or Syringa. . Cephalotaxus. . Hardy or Western Catalpa. . Pearl Bush. . Hall’s Japan Magnolia. . Large-flowered Mock Orange or Syringa. . Smooth-leaved English Elm. . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Scotch Elm. . * Cut-leaved English Oak. . Cockspur Thorn. . Yellow or Sweet Buckeye. . Red Maple. . Purple-leaved Sycamore Maple. . Red Buckeye. . Late-flowering Tamarisk. . Washington Thorn. . Acanthopanax. . Japan Lemon. . Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa. . Judas Tree or Redbud. . English Hawthorn. . Pignut or Broom Hickory. . Dotted-fruited Hawthorn. . Persimmon. . Shagbark Hickory. . White Oak. . Pignut or Broom Hick- ory. BoTANICAL NAME Crataegus macracantha. Atsculus hippocastanum, Spirea Van Houttet. Catalpa bignontoides. Alnus glutinosa. Betula alba. Fagus sylvatica. Philadelphus grandzflorus. Cephalotaxus Fortunit. Catalpa speciosa. Exochorda grandiflora. Magnolta stellata (or Halliana) Philadelphus grandzflorus. Ulmus campestits, var. levis (or glabra). Lonicera fragrantissima. Ulmus M ontana. Quercus robur, var. filictfolia. Crategus crus-gallt, Atsculus flava. Acer rubrum. Acer pseudoplatanus, var. pur- purea. Aisculus pavia. Tamarix Indica. Crategus cordata, Aralia pentaphylla. Citrus trtfoltzata. Phaladelphus coronartus. Cercis Canadensis. Crategus oxyacantha. Carya porcina. Crategus punctata. Diospyros Virginiana. Carya alba. Quercus alba. Carya porcina. *Cut out while MS. was going through press. 98. 99. Ioo. Iol. TO2. LOR: 104. LOS. * TOO: 107. 108. 109. IIo. cp Ere Db3) iy Lap Tr6. Eto: r18. 119g. I20. E21. L22;, h23). 124. 25. 126. 127. 128. 129. ComMon NAME Bosc’s Red Ash. Panicled Dogwood. Double-flowered Euro- pean Raspberry. Cockspur Thorn American Chestnut. Japan Pagoda Tree. Norway Maple. Mockernut or Whiteheart Hickory. Sweet Gum or Bilsted. Fontanesia. Persian Lilac. Japan Quince. Cornelian Cherry. Shadbush, June Berry, or Service Berry. Osage Orange. Tree Box or Boxwood. Hop Tree or Shrubby Trefoil. Oak-leaved Hydrangea. Fringe Tree. Purple-leaved European Hazel. Standish’s Honeysuckle. American White or Gray Birch. Carolina Allspice or Sweet scented Strawberry Shrub. Double-flowered Bridal Wreath Spirza. American Bladder Nut. Mountain or Red-Berried Elder. Chinese Privet. Weigela (creamy white flowers, changing to rose pink). Tartarian Honeysuckle. Spanish Chestnut. Scentless Syringa. Gordon’s Syringa. BoTANICAL NAME Fraxinus pubescens, var. Bosct. Cornus paniculata, Rubus fruticosa, pleno. Crategus crus-gallt. Castanea sativa, var. Amert- cana. Sophora Japonica. Acer platanotdes. Carya tomentosa. var. flore Liquidambar styractflua. Fontanesia Fortunet. Syringa Persica. Cydonia Japonica. Cornus mascula. Amelanchter Canadensts. Maclura aurantiaca. Buxus sempervirens. Ptelea trifolzata. Hydrangea quercifoltia. Chionanthus Virginica. Corylus Avellana, var. pur- purea. Lonicera Standtsht11. Betula populifolia. Calycanthus floridus. Spirea prunifolia, var. flore leno. Staphylea trifolia. Sambucus racemosa. LigustrumIbota,var.Amurensis Duervilla grandtflora. Lonicera Tartarica. Castanea sativa. Philadelphus tnodorus Philadelphus Gordonianus, TREES AND SHRUBS OF CENTRAL PARK THE POND AND VICINITY. is. you enter the Park at. the, Plaza, Entrance, Fifth Avenue and Fifty-ninth Street, if you love color and the flash of crystal light over glossy leaves, you will stop to look at the lusty bushes of Califor- nian privet on your left. Their rich life-full deep green foliage flings off the light in white fire at every touch of the breeze, and, if you watch them sway, you will see the deep sea-green flash into lighter green, as they toss up the undersides of their leaves or perchance your eye will catch that ice-like glint of white sunlight just as they turn. One cannot speak too highly of the Californian privet. You can know that it is the Californian privet and not the common privet by its leaves, which are larger and oval, while the leaves of the common privet (Ligustrum vulgare) are eliptic - lanceolate. Besides, the Californian’s color is richer, glossier and more of a deep sea-green shade, while the common privet’s leaf has more of a bottle-green color. 10 If you should happen to pass these bushes in early summer (June), you will see their bloom-panicles of white flowers (mostly at the ends of the branches). The flowers are four petalled and their corollas are funnel form. They are to me, at least, very unpleas- ant in their odor—a sickish smell, which I wish to get away from as soon as I come near it. These flowers change into small black berries. This beautiful species of privet, though known gen- erally as Californian privet, really comes from China and Japan. It is a profuse bloomer and in its season is covered with its white flower clusters. In the autumn its leaves turn a beautiful cold bronze and their glossy, satin-like finish makes their effects truly exquisite. Not very far along a little by-path slips away at your left down an easy run of stone steps toward the Pond. The Californian privet makes a bower of it, shooting out its lances of straight branches like masses of soldiery at charge bayonets. As you go down the steps at your right, a little back from the steps, half hidden by the sur- rounding shrubbery, chiefly privet, you will see a small tree with a low-branching, rather squat trunk. Were the tree not so hidden, you would notice that its bark is of a brittle-looking gray. Its limbs are lumpy looking in spots and it carries a compound leaf made up of from five to nine lance-oblong leaflets. These leaflets often have their margins crumpled and curled. The tree is the manna tree or European flowering ash, and is used very extensively as an ornamental II tree in park planting. Why it is called manna tree does not appear so readily as its name “flowering ash.” This fits it well, for in late May or early June it fluffs its boughs most gorgeously with fringe-like masses of greenish-white flowers borne at the ends of the branches. These are very conspicuous and show all over the tree in great clusters. They change later into the samaras so characteristic of the ash family, very beautiful in autumn and early winter, when they cling to the branches in clusters of soft fawn-colored brown. The wind makes a delicate, crispy, tinkling music through them, which I, for one, love to hear on a brisk wintry day, with the snow sparkling all over in diamonds and the wind sweep- ing the blue sky clear of clouds. The tree gets the name Manna from the juice obtained by cutting into the bark. It is a native of Sicily and Southern Eu- rope. Close down by the left of the bottom step you will find a shrub which you will meet with frequently along the walks of this Park. It is the Rhodotypos kerrioides from Japan. You will know it by its rather sharply- pointed, ovate leaves, which are beautifully doubly serrate. Turn the leaves over and you will see that they have considerable pubescence, markedly covered with fine, silky hairs. This is especially noticeable when the leaves are young. It gets its generic name from two Greek words meaning rose and type, and the spe- cific kerrioides refers to its resemblance to the kerria. Indeed, its leaf looks very much like an enlarged edition of the kerrias. The Rhodotypos is conspicuous for its 12 branching habit, twisting its forks here, there, every- where. It flowers in May or June, and throws out large, solitary white blossoms at the ends of the branches. These flowers are succeeded by beautiful berries, rich, shining black-purple, in close clusters, four or five together. The berries are conspicuously surrounded by the very large and persistent calyx. Of all the berries which September loves to work over, I do not think there is one that compares with the finish and gloss of the beady gems that sparkle and toss in the sunshine of a bright autumn day on the branches of the Rhodotypos. The little arm of pathway leads out upon another Walk that branches right and left to enfold the sleep- ing waters of the Pond. As you come from the bowers of canopied green, at the junction of the Walk, on your right, is.a fine old American elm. On your letijis® white pine. Directly in front of you, as you look toward the water, about midway between you and the water, is, generally speaking, one of the loveliest of Park trees, I think. Tall, graceful, aspiring, with a conical, spire-like head which waves in easy motion to every breeze or bows majestically in dignified submis- sion to the harder winds, like a king to the will of a higher power, stands a bald cypress(Taxodium dis- tichum). You can recognize it by its form alone, which, as has been said, is tall, slender and spire-like. When in foliage, for the tree is deciduous, its delicate, feather-spray leaves, which are flat and two-ranked (distichum), give its foliage a very soft and fine effect. The bald cypress is especially lovely at two seasons of 13 the year—in spring, when it puts forth its leaves of tender green; in autumn, when its feathery foliage turns to the softest shades of old gold and brown or orange-brown, lovely beyond words against the deep blue of an October sky. Even in winter the bald cypress has a fine beauty. Being deciduous, it drops its leaves, like the larch, and I know of no finer, more delicate sight in winter than the exquisite effect of this tree’s wire-like framework of bare branches against the golden flame of a dying winter’s day. The tree grows to very large proportions in the southern swamps, especially in Florida. It gets its name, 7axodium, from two Greek words meaning yew- like, which refers to the leaves. In the autumn you may chance to see its fruit, little round cones, hanging like small green apples, amid the fast thinning leaves. These cones are very interesting things, and if you look sharply about the base of the tree you may find bits of them, for they split apart and fall in pieces. The scales are valvate, that is, join edge to edge, and if you find pieces enough you may be able to reconstruct the whole cone or seed ball. As we stand here facing the bald cypress, the Walk runs to the right and to the left about the Pond. We will take the left hand now, and go westward with it, along the southern border of the Pond and parallel with Fifty-ninth Street. Proceeding then westward, along the southern border of the Pond, a little beyond the bald cypress, you pass beneath the overhanging tresses of a fine old weeping willow. I suppose there is no one who does not know a weeping willow, so it 14 is not necessary to delay longer over its description. Its very form is enough to identify it. But in passing let me say that I, for one, think it is a tree of great beauty. Its long, sweeping vails of hanging green, rustling with low, sweet music on a fair summer day, suggests falling waters, and when the breeze turns its leaves, what rippling lights of soft gray fleck down the graceful tresses! Midway between this tree and the bald cypress just spoken of is another European flowering ash. Its leaf- lets run in sevens and nines, and it stands about oppo- site the weeping willow. On the left of the Walk is a small Austrian pine. You can know it at once by the bunching growth of its leaves, by its stocky, thick-set look. Its leaves grow two together in a bundle (fascicle) and are of a dark green color, very sharp- pointed (mucronate) and rather stiffish in texture, with quite a decided incurve. The dark green color of the Austrian’s leaves gives the tree, when well grown, a handsome, furry effect in winter. A little further on, you pass Japan quince, easily known, summer or winter, by its thorns. In early spring this bush is a torch of crimson-colored flowers, and all over the Park, then, you can see it glowing in crimson, pink and white. This bush is very near the fence, on vour right, and, opposite to it, on the left, is a fine bald cypress. A little further along, you pass, on your right, an- other noble old weeping willow, then bald cypress again, tall and stately. To the right of this bald cypress, on the point of land swelling out here, is a 15 fine mass of arrowwood. It has beautifully saw-cut leaves. This saw-cut notching is enough to identify it as the arrowwood (VV wbournum dentatum). In June it sends out its flowers, conspicuous, flat-topped clus- ters or cymes of small, five-lobed blossoms, and these change into small, one-seeded, shining blue berries (drupes) having flattened seeds, and are usually ripe in September. Passing on, westward, you go by good sized clumps of Forsythia viridissima. This is the golden bell, which is among the earliest of the shrubs to waken in the spring. With a profusion of wealth, it fairly foams gold, seeming to throw it forth with a lavish fullness, as if to make amends for the harsh paucity of winter. How lovely its bells hang along the arching sprays, or rather they seem more like stars, with their four-lobed corollas burning against the bank. It is a cold heart that cannot warm with the sight of Forsythia in spring. The viridissima carries a very distinguishing leaf. It is lance-oblong and of a beautiful deep, clean green. In the autumn it turns a rich, smooth bronze. The shrub takes its name Forsythia from W. A. Forsyth, an English botanist. Just beyond the Forsythia you will pass another weeping willow, and then you have come to the eastern edge of the platform that marks the resting place of those winged water sprites, the swan boats, the joy of the children in summer. How you love to see them flap off and sweep over the dreaming waters with the happy faced little ones. The silver spangled foam churns behind, and the great white birds float on and on. Would that we went with them into 16 that wonderland. which opens only for those childish eyes ! Directly opposite the easterly end of the Swan Boat House platform, on your left, as you face west, stands a fine bald cypress, and directly opposite the little house which bears the sign “Around the Lake, 5 cents,” an Austrian pine has struck its feet into the bank with a determined grip. Up the hill, beyond it, a few feet, is white pine again, with its characteristic level reaches of boughs that mark it so distinctively. Just beyond the Swan Boat House, on your right, as you continue westwards, six magnificent cottonwoods (Populus monilifera) rise up beside the water of the Pond. Tall and fair and majestic, they lift their heads on strong magnificent columns. If you love to see strength of hard-finished bark, come and stand before these noble specimens when the sunshine is playing over their rugged, ridged and deeply-fissured ashy- brown bark. Summer or winter, these trees will thrill you. What shadow play sleeps in their ridged bark! What showers of sunlight rain from their leaves! What majesty and nobility in their lofty trunks as they tower heavenward! They seem to say in their silent way, which is so eloquent: “Lo, here have we set our feet, lo, here we stay!’ I defy anyone to stand before these trees without a feeling of reverence and respect, with- out an uplifting of spirit. You cannot go away from them without having had a sense of ennoblement. All over the Park you meet them, foot set as if halted in some mighty march whose music has never yet been writ upon the staff, marching with widespread arms 17 and stately poise; each like some winged victory of Samothrace, to join the hosts of the primeval forests. The cottonwood has a very easily distinguishable leaf, one which you cannot mistake—large, broad, spade-shaped or heart-shaped(deltoid). The margin is serrate (notched) with cartilaginous teeth. The leaf stems (petioles) are noticeably flattened and often bear gland-like protuberances on the top. In early spring the tree flowers before the leaves expand, showing its bloom in long, drooping, conspicuous catkins, which develop later into seed pods that burst and let free the seeds, covered with cotton-like down which the winds drift hither and thither, dispersing the seeds in the way that Nature has ordered. The cotton-like down has given the name to the tree, and in fact to the whole populus family, which are often indiscrimi- nately called cottonwoods on this account. About half way between the third and fourth of these magnificent cottonwoods, you will find, on the left of the Walk, two very interesting trees. They are often called Varnish trees, and they belong to the bladder-nut family. They are from China, but have become quite naturalized here, especially in parks and on ornamental grounds. The botanical name of the tree is rather imposing, Kelreuteria paniculata, and is taken from Joseph Gottlieb Koelreuter, a German botanist. It is a fair sized tree growing from about twenty to forty feet in height, with a rather bunchy, round head, “all head and shoulders.” _You can know it easily by its long, alternate compound leaves, which are irregularly pinnate and made up of several thin, coarsely-toothed 18 leaflets. In summer this tree throws out conspicuous clusters of yellow flowers in dense terminal panicles, and these flowers are succeeded, in the autumn, by queer-looking bladdery pods which contain the seeds packed away in three-celled compartments at the base of the pod. These pods are of a light green hue at first, but change, as the fall comes on, to a bronze brown, and, as they are very conspicuous and hang on the tree late in winter, they are an easy means of iden- tification, for the rambler, at that time of year. On the right of the Walk, diagonally opposite these two Kelreuterias are three small bushes, not any of them doing over-well. They are Tartarian honey- suckle (the easterly bush), Arrowwood (the middle bush, with saw-cut leaves), and Spirea Van Houttet (the westerly bush). They are just over the fence, about midway to the water. As you continue along the Walk, westward, on the left, nearly opposite the fourth large cottonwood, you will see masses of ninebark, Physocarpus (or Spirea) opulifola, You can know them by their rather three lobed leaves and by the tattered shreds of bark that cling about their stems. Surely these ragged rem- nants seem to give some propriety to the name “nine- bark,’ for the bark certainly looks as if it had been peeled more than nine times. Almost under this hand- some cottonwood is a young Austrian pine, and there is another coming up by the cottonwood, near the lamp- post here. At this point the path throws off a short arm to the left, up a little run of steps toward the Sixth Avenue 19 Gate. As we turn to go up, we must note the pretty honeysuckle which garnishes the bank on our right. It is a brave old shrub, with rather ovate, glaucous leaves, and stands on the right of the lowest step, just as you start to go up. It is Lonicera caprifolium and, in early summer, bears yellow or yellowish-white flowers, whose tubes are very slender, rather bluish, but not gibbous. The flowers are in whorls, on the ends of the branches, which seem to run through the uppermost two or three pairs of leaves. This characteristic is termed by botan- ists, connate, that is, having the lower lobes united. If you look at this plant you will see that the two or three pairs of its uppermost leaves seem to be grown together. Its other leaves are mostly obovate, or slightly acute. They are also quite glaucous. This honeysuckle comes from Europe, and its very fragrant flowers certainly give it a welcome place with us. To the left of the lowest step, the Californian privet flings off the sunlight from its polished leaves in a cool gloss of silver. By the Californian privet here, nearer the left of the lowest steps, you will find Kerria Japonica, Japan rose, often, but incorrectly, termed Corchorus. As has been said above, the leaf of the Rhodotypos looks very much like a larger edition of the Kerria’s leaf, and you can here compare them easily, as the bush just above, by the left of the mid- dle steps, is Rhodotypos. The Kerria gets its name from a British botanist, Bellenden Ker. It blooms in late May or early summer with handsome orange- yellow flowers of five elliptical petals. Its leaves are thin, lance-ovate in shape, and doubly serrate. The 20 Kerria is also known as globe flower and Jew’s mal- low. On the right of the middle steps is ninebark, and just below it golden-leaved ninebark. Up the steps again, by the uppermost stair, you will find, on the right and on the left, as well, good specimens of the English maple (Acer campestre), also called English field maple. You can know them easily by their leaves, which are usually five-lobed with the lobes round-cut, making them look bluntish or squared. This cutting of the leaf gives it a cordate or heart-shaped appear- ance. The English maple is a hardy fellow and does well all over the Park. If you compare its leaves with those of the Norway maple, you will be impressed by their resemblance, on a smaller scale, to the leaves of that tree. They look like square-cut editions, smaller and trimmed, of the Norway maple’s leaves. The English maple blooms early in the spring and throws out pretty, erect, greenish corymbs of flowers which also resemble the blossoms of the Norway maple very closely, except that they haven’t that full, clear, tender light green which is the glory of the Norway’s bloom. The fruit, or keys, of the English maple spread very widely, and the ends tip up a little, giving a rather pert effect, which is very pleasing. At the top of the steps we are confronted by the Sixth Avenue Gate. We will not go out by it, but, turning to the right, will follow the trend of the path toward the north. Not very far along, the Walk throws off a path to the left. Let us follow it for a short space. In the point of its fork, on the right, is a beautiful clump of 21 the Deutzia gracilis, a lovely Japan shrub, about two feet high, with finely serrated, smooth, bright green ovate lanceolate leaves, which make it beautiful even when not in bloom. In bloom( May )it is a fairy sight, covered with its snow-white flowers—the very es- sence of purity. It is aptly called “Bridal Wreath.’ It gets its botanical name from Johann Deutz, an Am- sterdam botanist. As you go on westwards, nestling down beside the Deutzia is the lovable little Thunberg’s barberry, also a Japan shrub. You can know it at once by its fine, slender branches very generously beset with sharp spines, or by its very small obovate leaves, usually about half an inch long. In May its dainty sprays are set with very beautiful flowers, waxy-yellow with blood-red sepals, and petals softly brushed with crim- son, like the first flushes of rose before dawn. But if the Thunberg is lovely in bloom, it is, perhaps, more so in fruit. Come upon it some sparkling September morning, when the sunbeams are glistening over the bright, coral-red berries which hang so thickly through its now crimson-tinted leaves, and I think you will agree with me that the hardy little barberry is worthy of its frequent placing in our parks. Directly back of the Japan barberry is a large mass of Rhodotypos, and, further along, Kerria Japonica, and then Japan barberry again. Directly opposite to this bush, on the left, stands a very interesting tree. It is interesting because it is often mistaken for what it is not. It is the Paulownia wmperialis and is so similar in leaf and form of growth to the Catalpa, that it is constantly mis- taken for that tree, In form of growth it has a slight 22 resemblance to the Catalpa’s sprawl, but as it grows older it attains a far more lofty and dignified aspect than the Catalpa reaches. But in leaf the two trees are very similar, and this, I presume, is one reason why the two trees are so often confused with each other. However, though slightly similar in form and closely alike in leaf, they are widey different in flower, fruit and bark. The Catalpa belongs to the Bignoniacee or Bignonia family, while the Paulownia belongs to the Scrophulariacee or Figwort family. The bark of the Paulownia is very much like that of the Ailanthus, dusky, often smoky gray, with fine, silvery flashings of streaks through the gray. Its leaf is large, some- times a foot long, and generally quite hairy on the underside. Early in the spring this tree, if the win- ter has not been too severe, for its buds frost kill very easily, breaks forth into lovely bloom, sending out beautiful, violet-colored, heavily-fragrant flowers of long funnel form, with flaring corolla lobes. In winter it is a very interesting tree, because of its conspicuous fruit and bud clusters of next spring’s flowers. They are easily seen on the upper branches of the tree, clearly and distinctly against the sky, resembling bunches of grapes with the grapes picked off. The fruit of the tree is a dry egg-shaped capsule about an inch and a half long, strongly pointed, and densely packed with the flat-winged brown seeds. Proceeding westwards again, just beyond the Japan barberry, you come upon Rhodotypos, and a little back of it and beyond, toward the northwest, stands a fine young, fern-leaved beech of the European variety. ao You can easily know this tree by its beautifully-cut leaves, which make you think of ferns the moment you see them. You can know it in winter by its light gray, smooth bark, and by its long-pointed, brownish, cigar-shaped buds. These long-pointed, cigar-like buds are the sure winter mark of the beech. They are distinctive of the beech alone, and you can be posi- tive of the tree’s identity from their testimony alone. Nearer the Walk again, as you go on, growing low down, on your right, with closely-clumped, bayonet-like leaves, is the Yucca filamentosa, or Adam’s needle. In midsummer it sends up a long, straight shaft several feet high from its midst and from the top of this shaft or scape the plant throws out its handsome bloom, large, showy, white flowers, delicately tinted with green on the outside. It belongs to the lily family, and is some- times called palm lily. Another common name for it is silk grass, though it is probably more generally known by the name “Adam’s Needle.” Back of the Adam’s Needle you will see a handsome evergreen. Its fine feather-spray of leaves, so distinctly plume- like in appearance, with the rather conical or pyramidal form of the conifer, will easily identify it for you. It is a Chamecyparis (ground cypress) or a Retinospora (that is, it has a resin sac in its seed) of the variety plumosa. For fineness of effect among the Japan arbor vite, the foliage of the plumosa (with its golden- leaved variety aurea) is surpassingly beautiful. Close by the Walk, as you go, at your right still, low down and growing about a foot high, you will see bushes with very willow-like looking leaves. These 24 are herbaceous plants, termed Amsonia salicifolia or willow-leaved Amsonia. They get their name from Charles Amson. The Amsonia belongs to the dogbane family. It bears very pretty sky-blue, star-like flowers with salver-shaped corollas in May; dies down to the ground in winter, and comes up again from the roots in spring. A little further along you will see a healthy young American hornbeam, with the birch-like leaves which are so characteristic of the hornbeam. Further on, you come to another good clump of Am- sonia, and beyond it Reeve’s spirea, with lance-oblong leaves, often quite distinctly three-pointed. This Spirza bears very showy white flowers in June, in large corymbs. Growing in with it is a young English maple. Continuing along, you meet, still on your right, a little back from the Walk, by the rocks, a broad-spread- ing, brown-barked tree with smooth, shining light- green leaves, which are variously shaped, some mitten- like with the thumb on one side or the other, or both sides at once, some without the thumb at all. These mitten-shaped leaves tell you at once that it is a mul- berry, and its smooth (upper side), shining leaves tell you it is the white mulberry. You cannot mistake this tree, for it stands directly opposite a lamp-post which stares boldly upon it from the other (your left) side of the Walk. Directly under this handsome mul- berry are great masses of the Japan variety of hedge bind-weed, Polygonum cuspidatum or Polygonum Ste- boldi, with splendid, broad, oval-oblong stalked leaves which come to an acute point at the tip. This bushy ce ON “1 dey (D1dIU DINJIG) HOMIG MOVIG ‘HONIG YAATY “HOUIG day 25 perennial flings itself right and left in glorious abandon, arching its striped stems, beautifully tinged with crim- son here, there, everywhere, and if you happen to pass it in late August you will surely have to stop to look at the fine feather-sprays of its delicate flowers which float out and droop in pretty fluffy little panicles from four to six inches long, from the axils of the leaves. Close by the Walk again, at your right, nestling very near the fence, is Deutzia gracilis again, and beyond it syringa (Philadelphus grandiflorus). Beyond the lamp-post, you pass, on the left, a very interesting birch tree, the red or river birch, often called also the black birch. You will know it easily by its shaggy-looking bark, especially tattered and ragged on the upper parts of the tree. In other portions of the Park you will find this tree exceedingly shaggy, with its tattered ends curled back, looking very much like the bark of the yellow birch. The general tone color of the red birch’s bark is slaty-gray with a beautiful crim- son flush through it. This reddish-brown tinge almost identifies the tree in itself. If you have any doubts about it, though, look at its leaves. They are dis- tinctly different from any other birch in the Park, being decidedly rhombic ovate, acute at both top and bottom, and very noticeably double serrate. If you love to look at rough bark, the red birch, in its glory, will satisfy your eye completely. For my part, I love to come upon its shaggy beauty. As you go on westwards, not very far from the red birch, you will find, on your left, a good specimen of the sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus). ‘This tree has 20 a leaf which somewhat resembles the leaf of the Amer- ican buttonwood, often called sycamore, hence the name of sycamore maple. The botanical name, pseudo pla- tanus, means false-platanus, platanus being the generic botanical name of the buttonwood. Why a thing which is not something else should be called false because it is not that thing, is one of the queer things of botanical nomenclature. Why could not some name meaning resembling be chosen to indicate such similarity? The leaves of the sycamore maple are rather thick, gener- ally five-lobed, downy on the undersides, and with leaf stems or petioles long and distinctly reddish. In the spring, after the leaves have appeared on the tree, it flowers in long, conspicuous pendulous racemes which make you think of little hanging green baskets, such as the children make with burs. The flowers change to crowded clusters of winged seeds of keys, or samaras, as the botanists call them. The wings of these seeds are almost at right angles with each other, and the keys hang on the tree long after the leaves have fallen, often remaining on until well into the winter, and are one of the means of easily knowing the tree at that season of the year. The Walk bends around here to the north- ward, and as you follow its easy sweep, you pass up the hill a little, on the right, a black cherry, whose very rough bark is almost enough to identify it. But if that is not sufficient for you, look amid its lustrous green leaves for the raceme that in June showed so conspicu- ously white and later held little clusters of small, crim- son-purple berries. A few feet further on, along this Walk, you come to a lamp-post on your right, and on 27 your left to a left-hand branch of this Walk. Just back of the lamp-post is a fine, old scarlet oak, with deeply- cut, bristle-tipped leaves. On the very point of the left hand border, where the Walk throws off its branch to run on about parallel with Fifty-ninth Street, you will find a Scotch elm (Ulmus Montana). We will not continue further on this Walk, but will go back now to the spot where we turned off by the Paulownia below, to the Walk leading northerly from the Sixth Avenue Gate. We will follow this Walk as it leads on northerly from the fork by the Deutzia gracilis and the Paulownia. Following the path in its northerly course past large masses of rock on either hand, over which trailing vines fall in lovely cascades of green, joyous sights for city eyes on coming from the streets, hot and baking, on a midsummer day. Passing by these, you come on the right, about midway between the fourth and fifth forkings of the Walk, from the Sixth Avenue Entrance, to a good well-grown Austrian pine. Its stocky, chunky form, with its long, wire-like needles, two in a sheath or bundle, will mark it for you. A little down the slope of the hill from it, toward the right, wave the feathery plumes of the beau- tiful tamarisk (Tamarix Gallica). Every breeze sways and bends its lovely sprays of feathery green as if it loved them, and the whole shrub seems alive with the very quintessence of joy. Its fineness and grace and its soft, tender, delicate green must surely stir you like a fine poem or lulling of exquisite music. Not far from the Tamarix, a little back toward Sixth Avenue, you will find the dwarf mountain sumac (Rhus copallina), 28 which you can know very easily by its glossy entire leaflets and by the distinct wing along the edge of the leaf stem, between each pair of leaflets. This sumac in autumn time turns a cool crimson, like the brilliant scarlet of the staghorn or the smooth sumac, but all the richer in effect, from its subdued fire. Its glossy leaves give a dark, lustrous glow to the whole mass, which seems to suggest that the shrub is just about to break out into full flame. Proceeding onward, the next fork of the Walk (the sixth from the Sixth Avenue Gate northwards) brings you to some handsome honey locusts, buckthorn, English hawthorn and bristly locust. You can find them easily. One honey locust stands in the very angle of the Walk’s fork. It has very dark (almost black) bark, smoothish, save where it is broken» by rather clearly-cut ridges. The trunk and branches fairly sprout thorns—strong, fierce-looking things with a kind of three-tined growth which has been sufficient to give the tree one of its names tricanthos (three- thorned). Its genus name, Gleditschia, is from Gled- itsch, a German botanist. This tree exhibits a strange combination of strength and delicacy, strength in its armed trunk, delicacy in its exquisite sprays of com- pound leaves, made up of many small leaflets. The honey locust is of the great pulse family, as is also the locust, and its leaves look like finer, smaller editions of the locust’s leaf, having from ten to twenty-four small pinnate leaflets. The honey locust has very conspic- uous fruit, especially noticeable in late autumn and winter, long strap-shaped pods often curled and twisted, at first of a striking orange-yellow, later of a russet 29 reddish-brown. These pods hold the small, oval, bean- like seeds. Surely the honey locust is a stately tree with its rich, blackish bark, a tower of strength, with its fine, soft, light green leaves fluttering in exquisite grace at every breath of stirring air. It is a tall tree, and as the years build it up to the full of its majestic proportions, it spreads and gains a broad, flat head, which is very distinctive, marking the tree afar off. At the right of the right hand branch of this fork, you will find two more of these handsome trees, the second is further along by the path side. The left branch of this fork carries you on beside a very pretty little English hawthorn, which stands just north of the honey locust in the angle of the fork. You can tell the English hawthorn by its long thorns, by its simple (that is, not compound) leaves, which are alternate on the branch, smooth, noticeably cut-lobed and with a wedge-shaped base. The fruit of the English hawthorn is a small, coral-red berry about one-third of an inch in diameter, and hangs in clusters on the tree late into the winter. Beyond the English hawthorn you will find, still close by the right hand border of this left hand fork of the Walk, common buckthorn, Rhamnus cathartica. By the careless eye, its leaves are mistaken for those of the flowering dogwood or the Cornelian cherry, but if you will look at them closely you will see that though they do somewhat resemble the leaves of these varieties of Cornus, they are minutely serrate, while those of the Cornus are entire and curved-veined (not feather- veined like the buckthorn). Again, the buckthorn’s 30 leaves are lustrous and silky of texture, especially on the upper sides. You can further distinguish the buckthorn by the little fine thorns (almost a prickle) at the ends of the branchlets. The buckthorn’s leaves are generally arranged alternately on the branch, but often many of them are opposite. The flowers of this shrub are small, greenish, four-parted, scarcely notice- able, in clusters in the axils of the leaves and they are succeeded by small green (later, black) berries, about a third of an inch in diameter, which contain from two to four seeds. The berries are ripe about September. Beyond the buckthorn you come to honey locust again, and, if you follow this left branch of the fork to where it meets the Walk by the Drive, you will find, all frouzled over the rocks, on the right, near the junction, tangled in delightful abandon, great masses of the bristly locust, which you will have no difficulty in know- ing by its very bristly branches. The bushes bear lovely pink flowers in June, and the fruit which suc- ceeds them lives up to the name Dristly. Let us now come back to the honey locust, which, as stated above, stands exactly in the northern angle of the fork we have just been considering, and let us fol- low its right hand branch as it curves gently around to the eastward to the Stone Bridge over the Pond. A lamp-post stands at its next junction, and just beyond it, as you go east, on your left, is a sycamore maple, and opposite to it, on the right, is a fine old American elm. Continuing along a little stretch here, you pass on your left, in a beautiful open cluster, a graceful group of three purple beeches. These are of the Euro- HEART-LEAVED ALDER (Alnus cordifolia) Map a. No: 50. 31 pean variety, as you can distinguish by their entire, ciliate or hairy margins, so different from the strongly- toothed leaves of our native beech. The leaves of these trees come out a deep dark crimson purple in the spring and hold that color late into the summer. Their bark is a fine light gray, and the swing of their branches is noticeably horizontal from rather short, squatty trunks. They are beautiful trees and well worth your careful consideration. As you follow the path along, it bends gently here to the southeast, and about midway down the slope of the hillside, on your left, you will see a very interesting tree. It is the heart- leaved alder, Alnus cordifolia, with dark green, heart- shaped leaves which have a lustrous shine through their rich green. You cannot mistake the tree, for it is hung full of its telltale “cones,” the seed receptacles of the alder. The tree is a native of southern Europe and flowers early in March or April before its leaves ~ come out. Its flowers are greenish-brown. In the next bend of the Walk, on your left, you will have to stop surely to look at the handsome masses of the smooth sumac which fling out scarlet and orange in such beautiful blendings in autumn. ‘The easiest way to tell a smooth sumac from its twin brother, the staghorn (for the leaves are very much alike) is to look at the branches. The branches of the smooth sumac are beautifully smooth, a clean, clear pinkish-red or magenta-crimson, overlaid with the loveliest of lilac bloom. The branches of the staghorn sumac are as different as can be—covered with a sticky pubes- cence. This pubescence, when the leaves of the bush 32 are off, gives the branches a look which so closely resembles the horns of a young stag, that the bush has been named staghorn sumac, from that feature alone. The clump here, as you see, has its end branches smooth and without hairs. Opposite this clump, on the right of the path, stands a good-sized American hornbeam or water-beech. The hornbeam has simple, alternate leaves which are straight veined, like the beech and the chestnut. From here the path bends to the east and crosses a vine-hung Stone Bridge, of the old Roman type, which spans the waters of the Pond. As you go on, you pass, on your left, a good cluster of bald cypresses, tall and spire-like. About opposite the most easterly of these bald cypresses, close by the Walk, you will find black haw (Viburnum prunifolium) a small tree with simple, opposite leaves very finely serrated and with little flanges (or wings) along the edges of the leaf-stems (petioles). In early May or June it turns into a cloud of white bloom—large, con- spicuous, flat-topped clusters of flowers on the ends of the branches. These change into small berries, blue- black and sweet when ripe in September. But long before they are ripe you can see the berries hanging in green clusters on the tree. With the first biting nip of frost they flush softly to a lovely pinkish-blue and then, as they ripen, to blue-black. As you approach the Stone Bridge you pass many things of interest; on your right, Ailanthus (nearly opposite the lamp-post on the left of the Walk) then Weigela, then staghorn sumac (note its pubescent terminal branches), then pouring over the stone wall ‘INOg JH], oo here in fountain-like spray of green, with sweeping branches is the lovely Lyciuwm barbarum, matrimony vine or box thorn, sending out in summer its beautiful bell-shaped pale blue flowers. Beyond the Lycium is Van Houtte’s spirea, then Lombardy poplar with branches hugged close to the main trunk, and close by the Bridge, another bush of the beautiful Spirea Van Houttei. On the left of the Walk, just beyond the lamp-post, and about opposite the Weigela, a great puff of feathery green tells of another Tamarix gallica. Across the Bridge you pass on the right, nestling quite near the corner, a fine young cockspur thorn, with glossy, dark green, shining, wedge obovate leaves. Rising from the masses of shrubbery here, a good sized laurel-leaved willow flashes the light in showers of crystal from its laurel-like eaves. Beyond is more staghorn sumac, then ninebark, Forsythia viridissima, Rhodotypos, and Lonicera fragantissima, the last on the point where the Walk forks. On the left you passed Californian privet, Lombardy poplar, syringa (Phil- adelphus grandiflorus), Judas tree, with large. heart- shaped leaves, golden-leaved ninebark, fine masses of syringa (opposite the staghorn sumac), Judas tree again close by a handsome cranberry bush, then ninebark, Philadelphus grandiflorus and Spirea Van Houttei on the point of the left hand fork of the Walk. This fork sends out two branches, one to the right creeps down around the Pond and ultimately meets the path that comes down the steps by the Plaza En- trance, where we started in. The left fork runs off in a northeasterly direction to the Drive and follows 34 along beside it toward the Mall. Let us follow the right fork for awhile and then take the left from this point. Not quite half way to the next fork (the one that slips away under an Arch to the Arsenal) you will see, on your right, as you go southerly, a fine, healthy red oak. You can know it by its bristle-tipped, oval or oblong leaves. The leaves are cut deeply into pin- natified lobes. The red oak’s buds are distinctive, too, clean cut and glossy red in winter. Diagonally across from it, well up on the bank, with broad, outcast arms and a noble trunk, stands a flourishing English oak. It stands in the bend of the left hand border of the Walk, and you can tell it at once by its broadly oval leaves slightly lobed and distinctly eared at the base, about the leaf stem, where they seem about to clasp the petiole. Its acorn is certainly beautiful, a polished olive-green, over an inch long and about a third en- closed in a clean, hemispherical cup. Directly oppo- site the path leading under the Arch here is a fine mass of the staghorn sumac, filling in the bank between the Walk and the water. It is a well-grown mass, with branching antlers of sweeping fronds that blaze a glory of crimson and scarlet and gold in the autumn. Here, before we continue southwards, let us turn off to the left, and pass through the Arch which leads the path northeasterly from the handsome clump of sumac, under the Drive, towards the Arsenal. On going through the Arch, you will come on your left, after passing a fine bush of the sweet syringa, to a very interesting shrub with dark-green leaves HEART-LEAVED ALDER (Alnus cordifolia) (Looking north). Map 1. No. 50. 7 er i a , a j Pulie Tree. . Japonicum or Japan Vi- burnum. . Honey Locust. . Camperdown Elm. _ American White Ash. . Siberian Pea Tree. BoTANICAL NAME Quercus cerris. Juglans nigra. Catanea sativa, var. Amert- cana. Fagus sylvatica. Taxodium distichum. Quercus macrocarpa. Fagus ferruginea. Platanus Orientalis. Quercus palustris. Fagus sylvatica, var. pendula. Quercus bicolor. Carya alba. 4zsculus hippocastanum. Ulmus Montana. Acer rubrum. Cornus florida. Pinus strobus. Tilia Europea. Nyssa sylvatica. Acer dasycarpum. Quercus coccinea. Ulmus parvifolia (or Siberica.) Tilia Americana. Fagus sylvatica, var. atropur- purea. Tilia Europea, var. argentea pendula. Liriodendron tuliptfera. Viburnum tomentosum. Gleditschia triacanthos. Ulmus Montana, var. Camper- downti pendula. Fraxinus Americana. Caragana arborescens. IOI CoMMON NAME . European Ash. . Althza or Rose of Sharon. . Cherry Birch, Sweet Birch or Black Birch. . Black Alder or Common Winterberry. . American or White Elm. . Weeping European Ash. . White Mulberry. . Hardy or Panicled Hy- drangea. . Wild Red Osier. . Cut-leaved Weeping Eu- ropean White Birch. . Japan Pagoda Tree. . Ginkgo Tree or Maiden- hair Tree. te Tree or Shrubby Te foil. . Gordon’s Mock Orange or Syringa. . Witch Hazel. . Indian Bean Tree or Southern Catalpa. . Sassafras. . White Oak. . English Oak. (This oak was planted, 1861, by the present King of England.) . Kentucky Coffee Tree. . Yellow Birch. . Reeve’s or Lance-leaved Spireza. . Bridal Wreath Spirza. . Morrow’s Honeysuckle. . European Red Osier. . Weigela. . European Hazel. . Alternate-leaved Dog- wood. BoTaNIcaAL NAME Fraxinus excelstor. Hibiscus Syrtacus. Betula lenta. Ilex verticillata. Ulmus Americana. Fraxinus excelsior, var. pen- dula. Morus alba. Hydrangea paniculata, grandzflora. Cornus stolonifera. Betula alba, var. lacintata. Sophora Japonica. Salisburia adianttfolia. Ptelea trifolzata. Philadephus Gordonianus. Hamamelis Virginiana. Catalpa bignontoides. Sassafras officinale. Quercus alba. Quercus robur. Gymnocladus Canadensis. Betula lutea. Spirea Reevesiana. Spirea prunifolia. Lonticera Morrowt. Cornus sanguinea. Diervilla rosea. Corylus Avellana. Cornus alternifolta. pendula 102 ComMMON NAME BoTANICAL NAME . Shrub Yellowroot. X anthorrhiza apitfolsa. . Hundred-leaved, Pro- Rosacentifolia. vence, or Cabbage Rose. . Fringe Tree. Chionanthus. . Sweetbrier. Rosa rubignosa. . Fortune’s White Spirea. Spireacallosa, var. alba. . Many-flowered Rose. Rosa multsflora. . Clump of roses; mostly Rosa setigera and Rosa rubig- Prairie Rose and Sweet- = =_nosa. brier. . Withe Rod. Viburnum cassinoides. . American Strawberry Euonymus Amertcanus. Bush. . Cotoneaster, Cotoneaster frigida, el. THE MALL AND VICINITY. In all the Park the noblest conception of the land- scape architect has been achieved in the Mall. It is superb. The magnificent stretch of arched vistas made by the four rows of grand old elms (mostly American ) gives the impression of some vast open-air cathedral. As you stand at the extreme south end this feeling is aroused with impressive effect. From this point you get the full sweep of the majestic lines of trees, and it is impossible not to feel their dignity and grandeur. The broad, open space fills you with its stateliness, and the splendid trees lift their Gothic arches with a serene nobility which both hushes and exalts the soul. If anyone can walk down this majestic arcade without a feeling of reverence, that person is wanting in any appreciation of the message which trees silently ex- press to man. I know not when I like this temple best. It is noble and majestic at all times, be it in those lovely June days, when the leaves move as with the sounds of a thousand hushed organs whose echoes whisper and whisper and whisper with that indescrib- ably cool refreshment which the ear loves to hold and dwell upon; or be it in autumn, when the loosed winds descend upon the broad boughs and drive the flying gold from their branches, sounding the while the mighty 104 thunder of its diapason through the noble aisles, or in winter, when the rugged masonry of its architecture is at its best, column and arch in all the glory of their naked strength and symmetry. Come here after the snowstorm has wrought its wonderwork of white along the silent aisles and behold in equal silence the en- chantment that is everywhere. The vast vault is groined with a lacework of tracery and the col- umned trees hold aloft this fairy roof on arches of purest marble. No other trees than these elms could have given the marvelous effect of aisle and arch which is so magnificent in lift and in perspective, in aspiration and in suggestion. The cosy nooks of the Park appeal to you in their ways and draw you lovy- ingly to their confines, but this open spot uplifts you as the music of the organ, as the sound of the sea. Even in its silence there is a majesty of repose. Come here after the driving sleet of the midwinter ice storm has hammered its flashing mail over these staunch old trees; when the sun sends a glory over their crystal arches and fills the flashing vaults with flames of the ruby, the topaz, the amethyst and the diamond, while the keen air crackles and snaps with the yearn- ing of the great boughs as they rock and sway with the wind. Come here then and walk adown this sylvan abbey with the wonder of enchantment in thy heart. Surely this place should be the sanctuary of high aspira- tions and noble communings. No mean nor petty thoughts should here walk with the soul. The grand old trees at every step say, “The groves were God’s first temples,” and from their silent eloquence comes 105 an ennobling and uplifting of the spirit. Let those who walk here forget the pomp and splendor of fashion and display and in humility lose themselves in the contemplation of the enduring beauty of the Creator’s handiwork in noble and stately trees. But let us begin our ramble. We will start with the Walk at the right of the Mall itself, leading off imo shakespeare’ s Statue. Near its first fork; on your left, you will find several well grown hackberries, called also sugarberry trees or nettle trees. You can identify them by the warty ridges and rough, knotty- looking excrescences on their trunks, especially marked about the part nearest the ground. The hackberry has also a peculiar habit of bunching its smaller branch- lets in very conspicuous and odd-looking masses which at once suggest the presence of a bird’s nest in the tree. This is very noticeable in autumn and winter. But if these are not enough to identify it, its long, pointed, egg-shaped, rather lop-sided leaves set alter- nately on the branch will no doubt fix it for you, or perhaps you may see the small, roundish berries swing- ing singly on stems about an inch long, from the axils of the leaves. These berries, through the summer, are of a greenish-brown, but turn to purple in September, when they are ripe. They are about a quarter of an inch in diameter. The hackberry blooms early in May, very inconspicuously, in small, yellowish-green flowers which you scarcely notice, unless looking for them. The tree belongs to the nettle family. Just east of the hackberries, in the bend of the left fork here, is spicebush, and a little beyond it Judas 106 tree, with heart-shaped leaves. At this point we will now take the right fork of the Walk and follow it east- ward. As we turn to do so, on our left is a fringe tree, with an osage orange near the Arch, and back of both another hackberry. The fringe tree you can know by its oval, entire leaves, which somewhat re- semble the leaves of the magnolia. If it is in bloom, you will know it at once by its fringe-like flowers. These are four-parted, white, and, in June, cover the shrub with snow-white masses of bloom. These flow- ers are succeeded by purple berries. The osage orange is easily known by the spines in the axils of the leaves. Back of the fringe tree, north of it, is English haw- thorn, identified by its thorns and cut-lobed leaves, wedge-shaped at the base. On the right of the Walk are Chinese wistaria and mock orange or sweet syringa. Passing through the Arch here, you meet, on the left, flowering dogwood, with a cluster of young com- mon locusts just beyond. On your right, near the Arch, just as you come out from its shadow, is a fine old sycamore maple. A little beyond, the path forks again. We take the right branch, passing, on our left, a hemlock, then a shadbush, the latter about in the bend of the Walk. The shadbush is easily known by its peculiarly-veined bark, steel-gray shot over with darker, vein-like lines. Diagonally across from the shadbush, in the right of the Walk, one above and the other below, are Lonicera fragrantissima and sweet gum. The honeysuckle is a bush and has cusp-tipped leaves; the sweet gum is a tall tree with star-shaped leaves. A little further on you come to an Arbor. 107 Directly back of it is a shagbark hickory with com- pound leaves of five leaflets and a noticeably shaggy bark. Opposite the westerly end of the Arbor, across the Walk, is American hornbeam, and a little southeast of the hornbeam, up the slope of the hillside, is the small-fruited hickory, a variety of pignut hickory. Continuing along the Walk from the Arbor, you pass, on your left, black cherry, with rough, scaly bark, and, very near the next fork of the path, 7arus cuspidata, English yew, Taxus cuspidata and Nord- mann’s silver fir. The fir stands nearly in the point of the fork, and has light silver-gray bark and linear leaves, dark glossy-green on the upper sides, but marked on the lower by silvery lines. The leaves are about an inch long and are distinctly dentate (toothed) at the tip. The boughs have a flattish look, due to the horizontal growth of the branches and also to incurv- ing of the leaves. As you continue, southerly now, about opposite the donkey tent, you will see, on your right, three trees which look, at first glance, very much like Austrian pines. They are not Austrian, but Corsican pines, slender-leaved varieties of the Austriaca. Up the hill, back of these, is a cluster of English oaks, among them a fastigate form, known as pyramid oak, with branches which grow up close beside the main trunk of the tree like a Lombardy poplar. The English oaks you can know by their round-lobed leaves distinctly eared at the base. In between the group of English oaks and the most southerly of the Corsican pines, fine and feathery, with soft, waving, plume-like sprays of foli- 108 age, a veritable green mist, stands a good specimen of the Tamarix Gallica, or French tamarisk, which blooms from May to October in spike-like panicles or small pinkish or reddish flowers. The leaves of the shrub are very small, set alternately on the branch in a man- ner which botanists term “clasping.” Further along the Walk, not far from the Arch which leads out upon the vicinity of the Arsenal, you will see, on your right, a lumpy-barked tree with markings which make you think of “eyebrows.” If you come upon this tree in winter its long-pointed, furry buds will tell you it is of the Magnolia family, and when its leaves are out, their umbrella-like way of hanging about the ends of the branches will give you the cue to the tree’s exact identity—Magnolia umbrella. Its leaves are very large, often nearly two feet long and from four to eight inches wide. They are entire and pointed at either end. The flowers of the tree appear late in May, in large creamy- white blossoms at the ends of the branches. The tree has a somewhat catalpa-like sprawl of branching which is quite distinctive. Its bark is of a dull gray and re- minds you, in a way, of the beech tree’s color, but of course is far more humpy and uneven. In September the umbrella tree begins to show its fruit clusters very conspicuously through its leaves, magenta-hued husks which break open and let fall, from each little hole, seeds of the richest coral, on fairy threads of silk. As you came along this way you passed, on your left, about opposite the most southerly of the Corsican pines, sycamore maple, and back of the donkey tent, well up the slope, to the east, two very handsome red oaks 109 standing close together. If you love the oaks, study their winter buds. Their story is marvelously enter- taining. The buds of the red oak are of a smooth, clean crimson, far different from the dirty-looking, hairy buds of the scarlet oak. Let us now come back and take the fork of the Walk which runs northerly from the donkey tent. In the point of the fork, on your left, is the Nordmann’s fir and several English yews clustered about it. As you come near the next branching of the Walk, there is a fine cluster of Turkey oaks out on your left. Note the thick, heavy ridges of their blackish bark. About op- posite these, on the right of the Walk, is a pear tree, and, just back of it, some sassafrass. At the next fork, which has three tines, on your left, is a stately cluster of black walnuts. In between the third and middle branches of the Walk’s fork are two well-grown Hale- sias or silver bell trees. If you wonder where they got that name, come and gaze upon them in the spring (May). Then they cover their branches with the loveliest of fairy-white bells. Their purity fills you with a silent joy. The long styles of the pistils hang down below the corollas like tiny little clappers and give the flowers a veritable bell-like look. If you stand still and gaze upon them in sympathetic love, you can hear their music—a music which no instrument ever made by man can even faintly echo. Such is the silver bell in May! Its branches ring with the silent chimes of the eternal beauty of purity and perfection fresh from the hand of God. The halesia’s fruit is an easy key to its identification, a peculiar-looking, four-winged _ IIo affair, which is very conspicuous on the tree as autumn draws near. This four-winged nut has given the tree its botanical name tetraptera, from two Greek words, tetra (four) and ptera (wings). The halesia’s bark is also conspicuously marked with dull, reddish-yellow fissures or lines, which make it easily recognizable in winter. Following the westerly branch of the Walk north- wards, at the point of the west fork, on your left, is osage orange. This is a double fork with an open space between the two. At the upper branching, one shoot runs off to the west to meet the Drive, the other to the east, to come out by the Morse Statue, near the Seventy-second Street Gate. Let us take the easterly. As we start off, we cannot pass without a word of comment, the fine gathering of stately bald cypresses which fill the arm of the Walk on our right. Not far from the next offshoot of path is shagbark hickory, easily known by its bark which well bears out its name. Following along, on your left, are swamp white oak and halesia. Directly west of the halesia is a fine old white mulberry with glossy green leaves, and directly west of this mulberry stands another shagbark hickory. The shagbark’s leaves are made up of five leaflets with the lower pair much smaller than the upper. Continuing on, now northerly, we come to three dogwoods, almost in line with each other, with a fine old white pine west of the third tree. West of this white pine is a fair specimen of the yellow birch. You can know it by its rough, shredded bark, of a peculiar sheeny gray. In front of the dogwood, by the Walk, Ls stands Scotch elm. Here we are opposite a little arm of Walk which has run in from near Sixty-ninth Street. There are several good specimens of Scotch elm gathered here, and you can know them by the side points near the ends of their leaves. Continuing, northwards, near the place where the Walk widens out around a wooden platform through the centre of which an aged pin oak still lives on, flut- tering a few leaves from its lopped branches, you will find, on your right, Turkey oak, and then two horse- chestnuts on your left. About opposite the Turkey oak is European linden, and diagonally northwest of it is sour gum or tupelo. The Walk narrows beyond the pin oak in the plat- form, and as you follow it there is a sturdy European beech on the right, with a couple of Scotch elms just beyond. Opposite these, on the left of the Walk, are two silver maples. Beyond, standing in a stalwart cluster, are two stately scarlet oaks. These are fine types, healthy in every way. As you come out upon the Drive Walk, near the Morse Statue, two well grown pin oaks fling their boughs over you. You may some- times confuse a pin oak with a scarlet oak, but one sure way to distinguish them is by their leaf stems— the pin oak’s is always slender and yellowish; the scarlet is swollen at base, stout, and often tinged with red. We will turn to the left here and follow the Drive Walk back to the west and south. Just beyond the pin oak is an elm which will interest you. Look at its tiny leaves, This is the Ulmus parvifolia, from Si- 112 beria. It has a peculiar trick of blooming in September or October. Its foliage is certainly exquisitely beauti- ful. Near the place where the Walk begins to bend southerly is American basswood, with large, heart- shaped leaves. Southeast of the lamp, just beyond, are three handsome beeches. The northerly one is American, the easterly is European, and the westerly is a purple-leaved European. ‘This is a good place to note the differences of leaf in the European and native beech—the tooth leaves of the latter and the entire, hairy-margined leaves of the former. Where the Walk crosses from the Casino you will find an old weep- ing European silver linden letting fall its pendulous boughs, making noble shade in summer. Following the path on southwards, about opposite the next lamp, east of it, is swamp white oak. Still keeping to the south, the path meets another Drive-crossing and then bends swiftly away from it to the southeast. On your left, close to the Walk, is another pin oak with steel- gray bark streaked with black. On your right, about due west of this pin oak, midway between Walk and Drive, is a weeping European beech. You cannot mis- take its weeping form. It looks like a fountain of fall- ing green in summer; in winter, like some mighty harp on which a jotun might play the war song of the winds. A little northeast of the pin oak is another Turkey oak, with thick, heavily-ridged, rough, black bark, and south of this a pin oak again, with bristle- tipped leaves. Continuing along the Walk, you pass, close by the path, Oriental plane tree with its spotted bark, then Va, ON ce Cui (DIN4IGIS 40 DYOfIADg SNM) WI NVIMAIIS Lee ns eae! Fee te } a ee LEA ta om BF oh 113 sycamore maple with its five-lobed leaves, and then osage orange. This osage orange is one of the oldest in the Park. Back of the osage orange are several beeches of the native type. Opposite the osage orange, on the right of the Walk, is American hornbeam, and out beyond it, almost in line with the hornbeam, is a fine old bur or mossy-cup oak. This tree grows close beside a good sized rock. The rock, by the way, is beautifully covered with Chinese wistaria. The bur oak is a tall tree with light gray, scaly bark, so coarsely furrowed as often to seem scaly. You can pick it out easily by its peculiar leaves, which have, near the mid- dle, two sinuses (the curve or bay between the lobes) opposite each other, cut almost in to the midrib. The leaves are quite large, from six to twelve inches long, and look something like an enlarged edition of the narrow-form leaf of the white oak. But if you fail to find the characteristic “opposite sinuses,” look for the corky wings which are almost sure to be present on the younger branches of the tree. If by chance you should find an acorn of the tree, its cup, almost com- pletely grown over the nut and nearly enclosing it with a frouzelly fringe, will tell you at once that the tree is the bur oak or over-cup oak. This name well suits the tree, judging from its acorn. A little further on and we have come again to the fork of the Walk by whose easterly branch we pro- ceeded northerly to the Drive, by the Morse Statue. Let us now go back to the first branching of the Walk referred to in this ramble, the first beyond the Shakes- peare Statue, on the Mall, and follow its Jeft arm along 114 its northerly course, midway between Mall and Drive. We pass many magnificent trees, mostly elms, and the majority of these of the sweeping vase-form which is so characteristic of our native species. Among them you can pick out the oak-like forms of the English elms, heavy of base, thick set, rough of bark, and with a broad, horizontal swing of bough. Here, too, are Scotch elms and smooth-leaved varieties of the English elm. All are beautiful in their own ways, and as you walk beneath their boughs you revel in the varied lines of their forms, in their hues of bark, in their leaves, and branch sprays. At the second fork of this Walk, the path splits right and left. Let us take the right hand or easterly. Not very far from the point of branching, you meet, on your right, a small, umbrella-shaped tree with leaves which reveal its kinship with the European ash. It is the weeping variety of Fraxinus excelsior. Compare its leaves with the true European ash which stands in the point of the next fork of the Walk. The compound leaves are made up of from five to six pairs of leaf- lets, with an odd one at the end. These leaflets are almost sessile (that is, stemless) on the main leaf stalk, are lance-oblong, serrated and pointed. Where this fine specimen of European ash rises in the point of the Walk, the Walk throws out its left arm towards the Casino, and if you follow it, you will pass Rose of Sharon, and just across from this shrub, on your right, as you go towards the Casino, another umbrella- shaped tree. This tree is an elm, and is the weeping variety of the Scotch elm, or, commonly, the Camper- 20. UN eG Gery (Dinpuad nunopsaqun) *102 ‘punjuopy snmp) Q) Wi NModidaWwvsa II5 down elm. See how closely its beautiful large leaves, with their strong side points shooting out from the end of the leaf on either side of the terminal point, resemble the leaves of the Scotch elm proper. Following the path again, you pass Reeve’s spirza, with massy, hemispherical heads of white flowers in June and the lovely bridal-wreath spirzea which, early in April, stars its branches with the little hanging umbels of blossoms. These are indeed lovely, miniature com- pressed wreaths of the purest white, which hang four or five together in little clusters or umbels along the branches of this graceful bush. Its leaf is rounded at the base but comes to a point at the tip, and, as its name (prunifolia) implies, resembles that of the plum. At the next fork of the Walk, there is honey locust, on your right, and, if you take the left branch here, you pass, about midway between the fork here and the fork beyond, two good specimens of Oriental plane tree. In the elbow of the fork beyond these trees, you have a well grown cluster of American hornbeams, and opposite these, on your left, as you go west, is a well grown Japan pagoda tree, Sophora Japonica, some of whose kinsmen you met on our first ramble, in the vicinity of the Arsenal. Why this tree was named pagoda tree is hard to see, but its generic name, Sophora, is well applied—derived from the Arabic sofara, yellow, and probably refers to the yellow dye made by the Japanese and Chinese from its flowers. These blossoms burst out in August in great clusters of yellowish-white pea-form flowers, and are suc- 116 ceeded later by glossy green string-like pods which show very conspicuously. A little further along, as you pass westerly here, on this short arm of path to the Mall, about midway between the Japan pagoda tree and the junction of this path with the Mall, close at your left hand, is withe rod, one of the viburnums. This viburnum has dull green, opposite, simple leaves of thick and rather leathery texture. Upon coming out upon the Mall, turn to your left and take a short little run back by the arm of Walk which bends around to the southeast here. You will see panicled hydrangea (//ydrangea paniculata, var. grandiflora) bedded in with a bank of beautiful things. About midway between the hydrangea and the fork of the Walk to the southeast, a largee) binehestree stands out quite conspicuously near the Walk, on your left. It is a handsome tree and a splendid specimen of the cut-leaved variety of European birch. Note the very beautiful cutting of its leaves. Turn back now to the steps at the south end of the Pergola, and proceed through it, northwards. Near its centre, on your left, you will find American straw- berry bush (Euonymus Aimericanus), which you can identify by its four-angled twigs. These four ridges are quite noticeable on the dark green twigs. In the autumn, the fruit of this bush is very beautiful—three to five-lobed pods, which have a peculiar trick of curling back, when ripe, and show, beneath their cool crimson, the bright scarlet seeds beneath. At this season of the year they are indeed beautiful. A little 117 beyond this bush, you will find Cotoneaster frigida with oblong leaves which are smooth on the upper- sides, but pubescent beneath. The leaves are pointed at both ends. The fruit is scarlet. On passing from the Pergola, almost in front of you, is a fine hop tree or shrubby trefoil, which you recognize by its compound leaves of three leaflets. Off to the left of this tree is rosy weigela, and to the left of this (to the west) are several good-sized hale- sias, with fine light brown fissures in their darkish bark. These trees line the northerly side of the little jut of Walk that springs off to the left, down some short steps to the Mall. If, on coming from the Pergola, you turn to the right and cross the Drive that leads in from the Drive to the Casino, in the corner, you will see a good locust. Look for its spines. Just north of the first steps here is weigela with rose-colored flowers in June, and in the south-east corner of the second steps, English hawthorn. Near the Casino, at the northerly turn of the Drive, are two very good specimens of the Lonicera Morrow, which, in June, are covered with flowers that are, first, pure white, and then change to yellow. These flowers have their upper lips cleft almost to the base. The blossoms are succeeded by bright crimson berries. The shrub is from Japan. East of the Casino, near the Drive, is a large Euro- pean hazel with an alternate-leaved dogwood east of it. Several fine specimens of the European red osier will be found in the northerly corner of the Casino Drive where it meets the East Drive. North of these, 118 and east of the Casino, between the Walk and the East Drive, is a large mass of roses, which is made up, mostly, of the lovely prairie rose and the sweet- brier. The prairie rose, climbing rose, or Michigan rose, can be known by its leaves, which are usually made up of three leaflets, sometimes five. Its climb- ing stems are not bristly, but are armed with strong curved prickles. The leaves are oval, rounded at the base, but acute or obtuse at the apex. They are also thickish, and have the veins quite deeply depressed. The sweetbrier, Rosa rubignosa, equally lovely, has its leaflets five to seven, usually five. They are ob- tuse at the top, rounded at the base, and covered on the undersides with resinous glands. From these the brier gets its sweet fragrance. Its slender stems are set with stout prickles which are curved backwards (re-curved). Its flowers are either solitary or in twos, of a lovely pink to white, and its hips (fruits) are scarlet and pear-shaped. North of this clump of roses, near the Drive, is a pole that carries wires to the Casino. Near this pole is another handsome bed of roses, mostly made up of the Rosa centifolia, the cabbage rose. This rose has its oval leaflets five to seven (usually five), and its stems beset with straight (mostly) prickles. From this stock are derived the pompon rose and the moss rose. Its flowers, on nodding stems (pedicels), are very fragrant, of a rose purple hue, generally. Skirting the westerly border of the Drive here, con- tinuing northward you come to a lamp, just as the Drive forks to send a branch off to the Terrace. About SZ OND “dere (p1jofyunipo DiAngsyvDS) SATA], ONIN 119 this lamp are clustered several things of interest. South of it is cabbage rose again, and south of this, sweetbrier. West of the cabbage rose is fringe tree, lovely in June, with its fluffs.of purest white; west of the fringe tree, and a little to the north, is shrub-yellowroot, with its pinnately (sometimes bi- pinnately) compound leaves. These are usually five- lobed. Northeast of the shrub - yellowroot stands Fortune’s white spirzea, with small fine leaves and tiny fairy-like white flowers in early spring. If you follow the border of the Drive around toward the Terrace, you will find, near the second lamp, the hand- somest cluster of gingko trees in the Park. They are superb! You can know them at once by their fan-shaped leaves, or, better still, by their maiden- hair fern-like leaves. How lovely they are, with their great long branches growing from the main trunk at angles of about forty-five degrees. What a glory is their green! And when autumn changes this to a soft lemon yellow, ask for no richer sight. Directly north of these fine gingko trees, quite near the Drive, is a bush with its leaves in fives. It is the European bladder nut, Staphylea pinnata, with small, hanging clusters of flowers, when in bloom, in May or June. Let us now come back to the southern end of the Mall, and follow the left branch of the Walk which turns off by the Statue of Columbus. Its first arm leads us past a fine old horsechestnut, a spreading European beech, and a sturdy English elm at the left of the second fork. The Walk bends here to the 120 west, and trends northward in graceful curves, be- tween the Mall and the Drive. A gnarled sour gum blazons its crimson banners to the autumn sun very near to where the Walk begins to bend northerly. It is a little to the right of the Walk. You can tell it by the crowding of its oval, entire leaves at the ends of the side branches. Not far from the sour gum, and quite near the Walk is red maple. Some dis- tance beyond, where the Walk swings gently to the west, after its slight bend to the east, you come, on your left, upon several oaks. The first is swamp white oak, the next two are white oaks, and the next be- yond, the last of the four, is an English oak which was planted in the year 1861 by the present King of England, when he visited this country as Prince of Wales. The tree has since been known as the “Prince of Wales Oak.” It has had every care, but for some reason, it does not seem to be doing over well—in- deed, it is just about holding its own. At the spot where the Walk touches the Drive there is English elm again. The Walk then draws away from the Drive, opens out into the transept of the Mall, and throws off a cosy little side-shoot of path again at your left. This snuggles down close to the Drive, ind runs with it for a little space.) Ii {you take it, it will show you a good swamp white oak with a fine old white ash just beyond it. The ash has compound leaves. These are on your right. On your left, where the Walk comes nearest to the Drive, you will find a catalpa and a sassafras. Opposite these, about midway between them, a stately old white 121 pine flings out its free-hearted boughs in the broad and open way so characteristic of it. A clump of witch hazel with large oval, unequal-sided leaves, has taken its stand, just beyond, not far from where the Walk and Drive begin to draw together again. Try to see the witch hazel in the fall, October or November, when it decks its branches gaily with its slender ribbons of yellow four-petaled flowers, so daintily crimped, so delicately beautiful. Surely they are fairy- like as they flutter there so bravely in the keen crisp air. The yellow four petals of the flowers which flut- ter like tiny crimped ribbons, are inserted upon the calyx. The flower has eight small stamens, only four of which are perfect and have anthers. The anthers carry the pollen. The other four are imperfect and are scale like. The four with anthers are alternate with the petals. The fruit of the witch hazel is a two celled nut-like capsule, which contains two very hard black seeds. When the fruit is ripe the nut opens with a snap and discharges these seeds like a pop-gun. William Hamilton Gibson once measured the distance of some witch hazel seeds as they were discharged from the nut, and found that they were thrown over thirty feet, so great was the force expended. Across from the witch hazel, on the right of the Walk, is another hearty old white pine. The white pine has its leaves in clusters of five, as has been said, and about three, four, or five inches long, of a bluish-green. They are very soft and slender, three-sided, needle- shaped, and are whitish on the undersides. The cones of the white pine are about five inches long, cylin- 122 drical in shape and usually bent in a gentle curve. The scales are thin and smoothish and free from prick- les. The white pine is also called the Weymouth Pine, especially in England, because it was first cultivated there by Lord Weymouth. Beyond, the Walk again touches the Drive, and, as it draws away again, in the point between Walk and Drive, are long sweeping masses of Gordon’s syringa. The Walk curves on to the southeast and brings you out upon the northern end of the Mall, with its magnificent sweep of elms and its noble outlook from the Terrace over the Es- planade and Lake, an ha | Bi i hy nk hy? ‘i i Rs P i a Tae mm ae. Ne are ‘) “ia hab ASN bitin wehiry Vardi’ on re at ge tt ‘2 f a rain ae Xs K } . : ¥ ta'y ee warty! ® a Sh ear wi a a 2) ih ye) ¥ ” i Ar aa) i io: i | - iy ty " ve mel iv Unk r, ni A i ri STU AED Aida Ah oer ik iia ita is ok hi ¥20U,, 2 \ Zl 49 pucl MLINIOIA GNV N3349 AHL ‘bv oN TVYSLNID wyyrT ih eae Ryser: APY Ae oo aeien ge ae i 4 i eT . ae i “f A dag ; ye ‘ y é via \ T “ab ee = , i 1 : 7 ‘ ‘ t ¥ ’ i z , i * ph vy i ae | e * A, her ete) hy t , i a f ; ’ i ' d nie ‘ é a 1y ais a's ea ; eT | 7 ; v ty . : | 4 1 ; | } i . res a + dy i ual " 4 4 De eden: pao ee Te 6 frees t Catena Wy er pear orl Explanations, Map No. 4 CommMon NAME. . Evergreen Thorn or Fire Thorn. Silver or White Maple. English Cork-bark Elm. Hop Tree or Shrubby Tre- foil. . Buttonwood or American Sycamore. Pin or Swamp Spanish Oak. . Swamp White Oak. . Turkey Oak. . Red Oak. . Sycamore Maple. . Norway Maple. . Osage Orange. . Weeping Golden Bell or Forsythia. . White Pine. . Cockspur Thorn. . Bladder Senna. . Scotch or Wych Elm. . American or White Elm. . Sugar or Rock Maple. . Scotch Pine. ‘Indiam . Bean... Tree or Southern Catalpa. . American Hornbeam, Blue or Water Beech. . American White Ash. . Lulip “Tree: . Silver or White Maple. . American Arbor Vite. . Plume-leaved Japan Arbor Vitae. . Hemlock. BoTANICAL NAME. Crategus pyracantha, Acer dasycarpum. Ulmus campestris, var. suber- osa. Ptelea trifolzata. Platanus Occidentalis. Quercus palustris. Quercus bicolor. Quercus cerrts. Quercus rubra, Acer pseudoplatanus. Acer platanoides. Maclura aurantiaca, Forsythia suspensa. Pinus strobus. Crategus crus-gallt, Colutea arborescens. Ulmus Montana. Ulmus Americana. Acer saccharinum. Pinus sylvestris. Catalpa bignoniotdes. Carpinus Caroliniana, Fraxinus Americana. Liriodendron tuliptfera. Acer dasycarpum. Thuya Occidentalts. Chamecyparts (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plumosa. Tsuga Canadensis. 128 Common NAME . Indian Currant or Coral Berry. . American or White Elm. . Red Maple. . Cup Plant. . American Hazel. . Black Cherry. . Chestnut Oak. . American Chestnut. . Black Haw. . American or White Elm. . Scarlet Oak. . Pignut or Broom Hickory. . White Oak. . Pignut Hickory. . English or Field Elm. . White Beam Tree. . Dwarf Mountain Sumac. . Norway Spruce. . White Mulberry. . Fontanesia. . Ramanas Rose or Japan Rose (Pink and White flowers). . Cockspur Thorn. . Common Snowball or Guelder Rose. . Honey Locust. . Norway Maple. American or White Elm. . Indian Currant, Coral Berry. . Common Barberry. . Mound Lily. . Pearl Bush. . Barberry Box Thorn or Matrimony Vine. . Prairie Rose or Wild Climbing Rose (Double flowered). . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Rhodotypos. . Cut-leaved Blackberry. BoTANIcAL NAME Symphoricar pos vulgaris. Ulmus Americana. Acer rubrum. Silphium perfoliatum. Corylus Americana. Prunus serotina. Quercus prinus. Castanea sativa, var. Amert- cana. Viburnum prunifolium. Ulmus Americana, Quercus coccinea. Carya porcina. Quercus alba. Carya porcina. Ulmus campesirts. Sorbus (or Pyrus) arta. Rhus copallina. Picea excelsa. Morus alba. Fontanesta Fortunet. Rosa rugosa. Crategus crus-gallt. Viburnum opults, var. sterilis. Gleditschia triacanthos. Acer platanotdes. Ulmus Americana. Symphoricarpos vulgaris. Berberis vulgaris. Yucca gloriosa (or pendula). Exochorda grandtflora. Lycium barbarum. Rosa Setigera, var. flore pleno. Lonicera fragrantissima. Rhodotypos kerrtodes. Rubus laciniatus. 129 . Weeping European Sil- ver Linden. . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . Black Alder or Common Winterberry. . Swamp Dogwood, Silky Dogwood, or Kinnikin- nik. . American Linden. Bass- wood. . Colchicum-leaved maple. . European Beech. . Norway Maple. . Chinese White Magnolia or Yulan (Pure white flowers). . European Cherry. Maha- leb Cherry. » ised Cedar. . White Mulberry . Japan Zebra Grass. . Alternate-leaved Dog- wood. . American Strawberry Bush. . Bayberry or Wax Myrtle. . Josika Lilac. . Chinese Lilac. . Japan Shadbush. . Siberian or Mountain-ash- leaved Spirza. . European Red Osier, Red- stemmed Dogwood, or White-fruited Dog- wood (also called Si- berian Red Osier). . Hackberry, Sugarberry, or Nettle Tree. . Slender Deutzia. . Ramanas Rose (White flowers). . Large-flowered Mock Orange or Syringa (Var- lety florzbyndus). Tilia Europea, var. argentea (or alba) pendula. Populus montiltfera. Ilex verticallata. Cornus sericea. Tilia Americana. Acer letum. Fagus sylvatica. Acer platanozdes. Magnolia conspicua. Prunus Mahaleb. Juniperus Virginiana. Morus alba. Eulalia Japonica, var. Ze- brina. Cornus alternifolia. Euonymus Americanus. Myrica certfera. Syringa Jostkea. Syringa villosa. Amelanchier Japonica. Spirea sorbifoltia. Cornus sanguinea (or alba). Celtis Occidentalis. Deuizta gracilis. Rosa rugosa. Philadelphus grandzflorus, var. florrbundus. 130 . Common Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa. . Common Elder. . Pekin Lilac. . Prairie or Wild Climbing Rose (Single flowers). . Meadow or Early Wild Rose. . Japan Bladder Nut. . Common Chokeberry(Red berries). . Black Chokeberry (Black berries). . Bristly Locust, Rose Aca- cia or Moss Locust. . Chinese Privet. Philadelphus coronarius. Sambucus Canadensis. Syringa Pekinensis (or ligus- trina). Rosa setigera. Rosa blanda. Staphylea Bumalda. Pyrus arbutifolza. Pyrus arbutifolia, var. mel- anocarpa. Robinia hispida. Ligustrum Ibota, var, Amur- ensts. Ly THE GREEN AND VICINITY At West Sixty-sixth Street, a little by-path leads in from behind the Sheepfold, around to the Walk that borders the westerly side of the Drive. There are many pretty things along its course, but we cannot linger, for the circuit of the “Green” is ahead of us. But we must stop long enough to take a glance at two or three things here, as we go along. Just as this by-path begins to bend easterly, you will find, on your right, the pretty Japan bladdernut (Staphylea Bu- malda) with trifoliate leaves, the central leaflet short- stemmed. Just beyond, you pass, about opposite each other, pin oak (southerly side of Walk) Pyrus arbutifolia (northerly side). The red chokeberry is an erect shrub with obovate leaves, of smoothish (uppersides) texture, but pubescent beneath. They are quite short-stemmed. In April or May its pretty white corymbs of flowers appear, and these are suc- ceeded by red berries. Across from the pin oak here, close by the Sheepfold’s corner, you wil! find a spec- imen of the dark-berried chokeberry. Its berries are almost black and shining. In the little somewhat rectangular space or plat of ground in front of the Sheepfold there are several in- teresting things. In the northwestern corner, Japan shadbush, with ovate-elliptic leaves which are densely 132 woolly, especially after unfolding; in the northeastern corner, Chinese privet; in the southwest corner, the Josika lilac, of Hungarian stock, with leaves that make you think of the fringe-tree. Some bushes of the Chinese lilac stand just above this, in about the center of the space, by the border. Its leaves are broadly ovate, whitish beneath, and covered along the veins with hairs. The leaves are on short, stout, grooved stems. Just north of the villosa is Pekin lilac. Close by the Bridle Path, about the center of the space we are considering here, you will find two small growths of the fire thorn or evergreen thorn, with lance-spat- ulate leaves and small clusters of brilliant red berries, which are about the size of small peas. You can know it by its thorns. Just beyond this, is meadow or early wild rose (Rosa blanda), with its leaflets, five to seven, oval obtuse. Beyond the blanda, you will find prairie rose (Rosa setigera), with leaflets, three to five, oval acute. Around the Seventh Regiment Monument there are clustered some beautiful things. Let us follow the path that leads to and around it, going northerly. As this path branches off to the left (west) from the Walk that borders the west side of the Drive, you pass, on your left, Indian currant, a pretty low straggling bush with small oval leaves and beautiful coral-red berries in autumn. Just beyond it is common barberry with oblong leaves and plenty of spines. Beyond this, in the corner just as the path opens out about the Monu- ment, low down, with sabre-like leaves, is mound lily. Look at the margins of these leaves. You see they Le Oe “Oden (DINDIS DYOUSD}Y) VIIONDVI dWVMS “AVG LaaMS 133 do not shred off into fine thread-like filaments, like the Adam’s needle you found down on Section Num- ber One. Beyond the mound lily, and about south of the center of the Monument, is the pretty pearl bush, cultivated from China for its large white flowers. These have spoon-shaped petals, and come out in long axillary racemes in May or June. It is a beautiful shrub, and the white of its flowers is purity itself. It gets its name from the Latin evo, external, and chorde, a thong, referring to the structure of the fruit. At the far south-westerly corner of the path is Lycium barbarum. Directly back (west) of the Monument is a handsome double-flowered variety of the prairie rose, and at the northwest corner of the path we have fragrant honeysuckle. Directly north of the Monu- ment are two low-growing specimens of the pearl bush. On the right of the Walk, as you went around, you passed Rhodotypos (in the corner), then cut- leaved blackberry and bristly locust, opposite the mound lily. The bristly locust is easily identified by its bristly branches and locust leaves. It sprawls about beautifully here, directly opposite the south- easterly corner of the Monument. As you follow the path down the gentle decline to its junction with the Drive Walk, you will see, on your right, as you go northerly, a fine old weeping European silver linden. Follow the Drive Walk northwards from this junc- tion, and, about half way to the Arbor beyond, you will pass three fine cottonwoods. These are on the left of the Walk. Beyond these, a little space, on the left again, you will find black alder or common win- 134 terberry, conspicuous in the fall, for its bright red berries. Its leaves are wedge-shaped at the base. Be- yond these, on the right, in the point of the bed here between Walk and Drive, is Rhodotypos with its ovate, opposite leaves which remind you of the arrowwood. Continuing, on your left again, nearly opposite the Arbor, stands a handsome honey locust with dark, al- most blackish bark, strong thorns, and delicate pinnate leaves. Just north of the honey locust is swamp dog- wood or kinnikinnik, with silky pubescent leaves, cream white flowers in late spring or early summer, in flat cymes and pale-blue berries. Roiling out beside this shrub is a handsome mass of the Cornus sanguinea, with broadly ovate leaves coming down to a point at the tip. It gets its name sanguinea from its end branches which in winter turn a beautiful polished crimson. Afar off then you can see its ruddy glow, and against the snow it is charming. Its specific name alba applies to its fruit, wife berries. Passing on, near where the Walk bends up toward Seventy-second Street Gate, a fine old osage orange spreads out its shining canopy of sun-glinted leaves. Its dark-brown bark with a decided reddish cast will mark it for you. But if this is not enough, look for the spines in the axils of its leaves. This tree fruits heavily, and if you are passing it in the autumn, you will see the large pale-green “oranges’’ hanging conspicuously amid the branches. Of course, the term “orange” is merely applied from their resemblance to that fruit. The green fruit of the osage, as you can see by examin- ing the pieces which are sure to be under the tree, is 135 simply a ball of closely compressed drupes. Each of these drupes are oblong and filled with a milk-like juice. And don’t the squirrels love them! The osage stands about opposite another honey locust. Going to the Arbor over the Walk, near West Seventy-second Street Gate, standing close by its southwesterly end, is a basswood, with large (four to six inches) lop- sided heart-shaped leaves, with the largest side of the leaf nearest the branch. The fruits look like good- sized woolly peas. Off to the west of the basswood, down the bank, thrusting its leaves over the Bridle Path, is a small alternate-leaved dogwood. If you can get close enough to it, you will see that its leaves are set alternately on the branches, especially at the end-branches—a feature quite distinct from the other cornels which have their leaves all opposite on the branch. Let us now come back to the Sheepfold and make the circuit of the Green. We cross the Drive and continue our ramble along the southerly side of the broad open stretch which has been so aptly called the “Green.” As we enter upon it, on our right, stands a fine old swamp white oak, and opposite to it, in the left-hand corner, a pin oak. Note the different character of bark on these two trees—the smooth steel-gray of the pin oak, streaked with black, and the rough ash-gray of the swamp oak, cut in long flattish strip-like scales or plates which have a rather shaggy look. Beyond the swamp white oak are two Turkey oaks, easily known by their dark heavily-ridged bark, and beyond the Turkey oaks, a splendid red oak. 136 This tree is lordly! Stand off and let your eyes rove in delight over its lustrous green. In the corner of the next offshoot of path is osage orange, with a fine mass of weeping Forsythia beyond it, and a hackberry opposite the Forsythia. The hackberry can easily be known by its warty bark and “bird’s nest” clusters of branches. Opposite the osage orange, on your left, is sycamore maple with its cordate five-lobed thickish leaves on long reddish leaf-stems. Out upon the Green, just north of this tree, is Norway maple. Continuing eastwards along the southerly side of the Green, you pass, on your right, white pine, cock- spur thorn, and then a goodly gathering of more white pines. Some little distance along, is Scotch elm, and close by the brink of Transverse Road No. 1, about southwest of the Scotch elm, you will see bladder senna. It has compound leaves (seven to eleven leaf- lets), and belongs to the pulse family. In summer (July) it flowers in golden racemes. These yellow pea flowers are succeeded by bladder-like pods which puff out very conspicuously all over the bush in a way that at once stirs your curiosity. Back on the Walk again, and continuing easterly, you pass Scotch elm, on your right, and then, on your left, out on the Green, sycamore maple, American elm, sycamore maple, sugar maple, sycamore maple. Just beyond is an old catalpa, and close about the rcoks here several American hornbeams. A fine white ash has set its firm foot on the next rock mass, and faces a pin oak, to the south, with a couple of lordly tulip trees beside the pin oak. 137 As this Walk approaches the Drive, there is a good specimen of American arbor vite and a golden plume- leaved retinospora. The American arbor vite is easily distinguished by the glands on the backs of its closely appressed scale-like leaves, and the retinospora by its fine plume-like leaf-sprays. Let us turn here and follow the trend of the Walk northerly along the east side of the Green. We pass a cluster of silver maples, then a struggling little hem- lock, and then some good specimens of American elm. ' These are near a lamp-post by the Drive. Now we go northerly, and opposite another lamp-post by Drive (about half way to the next off-shoot of Walk) is silver maple with a red maple beside it. At the next fork of the Walk, the left-hand branch cuts across the upper part of the Green. Let us take it. At the right-hand corner of this path, as you go westerly, is a good white pine that still sings its re- quiem music to the sweep of winter winds. A lordly group of tulip trees are clustered together, a little further along on your right (north), with tall col- umnar trunks and white seed “cones” against the autumn sky. Opposite these, on the other side of the Walk, is catalpa. A little further on, as you go west- erly, a rock cuts up through the swelling greensward. In its easterly shoulder, a little black haw leans out most invitingly. At the northerly end of the rock is American chestnut. Back of the chestnut, on the rock is a ragged old red cedar with bare trunk and close scale-like leaves (awl-shaped on the younger growths). South of this red cedar, and about west of the black 138 haw, is a white mulberry with shining green mitten- shaped leaves. Beyond the rock, an American elm sweeps up its vase-like form, and, diagonally across the Walk from it, is a Norway maple, full foliaged and lusty. About in line with the next abutment of rock, but close by the border (right) of the Walk, is scarlet oak with bristle-tipped leaves, and just be- yond it, a pignut hickory. Beyond the hickory is white oak, standing just back of another pignut. The pignut has compound leaves, with the leaf stem smooth, The white oak’s leaves are simple and round-lobed. A little further along we come to a large mass of rock on the right (north) of the Walk. This mass is quite near the Mineral Spring House. The beautiful dwarf mountain sumac garnishes its southeastern corner. This sumac you easily recognize by the wing along the leaf-stem and between the leaflets. Up the rock, and back of the sumac an old black cherry lifts its shaggy scaly bark. Down in the southwesterly corner of the rock mass is a whispering chatty gathering of the Japan zebra grass. How lovely it is, with its handsome bands (across the leaves) of green and white. Near the Mineral Spring House, beyond the rock mass here, the Walk throws off an arm to the right (northerly) which meets the Border Walk of the Drive beyond. This arm of pathway has a very interesting tree to show us—the white beam tree of the mountain- ash tree family. It stands on the right (east) of the path, about opposite the short branch of Walk that runs in behind Mineral Spring House. This tree, from WuHitE Beam TREE [Sorbus (or Pyrus) aria] Map 4. No. 44. 139 its leaf, might be mistaken for a scarlet-fruited haw- thorn, for indeed the leaves are rather similar. But the lack of any thorns on the tree relieves it at once of that accusation. As has been said above, the tree belongs to the mountain-ash family, and in May breaks out its flowers in broad white corymbs which change later, with clusters of roundish orange-red berries crowded closely together. The leaves of the tree are dark-green on the uppersides, but are very white (tomentose) on the undersides. In shape they are roundish-ovate or oblong-oval, generally wedge-shaped at the base, either acute or obtuse at the point, and with margins sharply and doubly serrate. Continu- ing along the Walk, beyond the white beam tree, you pass, on your left, Norway spruce with dark sombre branches that droop in A-form on either side of the main boughs. You know it is a spruce, because its leaves are four-sided. A white mulberry with mitten- shaped leaves stands just beyond it. As the Walk curves around to meet the Border Walk, about half way around, on your right, is a fine mass of common elder. See it in June when it lays over its rolling masses of green the lace of its white kerchiefs of bloom —the lovely broad flat corymbs of its white flowers. In the point of the Walk’s junction with the Border Walk, is a beautiful mass of the Ramanas rose. This is made up mostly of the white-flowered variety. Diag- onally across on the bed at the north of the Border Walk you will find the pink and the white-flowered varieties of this handsome rose beautifully inter- mingled. The leaflets of this rose run in fives to nines, 140 and the branch stems are densely thick with prickles and bristles. They look “mossy” with them. The leaflets are dark glossy and shining green on the upper- sides. If you follow the trend of the Border Walk here, easterly, about midway opposite the bank of the pink and white Ramanas rose, you will find, on your right, a fair specimen of the Fontanesia—the same kind of shrub, with the willow-like leaves you met down in Section No. 1, near the Bosc’s red ash and the Dairy. Beyond the Fontanesia here, a little beyond a point - about opposite the “Falconer,” but close by the right- hand border of the Walk, you come to American strawberry bush, and beside it, the beautiful Siberian or Mountain ash-leaved spirea The former has ovate- lanceolate simple leaves, the latter has compound leaves, which closely resemble the leaves of the mountain ash. The Siberian spirza blooms in July in great white fluffs that are welcome sights at that time of year, when you wonder that anything has energy enough to show a petal of bloom. Should you follow the path around by the Drive, easterly, it will lead you past a splendid sweep of green to the fork where you turned off to go toward the Mineral Spring House. As you come to the rock mass (on your right) about opposite the Drive crossing to the Mall, you pass a handsome cluster of Turkey oaks. These are on the left of the Walk, between the Walk and the Drive. Up on the rocks at your right, on the extreme southerly end, is a chestnut oak with wavy-lobed leaves. Just beyond the lamp-post here, 141 on your left, is American hazel, with leaves slightly heart-shaped at the base, rather broadly oval and more or less pointed at the tip. Where the border bed of the Walk narrows here, a white pine spreads its open- hearted, level boughs, and on your right, as you now go southerly, not far from the fork of the Walk beyond, you will see a large mass of the gladsome cup plant starring out its beautiful yellow flowers in summer. You can recognize it easily by its very square stems and leaves that clasp about the stems in a way that is truly cup- like. In the right hand corner of the fork, beyond, is another white pine. Had you taken the left branch of the Walk, after passing around behind the Mineral Spring House, it would have led you by cockspur thorn (on your right, as you passed westerly) and Scotch elm (diagonally across from the cockspur thorn. The thorn has glossy, wedge, obovate leaves; the elm, large, thick leaves with a long, abrupt point on either side of which lesser points jut out conspicuously. A handsome mass of the large-flowered syringa banks the border bed, on your right, where it narrows to a point between Walk and Drive. Beyond is a lamp-post, and opposite to it, on your left, back on the greensward a little, is guelder rose or common snowball, one of the viburnums. You can know it easily by its three-lobed leaves. In the guelder rose all the individual flowers are sterile and form large, round heads of bloom. This shrub is really the sterile variety of the common high-bush cranberry. Compare the leaves of this shrub with those of the high-bush cranberry in other parts of the Park, and 142 note their similarity. Continuing, on your left, you pass sycamore maple, with its five-lobed, cordate leaves on long, reddish leaf stems. Here we have come to the Arbor by the Drive, bowered so beautifully by the cluster of honey locusts, that with their fierce thorns seem a silent guard-at-arms over the pretty little nook. While you are at the Arbor, go through it and have a look at the fine row of red oaks that have marshaled the bravery of their glossy green between the Mineral Spring House and the Arbor. Before leaving this section, if it has been your good fortune to have procured a permit, cross the Drive at the lamp-post opposite the guelder rose to the lamp-post on the northerly side of the Drive and strike due north of this until you corne to a tree with light-gray bark and leaves reverse egg-shape (obovate ) that have a little abrupt point at the end. This tree is the Chinese white magnolia or Yulan, and I hope you can see it bloom in April. It is then a cloud of pure white, lovely beyond words. The large, cream-white blossoms seem to float upon the air and the fragrance of their perfume is in- expressibly sweet upon the April breeze. The blossoms come before the leaves appear, breaking out from the great furry buds that have been the tree’s conspicu- ous and individual winter marks of identification. The winter buds of the conspicua have a somewhat greenish cast through their furry coats, while those of its near hybrid, the Soulangeana, are quite brownish. Across to the west of conspicua is a large rock mass, and west of this, near the Drive, you will find an in- 143 teresting group of trees. They are the Colchicum- leaved maples, and you can tell them by their beautiful bark striations or veinings, or by their somewhat star-like leaves, The leaves are five to seven lobed, smooth, and just a trifle heart-shaped at the base. They are smooth and green on either side, and are of atm and tender texture. Whese trees are indeed handsome, and the markings on their branches remind me of the beautiful stems of the shadbush. The bloom of these maples is in the spring in erect corymbs, some- what like the flowers of the Norway maple. Hand- some trees they are, surely, and seem to be all thriving here. May you have the good fortune to get near to them and let your eyes revel over their beautifully marked boughs. Northwest of the Colchicum maples, you will find close by the Drive, a splendid example of the European beech. It is broad boughed and in excellent condition. This handsome tree is almost opposite the pretty little rustic Arbor which arches the Walk that bends to the south just after entering the West Seventy-Second street Gate. As you drive in from the Gate it is sure to catch your eye, for it stands well out alone on the lawn and has had plenty of room to grow to its full perfection. As I have said before, notice its leaves, which are not toothed but have their margins fringed with delicate hairs. This fringing of the margin with hairs is termed botanically, ciliate. The American beech differs from the European in having very de- cidedly toothed leaves, the teeth terminating the ends of 144 the veins at the margin of the leaf. It may be inter- esting to add here that the beech belongs to the oak family, which includes, also, the birch, alder, hazel, hop, hornbeam, and chestnut. IS a6L ISVa- OL ‘LS aGL LSV3 GoN SAK MHONLISAL /8-- 0g-- a > \ Work , j 1 ae y AA, n has , ie awn 4 wi Ys af a ar Lat chee ar A gic Tans late aha tag inne neh ee yp op anny » 4 ar | i is i @ ; a , if y " 1 oe Aun), ~ ‘) i 7 \ ‘ { i] i f ‘ vi i ‘ ré ¥ i. ity’) aN 3 i) u Ws 5 ‘ f “? - j ” | oS ( 3 ¢ ; whip ( yn i y a ph! : - on . ' wal od as . mi: men's e ’ 4& ; ' vay H : i j fal A ua i 4 ) ' Way ‘ wi 2 a an ¥). 4 fi C + e c ‘ vy. y a A Q : re. ee ed be ag * Looe ua aaah Veo gis Cet ee os Ke) Io. Explanations, Map No. 5 ComMMon NAME . English Oak. . Japan Maple. . Austrian Pine. . Mugho Pine. Umbel-flowered Oleaster. European White Birch. European or English Yew. Purple-leaved European White Birch. . Purple-leaved European Hazel. American Linden, Bass- wood, Bee Tree. . Japan Snowball. . Black Cherry. . Nordmann’s Silver Fir. . American or White Elm. . Abrupt-leaved Japan Yew. Japan Rose. . Thunberg’s Barberry. . European Bladder Nut. . Willow Oak. . Japan Shadbush. . Siebold’s Viburnum. . Panicled Hydrangea (Large flowered). . Rosemary-leaved Willow. . Plume Grass. . Japan Bamboo. . Variegated Japan Plume Grass. . Weeping European White Birch. . Laurel-leaved Willow. . Garden Red Cherry, Mor- ello Cherry. BoTANICAL NAME Quercus robur. Acer polymorphum. Pinus Austriaca. Pinus Montana, var. Mughus. Eleagnus umbellata. Betula alba. Taxus baccata, Betula alba, var. atropurpurea, Corylus avellana, var. atropur- purea, Tilia Americana. Viburnum plicatum. Prunus serotina. Abies Nordmanniana. Ulmus Americana. Taxus cuspidata. Rosa rugosa. Berberis Thunbergit. Staphylea pinnata. Quercus phellos. Amelanchier Japonica. Viburnum Steboldt. Hydrangea paniculata, grandtflora. Salix rosmarinifolia (or in- cana). Erianthus Ravenne. Bambusa Metake. Eulalia (or Miscanthus) Ja- ponica, var. foliis variegatis. Betula alba, var. pendula. var. Salix pentandra. Prunus cerasus. 150 CoMMON NAME . Golden or Yellow Willow. . Cut-leaved European Beech. . Long-Stemmed Elm. . Weigela (Dark crimson flowers). . Sugar or Rock Maple. . Chinese Cork Tree. . European (or Siberian) Red Osier, Red-stem- med Dogwood, White- fruited Dogwood. . Purple-leaved Norway Maple. . Indian * Bean’ “Tree. or Southern Catalpa. . Arrowwood. . Black Haw. . Buckthorn. . Bush Deutzia. . European Beech . Red Maple. . Pin Gak. . Silver or White Maple. . English or Field Elm. . American or White Elm. . Sycamore Maple. . Shadbush, June Berry or Service Berry. . Common Snowball or Guelder Rose. . Californian Privet. . Cornelian Cherry. . American Sycamore, But- tonwood, Buttonball. . Sycamore Maple. . Scotch Elm, Wych Elm. . Purple-leaved European Hazel. . Yellowwood. . Bald Cypress. . Imperial Paulownia. . Plume-leaved Retinospora or Japan Arbor Vite. . European or English Yew. BoTANICAL NAME Salix alba, var. vitellina. Fagus sylvatica, var. lacintata (or asplentfolia). Ulmus effusa. ve hybrida, var, Laval- et. Acer saccharinum. Phellodendron Amurense. Cornus sanguinea (or alba). Acer platanoides, var. pur- purea. Catalpa Bignoniotdes. Viburnum dentatum. Viburnum prunifolium. Rhamuus cathartica. Deutzia crenata. Fagus sylvatica. Acer rabrum. Quercus palustris. Acer dasycarpum., Ulmus campestris. Ulmus Americana. Acer pseudoplatanus. Amelanchier Canadensis. Viburnum opulis, var. sterilis. Ligustrum ovalifolium. Cornus mascula. Platanus occidentalts. Acer pseudoplatanus. Ulmus Montana. Corylus Avellana, var. atro- purpurea. Cladrastts tinctortia. Taxodium distichum. Paulownia imperialis. Chamecyparis (or Retinospora) pistfera, var. plumosa, Taxus baccata. ISI CoMMON NAME . American or White Ash. . Ginkgo Tree, or Maiden- hair Tree. . scotch Elm. . American White Ash. . Oriental Plane Tree. . Black Cherry. . American Beech. . Weeping European Silver Linden. . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . Laurel Oak or Shingle Oak. . English or Field Elm. . Scotch Pine. . Scotch Elm. . Willow Oak. . Red Oak. . White Pine. . Ninebark. . Oriental Spruce. . Nordmann’s Silver Fir. . Keelreuteria or Varnish Tree. . Sweet Bay or Swamp Magnolia. PS otiartia. . Mount Atlas Cedar, Silver Cedar, African Cedar. . Cucumber Tree or Moun- tain Magnolia. . Japan Quince. . Sweet Bay or Swamp Magnolia. . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Rhodotypos. . Beach Plum. . Ramanas Rose or Japan Rose. . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . European or Tree Alder. . Great-leaved Magnolia. . Umbrella Tree. BoTANICAL NAME Fraxinus Americana. Salisburia adiantijfolia. Ulmus Montana. Fraxinus Americana, Platanus Orientalis. Prunus serotina. Fagus ferruginea. Tilia Europea, var. argentea . (or alba) pendula. Populus monzltfera. Quercus tmbricaria. Ulmus campestris. Pinus sylvestris. Ulmus Montana. Quercus phellos. Quercus rubra. Pinus strobus. Physocarpus (or Spirea) op- ultfolra. Picea Orientalts. Abtes Nordmanniana. Kelreuteria paniculata. Magnolia glauca. Stuartia pentagyna. Cedrus Atlantica. Magnolia acuminata. Cydonia Japonica. Magnolta glauca. Lonicera fragrantissima. Rhodotypos kerrtioides. Prunus maritima. Rosa rugosa. Populus moniltfera. Alnus glutinosa. Magnolia macrophylla Magnolia umbrella, 97 98 99 too. Iot. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. 207. 108. 109g. LTO, rag i Lp2. Lig ETA. Pen. 116. 27. E15: LEQ. E20; I21I. 152 CoMMON NAME European Bird Cherry. Fringe Tree. Double - flowering Crab Apple. Greenor Mountain Alder. Black Willow. English Cork-bark Elm. Persimmon. European Beech. Wild Red Osier. American Hornbeam. Ailanthus or Tree of Heaven. American or White Elm. Sourwood or Sorrel Tree. Common Horechestnut. Panicled Dogwood. Red Cedar. European Beech. Weigela (white flowers). Chinese Lilac. * Butternut or White Walnut. Swamp White Oak. Sassafras. Cut-leaved European Beech. Norway Maple. Californian Rose Mallow. BoTANICAL NAME Prunus padus. Chionanthus Virginica. Pyrus malus, var. flore pleno. Alnus viridis. Salix nigra. Ulmus campestris, var. sube- rosa. Diospyros Virginiana. Fagus sylvatica. Cornus stolonifera. Carpinus Caroliniana. Adlanthus glandulosus. Ulmus Americana. Oxydendrum arboreum. Atsculus hippocastanum, Cornus paniculata. Juniperus Virginiana. Fagus sylvatica. Dvervilla alba (or candida). Syringa Pekinensts. Juglans cinerea. Quercus bicolor. Sassafras officinale. Fagus sylvatica, var. lacinzata. Acer platanoides. | Hibiscus Californicus. Vv. EAST SEVENTY-SECOND STREET TO EAST SEVENTY- NINTH STREET Enter, for this ramble, at East Seventy - second Street, and turn off to the right at the first fork of the Walk. The path here splits right and left. Close by the second series of steps on the left branch of Walk (the westerly) you will find the interesting rosemary-leaved willow. It is a pretty shrub with very narrow linear leaves, which have their margins slightly turned or rolled over in a way that botanists term revolute. The leaf edges are entire (not cut) and the leaves are cottony-white on the undersides. On the uppersides they are of a dull, dark green. They are set close in to the leaf stem, that is, are nearly sessile. Delicacy is the word to express the effect of this shrub, and its fine leaves certainly make it a thing of exquisite beauty. If you follow the branch of Walk that splits off to the east, you will find just off to the east of the little cut-leaved beech (easily known by its cut leaves) two small English oaks. These are especially interesting, as they came from Sachsenwald, the estate of the late Prince Bismarck. Off to the east of these are two low bushes; the northerly is a small sapling of the laurel-leaved willow, with glossy, shining leaves; the southerly of the two is another rosemary-leaved willow. 154 South of this willow is another of the same kind, and south of it a pretty Japan maple, with star - like leaves. Continuing along this Walk, at the steps and about them, are several interesting things. Off to the left, near the first step, is European white birch, and at the right of the step is English yew, a low bush here, with flat, linear leaves, pointed and two-ranked. To the east of this is Siberian red osier, with crimson branches in winter. South of the osier is umbel-flowered oleaster, with yellowish-brown branchlets covered generally with a silvery scurf, and leaves elliptic or oblong ovate in shape, crisped about the margins and silvery-white on the undersides, often marked with a few brown scales. This pretty Japan shrub blooms in May or June with fragrant, umbel-clustered, yellowish-white flowers in the axils of the leaves, and these are succeeded in the fall by dense clusters of beautiful amber-red berries speckled all over with silvery spots. These berries make a beautiful show at that time. By the second step are some masses of the dark crimson-flowered Weigela (var. Lavallei) and are very handsome in June. Near them the purple-leaved Eu- ropean birch flashes its leaves so darkly purple that they appear almost black. They are striking indeed, burning the light from their glossy leaves and in strong contrast with the vivid white of the tree’s bark. Off to the east of this birch is a purple-leaved European hazel, a low-spreading bush, with dark crimson-purple, almost bronze, leaves. The leaves are roundish, heart- shaped, and broadish at the ends, just before they come 155 to a point. Note how much broader these leaves are at the ends than those of our native hazel. Passing on, we meet black cherry on the left of the Walk, easily known by its scaly bark, and opposite to it, on the right of the Walk, some fine masses of the Japan snowball. Beyond, on the left, is a fair specimen of the Nordmann’s silver fir, an evergreen with long, linear, flat leaves which are notched at the tip and marked on the undersides by silvery lines. The tree is rather conical in form, with horizontal branches. Its foliage is a deep dark green, and through it you catch, where the light touches the undersides of the leaves, the beautiful glint of silver that is just enough to set your eyes dancing. At the junction of the Walk beyond, with the Walk that borders Conservatory Lake, you will find Tarus cuspidata, with leaves like the English yew’s, but tipped with stronger points. Opposite the cuspidata is sugar maple. Following the Walk around the easterly border of Conservatory Lake, to its next fork, we will follow the east branch of this junction. But before we do so, let us look at some things about the Lily Pond. At its southerly end wave several clumps of the beautiful plume-grass, Erianthus Ravenne. Close by the margin of the Pond, you will find the pretty Japan bamboo, Bambusa Metake, growing in two waving clumps, one a little beyond the plume-grass, the other near the most easterly end of the Pond. East and a trifle south of this clump is the variegated Japan plume-grass. If you have a permit to explore this district, near the Fifth Avenue Wall and about due east of the Japan plume- 156 grass you will find Chinese cork tree with long ailan- thus-like leaves and another one south of this, about in line with the southerly end of the Lily Pond. If you find this cork tree, near it, to the southwest, is sour- wood, with leaves like those of the peach tree and long fingers of white bloom in the summer. To the south- west of the sourwood are several handsome specimens of the panicled hydrangea. At the extreme northerly end of the Lily Pond, you will find golden willow, in summer a drifting cloud of silvery gray-green, in winter a lovely mist of brassy- yellow twigs and branches. A little off to the east of the golden willow, low down, about two feet high, the handsome Californian rose mallow blows out its beau- tiful, large white flowers, with pink centers, to the blaze of an August sun. How lovely and cool they look, nestling here by the sleepy Pond! East of the mallow, almost in line with each other, north and south, are Siberian red osier, rhodotypos, pin oak and willow oak. All of these you have met before, except the willow oak. This is easy to identify, for its leaves are indeed very much like those of a willow—linear-lance- olate, of a smooth, clear green, and narrowed at base and tip. They are entire or almost entire. You cannot mistake the tree, for at first glance you are sure to see its willow-like look. There is another of these oaks about due north of this one, and northeast of the second, near the Fifth Avenue Wall, you will find the handsome Siebold’s viburnum, grown to the height of a small tree. This handsome shrub is a Japan product and is certainly a worthy importation. In May or June it ‘94 ON °F. dey (Sojjayd SNI42NE) MVO MOTIIAA 157 lifts over its dark-green, shining, oval leaves its con- spicuous panicles of bloom. These panicles are very showy, and, with their several tiers, make you think of acandelabrum. They are, in this respect, different from any other viburnum’s flowers in the Park. These hand- some blossoms are individually a combination of the wheel-shaped (rotate) and bell-shaped (campanulate) types of flowers. They change, later, to pinkish, oblong berries which, as they ripen, become blue-black. The shrub’s leaves are very handsome, large and richly dark green. About west of this viburnum, close by the Walk, is long-stemmed English elm, and across the Walk from this tree, to the southwest, up the rise of the slope here, is cut-leaved European beech. Con- tinuing along the Walk, northerly, near the place where it goes under the Drive, through an Arch, it branches off to the northeast (your right) past some European beeches and red maples, to the Seventy-ninth Street Gate. Near this Gate you pass, just beyond the lamp-post on your left, common horsechestnut, on your right catalpa, buckthorn and sycamore maple. The buckthorn has leaves that remind you of the dogwood. If you had not branched off to the right from the Arch, but had gone through it, northerly, you would have passed, on your right, sycamore maple (about opposite a red maple), then close together, one after the other, on your right, buckthorn, wild red osier (with crimson branches streaked with crinkly lines in winter), American hornbeam, with birch-like leaves, muscular, ridgy bark veined beautifully by silver streaks, and then buckthorn again. Diagonally across the Walk 158 from this buckthorn, is a black cherry, with rough, scaly bark. Continuing on the right of the Walk, are two sycamore maples, close together, with another of the same kind further to the north of them. Beyond the tree is a red maple, with very handsome, light-gray bark and leaves three to five-lobed. Directly opposite this red maple, across the Walk, is Japan quince, rich in thorns, and off to one side of the quince is panicled dogwood. Note the whitish undersides of the leaves. Just beyond these the Walk branches, with an arm to the west. Close by the first steps here is red maple, by the second steps, sycamore maple and American elm opposite each other, with a mass of ninebark, at the right of the steps, beyond them. The leaves of this shrub are three-lobed. A little beyond, on the right, near a sycamore maple, is a young swamp white oak, and quite near the Drive, on your left, American hornbeam. Come back now to the Boat House. Close by it, to the north, you will find several good specimens of the black willow, with the undersides of their leaves green, differing in this. respect from the witellina, which you met before at the beginning of this ramble near the Lily Pond. In the loops of ground at the Boat House, are varnish tree and fringe tree, in the northerly loop. The varnish tree has compound leaves, the fringe tree, simple. In the southerly loop are two European bird cherries. In the border bed, at the south of the Boat House, are double-flowering crab apple, and then two yellowwoods. These are side by side. The yellow- woods have smooth light-gray bark, like the bark of YELLOwwoop (In bloom) (Cladrastis tinctoria) Map 5. No. 58. od 159 the beech tree, but you can distinguish them from the beech by their compound leaves. The leaflets are oval and are from seven to eleven in number. These trees belong to the great pulse family, blooming in June, in long drooping panicles of fragrant white flowers. About opposite the northerly one of these yellowwoods, on the west of the Walk, back a little, about midway toward the Drive, you will find green or mountain alder, with oval or ovate leaves, rounded at the base and pale green on the undersides. Turn off from the Walk here and pass down the steps through the Arch beneath the Drive, follow this branch of Walk around to the right, and proceed along the border of the Drive, with it, southerly. You pass some lordly old cottonwoods, clumped together. Be- yond the cottonwoods, fairly well back on the slope of the greensward, stands the interesting laurel or shingle oak. Its leaves are lanceolate-oblong, of a smooth dark green, and resemble the leaves of laurel. They are generally entire (not cut), and end in an abrupt point. On the undersides they are somewhat downy. A lamp-post stands by the Drive Crossing, a little further along the Walk here, and off to the east of it, well back on the lawn, are black cherry (with rough scaly bark), and two willow oaks east of it. The oaks you know at once by their willow-like leaves. They are small trees, about eighteen or twenty feet high now, and are remarkably healthy in every respect. The leaves are certainly anything but oak-like in ap- pearance. The willow oak belongs to the sub-group of 160 oaks which botanists have designated as the thick- leaved oaks, which are almost evergreen in the South, but are, of course, deciduous at the North. This group includes the water oak, the barren oak, the shingle oak, the upland willow oak (Quercus cinerea) and the willow oak (Quercus phellos). Of this group the only representatives we have in Central Park are the shingle oak and the willow oak, both of which are in this vicinity as has been stated. At this lamp by the Drive, we cross to go to the Ter- race where we will find many very beautiful things, and which we will take up, in detail, in the next ramble. fy, 1s 7473 say 28 at pe 2 Farce aide see im y Th Les . us i 1 ; . i hy ' ue Lok Site ee nr © le (Bam At, 2 a lg opin a \ » y Explanations, Map No. 6 CoMMON NAME . American Arbor Vite. 2. Chinese Wistaria. 3. Pinxter Flower, Wild An & 17. Honeysuckle, Pink Azalea. . Caucasian Azalea. . Japan Judas Tree. . Early-flowering Jessa- mine. . Rhododendrons. . Staggerbush. . Red Oak. . American Beech. . Black Cherry. . Japan Plume Grass. . Plume-leaved Japan Arbor Vitz. . Thornless Rose. . Japan Zebra Grass. . Althza or Rose of Sharon. Jacqueminot Rose. . Japan Aucuba. . Purple Magnolia. . Japan Quince. . Rhododendron. (Ever- estianum.) . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Keelreuteria or Varnish Tree. BotaNnicaL NAME Thuya Occidentalis. Wtstaria Chinensts. Azalea nudzflora. Azalea Pontica. Cercts Japonica. Jasminum nudiflorum, Andromeda mariana, Quercus rubra. Fagus ferruginea. Prunus serotina. Eulalia Japonica, var. gracil- lima univittata. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plumosa. Rosa Boursaltt. Eulalia Japonica, var. ze- brina, Hibiscus Syriacus. Rosa hybrida, var. Gen. Jacqueminot. Aucuba Japonica. Magnolia purpurea. Cydonia Japonica. Rhododendron, var. Everestian- um. Lonicera jragrantissima. Kelreuteria paniculata, 166 CoumMon NAME . Paulownia. . Thunberg’s Barberry. . Russell’s Cottage Rose. . Swamp Magnolia. Sweet Bay. . Stuartia. . White Pine. . Mount Atlas or African Cedar, Silver Cedar. . Indian Bean ‘Tree or Southern Catalpa. . Umbrella Tree. . Cucumber Tree. . Great-leaved Magnolia. . European or Tree Alder. . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . Weigela (Light pink flowers). . Rhodotypos. . sassafras. Pin Oaks . Scarlet Oak. . Black Cherry. . Swamp White Oak. . Buttonbush. . Weeping Willow. . Spicebush. . Alternate-leaved Dog- wood. . English Hawthorn (Pink single flowers). . Japan Arbor Vitz (Pea- fruiting). . Irish Yew. . Adam’s Needle. . Cut-leaved European Beech. BoTANICAL NAME Paulownia imperialis. Berberis Thunbergit. Rosa hybrida, var. Russell's Cottage. Magnolia glauca. Stuartia pentagyna. Pinus strobus. Cedrus Atlantica. Catalpa bignonioides. Magnolia umbrella. Magnolia acuminata. Magnolia macrophylla, Alnus glutinosa. Populus monilifera. Diervilla rosea. Rhodotypos kerrioides, Sassafras officinale. Quercus palustris. Quercus coccinea. Prunus serotina. Quercus bicolor. Cephalanthus Occidentalts. Salix Babylonica. Benzoin benzoin. Cornus alterntfolia. Crategus oxyacantha. Chamecyparis (or Retinospora) pisifera. Taxas baccata, var. fastigiata. Yucca filamentosa. Fagus sylvatica, var. lacimata. 167 ComMMoN NAME . Bhotan Pine. . Swiss Stone Pine. . Tree Box or Boxwood. . Cephalotaxus. . Scarlet Oak. . Scaled Juniper. . Holly-leaved Barberry, Oregon Barberry, Ash- berry. . Garden Hydrangea. . Cockspur Thorn. . Variegated Weigela. . Thunberg’s Barberry. . Siebold’s Barberry. . Ramanas Rose (White and magenta flowers). . Persian Lilac. (Purple flowers). . Common Snowball or Guelder Rose. . High Bush Cranberry. . Carolina Allspice, Straw- berry Shrub, Sweet- Scented Shrub. . Plume-leaved Japan Ar- bor Vitz. . Soulange’s Magnolia. . Rhododendrons. (Various kinds. See text.) . English Yew. . European Holly. . Lovely Azalea. . Flaming Azalea. . Japan Holly. . Great Laurel, Rose Bay. . Virginia Willow. BoTANICAL NAME Pinus excelsa. Pinus Cembra. Buxus sempervirens. Cephalataxus Fortunet. Quercus coccinea. Juniperus squamata. Mahonia aqutfolia. Hydrangea hortensis. Crategus crus-gallt. Diervilla rosea, var. foli1s vari- egatis. Berberis Thunbergi1. Berberis Sieboldz. Rosa rugosa. Syringa Persica. Viburnum opulis, var. sterilis. Viburnum opulis. Calycanthus floridus. Retino- plu- Chamecyparis (or spora) pistfera, var. mosa. Magnolia Soulangeana. Taxus baccata. Ilex aquifolium. Azalea amena. Azalea calendulacea (or lutea). Ilex crenata. Rhododendron maximum. Itea Virginica. 168 ComMMon NAME BoTANICAL NAME 80. Austrian Pine. Pinus Austriaca. 81. Sugar Maple. Acer saccharinum. 82. Beach Plum. Prunus maritima, Ni THE TERRACE The Terrace is stately. It is a fitting and impos- ing introduction to the Mall. Its whole expression is noble, dignified, large, with its broad stairways, its open esplanade and its sweeps of greensward. Stand here and look northward. The beautiful Bethesda Fountain ripples a continuous sheen of falling silver, playing with rainbows and blown at times into sprays of flying diamonds by sudden gusts of wind. On either side the velvet lawns lead the eyes away in a revel of sunlit green, holding them here and there by the blaze of color from some mass of bloom. From April to the end of June this spot is a glory of richly mingled hues, the flame of the azalea, the splendid outburst of the rhododendron, the lovely hues of the rose, the en- chanting festoons of the Wistaria, the tender and gentle profusion of the hawthorn’s sweet flowers follow each other in charming succession. It is a silent symphony of color, and the eye roves over it with a joy as keen as the ear delights in the swelling music of the orchestra. And beyond the glittering Fountain, across the danc- ing waters of the Lake, you look into the restful depths of the Ramble. The contrast between the ornate and the simple is extreme, yet by no means jarring. The gaze is led away and lost almost un- 170 consciously, from the suggestion of embrasure and em- bankment, garden and terrace to open country and the heart of nature. Beyond, the puffy trees roll the smoke of the woods, and, as you gaze, you lose the pomp and stateliness of all this surrounding architecture of wall and staircase, and melt away into the serene reverie that steals over the soul in the contemplation of the face of Nature. And if this was the aim of the archi- tect who planned this noble Terrace, how truly did he succeed ! And now let us see some of the beautiful things gathered here with so much taste and judgment. We will begin our ramble at the easterly corner of the Terrace and follow the Walk that enfolds the easterly side of the Terrace, like an arm. The wall here has five large “posts,” which will serve well for landmarks in placing the things we pass. Close by the first post (the one in the corner) is American arbor vite, with flat leaf sprays, very aromatic when rubbed with the fingers. By the second post is a sprawling mass of Chinese Wistaria, and off a little to the northeast of this is the beautiful Pinxter (or Pinkster) flower which blooms before its leaves appear, whence the name mudi- flora. This is in April, usually, and the flowers are of a lovely rose color, in terminal umbels. The flower stems and the funnel-form corollas are very hairy. The leaves are alternate and crowded at the ends of the branches; are oblong in shape and acute at both ends. Their margins are very beautiful, under the glass, fringed with the most delicate tiny little hairs. Just back of this Pinxter flower, to the southeast, is Cau- 171 casian azalea, with fragrant yellow flowers. Close by the third post of the wall, is Japan Judas tree, Cercis Japonica, a low growth, with flowers a little larger than those of the native Judas tree. These flowers are purplish-red, and break out along the bare branches in dense umbel-like clusters, before the leaves appear. They are like pea-flowers, for the bush belongs to the great pulse family. The leaves differ from C. Cana- densis (the native Judas tree) in having a richer gloss, sharper points and a more deeply cut, heart-shaped base. Close beside the C. Japonica, almost at the foot of the third post, is early-flowering Jessamine, with noticeably angled branches of clear green. It has very pretty leaves, easily distinguished by their being in threes. Its flowers are like those of the Forsythia, golden yellow, very early in spring. Almost due north of the Pinxter flower, a little east of north, is Jacque- minot rose, and north of this, Rose of Sharon. Off to the westerly side of the Rose of Sharon is Japan plume grass, and directly in line with these, to the west, in one, two, three order, are Japan zebra grass, with zebra-like bands of white and green across the leaves, then Rosa Boursalti (a thornless rose), and Retinospora plumosa, rising up close by the staircase that flanks the easterly side of the Terrace. By the fourth post of the wall is another sprawling mass of Chinese Wis- taria, then Retinospora plumosa, and close by the fifth and last post of the wall which is at the steps, you will find Japan Aucuba, with spotted leaves, and the beauti- ful Magnolia purpurea beside it. This magnolia is a 172 low bush, a dwarf, and bears deep dark crimson-purple flowers in April. Going down the steps here, at your right, is a fine mass of the Japan hedgebindweed. About half way around the curve of the path here as it swings westerly toward the Esplanade and Bethesda Fountain, you will find, on your left, a pretty cluster of the Russell’s Cot- tage Rose. It blooms with beautiful clear magenta flowers. Just before you came to this, you passed a good-sized swamp magnolia, with leaves very whitish (glauca) on the undersides. Following on, you will find out upon the rise of lawn, at your right, two shrubs quite close together. One of these, the easterly, you have met many times before, on these rambles; the westerly one you meet here for the first time. The easterly is fly-honeysuckle, known by the cusp at the tips of its leaves, and ragged, tattered branches. The westerly shrub is Stuartia. It gets its name from John Stuart, Earl of Bute, and is worthy of some attention, as you will not find many of these in the Park. It belongs to the Camellia or Tea family (Ternstremia- ce@). Its leaves are oval, thick, pointed at the tip and base, and set alternately on the branches. In July its cream-white flowers, very much like the Camellia, break out on solitary short pedicils (stems), nearly sessile (stemless), from the axils of the leaves. These flowers are fairly large, two, three to four inches wide, and each has, generally, five petals very prettily crimped about the edges. These flowers are succeeded by five- angled pods which are ripe in autumn. As the Walk comes out upon the Esplanade, at your 173 right, is a splendid mass of the handsome Rhodotypos with its glossy, deep purple berries in September, and on your left, is Thunberg’s barberry, with its rich brilliant crimson berries, gemming its dainty stems at the same time of year. Take now the walk that breaks off to the east from the Esplanade, to the Boat House. Just beyond the Rhodotypos you will find beach plum. This, in April or May covers its bare branches with white clusters of flowers in side umbels. After it flowers, the leaves appear, downy, pale green on the undersides, but shining on the uppersides. They are set alternately, are ovate, about three inches long, and sharply serrate. The fruit is a round purple berry powdered over with a bloom, and is ripe in September. As you proceed toward the Boat House you pass, on your right, near the Walk, cucumber tree of the mag- nolia family, with thin leaves from five to ten inches long which are generally pointed at both ends. Off to the southeast of this tree, weli out upon the lawn, is a good-sized evergreen with noticeably vase-like form of growth to its branches. For some reason it is not doing over well, but it is a fair specimen of the Mount Atlas Cedar. Its leaves are crowded together in rosette- like clusters along the branches, and the leaves them- selves are about an inch long, round, stiffish and sharp pointed. They are of a glaucous-green hue which gives a beautiful silvery effect to the otherwise dark- green foliage. Indeed this tree is considered by bot- anists but a silvery variety of the Cedar of Lebanon, a good specimen of which will be found on Section No. 10 of this book. -A little beyond, but on your left 174 now, you pass two very good specimens of the great- leaved magnolia. You can tell them at once by their very large (often three feet long) leaves, crowded close at the ends of the branches. In shape they are ob- long, and narrow gradually down from a broad upper part to a cordate base. They are of a bright clear green, but whitish on the undersides. The flowers of these trees are large also—about a foot wide, cream- white except for a-purplish cast at the base. They are very fragrant. A little to the northeast of these is another magnolia. This is umbrella tree, which you met with before, on Section No. 3 near the Arsenal. Note the umbrella-way its leaves hang at the ends of its branches. Due north of this tree, close by the Lake, is Virginia willow. It is an interesting shrub, with white flowers in May or June, in close terminal racemes that put you in mind of the sweet pepper bush. The individual flowers have five petals, five stamens, and a five-lobed calyx. Its leaves are simple and alternate, acute at the tip, wedge-shaped at the base. The fruit is a two-celled pod. It belongs to the Saxifrage family, and gets its name from the Greek word for willow, from the resemblance of its leaves to those of the willow. A tree alder stands a little west of this, overhanging the Lake and easily known by its “cones” and leaves somewhat cut-in at the top. West of the alder is cottonwood. Should you continue to- ward the Boat House, at the junction of the Walk beyond, there are two good specimens of American beech with a black cherry opposite them. Let us now consider the westerly side of the Ter- AA 4 Thi eee ee te eee my ng GREAT-LEAVED Macnoita (Magnolia macrophylla) Map 6. No. 34. 6 175 race, beginning at the Esplanade, northwesterly corner, by the Walk that leads to Bow Bridge. Two lovely little English hawthorns with dainty pink single flowers burst out into bloom here, in May days, and near them you will find alternate-leaved dogwood. Some cockspur-thorns lean out to you in the point between the Walks here. You know them by their thorns and wedge-shaped leaves. Back of the southerly cockspur, hidden away in the masses of shrubbery here, is a lusty specimen of Eleagnus longipes. It has reddish- brown branches, ovate leaves. Its flowers are yel- lowish-white from the axils of the leaves, and the fruits are bright scarlet berries on long stems. The berries, when young, are covered with brown scales, and ate ripe in June or July. The shrub is an im- portation from China and Japan. You will not see this unless you push aside the bushes here and look in behind them, for it is pretty well hidden behind the Thunberg’s barberry. You will know it by its leaves, which are very silvery on the undersides. The barberry here is a splendid mass, and a handsome display in September when its bright coral berries sparkle all through its fine leaves with the gem- like beauty of jewels. At the extreme end of the mass of the Thunberg is Siebold’s barberry from Manchuria and the north of China, with more droop- ing racemes of flowers and oblong berries. Con- tinuing along the Walk, diagonally across on your left, are three shrubs, close together. The first is Persian lilac, with purple flowers; the second, high bush cranberry with flat broat cymes of white flowers 176 in May, and brilliant, translucent red berries in Sep- tember ; the third, common snowball or Guelder Rose. Close by the steps, beyond, is garden hydrangea, with large glossy oval leaves of light green, and large heads of flowers in June. The hydrangea gets its name from two Greek words meaning water, vase, and these refer to the shape of its fruit-pod. Beside the hydrangea you will see two clumps of the pretty holly-leaved barberry. You recognize it at once by its spiny leaves. It gets its botanical name from Bernard McMahon. In early spring its flowers ap- pear in close, erect clusters of yellow racemes, and these are succeeded by blue-black berries which are covered with a glaucous bloom (powder). Surely, the holly-like leaves are very beautiful. Let us as- cend the little run of steps here and follow the wall around the westerly arm of the Terrace. This wall, like its easterly companion, has five “posts” which will serve us very nicely in locating our botanical pets here. By the first post is Retinospora plumosa, whose fine feathery leaves you have learned to know, on sight, now, and south of it, about midway between the first and second post, is Magnolia Soulangeana, with hand- some cream-white flowers, softly flushed with pinkish purple on the outside, deepening at the base of the corolla. By the second post is English yew. Then a mass of hybrid rhododendrons flank off to south- east of this. These rhododendrons are mostly of the rosy-lilac variety, Everestianum. But the whole bed here, all along the front of the wall, (and on the east side of the Terrace as well) is planted with 177 many varieties of hybrid rhododendrons. Among them are Blandyanum (rosy-crimson flowers), John Waterer (dark crimson), Album Elegans (blush chang- ing to white), Album Grandiflorum (blush), Caracta- cus (rich purplish crimson), Minnie (blush white with spots of chocolate in the throat), H. H. Hunnewell (rich dark crimson), Charles Bagley (cherry red), Charles Dickens (dark scarlet), Mrs. Milner (rich crimson) and H. W. Sargent (crimson). By the third post you will see a tall, handsome mass of European holly, with its dark green, glossy leaves fairly blazing with white light in the fall sunshine, stiff and set so bravely with spines. We all love it! How beautifully crimped and curled are its leaves! Note, too, the whitish translucent margins of the leaves. Be- side the gloss, the luster and fire of these leaves, the leaves of our native holly are dull and dead. There is another mass of this close by the fourth post. Near this mass are handsome plantings of the Azalea amena, beautiful in April, with its lovely magenta-colored flow- ers. Beside these is Azalea calendulacea, with burning, fire-red, yellowish flowers, well named, the flaming azalea. In between the fourth and the fifth posts you will find English yew (close by the fourth post), and a little off to northeast of it Japan holly. This has very small, oval leaves, and at first glance you might think it box. But look at its small leaves closely and you will see the small tell-tale spines of the holly. Beside this, off to its northeast, is Rhododendron maximum, and then two more clumps of Japan holly. North of these is a pretty mass of the holly-leaved barberry, with its 178 pinnate, spiny leaves. Directly east of the holly-leaved barberry, close by the steps, is a young Paulownia. This brings us to the completion of our circuit around the Terrace. Bue before leaving, let me call to your atten- tion the handsome Swiss stone pine, on the high ground that overlooks the west arm of the Terrace. It is a conical tree, with dense, close foliage, that has an almost furry look. Should you get near enough to it to ex- amine its leaves, you will find that they are five in a cluster, and that each leaf is distinctly triangular, with a glaucous bloom on the sides. Back of this fine tree, about half way between it and the lamp by the Walk that leads over to the Concourse by the Lake, are two sturdy Bhotan pines (leaves in fives, but very long, ten inches or more). North of these, just where the high ground begins to sink in a hollow, are two specimens of Retinospora pisifera, with flat, gridiron leaf-sprays. Where the Walk to the Concourse springs away from the West Terrace Walk, near the steps, you will find another Swiss stone pine. Opposite it is a goodly scarlet oak, with bristle-tipped leaves. Close by the Swiss stone pine, in a low creeping mass, like thick moss, stealing here and there over the rocks, in lovely abandon, is the beautiful scaled juniper, of a light clear green. Its leaves are in threes, fine and silvery, and hug close in to the stems, in a thick, dense mass which gives the matted effect of moss. It is certainly beautiful—a lovely tapestry for rocks. By the lamp, on this Walk, you will find a broad-boughed, handsome cut-leaved European beech. -€6 DOI- %. “t / Mt @ 4 a= PG ae ION Of C7 of J IGWVe SAL : LoN * al che iv ‘aap ae PUN Re TM ae na allie oe Ria! an } ae,” a en | + ae ‘ BO Fiabe: i ee Me aaa agi ; rates. nny un ha hp MAR: en ae tu a ees ee ee f 4 | hae ‘ : > ' . .] . Ye - a =~ = 3 - ¢ - - os re > i = : Po = he OL GO LI II, MAT ore ee re a= > 4 oe — Coc i, S- = ‘ RY +h eu y } ‘i : 4 wae. io ? iw : , a ; ss Marrantda wvarembene! fo-aph mage Nace pl pia ‘ela ome ary halen Yim Noe Explanations, Map No. 7 ComMMoON NAME. . Pignut Hickory. . Mockernut or Whiteheart Hickory. . Shagbark Hickory. . Dwarf or Large-racemed Horsechestnut. . Black Cherry. . American Beech. . Sweet Gum or Bilsted. . Pin Oak. . Bhotan Pine. . Douglas Spruce. . Scotch Pine. . Colorado Blue Spruce. . White Pine. . White Oak. . Scarlet Oak. . Black Oak. . Soulange’s Magnolia. . Witch Hazel. . Sassafras. . French Tamarisk. . Witch Hazel. . Pin Oak: ‘Post Oak: . Japan Cedar. | Ailanthus or . Tree’ of Heaven. . Bird Cherry, Mazzard Cherry. . Chinese White Magnolia or Yulan. . Catesby’s Andromeda mixed in with ‘‘ Lovely Azalea.”’ . Rhododendrons, mostly ‘*Everestianum.’”’ BoTANICAL NAME. Carya porcina. Carya tomentosa. Carya alba. A¢sculus macrostachya. Prunus serotina, Fagus ferruginea. Liquidambar styractflua. Quercus palustris. Pinus excelsa. Pseudotsuga Douglasit. Pinus sylvestris. Picea pungens. Pinus strobus, Quercus alba. Quercus coccinea. Quercus coccinea, var. tinc- toria. Magnolia Soulongeana. Hamamelis Virginiana. Sassafras officinale. Tamarix Gallica. Hamamelis Virginiana. Quercus palustris. Quercus stellata. Cryptomeria Japonica. Adlanthus glandulosus. Prunus avium. Magnolia conspicua. Andromeda Catesbei and Aza- lea amena. 184 CoMMON NAME 1, dea Oat: . Weeping Willow. . English Hawthorn. . English Yew. . Cockspur Thorn. . European Bird Cherry. . American Chestnut. . Flowering Dogwood. . Plume-leaved Japan Ar- bor Vitz or Retinospora. . Scarlet-fruited Thorn, White Thorn. . American Holly. . Common Swamp Blue- berry, High-bush Blue- berry. . Shrub Yellowroot. . Fortune’s Cephalotaxus. . Arrowwood. . White Swamp Honey- suckle, White Azalea, Clammy Azalea. . Rhododendrons, mostly ‘*Everestianum.”’ . Wild Red Osier, Red Osier Dogwood. . Persimmon. . Red Maple. . Staghorn Sumac. . Mountain Laurel. . Shadbush, June Berry or Service Berry. . Sweet Bay or Swamp Magnolia. . Japan Spindle Tree. . Spicebush. . Hackberry, Sugarberry, Nettle Tree. . Sassafras, with Climbing Hydrangea growing on it S. Indian Bean Tree or Southern Catalpa. BoTANICAL NAME Quercus palustris, Salix Babylonica. Crategus oxyacantha. Taxus baccata. Crategus crus-galli. Prunus padus. Castanea sativa, var. Amert- cana. Cornus florida. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plum- osa. Crategus coccinea, Ilex opaca, Vaccinium corymbosum. Xanthorrhiza apttfolia. Cephalotaxus Fortunit. Viburnum dentatum. Azalea viscosa. Cornus stolontfera. Diospyros Virginiana. Acer rubrum. Rhus typhina. Kalmza lattfolia. Amelanchies Canadensis. Magnolia glauca. Euonymus Japonicus. Benzoin benzotn. Celtis Occtdentalts. Sassafras officinale, with Schiz- ophragma hydrangeoides. Catalpa bignontotides. 185 CoMMON NAME . Kentucky Coffee Tree. . White Pine. . Cucumber Tree. . American White Ash. . Sweetbrier. . Hemlock. . Mountain Maple. . Tartarian Maple, variety Ginnala. . Corylopsis. . Umbrella Tree. . Silverbell Tree. . Persian Lilac. . American Arbor Vite. . Snowberry or Waxberry. . Paulownia. . Paper or Canoe Birch. . Yellow Birch. . Weeping European Beech. . Common Lilac (Purple flowers). . Japan Pagoda Tree. . siberian Pea Tree. . Great-leaved Magnolia. . Sweet Bay or Swamp Mag- nolia. . Western Yellow Pine. . European Larch. . European Linden. . Bladder Senna. . Silver or White Maple. . Osage Orange. . Flowering Dogwood. . Lovely Azalea. . Mockernut or Whiteheart Hickory. . Black Cherry. . Cherry Birch, Sweet, Birch, Black Birch. elalip: Tree. . Fragrant Honeyuckle. . Red Oak. . MissouriCurrant, Golden or Buffalo Currant. BoTANICAL NAME Gymnocladus Canadensis. Pinus strobus. Magnolia acuminata. Fraxinus Americana, Rosa rubiginosa. Tsuga Canadensis. Acer spicatum. Acer Tartaricum, var. Ginnala. Corylopsis spicata. Magnolia umbrella (or tripe- tala). FHlalesia tetraptera. Syringa Persica. Thuya Occtdentalts. Symphoricarpus racemosus, Paulownia tmpertalis. Betula papyrifera. Betula lutea. Fagus sylvatica, var. pendula, Syringa vulgaris. Sophora Japonica. Caragana arborescens. Magnolia macrophylla. Magnolia glauca.. Pinus ponderosa. Larix Europea. Tilia Europea. Colutea arborescens. Acer dasycarpum. Maclura aurantiaca. Cornus florida. Azalea amena. Carya tomentosa, Prunus serotina. Betula lenta. Liriodendron tuliptfera. Lonicera fragrantissima, Quercus rubra. Ribes aureum. 97: 98. 99- Ioo. Iol. 102. 103. 104. LOS: 106. LO, 108. 109. TIO. 186 CoMMON NAME Purple-flowering Rasp- berry. Slippery Elm. Austrian Pine. Catesby’s Andromeda. Globe Flower, Japan Rose or Kerria (varie- gated leaves). Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa. European White Birch. Washington Thorn. Bush Deutzia (Variety ‘*Pride of Rochester’’). Pink or Purple Azalea, Pinxter Flower, Wild Honeysuckle. Dockmackie or Maple- leaved Arrowwood. Swamp Hickory, Bitter- nut. Common Lilac. Pin Oak. BotaNnicat NAME Rubus odoratus. Ulmus fulva. Pinus Austriaca, Andromeda (or Catesbet. Kerria Japonica, var. folits variegalts. Leucothoé) Philadelphus coronartius. Betula alba. Crategus cordata. Deutzia crenata, var. Pride of Rochester. Azalea nudtflora, Viburnum acerifolium. Carya amara. Syringa vulgaris. : Quercus palustris. VEL. THE RAMBLE The Ramble! How altogether lovable it is! There is always some spot in every park that is invested with a peculiar charm. Some subtilty of seclusion and beauty which draws the nature lover to its haunts. Its very air is full of contentment and peace and rest from the whirlpool of life that is seething in the great city be- yond. Such a spot surely is the Ramble. Its quiet nooks, its easy paths wandering, seemingly without thought, beside the still waters of the Lake or some sleeping pool over which the grasses and reeds bend to see their images; these beguile the very spirit from you and set free the swift, aspiring thoughts in new flights like the rush of birds skyward. Come here in the spring, when the smell of earth mold rises with a fragrance that cannot be described ; when the dazzling April sun sends a glisten of silver over the fallen leaves or touches crisp, dry branches of the leafless trees with a flame of crystal fire; or when the drowsy summer stirs with gentle breezes that sift in from the Lake, softly touching all the leaves to whis- pering music; when birds shoot through the green like bolts of light, when the cicada startles the serene silence with his rattle. But, I think, this spot is loveliest, perhaps, on one of the soft, hazy, Indian-summer days 188 of the autumn, when the trees are rustling their rich- est robes of crimson and gold, when the air, almost silent, trembles with the subdued hum of insects and the mellow haze of faint, gray purple mists wreathe the trees and lake with the witchery of their mystery. Come here then and let the loveliness of the placé move through you as the mists move through the trees, still- ing you with the serene communion with dreaming Nature that is indeed beyond the power of words to tell. The soft, golden sunshine falls upon you with a gentle warmth, as if caressing you, the trees rustle, the crimson and yellow leaves float gently down about you like the quiet thoughts of an idle reverie. All is hushed, subdued, mellowed. No harsh note comes to you. The very voices of the passers-by are softened, as if the scene possessed some subtle power of enchant- ment to enforce silence. If you have aught of artist or poet in you, and every one has or should have, come to this lovely spot when autumn is hanging about it its dream veils and do thou sit here and dream too. Let the city with its cares float away in its enfolding mists while you sit here amid the falling leaves, the warm, golden sunshine and the subdued colors of an autumn day and live! In this maze of winding paths, crossing and recross- ing as they do, it is quite impossible to follow out clearly any single line of rambling. Confusion would most certainly result from any such attempt. So I have pursued in the treatment of this chapter the plan of plot- ting, at easily distinguishable points on the map, such as crossings, intersections and other determinable points, 94 ON “4 dey (DNpuad “402 “v4wa]ks snsv.7) Hoaag ONIdaa MA NVadouny 189 the various important kinds of trees and shrubs in this section. Of these, such as have been met with before in other rambles are not here described, only the new varieties, and these are: Acer Spicatum. (Mountain Maple. No.65.) Near the handsome shrub, Corylopsis, in the northeasterly part of the Ramble, a little off from the Walk, and in behind some other shrubs, you will find this rather small sample of the maple which flings its glory over country roads. You will have no difficulty in finding it if you take the path which runs almost northerly from the junction near the Corylopsis. It lies a few feet to the right of the Walk, as you face north, about half a dozen paces from the junction, and nestles very shyly in behind the clumps here, as if longing for the retired haunts of wood or glen or shaded roadside. The mountain maple is easily identified by its leaves. These are divided into three tapering lobes above the middle of the leaf, the central lobe usually extending out further than the side lobes. Sometimes the leaves are five-lobed, having two small ones at the base. The bases are heart-shaped (cordate) and the leaves, coarse- ly serrated, are downy on the undersides. These soft, beautiful leaves swing out on very long stems (petioles) which are swollen at the base. In June you can look for this tree’s flowers, greenish-yellow, in delicate spikes or panicles, five or six inches long, which stand up conspic- uously amid the beautiful flowers. These erect or slightly nodding panicles look almost fuzzy at a little distance away, but when you get the hand glass on them you can see that they are made up of clusters of the 190 most delicate little flowers with five-petalled corollas. These flowers change into hanging clusters of two- winged seeds which are bright red a month later. But this lovely brilliant red cools off in autumn to a dull brown. These winged seeds or “keys” of the Acer spicatum are the smallest fruits of the American maples. The tree gets its name spicatum from its inflorescence, erect panicles or spikes of bloom. Acer Tartaricum, var. Ginnala. (Tartarian Maple, variety Giunala. No. 66.) Near the Corylopsis, about southeast of it, some dozen feet, you will find this pretty maple, the Ginnala variety of the Tartarian maple. It is not very high, about five feet, and is rather a shrub now. You can pick it out by its three-lobed leaves, the middle one longer. Their margins are doubly serrated. Its flowers are fragrant and yellow and appear in rather long-stemmed panicles which are very beautiful. This handsome little maple is an importation from China and Japan. In the autumn its leaves turn a brilliant scarlet. Esculus macrostachya. (Dwarf or Long-racemed Horsechestnut. No. 4.) If you take the path which leads off northerly from Bow Bridge, you will find, on your right, near the first fork of the Walk, a handsome cluster of these dwarf horsechestnuts. They can be known easily by their low growths, level, shelf-like habit of foliage, and by their palmate leaves. These shrubs get the botanical name macrostachya from two Greek words, macros, long, and stachus, spike ; in refer- ence to their flowers, which shoot up in long, conspic- ious spikes of white bloom. These fairly cover the shrubs with their tapering cones of florescence in July. IQI But you can know the shrub when not in flower by its easily distinguishable dwarf form and its handsome, beautifully smooth palmately compound leaves, made up of five to seven leaflets. These leaflets are oval- oblong in shape, very smooth on the uppersides, but hairy on the underside. They are set close to the leaf stem, that is, botanically, are nearly sessile. This dwarf horsechestnut is certainly a beautiful shrub for massing effects, and its midsummer bloom, fairly bursting with its horns of snow, makes it a lovely pathside joy to the city park rambler, jaded from the dust and glare of city Streets. Andromeda (or Leucothoé) Catesbei. (Catesby’s Andromeda. No. 28.) In the early days of spring, the frost white, tiny, little urn-shaped flowers of the An- dromeda are among the loveliest sights of the season. Down by the Terrace we found the staggerbush (An- dromeda Mariana), here in the Ramble we have fine masses of Catesby’s Andromeda, differing from the Mariana in having more pointed leaves. Catesby’s An- dromeda is a low-growing, spreading evergreen shrub -with thick, leathery leaves, taper pointed, and swinging on short stems. The leaves have almost the dark gloss of laurel on the uppersides, but on the undersides are of a pale, dull, lifeless green, in strong contrast with the lustrous and vigorous hue of the uppersides. The leaves are ovate-lanceolate in shape, roundish at the base, but tapering down to a point at the tips. They are sharply serrulate, and are on leaf-stems (petioles) of about half an inch long. When young these leaf-stems have quite a reddish cast over their green. The flowers of the shrub 192 are very beautiful, breaking out in April in dense, ra- cemed clusters from the axils of the leaves. The indi- vidual flowers are urn-shaped, frost or wax white, with a five-toothed corolla and ten tiny little stamens with golden heads. There is a daintiness, a fineness, about the little flowers which goes right to the heart. The little dense clusters make you think of lilies of the valley. You will find one good sized mass of this shrub very near the lamp-post which stands close by the rustic rail of the path leading into the little Summer House, in the middle of the southerly part of the Ramble. The mass is just back of a magnificent clump of Azalea amena. The Azalea is in the right hand corner, as you go from the Summer House to the path north of it. You cannot mistake it. . Azalea viscosa. (White Swamp Honeysuckle. White zalea. Clammy Azalea. No. 45.) Close by the high- bush blueberries, near the south-middle of the Ramble, you will find this honeysuckle or azalea. It is a late bloomer, and you can look for it the last of June or early in July. Its flowers are very fragrant and of a lovely pale pinkish white. Its corolla is funnel-form, with five flaring lobes. You will know its flowers at once by the sticky, clammy pubescence which covers stem and tube. These flowers are in end clusters or umbels. The branches of the shrub are very bristly and hairy. The leaves are simple, about four inches long, and set alternately on the branch, often crowded at the ends of the branches. They are oblanceolate, entire, with margins hairy and bristle tipped ends, pale green 193 on the uppersides, glaucous below and pubescent. The fruit is a bristly capsule. The shrub belongs to the heath family. Betula lenta. (Cherry Birch. Sweet Birch. Black Birch. No.92.) Inthe northwesterly part of the Ram- ble, on the westerly skirts of the open lawn that rolls its velvety green to the south of the Reservoir, you will find two of these handsome birches on either side of a lordly tulip tree. If you take the path that bends to the right (south) as you pass the Missouri currant and the Siberian pea tree, you will come upon this noble com- pany of three, just before you meet the next fork of the Walk. The sweet or cherry birch has a graceful trunk, lithe as a young Indian, polished glossy brown, but rough- ened by horizontal lines of dots that make you think of phonographic records. Could we swing a horn upon these and set them spinning, what harmonies of wind and weather should we hear! What woodland secrets! Music of brooks, whispers of rustling leaves, the song and dance of light, and the clear, white shine of the stars ! This birch gets its common name, “cherry birch,” from the rather close resemblance of its bark to that of the garden cherry (Prunus cerasus), and the name “sweet birch” from its aromatic bark. This is the birch that gives us that delicious brew, so refreshing to our lips on summer days—the “‘birch beer’? of the moun- tains! You can easily identify the tree by its bark and leaves. Both are sweetly aromatic. The bark is mahogany 194 brown, lustrous, close-fitting, not peeling away in shreds like other birches. It is noticeably marked with horizontal lines of dots (lenticels). The leaves, usually about three inches long, are soft and tender, ovate or oblong-ovate, with heart-shaped bases and tapering points. On the lower portions of the branches they are two together, but near the ends occur alternately. They are straight-veined, finely serrate, of a bright, shining green on the uppersides, but paler beneath. Early in the spring this tree flowers, and if you come upon it then, all lace hung with its golden catkins, you will surely have to stop and let your delighted eyes rove over such exquisite beauty. These pendant golden catkins contain the staminate or pollen-bearing flowers. The fruit-bearing or pistillate catkins are erect and rather inconspicuous. The fruit is about an inch long, cylindrical, erect, with rounded ends and spreading, resinous scales. On old trees the bark has somewhat of a grayish cast and the lovely smoothness of the younger trees is broken into scaly plates, loose at one end, and scaling off in large sheets. I love to look upon the lustrous bark of the young cherry birch. Carya amara. (Swamp Hickory. Bitternut. No. 108.) As you go southerly from the Cryptomerias, there is an extremely interesting tree that stands at the bend of the path where it turns to the east at the first fork, south of the Cryptomerias. The tree is a hickory and a very interesting one, for, so far as I know, it is the only one of its kind inthe Park. That you may find it without fail, the path, as it bends easterly, passes over an arm of the pool. 195 The tree is a small one, with compound leaves which are set on the branches alternately. The leaflets are op- posite each other, with the exception of the end one, which is terminal. These leaves are made up of from seven to eleven ovate-lanceolate leaflets. All except the terminal leaflets are sessile (stemless) on the main leaf stem. The end leaflet has a short stem. These leaflets are deeply serrated, more so than the leaves of the other hickories. But if you are not sure from the leaves, look at the buds. They are an easy and a sure mark of identification. These are distinctly flattened and curved (falcate) at the tip, and especially they are of bright orange-yellow hue. This conspicuous hue of the buds is a distinguishing feature of the tree. Its fruit is globular, ovate, and has four ridges or wings which run down to about the middle of the husk. The kernel of the nut is exceedingly bitter—whence the name of the tree, bitternut. Corylopsis spicata. (No. 67.) In the early days of spring, in March, if you are up in the northeastern part of the Ramble, this beautiful bush is well worth seeing. At this time of the year it is usually in bloom and you can easily know it from other bushes by its very profuse inflorescence. Away off through the maze of brown twigs you can catch the gleam of its pale yellow flowers which seem to fairly set the bush ablaze with their ten- der light. It is almost the first bush to break forth into bloom and set along its branches the age-old story of spring and its awakening glory. How lovely then is the sight of this torch-like shrub, kindled as with the flame of the burning bush that spoke to Moses—the 196 deathlessness of life, the eternal recurrence of its power, fresh from the hand of the living God. Looking upon these tender blossoms, it is almost impossible not to feel a new thrill of hope and a new sense of the deep-rooted feeling that welled in Browning when he wrote, ‘‘God’s in His heaven, all’s right with the world.” You will have no trouble in picking out this bush. Its flowers droop in three or four-inch racemes, from greenish-yellow bracts. These flowers are of a pale lemon or canary yellow, and are five-petaled and five- stamened. Its leaves, hazel-like, have given the shrub its name Corylopsis (corylus and opsis). They are acutely heart-shaped, are on long stems, have serrated margins, and are strongly feather veined. On their undersides they are glaucous and pubescent. The fruit of the shrub is a dehiscent capsule, containing two glossy-black seeds. The bush is a native of Japan and certainly a welcome and charming importation for our parks. Cryptomeria Japonica. (Japan Cedar. No. 24.) In the midwesterly part of the Ramble there is a little path, a little loop in the Walk, that gives you a sweet retire- ment from the rush of city streets, and almost buries you amid the leafy boughs. The birds sing and flash by on sudden, bursting wings, and at your feet a little stream feels its way along from a slumbrous pool to leap in silver rills down a rock-choked chasm to the sun-lighted waters of the Lake below. This little dream-spot can be easily found if you take the path that leads off due east from the Schiller Bust, cross a bridge which spans the outlet of the rill, mentioned above, into LEAF-SPRAYS OF THE JAPAN CEDAR (Cryptomeria Japonica) Map 7. No: 24 197 the Lake, then at the first fork of the path, turn to your left, nearly northeast, and follow the path up to a sharp elbow that crooks the Walk abruptly to the east again. Here at your right hand is the little dream-spot, and if you stand in it and face south you will look right into a cluster of Cryptomeria Japonica. They stand across the streamlet, up the bank. You will know them at once by their tall, spire-like forms, dark green foliage, with parts of it reddish brown, and trunks of the same hue. The trunks look like posts stripped of their bark. The specimens here are not doing very well, for some rea- son, but up by the Reservoir (on Section No. to of this book) you will find some superb specimens flourishing in the best of health. The foliage of the Cryptomeria Japonica is very easily distinguished. Its leaves have a marked, claw- like look, are rather four-sided, curved, and taper grad- ually down, from a thick base to a sharp-pointed tip. They seem to be trying to clasp the branch. This gives each branch a rather hard, close look. If you examine the tree carefully, you may find its small, globular cones, not quite an inch in diameter, clinging at the ends of the branches. These cones have a deep-seated affec- tion for the branch and hang on very persistently. They are odd-looking things, certainly, and, if you examine them closely, you will see that their scales are set with slender, recurved prickles. In form the tree is lofty and spire-like, and its foli- age, in the full perfection of good health, is dark green and lustrous, full of a seeming enduring strength. As 198 you look at its stiff, claw-like leaves, you long to hear the music that a good gale would draw from them. Kalmia latifolia. (Mountain Laurel. Calico Bush. No. 51.) All over the Ramble you will find this hardy little mountaineer flinging the white light from its pol- ished green leaves, with an almost crystalline brilliance. One particularly fine mass of it banks the northeasterly corner of the Walk which wanders from the northerly side of the slumbrous little pool in the heart of the Ramble. Just where this Walk comes out upon the Cross-walk at the south of the open stretch, bounding the upper part of the Ramble, you will find it, a dozen feet high, shaking its glossy, leathery, dark green leaves over your head and filling your eyes with a blaze of crystal light, if you catch their gloss across the sun. Apollo shoots silver arrows. The mountain laurel gets its generic name, Kalmia, from Peter Kalm, a Swedish naturalist. It is an evergreen densely foliaged shrub, with stiffly bent branches, which, if you meet in the shrub’s native environment of deep, dark woods, bar your way with an almost steel-like tenacity. It grows in a roundish, compact form. Its rather elliptical leaves are set alternately on the branches, are smooth, glossy and leathery, dark green on the uppersides, but light yellow-green beneath. They are pointed at both ends. The glory of the shrub is in June. Come then and behold in silence the wondrous work of Nature in the saucer-shaped corollas, rose flushed with the hues of dawn, that this shrub unfolds to your delighted eyes. Look down into the lovely chalice and follow the wan- derings of that wavy line of rose and faint purple 199 which flushes around the cup like a rainbow over a sky of pearl. See the ten little stamens with their heads all tucked away in little pockets, curved back, like miniature catapults, waiting the touch of the golden bee to set them off, with a shower of pollen from their flying anthers. Touch them with but the tip of your pencil, and the trap is sprung. The golden pollen flies, and Nature’s end is accomplished. The lovely flowers are succeeded by a woody pod or capsule. The capsule is five-celled and contains many oblong seeds. Magnolia acuminata. (Cucumber Tree. Mountain Magnolia. No. 61.) Not far from the Corylopsis, in the northeasterly part of the Ramble, you will find sev- eral stalwart specimens of this magnolia. They stand rather close together, with well-developed trunks of dark, brownish gray, and a look, in the upperparts, of lightish gray, that reminds you of the abele tree or white poplar. The leaves are thin and entire (not ser- rated), are pointed at top and base, often the base 1s rounded. The margins are generally slightly waved. These leaves are of a bright, light green on the upper- sides, but paler beneath, and, in the autumn, turn to a lovely fawn yellow. They are from five to twelve inches long and about four inches broad. The tree gets its common name from its fruit, which (especially when young) resembles a small cucumber. It is ripe in Sep- tember or October, and if you are passing near at that time you can easily catch its rose-crimson glow con- spicuously showing amid the tree’s foliage. This cu- cumber-like pod opens little slits and drops out from them its bright, coral-red seeds, on slender, silky 200 threads, curious sights, if you do not know the fruiting habits of the magnolias. The flowers of this tree break out in May or June and are not very conspicuous. They are small, greenish-yellow, six petaled, and about three inches wide. You cannot fail to find them, close by the Corylopsis in the northeasterly part of the Ram- ble. Two are quite near the Corylopsis, and there are some more to the westward and a little southward as you follow the path that skirts the southerly border of the open stretch of green here. Magnolia Soulangeana. (Soulange’s Magnolia. No. 17.) You will have little trouble in picking out this beautiful hybrid magnolia, if you are passing it in time of bloom. This is usually in April. Afar off, through the leafless trees, you can see its soft, lovely tints of purplish pink and white. The bloom is profuse, and, in its perfection, is almost cloudlike in its fullness. These flowers, chalice-shaped, seem to sit upon the branches in a way that makes you think of vases. Their petals are about four or five inches long, six to nine in number, cream-white on the inside, but on the outside softly flushed with pink, deeping down at the base of the flower to a deep purple. Emblem of dawn, is this lovely blossom. Roseate herald of the flowers that are so soon to burn on bush and tree, how incomparably beautiful is thy hue in those bare April days while yet the tang of winter is in the air! If you take the path that leads up northerly from the bust of Schiller, and follow it to its second fork, north, then turn to your right, walk easterly to the second fork of the path, you will find a very good specimen of this 201 magnolia directly south of the second fork of the path, with another of its kin just east of it, close by the path, just a few feet along. But these are on your right as you go easterly. They are small trees, about fifteen feet high, with very handsome, light-gray bark, lighter even than that of the American beech. Their leaves are about six inches long, obovate, that is, reverse egg- shape, and have a short, abrupt point. This magnolia is a hybrid between Magnolia con- spicua, the Chinese yulan, and Magnolia purpurea (or obovata). Its leaves show very plainly the intermedi- ate type of the two parent trees, as do also the blended hues of its flowers. Surely it is a lovely tree and lights the spring paths with a beauty that is all its own. Picea pungens. (Colorado Blue Spruce. Silver Spruce. No. 12.) Near the little mushroom-shaped shelter on the southwesterly part of the Ramble, not far from Bow Bridge, you can see some very fair (though small) specimens of this beautiful conifer. As you stand beneath the shelter and face west, within a few feet of you, and directly in front of you, are two of these young evergreens. You can recognize the Colo- rado blue spruce on sight by its color alone, a pale, glaucous green with a decided bluish tinge. When in its perfection of color it is an almost unnatural shade of hue for an evergreen, being then of a pale, glaucus green, overcast with the loveliest and most delicate tinge of pale blue. Its loveliness of tint fairly takes your breath away, so delicate, so soft is its effect. But though this richness of color often burns off, from effects of soil and climate, to a cold, grayish blue-green, 202 yet even then it is distinctive enough to detect easily as an unmistakable mark of the tree’s identity. Its leaves, like all those of the true spruces, are four-sided. They are also noticeably curved, tapering down to a sharply acute point. In character they are stout and stiff, which botanists call vigid, and are about an inch long. On the upperside they are light green, but on the underside are beautifully glaucous and silvery. It is this which gives the delicate, lightish cast to the tree’s foliage. Its cones are from three to five inches long, cylindrical-oblong, of a lustrous light-brown. In form of growth the outline of the tree is rather conical or pyramidal, with strong, horizontal branches which sweep out from the trunk in broken whorls. If you take the path northerly from Bow Bridge and follow it to the east from its third fork, you will easily find the mushroom shelter. Pinus ponderosa. (Western Yellow Pine. No. 82.) You will find a healthy young specimen of this sturdy stock in the northwesterly part of the Ramble, not far from the slippery elm. Follow the path which passes the slippery elm. Just around the corner from the point where it breaks off from the Walk, running east and west, you will find this fine young pine. In order that you may surely find it, as you go from the fork upon the Walk leading by the slippery elm, you pass witch- hazel and sweet gum, on the right (as you go northerly toward the west Ramble Road stop), and on the left, in the corner of the fork, the fine clump of retinosporas, alluded to and described below. The sweet gum has star-shaped leaves and the witch-hazel’s leaves are lop- sided. The retinosporas have finely-sprayed, plume- 203 like leaves. The pine in question stands just beyond the witch-hazel, back from the Walk, upon the left (east) bank, as you face north, looking toward the west Ram- ble road stop. You can identify this pine easily by its leaves, which are gathered together in bundles of three. The leaves themselves are long, nearly ten inches, when full grown, and are of a flexible texture, of a deep, dark green hue, rather lusterless and dead in finish. If you squeeze these three leaves together, you will see that they are so cut as to thus form one round leaf. Press the two leaves of an Austrian pine together and you get one round leaf. The cone of the ponderosa is about three or four inches long, with recurved (bent back) prickles on the cone-scales. This is a fine, healthy sap- ling here, and should grow nobly. You will find some splendid specimens of the ponderosa near McGowan’s Pass Tavern, indicated on the map for Section No. 15 of this book. Prunus avium. (Bird Cherry. Mazzard Cherry. No. 26.) If you cross the Bridge leading into the westerly part of the Ramble, turn to the left, and at the next right hand branch of the path, go up some steps, turn to the right again, cross the Stone Arch, go southerly, and just after crossing the Stone Arch, bend to your right and follow the leafy path as it winds around to run beside the Lake’s border, about midway between the point where it bent around from the Stone Arch to the next fork of the path, on the westerly side of the Walk, you will find two specimens of this cherry stand- ing quite close together. They are not very large trees, the taller of them is about twelve or fifteen feet high. 204 You can pick them out by their rather glossy, reddish- brown, typical cherry-tree bark and hairy (undersides ) ovate-lanceolate leaves, ending in a point, often ab- ruptly. These leaves are thickish, very coarsely and doubly serrated. The tree’s flowers occur about the time the leaves begin to appear, in close umbels, from side spurs along the branches. The fruit is a sweet (occasionally sour) drupe, yellow or red, rather heart- shaped, pointed. Pseudotsuga Douglasii. (Douglas Spruce. No. 10.) ‘As you approach the little mushroom-shaped shelter in the southwesterly part of the Ramble, just north of the lamp-post that stands by the right of the Walk, as you come towards the shelter, you will see a small- sized evergreen. It is now about five feet high. This is the Douglas Spruce. Its form of growth is pyr- amidal, with a horizontal spread of branches. The leaves are linear, either straight or curved, and quite flexible. They are of a dark or bluish-green color, whitish below, obtuse, and are more or less two-ranked along the branches. The cones are three or four inches long, drooping, and egg-shaped in form. These cones are bristly with exserted bracts. You will find another specimen of the tree on Section 10, close by the Reservoir’s wall. Quercus coccinea, var. tinctoria. (Black Oak. No. 16.) The branch of path leading off to the west of Schiller’s bust will lead you by a specimen of this oak. You will find it on the left (west) of the Walk as you bend northerly, and you can identify it by its rough blackish bark. The rough trunk is broken with 205 heavy plates, especially on the lower parts. The leaves of this tree are confusing because they run often very close to those of the scarlet and the red oak. On the lower parts of the tree the leaves are broad, reverse, egg-shaped in outline, with seven to nine lobes, obtuse at the base. The lobes are bristle-tipped, and this fact shows that the tree is a biennial fruiter. The oaks without bristled leaves are annual fruiters. The black oak carries its leaves on long, somewhat slender stems, and these stems are usually downy. The acorn is roundish, flattened very noticeably at the point of the nut, and often marked very beautifully with lines of yellow and brown. The cup of the acorn is quite deep and settles over the nut in a way that, with its loose- end scales, makes you think of Robinson Crusoe’s hat. Both the inner bark of the tree and the kernel of the acorn are strongly tinged with yellow or orange. This inner yellowish bark is the sure mark of the tree. It is bitter to the taste. From the characteristic inner bark the tree has its other common name, yellow- barked oak. Quercus stellata. (Post Oak. No. 23.) In the central part of the Ramble, near the slumbrous little pool which throws back the images of bending trees and overhanging bushes, close by the pathside, you will find a fairly good-sized representative of this species of oak. There are not many of these trees in the Park, indeed, this, I believe, is the only one I have found in the course of my rambles through the Park. May it thrive on where it has set its foot so firmly, and whisper still to us as we wind these lovely ways. 206 In order that you may more readily find it, the Pool lies just north of the little round Summer House, which has, for a distinguishing mark on the map, an open loop of walk at its south. This gives it a kind of dumb-bell look which is easily noted. A little rustic bridge spans the westerly outlet of this Pool. If you stand on this bridge, face northerly, and follow the path, northerly, you will find the post oak about midway, on your right hand, between the first and second forks of the path as you proceed northerly. It is a medium-sized tree, and you can pick it out easily by its leaves which are cut very peculiarly. These are from four to six inches long, leathery, dark green on the uppersides, but on the undersides downy and whitish. These leaves are cut by two deep sinuses, about a third way up, on either side of the midrib. This throws the upper part, generally, into three broad, obtuse, divergent lobes. These divergent lobes are often double. But it is the broad upper part, with the two large bays or sinuses, which cut it from the lower part of the leaf, that strikes your eye as a marked characteristic. It gives the leaves, the upper portion, a rather star-like look, as you glance up at them against the sky, and it is this feature which has given the tree its specific botanical name stellata. As a whole the leaf is generally from five to seven-lobed. Sometimes the leaf takes a short, broad egg-shaped outline, lacking the two deep sinuses, but the more common form of the leaf is that described above, with the sinuses. The tree’s acorn is about half an inch long, egg-shaped, nearly sessile, and set in a broad, close-scaled, saucer- 207 shaped cup which comes down over the nut from a third to about a half. The acorns occur singly or several (not more than four, generally) together in a cluster in the axils of the leaves. This tree stands almost in the centre of the Ramble. Rhododendron maximum. (Great Laurel. Rose Bay. Near No. 4.) Close by the dwarf horsechest- nut, in the southwesterly part of the Ramble, indeed quite filling up the whole stretch of bank-side along the left of the path, here, are superb masses of this handsomest of native laurels. You can know them by their large alternate leaves (evergreen) which are thick and smooth, and have their margins slightly rolled back in a manner that botanists term revolute. These leaves are from four to ten inches long, and are glossy dark green on the uppersides, but of a pale yellow green on the undersides. They have a lance- oblong form, and have a way of hanging down like a partly closed umbrella. In winter the leaves often curl and roll up into cylindrical form, easily distin- guishing them. The leaves are acute, at the tip, and rather roundish wedge-shaped at the base. In June and July this royal shrub bursts into glories of bloom that well stir your enthusiasm. From pale rose, through all the intermediate hues to white, the great corymb-clustered flowers burst their wealth of color upon your delighted eyes. The flaring corollas liter- ally glow with life and light, fair as pearled shells, fragrant as the breath of the morn, and lit with the hues of those first faint streaks that tremble upon the sky at dawn. Are they not wondrous! Look down 208 into their lovely throats, touched so softly with yel- lowish dots, like little golden clouds that lie breathless on a breathless sky. The corollas are five-parted and bell-shaped, with long sweeping stamens, five to ten in number, reaching far out from the corollas’ throats. The stamens are often noticeably curved. The flower stems (pedicels) are clammy (viscid) and hairy (pu- bescent). The umbel-like clusters of the flowers break out from cone-like buds which set the autumn before the season’s blooming. These cone-shaped buds are the winter mark of the rhododendron. The fruit is an oblong pod. Ribes aureum. (Missouri Currant. Golden or Buf- falo Currant. No. 96.) Ti you are in the namie western part of the Ramble in the lovely days of May, when those entrancing bursts of warm sunshine leap as with a heart full of love from behind pearl-edged clouds, and bring out to the full the starry beauty of the dancing blossoms, look then for the bright golden flowers of this cheery shrub. When the sunshine is full upon them, they glow like Wordsworth’s daffo- dils. If you take the path that leads off to the left from the west Bridge, and follow it to its second left- hand offshoot, you will find a good clump of this Missouri Currant not very far from the corner made by the fork of this second offshoot of the Walk to the left. It stands quite close to a Siberian pea tree here. Its lovely golden flowers will surely make you stop a moment in your ramble, with their bright merry hues burning up to you with five spreading lobes. The conspicuous lobes are part of the calyx, not petals of 209 the corolla. The petals of the corolla are very small (five), with delicate pink tops which are set on the throat of the calyx. At first glance you might easily think that the large flaring flanges of the flowers were parts of the corolla, but a close examination reveals the truth. The flowers are tubular cylindrical, and are carried in short-racemed clusters just as the leaves begin to expand. These leaves are three to five-lobed, wedge-shaped or cordate (often rounded) at the bases. They are palmately veined, the midrib and primary veins being quite conspicuous. These leaves are small, usually about an inch long, and are lobed so conspic- uously you can easily recognize the bush by these alone. The fruit is a brilliant yellowish (later blackish) spher- ical glossy berry, which is very conspicuous in late summer (August) amid the green leaves of this mod- est shrub. Although its fruit catches the eye and sets you wondering what it may be, it is its flowers which take hold of you, on those rare days of May, when the little yellow horns seem to fairly blow golden music. You will find another good mass of this up by the clump of purple-flowering raspberry, in the north- westerly part of the Ramble, not far from the Swiss Cottage. Rubus odoratus. (Purple-fowering Raspberry. No. 97.) Near the West Ramble Road Stop, following the path on which you mct the slippery elm, you will find a good-sized mass of this low straggling shrub which flings its arms in such delightful abandon along the country roads of summer. You can recognize it, at once, by its maple-like leaves, which are from three to 210 five-lobed, quite large, of a soft, woolly texture, pu- bescent on the undersides, but of a lovely tender green on the uppersides. The flowers, which have given the shrub its common name, are of a clear rose-purple, of five crumpled petals, in loose clusters, and float over the masses of the shrub in the heats of July and August. How lovely is their soft rich color against the cool tender green of its leaves, and how lovely the golden crown of its anthers in the heart of its ruby petals. These tender flowers soon give place to crim- son raspberries, flattish, about an inch in diameter. Schizophragma hydrangeoides. (Climbing Hydran- gea. No. 57.) The path which leads up from the Boat House into the southeasterly part of the Ramble will bring you, if you turn off to the left, at its third fork, and then follow this branch to the place where it, in turn, forks, to a sassafras tree, which stands close by a lamp, just where this branch of path throws off an arm to the west (your left). This sassafras tree carries the rather remarkable climbing hydrangea, Schizophragma hydrangeoides. According to Prof. Bailey, this rather staggering name, in plain English, means that the inner layers of its valve walls are cleft into fascicled fibers. But in spite of its disagreeable name, it is a very pretty climber. You might easily mistake it for a vine, with its ovate heart-shaped taper- ing leaves, but it is a deciduous shrub. It is, like so many other of our park beauties, from Japan, and has so close a resemblance to Hydrangea petiolarts, that it is often confused with it. The shrub blooms in July, with white or flesh-colored flowers, fairly large, 2I1 in pubescent flattish peduncled cymes. These blos- soms have the large outer ring of sterile flowers, so characteristic of the hydrangeas. The fertile flower’s calyx is top-shaped, has five teeth and five valvate petals. Valvate means edge to edge. ‘The stamens are ten, and they are inserted upon the base of the disc. Prof. Bailey says it can be easily distinguished from Hydrangea petiolaris, which has four sepals (petals of the calyx) on the marginal flowers, whereas this hy- drangea has but one sepal. The leaves of the climber we are here discussing are very coarsely toothed, bright glossy green on the uppersides, but paler beneath. They are from two to four inches long. The fruit is a little capsule. Symphoricarpos racemosus. (Snowberry or Wax- berry. No. 72.) In the northeasterly corner of the Ramble, near the Road Stop there, you will find hand- some masses of this daintily-flowered shrub. It has been well named indeed, for the pure white berries which gleam through its tender dark-green foliage are, of a truth, snow-white. The masses of the shrub, here, are on the left of the Walk, directly opposite the northerly end of the East Ramble Road Stop. You can easily know them by their small (two or three inches) oval leaves, generally entire, of a beautiful clear dark-green on the uppersides, but of a lighter green on the undersides. They are set oppositely along the branches, on very short leaf-stems, and, off- hand, have something of the look of a locust’s leaf. This shrub blooms all through the summer and, from June to September, you may come upon its dainty 212 little four to five-toothed, bell-shaped rose-pink flowers clustered at the ends of the branches. This habit of inflorescence at once distinguishes it from its twin sister, the Indian currant or coral berry which it so closely resembles, especially in foliage. The Indian currant sends out its flowers all along the branches in axillary clusters. The snowberry’s dainty little flow- ers are soon succeeded by the densely clustered bunches of small white berries which have given the bush its common English name. Its botanical generic name is derived from two Greek words meaning “clustered fruits.” These clusters of white berries conspicuously mark the bush about the middle of August. The shrub belongs to the honeysuckle family. Ulmus fulva. (Slippery Elm. Red Elm. No. 98.) If you take the path that turns off to the left from the handsome clump of Retinospora plumosa (the first offshoot of the Walk to the left, northward after cross- ing the Bridge which carries the path into the middle west of the Ramble), and proceed northwesterly toward the West Ramble Road Stop, you will see an elm tree throwing its shade over the Walk, on your left, close by the path, about twenty-five or thirty feet from the Retinosporas. It is a very fair specimen of the slip- pery elm. In order that you may easily identify it, it stands a few feet this side (south) of an Austrian pine, and has a witch hazel rattling its heavy lop- sided leaves diagonally across the Walk from it. The slippery elm has a lightish-brown bark which, in old trees, gets to be deeply furrowed. This bark also pos- sesses a peculiar mucilageneous quality which has given 213 the tree its common name, “slippery elm.” Its leaves are very rough, on the uppersides, and by this you may easily know them. The leaves are large, four to eight inches long and about four inches vide. They are ovate-oblong, in shape, but come down to a taper- ing point. They are set alternately along the branch, and are noticeably doubly serrate. The most conspic- uous feature of the leaves are their extreme roughness on the uppersides. Rub them either way, and you will feel a harshness of touch which will put your teeth on edge. On the undersides the leaves are soft and wooly, when young, but as the leaf grows older become roughish on this side also. The slippery elm flowers early in spring, before the leaves appear. These closely clustered purplish blossoms break out in little bunches along the branches, very much like the inflorescence (bloom) of the English and the Scotch elms. The fruit of the tree is a winged seed (samara), the flat wing enclosing the seed like a wafer. Over the seed there is a marked pubescence or hairy growth, but the wing is without pubescence. The seed of the Amer- ican elm is very hairy on the margin of the wing. Vaccinium corymbosum. (High-bush Blueberry. wamp Blueberry. No. 41.) Near the little Shelter or Summer House in the middle of the southern part of the Ramble, you will find a good specimen of this shrub. It is all through the Ramble, but you can see a good bush of it here, for close study. If you take the little path that leads out northerly from this Sum- mer House, passing the fine Catesby’s Andromeda and Azalea amena, on your right, then, as you come out 214 upon the Walk that runs east and west, turn westerly, to your left, to the first fork of the Walk. Take the left-hand branch of this fork, and you will find two very fair specimens of this blueberry. The first one stands on the right of the Walk, just beyond a hand- some Viburnum dentatum. The viburnum has saw- cut leaves. The high-bush blueberry is, as its name implies, an erect shrub. It is very pretty in May, with hanging clusters of wax-white flowers flushed softly with pink. ‘These corymb-like clusters, in short, hang- ing racemes, have given the shrub its specific botanical name corymbosum. Dainty pale pinkish-white bells they are, with their little five-toothed corollas droop- ing so beautifully on the almost bare branches of the shrub. The leaves are simple, set alternately on the branches, are oval, and pointed at both ends, the top acute, the base wedge-shaped. These leaves, about three inches long when full-grown, are of a dark glossy green on the uppersides, but are lighter green below and pubescent. In the fall of the year they meet the first keen kisses of the frost with flushes of rose that glow into scarlet and crimson through golden glories of yellow and orange. All over the Rambie then you come upon the torches of flame which this shrub burns so bravely. Its berry is small, about as large as a good-sized pea, blue-black with a faint bloom. Viburnum acerifolium. (Maple-leaved Arrowwood. Dockmackie. No. 107.) Proceed northerly from the mushroom-shaped shelter, turn to the west at the first fork of the Walk, then follow it to the next fork, turn 215 to your right (northerly), and continue along the Walk, until it begins to bend easterly to a rustic shelter. If you have a permit to explore for things not beside the Walk, strike off from the path, to your left, just before you come to where the Walk begins to swing around to the rustic shelter, and in among the shrubberies here, about eighteen or twenty feet to the southwest of the Walk, you will find a fair specimen of this Viburnum. It is easily distinguished by its maple-like leaves, which are generally three-lobed and have large irregular teeth. The leaves are set oppositely, and the coarse cutting of the large teeth instantly attract the attention. The shrub blooms in June, in rather flattish terminal loose cymes, and are very beautiful, just before they open, from the pale pinkish-purple flush that suffuses them. As they open, they become cream-white. These flowers are succeeded by dark-purple berries, whose stones are two-grooved. It is a pretty shrub, and very beautiful just as it be- gins to bloom. It may be interesting to add that the viburnums belong to the honeysuckle family, Caprifoliacee, in- cluding the elder, the Indian currant or coral berry, the snowberry, and the Weigela (Diervilla). Generally speaking this great group Caprifoliacee, is character- ized by having the stamens of their flowers about as many as there are lobes of the corolla. In the elders and the viburnums, the corollas are shallow wheel- shaped or urn-shaped; in the coral berries and snow- berries, the corollas are bell-shaped; in the honey- suckles (Lonicera) and the Weiglas (Diervilla) the 216 corollas are funnel-form. They are among the loveliest of the shrubs to bloom and in June, especially, the Weigelas are glorious. m6L LS aed @IN OL 6L LS SoN | LSAIM Me TVGLNID S “hh ii a sens OSE areas OF 1b it inh x iat Dum ey a aa eae ece bate? ad ais ua yy er p ter bi he yee apie er: ¥ AO A COON Aun RW DN Explanations, Map No. 8 CoMMON NAME. . Reeve’s Spirea. . Tartarian Honeysuckle. . Honey Locust. . Judas Tree or Redbud. . English Hawthorn. . Silver or White Maple. . Washington Thorn. . Hackberry, Sugarberry, Nettle Tree. . Groundsel Tree. . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . Red Maple. . Japan Quince. . European Beech. . European or Tree Alder. . Flowering Dogwood. . Osage Orange. . Norway Maple. . Koelreuteria or Varnish Tree. . Common Locust. . Fringe Tree. . Bald Cypress. . Hop Tree or Shrubby Trefoil. . Common Swamp Blue- berry, High-bush Blue- berry. . European White Birch. . Shadbush, June Berry or Service Berry. . Flowering Dogwood. . Italian Privet (White fruit). . Swamp White Oak. . Cockspur Thorn. BoTaNicaL NAME. Spirea Reevesiana. Lonticera Tartarica. Gleditschta triacanthos. Cercts Canadensis. Crategus oxyacantha. Acer dasycarpum. Crategus cordata. Celtis Occtdentalts. Baccharis halimzfolia. Populus monilifera. Acer rubrum. Cydonia Japonica. Fagus sylvatica. Alnus glutinosa. Cornus florida. Maclura aurantiaca, Acer platanotdes. Kelreuteria paniculata. Robinia pseudacacia. Chionanthus Virginica. Taxodium distichum. Ptelea trifolzata. Vaccinium corymbosum. Betula alba. Amelanchiter Canadensts. Cornus florida. Ligustrum Italicum, var. leu- cocarpum. Quercus bicolor. Crategus crus-gallt. 222 CoMMON NAME . Scarlet-fruited Thorn, White Thorn. . White-Stamened Syringa. . Turkey Oak. . Hercules’s Club, Devil’s Walking Stick, Angel- ica Tree. . Japan Pagoda Tree. . European White Birch. . Rose of Sharon or Althea. . Weigela. . Cut-leaved European Beech. . Rhodotypos. . Black Cherry. . Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa. . Buttonbush. . Dwarf or Japan Catalpa, Bunge’s Catalpa. . Sassafras. . Scentless Mock Orange or Syringa. . Common Elder. . Missouri Currant, Golden or Buffalo Currant. Perince bree . European Wayfaring Tree. » Indian: (Sean. “Treemier Southern Catalpa. . Purple-leaved European Hazel. . Paulownia. . Small-leaved Mock Or- ange or Syringa. . Wild Red Osier. . Sweet Bay or Swamp Magnolia. . Bur Oak, Mossy Cup Oak, Overcup Oak. . Japan Hedge Bindweed. . Weeping Willow, Baby- lonian Willow. . Weeping European Beech. BoTANICAL NAME Crategus coccinea. Philadelphus nivalis. Quercus Cerrts. Aralia spinosa. Sophora Japonica. Betula alba. Hibiscus Syriacus. Diervilla florida. Fagus sylvatica, var. laciniata (or asplentfolta). Rhodotypos kerrtoides. Prunus serotina. Philadelphus coronartuus. Cephalanthus Occidentalis. Catalpa Bunge. Sassafras officinale. Philadelphus tnodorus. Sambucus Canadensis. Ribes aureum. Chionanthus Virginica. Viburnum lantana. Catalpa bignontotdes. Corylus avellana, var. atro- purpurea. Paulownia impertalis. Philadelphus microphyllus. Cornus stolonifera. Magnolia glauca. Quercus macrocarpa. Polygonum cuspidatum. Salix Babylonica. Fagus sylvatica, var. pendula, 223 Common NAME . Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa , iapat cee (Red flow- ers). . Japan Quince (Pink flow- ers). . Umbrella Tree. . Oriental Plane Tree. . Weeping European Silver Linden. . European Linden. . Cut-leaved European Beech. . European White Birch. . Thunberg’s Barberry, Ja- pan Barberry. . Reeve’s Spirza. . Van Houtte’s Spirea. . Witch Hazel. . scarlet-fruited Thorn, White Thorn. . American Hornbeam, Blue Beech, Water Beech. . Hackberry, Sugar Berry, Nettle Tree. . Slippery Elm. pecamlet Oak. . Large-flowered Mock Or- ange or Syringa. . Austrian Pine. . White Pine. . Spicebush. . Chinese Juniper. . Japan Arbor Vite (Gold- , en Plume-leaved). . Wild Red Osier. . European White Birch. . American Hazel. . White Mulberry. . Standish’s Honeysuckle. . Large-thorned Hawthorn. . Black Oak. . scotch Elm. , BoTANIcAL NAME Phaladelphus coronarius. Cydonia Japonica. Cydonia Japonica. Magnolia umbrella (or tripe- tala. Platanus Ortentalis. Tilia Europea, var. argentea (or alba) pendula. Tilia Europea. Fagus sylvatica, var. laciniata (or asplentfolia). Betula alba. Berberts Thunbergit. Sptirea Reevesiana. Spirea Van Houttet. Hamamelts Virginiana. Crategus coccinea. Carpinus Caroliniana. Celtis Occidentalts. Ulmus fulva. Quercus coccinea. Philadelphus grandtflorus. Pinus Austriaca. Pinus strobus. Benzoin benzgotn. Juniperus Chinensts. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) prsifera, var. aurea. Cornus stolontfera. Betula alba. Corylus Americana. Morus alba. Lonicera Standish11. Crategus macracantha. Quercus coccinea, var. tinctoria Ulmus Montana, 224 ComMon NAME . Globe Flower, Japan Rose, Kerria. . Fortune’s Dwarf White Spirwea. . European Cherry, Maha- leb Cherry. . Bladder Senna. BoTANICAL NAME Kerria Japonica. Sptrea callosa, var, alba, Prunus Mahaleb. Colutea arborescens. VII. WEST SEVENTY-SECOND STREET TO WEST SEVENTY-NINTH STREET At the West Seventy-second Street Gate, the Walks bend quickly north and south. We have been over the southerly; let us take the northerly, at the left of the Drive. It wanders through a delightful Arbor, hung with trailing vines and the sweet garlands of the Wistaria;—a lovely spot in the days of shifting sunshine over dancing leaves. Almost as the Walk swings around to the north, close by the Arbor, you will find tall masses of the Tartarian honeysuckle. You can know it easily by its leaves, which somewhat ~ resemble narrowed and elongated arrow-heads. Tech- nically speaking they are ovate-lanceolate, with a very cordate (heart-shaped) base. The leaves are also cil- late, that is, with a fringe of hairs along their margins, and are somewhat hairy on the undersides, as well. In late May or early June the Tartarian honeysuckle breaks out in bloom—beautiful pink, white or crimson flowers which have their upper lips cleft quite consid- erably. As the flowers pass away, changing to fruit, the bush is hung full of bright scarlet berries. A little stretch beyond the Arbor, you come to some steps, and here, by the second step, on your left, you meet the interesting Italian privet which bears white fruit. There*are some more very interesting things 226 here. On your right, by the first step, is a lamp, and almost due east of this, on the border of the Drive, are two very flourishing specimens of the groundsel tree. If you have ever wandered over the salt meadows near Coney Island in the Autumn, and seen the snow of the groundsel tree’s seed-pods fairly billowing over the velvety sedge, your heart will give a leap of joy when you come upon these bushes. At least, so it was with me, the day I first found them here beside the Drive. Instantly I saw the salt meadows, the flying white sea- gulls turning in the sun; saw the drifting, rolling sedges smoothing to the wind; heard the sound of the ocean surge and saw the white fluff of the groundsel tree billowing over the tawny reaches of the marshes. This snowy fluff of silvery white pappus which covers the seeds so generously is the balloon that bears the seeds on the breast of the wind, serving their disper- sion. Each tiny little seed is loosed by the wind and borne onward to its resting place by the wings of this lovely, fairy-like fluff. The leaves of the shrub are wedge-shaped, obovate and very coarsely toothed. The branches are distinctly angled. Follow the Walk, still northerly, and just after you pass, on your right, some fine old cottonwoods, easily known by their towering trunks of heavily-ridged bark, cross the Drive and strike the Lake-walk, where it sends down a little side arm to the Lake itself. That you may know the spot, a flowering dogwood stands directly in the right-hand corner of this arm, and east of the dogwood a cluster of tall, conical bald cypresses (Ptelea trifoliata) FLOWERS OF THE Hop TREE OR SHRUBBY TREFOIL Map 8. No. 22. 227 wave their royal plumes of feathery green to every rocking breeze. What graceful trees they are! From this arm, pass southerly, following the east- erly border of the Drive. You pass Japan quince, on your right, honey locust on your left, resplendent in black bark and fierce thorns. These honey locusts are about opposite the lamp here. Beyond them, by the edge of the Lake are European elder, full of little “cones,” jet black against the blue of the sky; flowering dog- wood, osage orange (with spines in the axils of its leaves). Opposite these trees is a fine Norway maple. Then we meet honey locust again, then some more osage oranges and a little gathering of varnish trees just beyond these, on your left. Opposite the lamp that stands on your right, as you continue southerly, are two well-grown fringe trees, lovely in June, with their white fluffs of bloom. Beyond the fringe trees you will see a quartet of the shrubby trefoil, of the rue family, Rutacee. You must have met this tree several times before on your rambles in the lower sections of the Park, and their leaves, made up of three leaf- lets, are no doubt now quite familiar to you. You remember this tree has wafer-shaped, elm-like seeds, and that it is from this resemblance of its seeds to the seeds of the elm that it has been named pPtelea (Greek for elm). The tree flowers in terminal white cymes, which are rather open, in June. Off to the east of the hop-tree quartet here, is quite a goodly company of bald cypresses again, foot-set by the mar- gin of the Lake. It is worth a trip here to see these trees in October. Then their feathery masses have 228 turned to the softest shades of old gold and crimson- bronze. The Walk, here, flings off to the left a little side-shoot of path, down close to the Lake. In its southerly corner, a couple of young shadbushes have taken firm root, and stand in easy position for you to take a good look at, what always seems to me, their especial mark of beauty—their handsomely streaked bark. You can pick them out in winter by this mark- ing. See, too, their pretty pointed buds. These are not quite so finely pointed as the beech tree’s buds, but they are very well turned, and beautiful in their way. An Arbor arches the Walk, just beyond, and east of it, is European white birch. Beyond the Arbor, close by the margin of the Lake, you will see more European alders. Try to see them in spring when they veil themselves with the soft dull crimson of their stamen-bearing catkins. These catkins are like long slender pencils, and the anthers (the pollen-bear- ing parts of the stamens) are clustered beneath the bracts of these “pencils.”” They are very interesting trees at this time of the year, and glow with a beauty all their own, while as yet most of the trees are bare of leaf or flower. How few people ever see the flow- ers of the trees! Why is it? The Walk runs on to the south, and at the end of the Lake here bends around in a hook, following the trend of the Lake-shore, to the Concourse. It wan- ders past more tree alders, swamp white oak, sweet gum, and clusters of bald cypresses. Where the hook swings around to the northeast, near the Carriage Con- course, you will find, in the point of the bed which 229 lies between the Walk and the Drive, a lusty young cockspur thorn, with long sharp thorns and shining, thick, glossy, wedge-obovate leaves. Beyond the cock- spur thorn, also between Walk and Drive, on your right, as you go toward the Carriage Concourse, is. a good young scarlet-fruited hawthorn or white thorn, as it is often called, with light green, tender, dully- finished leaves, which are rather regularly cut along the margins, into very small lobes. In shape these leaves are broad-ovate. You can find the tree easily by its leaves and thorns. It stands just this side (south) of an osage orange. The osage orange has reddish-brown, rough bark, and rather sweeping branches, beset with spines in the axils of its leaves. Both trees are near the end of the bed bordering the right of the Walk, and almost in line with the tongue of ground between the two Drives, as they join each other to form the Carriage Concourse, about the foun- tain used for watering horses. Speaking of this tongue of ground, on its north-westerly corner there is a fine display of the wild red osier, and, on its north-easterly corner, a large mass of the small-leaved syringa. Let us now follow right around this Concourse. Just after passing the scarlet-fruited thorn and the osage orange, the Walk sends off a little side-shoot, to the left, down the bank, west, to a cosy little Summer House by the Lake. Just as it turns off, you will find a very interesting syringa. It is interesting be- cause, as a rule, the stamens in the centre of the white-petaled blossoms of syringa are golden yellow, these are creamy white and mark the shrub as one of 230 the variety mivalis, or white (snowy) stamened syringa. Across from this syringa is red maple. If you ga down the short arm of Walk here, you will pass, on your right, Rose of Sharon, and, beyond it, European white birch. Close by the little Summer House on the border of the Lake are a couple of handsome Tur- key oaks, with dark, heavily-ridged bark. Well out on your right, as you come down this arm of Walk, off from the Rose of Sharon, you will find a large mass of the Hercules’s Club or Devil’s Walking Stick. You will have no trouble in recognizing them, for they are literally covered with spines and prickles. Surely they are well named. They have long leaves which are pinnately, and often twice or thrice pinnately com- pound. The leaflets are ovate and pointed. In Au- gust this shrub blooms in large conspicuous panicles of greenish-white flowers which are succeeded, in September, by small crimson, five-ribbed berries. The mass here is thriving surely, and makes a decided dis- play at its time of bloom. But you must see it in win- ter if you want to get the glory of its spines. Come back now to the Concourse and continue its circuit. Two Walks lead off from the northerly side of the Concourse. Near the westerly, a fine cut-leaved beach will be found, near the left-hand corner. In the right-hand corner of this westerly branch you will find Rhodotypos, with which you are now familiar. Next to the Rhodotypos, east of it, by the border of the Walk, is sweet syringa, and next to this is an interesting shrub which you will do well to see in July. This is our native buttonbush, and in July it is a curious sight, 231 covered with its round, button-like balls of bloom. These balls or heads are made up of a dense round cluster of separate cream-white flowers, each flower of which is tubular, and from its narrow, four-toothed corolla, the very long style sticks up exactly like a long, thin pin. The whole affair looks precisely as if it were a little round pin-cushion stuck full of golden-headed pins. The leaves of the shrub are either opposite on the branches or occur three together. It is certainly odd- looking in bloom, and you should see it then. Back (north) of the buttonbush, down the slope of the lawn a little, looking toward the Lake, you will see the dwarf Japan catalpa. It has leaves that are like the bean catalpa, but are more sharply angulated, more pointed, and less cordate. The Japan catalpa here is not over five feet high, and you can tell it easily by these features. In the westerly corner of the easterly branch of the Walk, you will find scentless syringa, and opposite to it, in the easterly corner of the Walk, is Missouri cur- rant, which you met in the Ramble. If you will continue now, around the circuit of the Concourse, bending here, to the south, near the lamp- post, just south of it, you will find the shrub called the wayfaring tree (Viburnum lantana), of Europe. It has scurfy branches and dark-green, thick, wrinkled leaves which are almost woolly on the undersides. These leaves are from three to four inches long, ovate, and with bases more or less cordate. The shrub flowers in May, with the characteristic white flat cymes typical of the viburnum, and these dense heads are succeeded by bright-red, egg-shaped berries, which become blue-black 232 when they are ripe. South of this shrub, over on the other side of the Walk (your left) you will find Catalpa bignonioides, and diagonally across from this catalpa, south, on the right of the Walk, you will find purple- leaved European hazel, which will be readily recognized by its dark-purple leaves. South of the hazel, in the same border bed of the Walk, you will pass cockspur thorn, bristling with thorns and glossy with its shining leaves. This thorn is not far from a lamp which stands a little south of it, where the border bed on your right narrows to a thin strip. Let us now come back to where we branched off, by the grounsel tree and the cottonwoods, beyond the steps, at the beginning of this ramble, and follow the Walk northerly, as it runs about parallel with the Drive. You pass silver maple, opposite the lamp on your right, and, just beyond the maple, scarlet oak. Not very much further along this Walk you come to a nestling sheet of water. At its southerly end you will find bald cypress, and back of the bald cypress European white birch. Continuing along the Walk, note the gathering of American hornbeams bordering the bed on your right. You know them at once by their smooth, clean- cut, muscle-ridged bark, streaked with silvery lines, like veins, and by their beautiful birch-like leaves. On either side of the cross-walk here, as it breaks off to cross the Drive, you will see a fringe tree. They have simple, entire leaves, oval or obovate and placed opposite each other on the branches. See these trees in June, when they hang full of their snow-white, fringe- like flowers. Beyond the northerly fringe tree is a mass 233 of Rhodotypos again. Here the Walk swings around . in a graceful bend to the Seventy-second Street Gate. If you go around with it, as it nears the Drive, to cross it, close by the lamp there, which is on your left, you will find a good sample of the black oak. The black oak is an interesting variety of the scarlet oak. On the lower parts of the tree the leaves somewhat resemble the leaves of the red oak, only are much broader at the top, with a kind of squarish outline. On the upper parts of the tree the leaves run into the more typical forms of the scarlet oak, very deeply cut along the sides, into rounded sinuses (bays) between the thin lobes. These lobes are bristle tipped. The oaks having their leaves tipped with bristles ripen their acorns in the second year, and hence are termed biennials; those without bristles ripen their acorns within the year and, so, are annuals. Cross the Drive here and have a look at the Scotch elm which rises up close beside the parapet, on the right of the Drive. It stands near a black cherry. You can tell it at once by its large, rough leaves. If you do not care to go out of the Park here, take the little arm of path that slips off to the north from this Walk, and snuggles down close by the dream- ing waters of a pretty little pond. On your left, in the corner, are some osage oranges, with a handsome witch- hazel diagonally across from them, on the right of the Walk. The witch-hazel has large oval, lop-sided leaves which are distinctly wavy-margined. Crossing the little Bridge here, which is almost hidden away from view in the embowering green, you pass, on your left, 234 just beyond the Bridge, a couple of American horn- beams, with some white mulberries, on the point that juts out into the water, to the west of them. Then you pass white pine, and, beyond, but on your right this time, spicebush. Where this Walk meets the Drive beyond, you will find some good specimens of the pretty Mahaleb cherry, of southern Europe. One of these stands on the southerly end of the little “island” of shrubbery that lies in the ‘““mouth”’ of the Walk here, opposite the West Ramble Road Stop. In the point of the border bed, on the left of the Drive, just beyond, you will find Chinese juniper, with short, sharp, stiffish leaves that prick like thistles if pressed by the fingers. West of this is plume-leaved Japan arbor vite (Retin- ospora), and along the border (southerly) of the Bridle Path, you will find kerria, and a little west of it, on the southerly border, a clump of the dainty Fortune’s dwarf white spirzea, which sets its small, exquisitely-cut, tiny little white flowers in early days of spring—almost the first of the spirzeas to bloom. OL om LS w6L L839 _-—- - | as ty, \ SF ONS TSTY 18ev29| ||fL Wy so winasny/woap//odoHay oF SIONS IST a Poa a v AUN Aigetetys ge a a A = chee terre , ot | |) a i AD — SE OO, eee eee a ae + aes tl < i - i (UO Gage ay &, Xo) CON AN BW ND H Explanations, Map No. 9 ——————— ComMMon NAME . Cockspur Thorn. Acanthopanax, Pin Oak. . Norway Maple. American or White Elm. Thunberg’s Barberry. Japan Snowball. . English Oak. . Dwarf or Japan Catalpa, Bunge’s Catalpa. . Turkey Oak. . European Linden. . Josika Lilac. . Arrowwood. . European Wayfaring Tree. . Ramanus Rose, Rose. . Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa (Golden- leaved). . Japan Maple. . Black Haw. . American Hornbeam, Blue Beech, Water Beech. . English Elm. . European Beech. . Weeping Willow. . Swamp Dogwood, Silky Dogwood. Kinnikinnik. . American White or Gray Birch. . American Sycamore, But- tonwood, Buttonball. Papal otorax, . American Linden, Bass- wood, Bee Tree, White- wood. . Wild Red Osier. . Flowering Dogwood. . Common Privet. . Bush or Fortune’s Deut- zia (White flowers). . Red Cedar. Japan BoTANICAL NAME Crategus crus-galli, Aralta pentaphylla, Quercus palustris. Acer platanotdes. Ulmus Americana. Berberts Thunbergit. Viburnum plicatum., Quercus robur, Catalpa Bunget. Quercus cerris. Tilia Europea. Syringa Jostkea. Viburnum dentatum., Viburnum lantana. Rosa rugosa. Philadelphus coronarius, var. aurea. Acer polymorphum. Viburnum prumfolium. Carpinus Caroliniana. Ulmus campestris. Fagus sylvatica. Salix Babylonica. Cornus sericea. Betula populifolia, Platanus Occidentalis. Styrax Japonica. Tilia Americana. Cornus stolontfera. Cornus florida. Ligustrum vulgare. Deutzia crenata. Juntperus Virginiana., . Indian Bean ‘Tree 240 CoMMON NAME . Persian Lilac. . Common Lilac. . American Beech. . American White or Gray Birch. . Red Maple. . Black Cherry. . Swiss Stone Pine. . Chinese White Magnolia, Yulan. or Southern Catalpa. . English Oak. . Red-flowering Horsechest- nut. . Common Locust. . Common Horsechestnut. . Scotch Elm or Wych Elm. . European (or Siberian) Red Osier, Red-stem- med Dogwood, White- fruited Dogwood. . Kentucky Coffee Tree. . Ailanthus or “Drees ot Heaven. . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . American White Ash. . Oriental Plane Tree. ~ “Putip Tree. . Sycamore Maple. . Cherry Birch, Sweet Birch, Black Birch. . Garden Cherry, Morello Cherry. . Bald Cypress. . European Linden. . Day Lily (Orange-red flowers). . Broad-leaved European Linden. . English Cork-bark Elm. . Spanish Chestnut. . Hop Hornbeam, BoTANICAL NAME Syringa Persica. Syringa vulgaris. Fagus ferruginea. Betula popultfolta. Acer rubrum. Prunus serotina. Pinus Cembra. Magnolia conspicua. Catalpa bignontioides. Quercus robur. 4zsculus hippocastanum x Pavia or Atsculus rubt- cunda. Robinia pseudacacia. Atsculus hippocastanum., Ulmus Montana. Cornus sanguinea (or alba). Gymnocladus Canadensis. Atlanthus glandulosus. Populus moniltfera. Fraxinus Americana. Platanus Orientalts. Lirtodendron tulipifera. Acer pseudoplatanus. Betula lenta. Prunus cerasus. Taxodium distichum. Tilia Europea. Hemerocallis fulva. Tilia Europea, plati- phylla. Ulmus campestris,var.suberosa Castanea sativa (or vesca). Ostrya Virginica. var. IX. EAST SEVENTY-NINTH STREET TO EAST EIGHTY- FIFTH STREET In this Section you will find, in their various places, described individually at length below, excellent specie mens of the Japan storax, the lovely Bumald’s spirza, which throws up its crimson heads in midsummer, red- flowering horsechestnuts, masses of the Japan rose, golden-leaved syringa, Japan maple with pretty star- shaped leaves, handsome beeches and sturdy English oaks. But let us take them up individually :— ZEsculus hippocastaneum X Pavia, or Aisculus rubi- eunda. (Red-flowering Horsechestnut. No. 43.) If you enter the Park at the Gate, a little south of Transverse Road, No. 3, at East Eighty-fifth Street, and follow the Walk eastward to the Drive, then turn southerly along the Drive and cross it at the second cross-walk of the path, you will find, in each corner of the Walk, where it meets the Walk that trends by the Reservoir, some rather slender specimens of this beautiful hybrid between the common horsechestnut and the red buckeye (Pavia). If you look at the leaves, you will see that they look something like the leaves of the common horsechestnut. But they are only ina way similar, as you will see if you look closely at the pointed ends of the leaflets. You see these leaflets are all wedge-obovate and come down gradually to a point. 242 The leaflets of the common horsechestnut have a very broad top, which rounds quite abruptly to a short point. In late May or June these trees put out their beautiful red blossoms in conspicuous, erect terminal racemes. The individual flowers of the raceme are four-petaled, with claws shorter than the calyx. Eight stamens are folded within the clasp of the lovely rubicund petals. The flowers are usually of a rich rose-red, scarlet, or sometimes flesh-colored. They are succeeded by nuts whose husks are covered with small prickles. Castanea sativa. (Spanish Chestnut. No. 62.) Di- rectly south of the Hamilton Statue, you will find four trees, gathered together in the form of a rough parallel- ogram, ‘These are common horsechestnut, European linden (south of the horsechestnut), common horse- chestnut again (east of the linden), and north of this horsechestnut you will find the Spanish chestnut. The group here stands south of the Hamilton Statue, clear and fair on the open lawn between the Walk and the Drive, and a little above a line from the northwesterly corner of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Spanish chestnut’s leaves are shorter than those of our own chestnut, and are of thicker, coarser tex- ture. They are usually from five to nine inches long, while those of our own species run from six to ten inches. Our own chestnut is a variety of the Spanish stock. Its nuts are smaller, but sweeter. The leaves of the Spanish also differ from our native chestnuts in being slightly pubescent on the undersides. This is when the leaves are young; as they develop they be- come smooth (glabrous). It blooms in June, with 243 longer catkins of staminate (pollen bearing) flowers, than our native chestnut. These long, spike-like, stam- inate catkins of the chestnut are very beautiful, in the height of their bloom, seeming to cover the tree with cream-white tufts. These staminate catkins are long, greenish spikes along which the tiny little stamen clusters are borne, in small, close, creamy bunches. The fertile or pistillate flowers are inconspicuous. If you look close you will find them at the bases of the sterile (staminate) catkins, highest on the branches, or rather nearest the ends of the branches. Cornus sericea. (Swamp Dogwood. Silky Dogwood. Kinnikinnik. No. 23.) You will find a handsome mass of this shrub on the southerly side of the Walk which forks east and west. The west branch runs under an Arch to follow on beside the Reservoir ; the east branch skirts the broad and open stretch of green that beds the southerly side of the Drive, south of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The most distinguishing feature of this shrub is its leaves, which are silky, hairy or pubes- cent, especially on the undersides. From this the shrub is called silky dogwood. Its branchlets are purplish, often peculiarly marked with purple above and green below. The shrub blooms in late spring or early sum- mer in compact, flat heads, or cymes, of white flowers. A cyme is usually a flat cluster of flowers in which the central flower opens first and the others after. This blooming, or inflorescence, as it is termed botanically, is called centrifugal, 7. e. from the center outward, and is the distinguishing feature of the cyme. The indi- vidual flowers in the flat-topped clusters of the shrub’s 244 bloom are white and four-petaled. These are suc- ceeded by light-blue berries. Spirea Bumalda. (Sumald’s Spirea. Near No. 26.) In the burning days of July or August, look for the deep-pink flowers of the Bumald’s spirza. To me it always suggests the Joe Pye weed that comes upon us with such lovely and cool delight along the dusty road- sides of midsummer highways in the country. Its cool, subdued hue is restful to the eye, and you can stand and look down upon the open face of this frank little shrub with a sense of keen refreshment, all the keener, because the atmosphere quivers about you with the trembling heat of a summer’s day. This undaunted little shrub bravely spreads its rosy plume quite near the westerly storax, by the pathside which cuts the lawn south of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It is only a few feet high, and you perhaps would scarcely notice it except when in bloom. If it is not in flower, you can tell it by its ovate-lanceolate leaves of about three inches in length. These leaves are smooth and are doubly serrate, quite sharply so. The Anthony Waterer variety of this spirza has bright crimson flowers in close, dense heads, and is often con- fused with the Bumalda. ) Styrax Japonica. (Japan Storax. No. 26.) If you enter at the Eighty-first Street Gate, from Fifth Ave- nue, and follow the path along the southerly side of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, to a point about oppo- site the extreme southwesterly corner of the Museum, then cross the Drive, due south, and pick up the path again, going southerly, not very far along, you will 245 find, on youz right, and on your left, quite near the Walk, well-grown specimens of this handsome Japan variety of storax. The westerly one is near the Bu- mald’s spirza. In June or July this pretty tree hangs its branches full of pure waxy-white flowers, which droop in short, loose, axillary or terminal racemes, one to four-flow- ered. They are very beautiful, with bell-shaped corol- las, five-lobed. The lobes spread out in rather a star- like way. The richly yellow stamens, ten in number (twice the number of the lobes of the corolla), are fastened at the base of the corolla and make a beau- tiful contrast against the pure white petals. The leaves of this small tree are set alternately on the branch, are smooth, ovate, or broadly-elliptic, pointed at both ends, and are about three inches long. They are finely serrated. When young the leaves have stellate hairs. The flowers are succeeded by small, round, dry drupes in autumn. While studying the storax here, it may be well to note that the pretty halesia or silverbell tree, which you have met so many times on these rambles, is of the same family. The halesia, which by the way, gets its name from Setphen Hales, a writer on vegetable physiology, carries its flowers, also, from the axils of the leaves. It is interesting to note the family rela- tionship of the trees and shrubs as you study them. If you will do this, it will add great enjoyment to your investigations. You will find another storax on the edge of the Drive, southwest of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 246 It is on the southerly side of the Drive and stands in between a basswood, on the east, and a cluster of Japan snowballs on the west. The Japan snowballs have thick, roundish, wrinkled leaves. The basswood large heart-shaped (cordate) leaves. ai A a ae ia aR ie Ke And Ne yan ‘ a : - a ae + a noua diaanth "Nba | io ba) ” F } { BPA Wh wall Gicign.s tein oe ey j ey i GIONGTSLTY es sat ee aay. LS 198 LSSM “LS i6Z LSSM OIoN 49 yt9§ YSIONYTISTY 4S y46L ae ¢ ’ bd y Aye be 3 ; tee as toe. ee oe ; ‘ ree,” | ee a ts ah ex mS a Lo a the: ‘i “7 , Win Vee Sat oes ore ah oN ye é i ys 7 f i v ak ‘ \ aA a 5 * j ie + ¥ ns | is i \ Cd \ " ” i a Py oo OO 4» oe , : ve Od, at - Lhe ¢ | ic - . y 1 7 bay “ete as ro Le r ; oe A. ea ; re , - fw ‘J - ; A he . 4 ’ 5 Var i Ny wt? Pissices ome é ‘ os os vk fa } ¥ oy sve % ~S ts ee AY neue ah ¥ r } 7 v ' j Wa Say ee a 2 Ai ‘ f Ay £ : Se Vr ~ 5 ad hk a’ = jal 1a WAG , WV, ¥ i” Oded 6 hall ce ere. 2 * to aa OOS BI ANBW Explanations, Map No. 10 ComMMon NAME . scotch Pine. . Hackberry, Sugarberry Nettle Tree. . Red Mulberry. European Larch. Osage Orange. Nordmann’s Silver Fir. . Oriental Spruce. Cockspur Thorn. . Fontanesia. . Indian Curtant. Coral Berry. . Plume-leaved Japan Ar- bor Vite. . Austrian Pine. . Golden Plume-leaved Japan Arbor Vite. . Chinese Juniper. . Globe Flower, Japan Rose or Kerria (Double flowered). . American or White Elm. . Pin Oak. . Common Swamp _ Blue- berry, High-bush Blue- berry. . Cephalotaxus. . European White Birch. . Hemlock. . Black Haw. . Prostrate Juniper. . Giant Arbor Vite. . Shagbark Hickory. . Red Maple. . Sugar or Rock Maple. . Bush Deutzia. , « weotch Pine. BoTAaNICAL NAME Pinus sylvestris. Celtis Occidentalts. Morus rubra. Larix Europea. Maclura aurantiaca. Abtes Nordmanniana. Picea Ortentalts. Crategus crus-gallt. Fontanesia Fortunet. Symphoricar pos vulgaris. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plumosa. Pinus Austriaca. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plumosa aurea. Juniperus Chinensts. Kerria Japonica. Ulmus Americana. Quercus palustris. Vaccinium corymbosum. Cephalotaxus Fortunet. Beluta alba. Tsuga Canadensis. Viburnum prunifolium. Juntperus prostrata. Thuya gigantea. Carya alba. Acer rubrum. Acer saccharinum. Deutzia crenata, Pinus sylvestris. 252 CoMMON NAME . Thunberg’s Barberrv. . Cut-leaved Weeping Euro- pean White Birch. . Norway Maple. . Norway Spruce. . Bhotan Pine. . Panicled Dogwood. . Panicled Dogwood. . American White Ash. . Tree Box or Boxwood. . Bayberry, Wax Myrtle. . Chinese Golden Larch. . Plume-leaved Japan Ar- bor Vite. . Ninebark. . Holly-leaved Barberry, Oregon Barberry, Ash- berry. . Mugho Pine. . Japan Cedar. . Bald Cypress. . Eastern Arbor Vite. . Cephalotaxus. . Black Cherry. . Douglas Spruce. » ed Cedar. . Colorado Blue Spruce. . Weeping European Larch. . European White Birch. . American white or Gray Birch. « Japan Arbor Vite (Var- iety squarrosa). . Swiss Stone Pine. . American or White Elm. . Globe Flower, Japan Rose or Kerria (Double- flowered). . Moss. Pink or Ground Pink. . Weeping Golden Bell or Forsythia. . Japan Yew. BoTANICAL NAME Berberis Thunbergit. Betula alba, var. pendula lac- iniata. Acer platanoides. Picea excelsa. Pinus excelsa. Cornus paniculata. Cornus paniculata. Fraxinus Americana, Buxus sempervirens. Myrica cerifera. Pseudolarix Kempfert. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pistfera, var. plumosa. Physocarpus (or Spirea) opu- lifoltza. Mahontia aquifolta. Pinus Montana, var. Mughus. Cryptomeria Japonica. Taxodium Distichum. Thuya (or Biota) Ortentalts. Cephalotaxus Fortunet. Prunus serotina. Pseudotsuga Douglasit. Juntperus Virginiana. Picea pungens. Larix Europea, var. pendula. Betula alba. Betula populifolia. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. squar- rosa. Pinus Cembra. Ulmus Americana. Kerria Japonica, var. flore pleno. Phlox ub ulata. Forsythia suspensa. Taxus adpressa. 253 CoMMon NAME . White Pine. . Cedar of Lebanon. . English Yew. . Lovely Azalea, partly sur- rounded by mass of Lily of the Valley Tree. muily of the Valley ire: . High-bush Blueberry, Swamp Blueberry. . Catesby’s Andromeda. . Cephalonian Silver Fir. . Turkey Oak. . American Sycamore, But- tonwood, Buttonball. . European Bird Cherry. . *Procumbent Juniper. . Paper or Canoe Birch. . Reeve’s Spirza. . Ailanthus or °9Tree of Heaven. . Adam’s Needle. . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Tartarian Honeysuckle. . Douglas’s Spirza. . Irish Yew. . Van Houtte’s Spirza. . Norway Maple. . Scaled Juniper. . Swamp Dogwood, Silky Dogwood, Kinnikinnik. . Paper Mulberry. . European Purple Beech. . Honey Locust. . European Hornbeam. . Rosemary-leaved Willow. . Oleaster or Wild Olive Tree. . Cup Plant. . Tartarian Honeysuckle (White flowers). . Lombardy Poplar. BOTANICAL NAME Pinus strobus. Cedrus Libant. Taxus baccata. Azalea amena and Andro- meda floribunda. Andromeda floribunda. Vaccinium corybosum. Andromeda (or Leucothoé) Catesbe@t. Abtes Cephalonica. Quercus cerris. Platanus Occidentalts. Prunus padus. Juntperus communis, var. pro- cumbens. Betula papyrtfera. Spirea Reevesiana. Adanthus glandulosus. Yucca filamentosa. Lonicera fragrantissima. Lonicera Tartarica. Spirea Douglas. Taxus baccata, var. fastigiata. Spirea.Van Houttet. Acer platanotdes. Juniperus squamata. Cornus sericea. Broussonetia papyrifera. Fagus sylvatica, var. atropur- purea. Gleditschia triacanthos. Carpinus betulus. Salix rosmarinifolia (or 1m- cana). Eleagnus angusttfolza. Siphium perfoliatum. Lonicera Tartarica, var. alba. Populus dtlatata. 254 CoMMON NAME . Dog Rose, Canker Rose, Wild Brier. . Heather. . Lovely Azalea. . Common Snowball. Guelder Rose. . Savin Juniper. . Dwarf Cranberry. . High-bush Cranberry. . Shrubby Cinquefoil. . Oriental Spruce. . Oleaster or Wild Olive Tree. . Evergreen Thorn, Fire Thorn. . English Yew (Variety Elegantissima). . Scotch Elm, Wych Elm. . Dog Rose, Canker Rose, Wild Brier. . Japan Holly. . European Larch. . Purple-flowering Rasp- berry. . Alternate-leaved Dog- wood. . Smoke Tree. . Buttonbush. . Reeve’s Spirea. BoTANICAL NAME Rosa cantina. Calluna vulgaris. Azalea amena. Viburnum opulis, var. sterilis. Juniperus sabina. Viburnum opulis (or oxycoc- cus), var. nanum. Viburnum opulis (or oxycoc- cus), Potentilla fruticosa. Picea Orientalts. Eleagnus angustifolia. Crategus pyracantha. Taxus baccata, var. elegantts- sima. Ulmus Montana. Rosa canina. Ilex crenata. Larix Europea. Rubus odoratus. Cornus alterntfolia. Rhus cotinus. Cephalanthus Occidentalis. Spirea Reevesiana. Da WEST SEVENTY-NINTH STREET TO WEST EIGHTY- SIXTH STREET In this Section you will find many interesting things. In a way, all its own, it is, | think, one of the most at- tractive parts of the Park. It is especially so along the Walk by the Reservoir, where you meet the beautiful Chinese golden larch, the interesting Japan cedar, the Cedar of Lebanon, and many others. Enter at the West Eighty-first Street Gate, take the Walk at your right, and proceed to the Swiss Cottage. Almost as you enter, you pass a good osage orange, on the right of the Walk. The lawn here swells up in a gentle rise of velvet and, crowning its ridge, a gnarled old hackberry twists its branches. You have, no doubt, by this time learned to know this tree on sight, from its trunk alone, covered as it is with warty ridges and knobs. Just to the northeast of this tree you will find an excellent specimen of the red mulberry, with large, thick leaves, which are rough on the uppersides, and of a dull, darkish green. How different these are from the bright, glossy, green leaves of the white mulberry. You can tell this tree easily by its leaves, which are of the true mulberry cut, mitten shaped, with and without thumbs. Off to the east of the red mulberry, you will see European larch, full of its black cones. On your left, you will find, opposite a lamp-post by the Drive, 256 several small Nordmann’s silver firs. You know them readily by their leaves, narrow, linear, about an inch long, with a small but very distinct cut or notch at the tip, and with fine, silvery lines on the undersides. Near the point of the Walk with the fork beyond, you will see another evergreen. It is the fourth from the end here and is a fair specimen of Oriental spruce. Note the difference between a leaf of this tree and a leaf of the Nordmann. The leaf of the spruce is four-sided, the leaf of the fir is fat. This is one of the chief points of difference between the spruce and the fir. The foli- age of the Oriental spruce is dark green. Its leaves are very short, quarter of an inch, blunt and stubby. Next to the spruce you pass cockspur thorn, then Fontanesia, with willow-like leaves, and, in the angle of the fork made by the junction of the Walks, coral- berry or Indian currant. Continuing to the southeast, where this Walk crosses the Drive, you will find, on your left, European white birch; on your right, Cephalotarus. Look at the un- dersides of these leaves. You see they are distinctly whitish. This is one of its distinguishing marks, by which you can immediately tell it from the English yew, the leaves of which its leaves closely resemble. The undersides of the yew’s leaves are yellowish green. Cross the Drive, and take up the Walk, south, to the crossing that leads to the Swiss cottage. Just as you cross here to the Cottage, you have on your left, in the point of the bed between Walk and Drive, a good sized Austrian pine and a mass of beautiful Reeve’s spirea with rather lanceolate leaves, ert sii pay hg bar wee iia en r Ns ue ~ ' . Ar boa a, mi } ~ | ; be: ‘ . * , ‘ - ' Rei f s: = , > ; Zz | id a a t at ee , . v | : a ) - ? | q 7 Th . ; : ° he ; ’ : ’ 7 : 7 Ds eo 7 y a Mie | t 7. _— ie . } - S 7 bf, i a4 i a Sita 2 ’ ’ . 4 ub A rey } ve | > te /8 a hi bd : > _ i ‘ . Pid 3 « ( _| 7 +f 7 5 - se _ ‘« ; 7 a ; ; FT id , 7 ier © j ae Be | i] — a oa “Aba | the if . ne, 7 . ® ‘ _ - Q : - a,’ 7 7 4 . } 5 1 4 _ » } ) , , ir ar ~~ ‘G4 = _— a » a s aj ‘s) _ = es Urge es ' . d 7 eee ic ) : o. rn oy ; : Tea _: es 257 At the Swiss Cottage follow the Walk that runs northerly beside the Drive. It will lead you by many beautiful things. In the rather long oval bed, in front of the Swiss Cottage, at its southerly end, you will see a well grown Norway maple, and near it a cut-leaved European white birch, with beautifully cut leaves. On the left of the Walk, set in the border bed between the Walk and the Drive, almost opposite the northerly end of the oval bed which we have just spoken of, in front of the Swiss Cottage, you will see several rather upright bushes. Their leaves at once tell you that they belong to the dogwood family. Their upright form of growth might lead you to suppose that they were Cornus stricta, but they are not. They areC. paniculata. Note the whit- ish undersides of their leaves, which distinguishes them at once from C. stricta, whose undersides are greenish and not whitish. As you pass on, to the north, when you have come about midway between the panicled dogwood and the rock mass which comes down close to the Walk, ahead, on your right, take a good look at the handsome evergreen which stands back (east) a little and out upon the lawn. It is a splendid example of the Bhotan pine—one of the handsomest, if not the handsomest, specimen of its kind in the Park. It is nobly formed, with great broad reaches of boughs that are superb. The fine long leaves of this tree are so responsive to every breath of breeze that they are almost constantly in motion, rippling the sunlight in continuous waves of silvery sheen. The trunk of this tree has a noticeable tilt which gives it a leaning look, and which will easily mark it for you. Close by the 258 rock mass at the right of the Walk beyond, is a sturdy white or American ash. What a handsome strong bark it has! Do you catch the lozenge-like cut of its plates, made by the cross run of the ridges? If there is one tree that has a distinctive bark, it is our white ash. On the other side (northerly) of the rock, still on the right of the Walk, you will find a hale old hackberry, and beside it a good mass of box. Here the Walk be- gins to bend to the right (east) to meet the fork of the Walk that has run down close by the Reservoir. This is a lovely little spot in here and one which appeals to you strongly ; for it holds many very beautiful things. Here, tall and conical Retinosporas, of the lovely plume- leaved variety, rear their forms; here the wax-berry and the Japan cedar will be found; the Chinese golden larch and many others. But let us hunt them out. The tree here of especial interest is the Chinese gol- den larch. It is called Pseudolarix Kempfert. The designation Pseudolarix (false larch) has been put upon the tree by botanists, because it has the deciduous trick of larch, in dropping its leaves, but has not the larch habit of holding its cone. The cone of the larch proper is persistent, that is, clings as whole to its branch. The cone of the Pseudolarix is not at all persistent, but falls away in broken scales, like the cones of the firs. And speaking of these cones of the Pseudolarix, I do not think I have ever seen lovelier. They are like wax roses. You will have no difficulty in identifying the tree, for its leaves are very distinctive. These are gathered together in very pretty rosette-like clusters, and are noticeably saber- CHINESE GOLDEN LArcH (Pseudolarix Kempferi) Map Io. No. 4o. ‘ev ON ‘or dep [vyofyndo (vvAid§ 40) sndapr0skyq| MAVAININ 259 shaped. They are about two inches long, flat, and linear, and are gently curved, like miniature sabers. They are of a pale green, when they first come out, in the spring, very beautiful to behold, but get a little darker, as the season advances. In the autumn they turn a pale golden yellow, whence the name, golden larch. Being of the larch character, the tree drops its leaves, and this occurs just after they have turned to their beautiful golden hue. See the tree then by all means. It is very beautiful. Right in the angle of the fork of the Walk here, you will find ninebark. Diagonally across from it, to the southwest, near the west border of the Walk (the one forming the left branch of the fork here), you will find bayberry or wax-myrtle. It is easily known by its leaves, which are very fragrant. Rub them, and then smell of your fingers. The leaves are lance- oblong and are entire, generally. As they grow older, they become glossy on the uppersides. Clustered in a noticeable way along its branches, you will find the berry which gives the shrub its name—bayberry or wax-myrtle. They are clustered together in little bunches. The berries themselves are not very large— smaller than small peas, and are all crusted over with greenish-white wax. The shrub belongs to the sweet gale family, Myricacea. Diagonally across from the ninebark again, but to the northwest, close by the westerly side of the Walk, just beyond the fork, is a good specimen of the Japan cedar (Cryptomeria Japonica), which you met with, down in the Rambie. Note their four-sided, stiffish, 260 curved leaves, which, sessile at the base, taper grad- ually down to a sharp tip. Directly opposite the Cryptomeria, you will find Mugho pine, with thick, short leaves about two inches long, stiff, dark green, twisted, two together in a sheath or fascicle. The Mugho is on the right of the Walk. As you go northerly, you pass Mahonia, with holly- like leaves, and back of it, a handsome mass of Cephalo- taxus, with leaves whitish on the undersides. Back of this (east of it) stands Thuya (or Biota) Orien- talis, with small leaves, pressed flat, of a bright green hue. These leaves are rhombic - egg - shaped, sharp- pointed, and have a small gland on the back. The tree is tall and rather thin of foliage. At the next fork of the Walk, is red cedar, on the right, and Fet- imospora plumosa, on the left. It is worth your while, here, to turn off, for a moment, and follow the branch that slips off to the left, under the arch beneath the Drive, to see the Thuya gigantea and the rich mass of prostrate juniper, both on the westerly border of the Bridle Path, south of the Arch. You can locate them easily by the map. The Thuya has leaves larger than the common Amer- ican arbor vite, and the juniper should be seen in winter. Then it is of a rich velvety dark green. The mass here creeps and trails over rocks, close by the Bridle Path, and its color is truly beautiful. It is close by a black haw. Continue now, northerly, along the Walk by the Reservoir. Almost in line with the first lamp on the Bridle Path (see the map) is white pine. This is la Japonica) ‘yptomeria No. 45. Map 10. JAPAN CEDAR (C7 261 close by the westerly border of the Walk. A little beyond the pine, north, is a cluster of three. The first is white ash; the second, plumosa; the third is Taxus adpressa. The Taxus stands midway west of the ash and the plumosa. It has very closely ap- pressed leaves. In line with the next lamp on the Bridle Path, close by the Walk, is Cedar of Lebanon. You can know it by its leaves, which are gathered in rosette-like bundles. The individual leaves are sharp- pointed, needle-like and quite stiff. Beyond, a little back on the lawn, are two beautiful golden-leaved varieties of the plume-leaved Retinospora. At the iemeurcre there is an interesting triangle. At its southerly corner is Nordman’s silver fir; at its east- erly, Chinese juniper, with stiff, sharp leaves; at its westerly, a beautiful Retinospora squarrosa. The squarrosa gets its name from the rather square-like way its soft leaves grow out from the branch. It is a beautiful shrub, with soft silvery green foliage. In Winter it often turns, in parts, a delicate copperish or reddish bronze which is very beautiful through its silvery green. There is another mass of this, just across the Walk, at the north, back of the Yucca. Across from the squarrosa in the west angle of the triangle here, you will find Van Houtte’s spirza, and back of this spireea, a fair specimen of the Douglas spirea, with reddish brown branches, and _ leaves densely white on the undersides. Continue along the Walk, to the Drive Crossing above, cross the Drive, and take the Walk that leads to Bolivar Hill. On the way, near the next fork of 262 the Walk, you pass a fine display of paper mulberries. These lean out from the rock, off to the south of the Walk, and are very handsome with their gray banded bark and curiously cut leaves. The one at the easterly end of the large rock here is very handsome. Note the bands of darker hue on their bark. Southeast of this rock, out upon the lawn, you will find a splendid mass of the scaled juniper. It is a low, trailing growth, and is about in line with a white pine, on the east, and a lamp by the Bridle Path, on the west. You will know it easily by its low, trailing growth, and thick moss-like foliage. Its leaves are small, linear-lanceolate, sharp-pointed, and convex on the outer sides. They are glaucous on the undersides; green on the uppersides. These leaves are generally in threes, and rather loosely pressed together. This gives the branches a pretty, tufty appearance. The mass here is very handsome, and it is thriving in a way that delights your heart. This is the same kind of low juniper you met near the Terrace, on its west- erly ridge. At the fork of the Walk, beyond the paper mul- berries, you will find Austrian pines, and off to the left of the one on the east of the Walk, you will come upon a lusty young purple beech. Where this branch of Walk (the left one) meets the Drive, an American hornbeam stands in the left corner, and a honey locust in the right. Cross the Drive and take up the path again toward Bolivar Hill. On your left, near the corner of the Walk here, just after you have crossed the Drive, you will see some low shrubs with very REEVE’s SprreA (Spirea Reevesiana) No. 76. Map 10. hae @ Ci { r aed Vrs _ io ; ‘ ‘ ih * i 4 ; i o iy a ' by * RE od > > 2) e ‘ i" soa i isi wise ~ i — =) ¥ : 4 ww | bs = S\iges,, Cl j ) hw ’ 7 AS Swiss SToNE PINE (Pinus Cembra) Map to. No. 37. 263 thin, narrow leaves. If you look at these leaves closely, you will see that their margins are slightly rolled over (revolute). They are Rosemary-leaved willows, some handsome examples of which you met down on Section No. 5, near the Conservatory Lake. In the angle of the fork, beyond, is Tartarian honeysuckle which blooms with white flowers. This is variety alba. On the left, as you turn to go south, toward Bolivar Hill, you pass some young Lombardy poplars, with close-hugged branches and small, broad-deltoid leaves. Continue on this Walk, up the Hill, and, on the right of the Walk (west), about opposite the Bolivar Statue, you will see a goodly cluster of common snow- balls. Where the arm of Drive comes in here, at the north, in its southwest corner, you will find Rosa canina, the Dog Rose, Canker Rose, or Wild Brier. Its leaflets are five to seven, obtuse at base and tip, of an oval shape, and about an inch and a half long. They are of rather thickish texture, smooth above, and frequently downy on the undersides. The flowers, light pink, occur solitary or in clusters of threes. The hips are about three-quarters of an inch long, egg- shaped, and of a brilliant orange-red, often scarlet. The shrub’s recurving branches are beset with hooked prickles. Off to the northeast of the Dog Rose, trail- ing down over the east side of this arm of Drive, is another rich mass of the scaled juniper. A lamp stands on the east border of the Drive encircling Bolivar Statue, about opposite the Dog Rose. Close by this lamp is a sturdy Colorado blue spruce. Follow this 264 border of the Drive, southerly, and a little southeast, of Bolivar Statue, on the border, you will find Ele- egnus angustifolia, the oleaster, with entire, lanceolate leaves which have a very distinctive silvery cast through their pale gray green. You have met a good specimen of this on Section No. 2. Down the slope of the Hill here, a little east of the place where the Drive makes its exit from around Bolivar Statue to the south, you will find fire-thorn, a specimen of which you met down near the Sheepfold, on Section No. 4. On the border of the bed, to the south of Bolivar Statue, are clustered close together, Juniperus sabina; Viburnum opulis (or oxyccocus), var. nanum; Vi- burnum opulis (or oxyccocus), and Potentilla fruti- cosa. The savin juniper here (sabina), is a trailing one, with dark green, slightly spreading, awl-shaped, sharp-pointed leaves. It is a native of the Alps, the Pyrenees, and Canada. Southwest of this juniper is the dwarf cranberry bush (Viburnum opulis, var. nanum) with small leaves and of rather compact form ; almost due east of this is shrubby cinquefoil (Poten- tilla fruticosa), and directly north of this, close by the border of the open space of Drive which encircles the Bolivar Statue, is the high bush cranberry. This has more name than height. You can tell it by its leaves, which are distinctly three-lobed and three- nerved (veined). As the Drive makes its exit at the south of the little concourse about the Bolivar Statue, it winds slowly down the Hill to meet the main West Drive. Near its junction with the Drive, there is a handsome me. ie 74 7 ‘ sp Ls ; ti b y * i - Lf De. %, , ® ¥ ‘J ow ¥ q e. nay F 4 z = . : y “ NV j r hk q A fy dod ‘ 4 wat =) a s aq i i ° 1 \ ADs Lee F j » Hf = e 4 ' i i 1 n _ iy 4 r { n : . ’ : ° & ’ { h ; * ’ 4 . ' i i F 2 i ‘ * * > ’ ‘ i 2 * + « * 4 % a -_ | — ' | \ * ran i J =) 7 ‘ j ; by } i yi! » a. apa a te = a i io ‘ i iy ' tf) mp’. M : ‘ 2 my an) oa xy TA % 1h e AM { LEG ' peri > y, Pea ay, as ; , Neo! si Es ne ey iA fe 1 _ i a cf. Hee cA on i j a @ ? ! , : éj ai! a Ar Mara ie ee om ay? mie a his CrepAR oF Lesanon (Cedrus Libant) Map 10. No, 64. 265 Cedar of Lebanon. This beautiful tree spreads out its darkly foliaged boughs, just east of a good-sized white ash, with a low dense mass of the elegantissima variety of the English yew, to the north of it, and a pretty, lusty young fire-thorn south of it. If you should follow the Walk from the south of the Bolivar Concourse, at the place where it bends around quite quickly in a curve to the east, you will pass a cluster of European larches on your left, with an Oriental spruce on your right. The larches have black persistent cones clinging amid their branches, and rosette-like clusters of leaves. These leaves are about an inch long, are soft, flat and linear, and of a light tender green, very beautiful in spring. The spruce has stout, thick, obtuse, four-sided leaves which are scarcely a quarter of an inch long. So you can make no mistake about these trees. At the next fork of the Walk, turn to your right, and go southerly to the next branch, which is at the Drive Crossing, not far from the Eighty-first Street Gate, where we entered for this ramble. At the Drive Crossing, in either corner of the Walk there, you will find large masses of the pretty Fontanesia, easily rec- ognized by its willow-like leaves. The Fontanesia be- longs to the Oleacee family and as has been said before, gets its name from Desfontaines, a French botanist, born 1752 and died 1833. The shrub has opposite, narrow, willow-like leaves, which are entire. It is a Chinese importation and, in the Park here, is certainly thriving. It blooms in May or June in short panicles at the ends of the branches. The panicles are made up 266 of cream-white, perfect flowers, with four petals. To the west of the westerly Fontanesia is a good clump of Van Houtte’s spirza, and with this we will end our ramble over this Section. f si Nw Lal O00 ONION Aw Explanations, Map No. 11 CoMMON NAME Day Lily (Orange-red flowers). Kentucky Coffee Tree. . Sycamore Maple. . Honey Locust. . English Hawthorn. . Scotch Elm. Common Barberry. . Pin Oak. . English Elm. . Smooth-leaved English Elm. Turkey Oak. . European Silver Linden. BoTANICAL NAME Hemerocallis fulva. Gymnocladus Canadensts. Acer pseudoplatanus. Gleditschia triacanthos. Crategus oxyacantha., Ulmus Montana. Berberis vulgaris. Quercus palustris. Ulmus campestris. Ulmus campestris, var. levis (or glabra). Quercus cerris. Tilia Europea, var. argentea (or alba), XI. EAST NINETIETH STREET AND VICINITY. There is nothing in this Section which you have not met before, if you have followed the rambles in the earlier part of this book, but there are some things here worthy of your notice as you pass along the Walks. As you enter at the East Ninetieth Street Gate, and take the Walk, at your right, which runs northerly beside the Drive, you will pass beneath a splendid colonade of sycamore maples. Almost the whole stretch of the Walk, up to where it bends away to the west, is lined with these maples, and they are in fine condition. Note the thick, five-lobed leaves, with their reddish (usually, though not always) leaf-stems (petioles). Directly in front (west) of the Ninetieth Street Gate, there is a bed between Drive and Bridle Path. On the southerly end of this bed you will find sycamore maple and common barberry; at its northerly end sycamore maple again. Down at the extreme south of this area (see the map), on the westerly border of the Drive, nearly opposite Eighty-seventh Street, you will see a pretty clump of the day lily (Hemerocallis fulva), which blooms in late July or early August with orange-hued flowers. You can readily recognize it by its leaves which, bending and lance-like, make you think of thick sedge grass. There is another clump of this down on Section No. 9, near the border of the Drive. / hike ‘ap eta We) mi Mie Ry Ly y oe f ‘i FS. ein, Be pe mt ; en N°l2 WEST 9O™ ST. AND VICINITY « | < Q ~J a = Wy S CONT OD was WN He Explanations, Map No. 12 Common NAME . Chinese Cork Tree. . Black Haw. . Ninebark. . Lombardy Poplar. Cut-leaved Weeping Euro- pean White Birch. . Japan Shadbush. . Japan Snowball. . Thunberg’s or Japan Bar- berry. . Wild Red Osier. . Austrian Pine. . Plume-leaved Japan Ar- bor Vitz. . Weigela. . Reeve’s Spirza. . Tree Box or Boxwood. . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Kentucky Coffee Tree. . White Pine . American White or Gray Birch. . Scotch Pine. . Norway Maple. . Yellow Pine. . Bhotan Pine. . Turkey Oak. . Siberian Pea Tree. . Cockspur Thorn. . Large-thorned Hawthorn. . English Hawthorn. . Common Quince. . Red Birch, or River Black Birch. . Chinese Juniper. . Sea Buckthorn. BoTANICAL NAME Phellodendron Amurense. Viburnum pruntfolium. Physocarpus (or Spirea) opu- lifolia. Populus dilatata. Betula alba, var, pendula la- cintata, Amelanchier Japonica. Viburnum plicatum. Berberts Thunbergit. Cornus stolontfera. Pinus Austriaca. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plumosa. _ Diervilla grandiflora. Spirea Reevesiana. Buxus sempervirens. Lonicera fragrantissima. Gymnocladus Canadensis. Pinus strobus. Betula populifolza. Pinus sylvestris. Acer platanotdes. Pinus mitts. Pinus excelsa. Quercus cerrts. Caragana arborescens. Crategus crus-gallt. Crategus macracantha. Crategus oxyacantha, Cydonia vulgaris. Betula nigra. Juniperus Chinensis. Hippophaé rhamnoides. 274 COMMON NAME . Shadbush, June Berry or Service Berry. . Ginkgo Tree. . Nordmann’s Silver Fir. . English Yew. » Dilip. Pree. . Mugho Pine. . White Mulberry. . Norway Spruce. . Swamp White Oak. . Indian Currant or Coral Berry. . Red Maple. . Holly-leaved Barberry, Oregon Barberry, Ash- berry. . Golden Plume-leaved Japan Arbor Vite. . Oriental Plane Tree. . Common Horsechestnut. . European White Birch. . American White Ash. . Common Swamp Blue- berry, High-Bush Blue- berry. . American Arbor Vite. . European White Birch. . Black Cherry. . Tree Box, Boxwood. . Paulownia. . Indian Bean Tree or Southern Catalpa. . Prostrate English Yew. . Pin Oak. . European Ash. . Sassafras. . Red Oak. . Sycamore Maple. . Rhodotypos. BOTANICAL NAME Amelanchier Canadensis, Salisburia adianttfolia. Abtes Nordmanniana. Taxus baccata. Liriodendron tulipifera. Pinus Montana, var. Mughus. Morus alba. Picea excelsa. Quercus bicolor. Symphoricarpos vulgaris. Acer rubrum. Mahonia aquijolia. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plumosa aurea. Platanus Ortentalts. Aisculus hippocastanum, Betula alba. Fraxinus Americana. Vaccinium corymbosum. Thuya Occidentalis. Betula alba. Prunus serotina. Buxus sempervirens. Paulownta wmpertalis. Catalpa bignontoides. Taxus baccata, var. prostrata. Quercus palustris. Fraxinus excelstor. Sassafras officinale. Quercus rubra. Acer pseudoplatanus. Rhodotypos kerrtodes. XII. WEST NINETIETH STREET AND VICINITY As you take the Walk at West Ninetieth Street, southerly side of the Drive, and follow it around to where it passes under the Drive through an Archway, you will have a good chance to examine Chinese cork trees, for there are some specimens of them on the right of the Walk, just as it descends to pass beneath the Arch. You can know them by their long, com- pound leaves, which closely resemble those of the ailanthus. If you pass through the Arch and follow this path around to the junction with the Drive Walk, at its junction, in the left or northwest corner, stand- ing close together, you will find a good-sized red birch, with rough bark and rhombic ovate leaves, and a Chinese juniper with stiff, sharp-pointed, awl-shaped and scale-shaped (on some of its branchlets) leaves. They are both interesting studies. Across the Drive from these, a little south of east, close by the border of the Drive itself, you will find sea buckthorn, a tall, sparse shrub, with very small, narrow leaves which are grayish green on the upper- sides, but silvery beneath. There are also, generally, reddish scales on the undersides. In May the shrub puts out its small, two to three-clustered, yellowish flowers, and these change into bitter orange berries, 276 which are ripe in September. If you look on the branches of this shrub you will find them often armed with small thorns. Follow the Walk that runs nearly parallel with the Drive, northerly, climbing an easy rise of ground, over several series of rock-cut steps. At the west of the last steps a handsome gingko stands with its up- stretched branches and beautiful fan-shaped leaves. Just beyond this, the Walk swells out into a little bay. Along its easterly side are tall, conical masses of the plume-leaved Japan arbor vite, with lovely plume- like leaves. I do not think that any other of the Retinosporas can compare with this one, for fineness of leaves. They are delicacy itself. Over in the northwesterly bend of the bay you will find a fair- sized Nordmann’s silver fir. This you can know by its leaves—flat, linear, notched distinctly at the ends, and marked with silvery lines on the undersides. Beyond this Retinospora-lined path, the Walk sends off a short arm to the east, to cross the Drive toward the Reservoir, and a little north of the place where it branches off, you will find, on the west of the Walk, your right, a splendid type of the Bhotan pine. This is a lovely tree. Its slender leaves seem to hang in tassels or bunches, and the light quivers and shimmers over them at every breath of breeze. They seem ever rippling with this tremulous play of light when the sunshine and the breeze are upon them, and the effect is certainly very beautiful. Sometimes if you stand off and look at the tree, as a whole, it seems to be letting fall a continuous cascade of rippling gold and 277 silver. This is the peculiar charm of the Bhotan, and is due to its very long (ten inches or more) needles which are so fine and slender that they dance at the slightest zephyr. These leaves are five in a fascicle or bundle. Continue along this Walk until it next meets the Drive. In its left-hand corner, close by the Drive, you will see a low, sprawling growth. Its flat, pointed, two-ranked leaves, dark green above, yellowish-green on the undersides, tell you it is of the English yew stock. It is the prostrate yew, and grows in this low sprawling, crab-like way. Cross the Drive here and take up the Walk on the other side. Two handsome pin oaks guard its either corner. Follow the Walk on, to its branching, and take the right fork, to the next branch, which sends off its left fork to the north. In the angle of this fork you will find Norway maple. If you take the left (northerly) branch here, and follow it along a little, you will pass, back from the Walk, a short distance, up a gentle slope of bank, two ash trees. They are interesting, because they are good types of the Amer- ican ash and the European ash, growing side by side, and so are easily accessible for comparison and study. The one to the north is the American species (with stalked leaflets), the one to the south is the European species (with leaflets almost sessile). Let us come back now to the West Ninetieth Street Gate, and take the Walk that trends southerly. Al- most as you turn off to the right, you are half hidden by the masses of shrubberies that rise on either side of 278 the Walk. Here, set on the Walk is an “island” of green things, with a mass of ninebark at one end (northerly), and at the other (southerly), Japan shad- bush and Japan snowball. These you have met with before, and we need not linger over them. Beyond, the Walk opens out into a broad space, close to the Drive. The beds, between Walk and Drive, end here in two tongues. In the northerly tongue is Reeve’s spirea with lanceolate leaves, and in the end of the southerly tongue is a handsome mass of box, with its beautiful dark green leaves. South of this is a rugged old Austrian pine with a couple of Scotch pines to the south of it, nearer the Walk. The Scotch pines have short, twisted leaves, the Austrian, long stiffish ones. If you continue on this Walk, southerly, not very much further beyond the Scotch pines, is white pine. These are all on the left (east) of the Walk. About the distance of the white pine from the mass of box, just passed, as you go southerly along the Walk, you will come, on your left, to a tall, thin looking ever- green which seems to be just about holding its own. It looks something like the Austrian pine, but is of a finer expression—softer by far. It rises rather conically, and its sprays are open, light and airy, very different from the heavy dense masses of the Austrian’s foliage. It is Pinus mitis, and its leaves are about five inches long, slender and green. They are gathered three or two (usually two) together in a fascicle. The cone of the tree is about the size of the Austrian cone (three inches), and looks something like it. It has small weak prickles. 279 Follow the path still southerly, and quite a little distance further along, where the path bends to the Drive, you pass close by the Walk, with leaves in hang- ing tassels that remind you of the tassels of Russian sleighs, a handsome Bhotan pine. This is a well- grown tree, and spreads its boughs out in a broad and splendid shade. It is a noble tree. Note that its leaves are five in a bundle, and long. Beyond, another Austrian pine overshadows the Walk, and near the place where the Walk comes in close to the Drive, you pass several very fine specimens of the Turkey oak. Cross the Drive, just beyond these, and take the Walk that leads to the Bridge over the Bridle Path. Just beyond the Drive, on the left of the Walk, as you go easterly, is common quince. Note its leaves and compare them with those of the Japan quince. If you follow the Path to the Bridge, down by the Bridle Path, close by the southerly border, are some good examples of Crategus macracantha, with strong thorns and oval glossy leaves. At the east of the Bridge, down by the border of the Bridle Path, you will find a clump of English hawthorns. The English hawthorns are clustered close together, just east of the Bridge which spans the Bridle Path. A little off to west of this Bridge, close down by the very border of the Bridle Path itself, you will find a very handsome cockspur thorn with dark-green, glossy, shining, thick and leathery (coriaceous) leaves which make you think of miniature tennis racquets. This tree fairly bristles with thorns. It stands diag- onally across from the handsome large-thorned haw- 280 thorns that flank the southerly border of the Bridle Path here. You can note here the different character- istics of these two very beautiful kinds of hawthorn. While you are here, notice the many handsome Turkey oaks in this vicinity. tA / / gos | \| \| \ “Nb a ‘e WD TT) aceon HLYON LS onBO1 1sw3 “LS un 96 LSW3 othe aaah bud o f ‘ , an yi aber ' very eee gaye 7 wt et | ee 1 y af [ ; 4 Je rn ley eee © UF pM ‘ Rai f ee b H #%, { : pa 4 , * 4 ee . 4 a a ' ' 4 | \ ~f \ a Ww , P . ‘ | “ | j a! f | m ~ Rib } pte 4 Ts i ’ * + : 5 \Ongoe St CN Un BWNH Explanations, Map No. 13 ComMon NAME . Honey Locust. . Sycamore Maple. Common Horsechestnut. . Red Birch, River Birch, Black Birch. . Weeping European Silver Linden. . Norway Maple. . American White or Gray Birch. . Sugar or Rock Maple. . American or White Elm. ) Oriental Plane Tree. ; wopper Beech. . Hackberry, Sugarberry, Nettle Tree. . Cornelian Cherry. . American Linden, Bass- wood, Bee Tree. . Sweet Gum or Bilsted. . Reeve’s Spirza. . Pignut Hickory. . European Elder. . Ramanas Rose, Japan Rose. . Mockernut or Whiteheart Hickory. . European Beech. , Black Cherry. . European Linden. . Hop Hornbeam or Iron- wood. . English Oak. . European Beech. . Indian Bean, Tree or Southern Catalpa. . Turkey Oak. BoTANICAL NAME Gleditschia triacanthos. Acer pseudoplatanus. Atsculus hippocastanum. Betula nigra. Tilia Europea, var. argentea (or alba) pendula. Acer platanoides. Betula popultfolia. Acer saccharinum. Ulmus Americana. Platanus Ortentalis. Fagus sylvatica, var. cuprea. Celtis Occidentalis. Cornus mascula. Tilia Americana. Liquidambar styracifiua. Spirea Reevesiana. Carya porcina. Sambucus nigra. Rosa rugosa. Carya tomentosa. Fagus sylvatica. Prunus serotina. Tilia Europea. Ostrya Virginica. Quercus robur. Fagus sylvatica. Catalpa bignonioides. Quercus cerrts. 20. 20; 31. 22). Jor 34: SD: a0; Sf: 38. cae 40. AT. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47- 48. 49. 50. oe rp! 53- 54. 55. 286 ComMon NAME American White or Gray Birch. Tulip Tree: European Bird Cherry. Witch Hazel. Pin Oak. Sassafras. Scarlet Oak. Scarlet-fruited Thorn, White Thorn. Ninebark. Red Maple. Ailanthus or Tree of Heaven. Sweet Viburnum, Sheep- berry, Nannyberry. Standish’s Honeysuckle. Hercules’s Club, Devil’s Walking-Stick, Angel- ica: Bree: Silver or White Maple. Fragrant Honeysuckle. Weeping European Silver Linden. European Silver Linden. Black Haw. Arrowwood. Red Oak. English Hawthorn. Swamp White Oak. Black Sugar Maple, Black Maple. Sweet Birch, Black Birch, Cherry Birch. Shagbark Hickory. Butternut. BotTaNicaL NAME Betula populifolia. Liriodendron tultpifera. Prunus padus. Hamamelis Virginiana. Quercus palustris. Sassafras officinale. Quercus coccinea. Crategus coccinea. Physocarpos (or Spir@a) opu- lifolia. Acer rubrum. Ailanthus glandulosus. Viburnum lentago. Lonicera Standish. Aralia spinosa. Acer dasycarpum. Lonicera fragrantissima. Tilia Europea, var. argentea (or alba) pendula. Tilia Europea, var. argentea (or alba). Viburnum prunifolium. Viburnum dentatum. Quercus rubra. Crategus oxyacantha. Quercus bicolor. Acer saccharinum, rum. Betula lenta. var. ni- Carya alba. Juglans cinerea. XI, EAST NINETY-SIXTH STREET TO EAST ONE HUNDRED AND SECOND STREET As has been said before, if you have followed these rambles, in the order of the book, you will readily recognize most of the trees and shrubs of this Section on sight. But there are some of them over which you may well linger, and to these few your attention is hereby called, in the spirit that Walton would have invited you to a day’s angling—be in no hurry, ob- serve quietly, and learn and love, for they are dear fellows—all of them. Learn to know them as friends. Acer saccharinum, var. nigrum. (Black Sugar Maple. No. 52.) This interesting variety of the sugar maple will be found along the Walk that branches off to the west from the Drive, just as the Drive passes over Transverse Road No. 4. This Walk skirts the east- erly side of North Meadow, and runs about parallel with East Drive. Follow this Walk along until you come to a large mass of rock on the right (east) of the Walk. This mass is about opposite East One Hundredth Street, were it extended into the Park. It is the second rock mass you meet, going northerly on this Walk, and the black maple is just beyond it, on the left of the Walk (west). This tree makes a triangle with two swamp white oaks, back (west) of it; the black maple is in the point of the triangle, and the two swamp white oaks make its opposite side. 288 The leaves of this tree are much larger than those of the sugar maple, and often droop conspicuously at the ends like the leaves of the Norway maple. That you may make no mistake about this tree, you pass, after the rock mass spoken of above, but on your left (the rock mass is on your right), a Turkey oak, and, beyond it, a fine red oak. The Turkey oak has dark, black, heavily ridged bark; the red has rather smoothish (compared with the Turkey), smoky, or slaty-gray bark. The leaves of the red oak are bristle- tipped at the lobes. The lobes of the Turkey oak are angulated. Aralia spinosa. (Hercules’s Club. Devil's Walk- ing Stick. Angelica Tree. No. 42.) You will find a small cluster of these odd looking shrubs close by the Walk, just as it bends away from the Drive, to the west, at the place where the Drive passes over Transverse Road No. 4. You can pick them out easily by the fierce spines that bristle out all over their stems. Truly they are well named—Devil’s Walking Stick. The leaves are quite large, compound (twice or thrice odd-pinnate), and clustered at the ends of the branches. The leaflets are ovate, pointed, glaucous on the undersides, and have serrated margins. In July or August the shrub flowers, in large, conspic- uous panicles of many-flowered umbels—white or greenish. These change in September to conspicuous clusters of cool crimson berries, about quarter of an inch in diameter. These berries are quite distinctly five-ribbed, and are certainly very pretty to look upon at this season (fall) of the year. 289 Fagus sylvatica. (European Beech. No. 21.) This is indeed a splendid gathering of the European beech— a veritable grove of them. They are all doing well, and are remarkably healthy and lusty. Come upon them in spring, when they are setting their boughs with that peculiar delicate, tender green which only the beech can show. No other tree can compare, in spring leafage, with the tender green of the beech. If you don’t believe it, stand under a beech at this season of the year and look up through the young leaves at the sunshine. Can anything equal that glory of illumined green! There is a tender translucency of light, that seems to hallow and sanctify, as it passes through; an ethereal quality, that seems almost fairy- like and full of things that cannot be described. And in summer these trees are quite as lovable. Then the bright, light green grows deeper and richer. The European beech differs from our native beech in one very marked and easily distinguishable feature—in its leaves. Look at the margin of the leaf. The leaf of the European is not toothed, the leaf of the American is very strongly toothed, the teeth terminating the veins, If you will remember this, you can distinguish between the two trees at a glance. In addition, the leaf of the European is very hairy (ciliate) all along the entire margin. Again the European has a gray bark, darker than the very light gray of our native beech. The habit of growth is usually different also. The European branches lower, and has a more squat and thickset look, while the branches reach out more horizontally. You will find this really handsome grove 290 by taking the Walk on the east of the Drive, where it passes over Transverse Road No. 4. The Walk forks just a little beyond the Transverse Road, and its west- erly Branch will bring you beneath the green canopies of this delightful grove. Prunus padus. (Luropean Bird Cherry. No. 31.) On the westerly end of the little triangular-shaped bit of ground that stands like an island on the Drive, just as the latter crosses Transverse Road No. 4, you will find a pretty fair specimen of this tree. The trian- gular “island” is at the west branch of the Drive, just before it passes over the Transverse Road, and the bird cherry is on its westerly corner, back of a tulip tree. The tulip tree is on the point of the triangle, and you can tell it by its leaves, which seem to be shorn off straight across the top in a very peculiar way. The bird cherry is a small sized tree, with leaves and flowers much like those of the choke cherry, ex- cept that the flowers, which occur in drooping racemes, are longer and larger than those of the choke cherry. In addition they are very fragrant, while those of the choke cherry are anything but that. The leaves of the bird cherry are about four inches long, and obovate in shape, with bases unequally heart-shaped. They are sharply and doubly serrate. Sambucus nigra. (European Elder. No. 18.) As you enter the Park at East One Hundred and Second Street, and take the first left-hand (southerly) Walk, close by the third series of steps, low down at your left, as you go south, you will find this mass. Its leaves are made up of five to nine leaflets. In June 2g1 it is covered with flat-topped cymes, which are five- rayed, and these are succeeded by black berries. Viburnum lentago. (Sheepberry. Nanny-berry. No. 40.) If you follow the Drive northerly, you will find, on your right, a good-sized rock mass, about half way between the first and second branching of the Drive. The rock is about in line with East One Hun- dredth Street. In the very shoulder of this rock, close by the Drive, is this good specimen of nanny-berry. It is a small-sized tree—about the proportions of the black haw, with broadly ovate leaves that come down to a long point. The leaves are simple, and opposite to each other on the branch—as are the leaves of all the Viburnums. Notice also the long leaf-stems, which are Wavy-margined and grooved. In the fall you will see the tree hung full of fruit, clusters of oval ber- ries, each about half an inch long, blue-black in color, covered with a bloom. They are sweet and edible. The berry stone is flat, oval, thin, and marked faintly by groovings that run lengthwise across its flat sides. The tree flowers in May or June, with the white, flat- topped cymes characteristic of the Viburnums. While you are in this vicinity you should have a look at the butternut tree, which is not far away. Follow the east border of the Drive northerly until you come to another rock mass. Just east of this rock you will find the tree. It is, if I remember rightly, about the best specimen of butternut in the Park. For some reason, none of them is doing very well. The speci- men here is rather a low tree, with the light gray bark that is characteristic of the butternut. Its leaves are 292 compound and made up of from eleven to nineteen leaf- lets, which are oblong-lanceolate and sharp pointed. The peculiar generic name of the tree, Juglans, is derived from the Latin words Jovis, glans, nut of Jove (Jupiter). ie al a oy) d LS7M 4917200/ = YL - 6L TL ‘100d aHL Ol. S 196 LSAM Wd 1VdLNIO . : oo. P [ d - ys : pamsl abonmdined! bp por genenin gt ahambon Shed) Phos yer eh setae, 37 alc a shy Ged SN AM BPW Wb Explanations, Map No. 14 ComMon NAME . Lombardy Poplar. . Crimean Linden. ed Oak. . English Elm. . Sugar or Rock Maple. . Norway Maple. Thunberg’s Spindle Tree, Winged Spindle Tree. . American or White Elm. . Japonicum or Japan Vi- burnum. . Fragrant Honeysuckle. . Red Maple. . American Cork Elm, Rock Elm. . Holly-leaved Barberry, Oregon Barberry, Ash- berry. . Rhodotypos. . Sorrell Tree, Sourwood. . Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa. . Wild Red Osier. . Tree Box or Boxwood. . Staghorn Sumac. . Mockernut or Whiteheart Hickory. . Common Swamp Blue- berry, High-bush Blue- berry. BoTaNiIcaAL NAME Populus dilatata. Tilia dasystyla. Quercus palustris. Ulmus campestris. Acer saccharinum. Acer platanotdes. Euonymus Thunbergianus (or alatus). Ulmus Americana. Viburnum tomentosum. Lonicera fragrantissima. Acer rubrum. Ulmus racemosa. Mahonia aqutfolia. Rhodotypos kerrioides. Oxydendrum (or Oxydendron’ arboreum., Philadelphus coronarius. Cornus stolontfera. Buxus sempervirens. Rhus typhina. Carya tomentosa. Vaccinium corymbosum, 22. 36 298 ComMMON NAME Lily of the Valley Tree, mingled with Lovely Azalea. Irish Yew. Swamp White Oak. . Catesby’s Andromeda. . English Yew. Austrian Pine. Swiss Stone Pine. . Cornelian Cherry. . Staghorn Sumac. . American Hornbeam. Blue Beech. Beech, Water . Blackberry. . Bhotan Pine. . White Pine. . Weeping Golden Bell or Forsythia. -*Box-leaved Cotoneaster. . Dwarf Mountain Sumac. . American Chestnut. . Scotch Elm, Wych Elm. . Common Horsechestnut. . Shagbark or Shellbark Hickory. . American Beech. . Silver or White Maple. . Smoke Tree. . Japan Cedar. . Flowering Dogwood. . Shadbush, June Berry, Service Berry. . Hemlock. 49. Obtuse-leaved Japan Ar- bor Vite. BoTaNicaAL NAME Andromeda floribunda with Azalea amena. Taxus baccata, var. fastigiata. Quercus bicolor. Andromeda (or Leucothoé). Taxus baccata. Pinus Austriaca. Pinus Cembra. Cornus mascula, Rhus typhina. Carpinus Caroliniana Rubus villosus. Pinus excelsa. Pinus strobus. Forsythia suspensa. Cotoneaster buxtfolia. Rhus copallina. Castanea sativa (or vesca), var. Americana. Ulmus Montana. Zisculus hippocastanum. Carya alba.. Fagus ferruginea. Acer dasycarpum. Rhus cotinus. Cryptomeria Japonica. Cornus florida. Amelanchier Canadensis. Tsuga Canadensis. Chamecyparits (or pora) obtusa. Retinos- >) CoMMON NAME . Witch Hazel. . Shagbark or Shellbark Hickory. . English Hawthorn. . Pignut Hickory. . Black Cherry. . Red Oak. . European Larch. . Indian Bean Tree Southern Catalpa. or . Cottonwood or Carolina Poplar. . Bald Cypress. . Sassafras. = Pulip ‘Tree. . American Elder. . Soulard’s Crab Apple. . White Oak. . Scarlet Oak. . American White or Gray Birch. . White Poplar or Abele Tree. . Black Walnut. . Honey Locust. odianthius “or ‘Tree ‘of Heaven. . Hackberry, Sugarberry, Nettle Tree. . Common Locust. . Sycamore Maple. . Fontanesia. . Osage Orange. . English Hawthorn. . American Hazel. Black Oak. BoTANICAL NAME Hamamelis Virginiana. Carya alba. Crategus oxyacantha, Carya porcina. Prunus serotina. Quercus rubra. Larix Europea. Catalpa bignontotdes. Populus moniltfera. Taxodium distichum. Sassafras officinale. Liriodendron tultptfera. Sambucus Canadensis. Pyrus Soulard. Quercus alba. Quercus coccinea. Betula popultfolia. Populus alba. Juglans nigra, Gledttschia tricanthos. Azlanthus glandulosus. Celtis Occidentalis. Robinia pseudacacia. Acer pseudoplatanus. Fontanesia Fortunet. Maclura aurantiaca. Crategus oxyacantha. Corylus Americana. Quercus coccinea, var. tinctoria 300 Common NAME BoTANICAL NAME v9. English Hawthorn. Crategus oxyacantha, 80. American Arbor Vite. Thuya Occtdentalts. 81. European Beech. Fagus sylvatica. XIV. WEST NINETY-SIXTH STREET TO THE POOL In this Section you will find Crimean lindens, almost as soon as you enter at the West Ninety-sixth Street Gate, handsome Soulard’s crab-apples, over near Trans- verse Road No. 4, native cork elm, on the westerly side of the North Meadow, the obtuse-leaved Japan arbor vitze, a sorrel tree near the hydrant, not far from the Gate by which you entered and others equally interest- ing. Let us consider them in detail. Andromeda floribunda. (Lily of the Valley Tree. No. 22.) This fine mass, which is intermingled with salea amena, is well worth seeing in early spring, es- pecially when in bloom. The azalea is then a mass of clear, cool magenta, and the andromeda fairly bursting with its dense clusters of small drooping, waxy, frost- white, urn-shaped flowers in erect panicles at the ends of the branches. The azalea has very small ovate leaves, scarcely half an inch long. The andromeda’s leaves are about two or three inches long. They both bloom early in spring, late March or early April. Be on hand to see them. You will find this mass on the west of the Walk that runs parallel with the Drive and opens out close beside it, where the Drive passes over Transverse Road No. 4. The mass is off the Walk, a little at your left (west), if you walk northerly, and not far from the fork that swings out its left branch to the Drive, as the latter pass over the Transverse Road. 302 Chamecyparis (or Retinospora) obtusa. (Obtuse- leaved Japan Arbor Vite. No. 49.) You will find this rather poor specimen (for it is slowly dying) on the wes- terly side of the North Meadow, near the fork of Walk which bends to the west, to cross the Drive, and pass out of the Park at the West One Hundredth Street Gate. It stands quite near a handsome cluster of white pines. These pines you can readily know by their hori- zontal boughs and leaf bundles of five together in a fascicle—the leaves about three or four inches long. The Retinospora stands west of the Walk, near the point of the fork, with a hemlock just back of it. The leaves of the hemlock are flat, about half an inch long, and white on the undersides. The Retinospora in question is, as you see, doing very poorly. It is just about holding its own. You see that its leaf-sprays have a flattish, fan-like look. If you examine these sprays closely, you will see that the leaves are scale- like, closely pressed together and very blunt or obtuse. Indeed they have a very jointed look. The small end leaves seem to clasp the inner leaves of each row like a pair of flat claws, and the whole row has a hard, flat-squeezed look which is very distinctive. Blunt- leaved is certainly a good name for this characteristic. The cones are very small, made up of from eight to ten light-brown, valvate, wedge-shaped scales. Euonymus Thunbergianus (or alatus). (Thunberg’s Spindle Tree. Winged Spindle Tree. No. 7.) If you take the Walk at the right (south) of the Drive, upon entering the West Ninety-sixth Street Gate, and proceed south-easterly with it, until you come to the 393 first fork of this Walk, you will see this interesting Japan shrub, standing next to the American elm, which is in the point of the fork of the Walk. The little Japan shrub stands next to the elm, at its left, as you face the northerly border of this Walk. You can recog- nize it easily by the corky (two to four) wings (alatus) on the branches. In May or June it blooms in little yellowish flowers, four or five together, on short pe- duncles (flower-stems) from the axils of the leaves. The leaves themselves are acute at both ends, rather broadly elliptical, and quite sharply cut (serrated) about the margins. They are usually about two inches in length. The glory of this shrub is its fruit, which nods from four parted capsules that glow in autumn with a soft, cool crimson, upon which your eye loves to linger. And when these are ripe, at this season of the year, how lovely it is to see these husks break open and curl back like lips, disclosing the rich orange gleam of the seeds beneath. You may pass the Enonymus heedlessly at other seasons of the year, but in autumn it will surely claim your attention. Oxydendrum (or Oxydendron) arboreum. (Sorrell Tree. Sourwood. No. 15.) Not far from the West Ninety-sixth Street Gate, on the right of the Drive, as you go easterly, you will find a hydrant. It stands on the southerly side of the Drive, just before the Drive opens out into two branches, the one turning to the right and running south, the other turning to the left and going north. There are several things of interest clustered about this hydrant. To the west of it you will see a mass of the Cornus stolonifera, with long, 304 bending and sweeping branches, which turn conspic- uously crimson in the winter. If you look closely at these crimson branches, then, you will see that the crimson is streaked and veined with fine, lightish or grayish markings, giving a striated appearance to the twigs. This appearance is present in summer, but not so conspicuously as in winter. The mass is broad and spreading and grows with a distinct tendency to fling its branches over the ground and root again—a trick which is called in botany, stoloniferous. Just south of the Cornus stolonifera stands a good specimen of the mock orange or sweet syringa. This you can tell by its pointed, ovate leaves, with the veins depressed on the upper surface and prominent beneath. West of this syringa you will find the sorrell tree or sourwood. Its leaves are alternate on the branch and resemble those of the common peach leaf. They are of a dark, shining green, from four to seven inches long, oblong- lanceolate, with a short point. True to the tree that bears them they are very sour tasting. At the bases they are rather wedge-shaped. The flowers of this tree are very beautiful, by reason of their delicacy, borne on long, terminal, panicles, which are very conspicuous. They resemble somewhat the look of the flower-pani: cles of the sweet pepper bush, slender fingers of bloom (June or July), that at once arrest your attention. These panicles are made up of delicate little urn-shaped flowers, of a rich, cream-white, and narrowed daintily about the throat, as if delicately tied with some fairy- like constriction. The tiny little five-toothed flanges of the corolla flare out squarely and the whole little urn is 305 a marvel of frost white. If you peep into these little white urns you will see the ten stamens inserted on the corollas. The flowers soon change into small, dry, five- angled capsules of five cells. These capsules are very clinging (persistent) and may be seen on the tree late in the autumn and winter. If you know the fruit of the sweet pepper bush, you will be reminded of their resemblance to the fruit pods of that shrub. They look very much like long fingers, erect on the branches. The tree is a slender one, with gray bark, through which suffuses a reddish hue. It is furrowed and scaly. The tree gets its genus name from the Greek words ous, sharp, sour; and dendron, tree. It belongs, as you see by its pretty little urn-shaped flowers, to the great Ericacee or heath family. While you are here look at the fine staghorn sumac just east of the hydrant. You can tell it by its sticky, pubescent end branches. Just as the Drive bends to the south, in its corner, is a handsome mass of box. Pyrus Soulardi. (Soulard’s Crab Apple. No. 63.) There is quite a cluster of these handsome crabs, at the left (west) of the Walk, just as it bends westerly from the Drive, after passing over Transverse Road No. 4. They are small sized trees, lusty and healthful. At first glance you might think them hawthorns, for they are of the hawthorn look. But their lack of thorns will save you from this error. According to the best author- ities, the Soulard’s crab is now regarded as a hybrid between the common apple (Pyrus malus) and the western crab apple (Pyrus Ioensis). The leaves are roundish-ovate, obtuse or truncate at the base, and 306 densely woolly. This pubescence is very marked on the undersides of the thick leaves and especially on the petioles. The leaves, especially above the middle, seem to develop a tendency to lobe. This is quite noticeable on the upper parts of the leaves. The flowers of the Soulard are blush color and break out in dense woolly cymes. The fruit is a pome, flattened lengthwise and of a yellow hue. The tree is named from J. J. Soulard, of Galena, Ill., who first brought this variety into culti- vation. They are certainly a pretty cluster here and are doing well. Their healthfulness is indeed a joy to look upon, especially their leaves and branches. Quercus bicolor. (Swamp White Oak. No. 24.) There are two of these trees about opposite each other on either side of the Walk, not far from the West Ninety-sixth Street Gate. They are worthy of notice because, though of the same species of oak, their leaves are quite different. The leaves of the one on the east of the Walk are in conformity with the type of the swamp white oak’s leaves, as you have met this tree in other parts of the Park, but the leaves of the one on the west of the Walk are very much more deeply lobed. The two trees stand about diagonally opposite to each other. You will find them easily by taking the north- erly Walk from the West Ninety-sixth Street Gate, and following it on, until about midway between its first fork and the place where it meets the Drive, as it passes over Transverse Road No. 4. As you proceed it may be of interest to note some of the things you pass on the way. Just beyond the Crimean linden stands sycamore maple, with five-lobed 307 leaves. At the pend of the Walk, as it turns down southeasterly to meet the fork, is a fine white oak with its leaves cut into about nine lobes. Just back of this oak, southeast of it, is black cherry, with rough, scaly bark and shining, glossy, taper-pointed leaves. South- east of the cherry is pin oak, with its leaf-lobes bristle- tipped and rounded out by deep bays or sinuses—re- minding you of the scarlet oak’s leaves. But if you look at the slender yellowish petioles of these leaves you will not confuse them with the stout leaf-stalks of the scarlet. About opposite the point of the fork here, on the northerly side of the Walk, is another pin oak, and west of this, back (north) of the Walk is a good mock- ernut hickory. The mockernut you can tell by its large buds, its large leaves (compound), whose leaf-stems are very pubescent, as are also the undersides of the leaflets. The leaflets run in sevens and nines, usually in sevens. Beyond the fork of the Walk, on the southerly side, down the bank a little, is English yew, with dark green (uppersides), flat, sharply tipped leaves, seem- ingly arranged in a two-ranked manner on the branch. The leaves are linear, that is, with edges nearly parallel, and on the undersides are yellowish green—a mark which will distinguish this tree for you from the Ceph- alotaxus, whose leaves are whitish on the undersides. Just beyond the yew stand several clumps of Catesby’s andromeda, low bushes of thick, leathery, pointed leaves on short reddish leaf-stems. Beyond these, on either side of the Walk, are the two swamp white oaks of our quest. Note the differences in the leaves of the two trees. As has been said above, the one on 308 the west of the Walk has its leaves cut into lobes that remind you of the white oak, while those on the tree on the east of the Walk are wavy-lobed and recall the look of the chestnut oak. Note also the very pubescent undersides of the leaves of both of these trees. They are downy with tomentum (dense, close-matted pubescence). The acorns are oblong egg-shape, and set in shallow cups which are often densely fringed about the margins with ragged, mossy scales—much like the acorn of the bur oak. Beyond the swamp white oaks, on the right (east) of the Walk, as you continue northerly, is Irish yew, a small pyramidal growth, with leaves the same as those of the English yew, but gathered together in rather rosette-like clusters. Beyond this is Austrian pine, with its dark-green, stiffish leaves in bundles of two, and north of the Austrian, a handsome Swiss stone pine, with its leaves in bundles of five. Note that these leaves of the Swiss pine are three-sided and glaucous. At the steps here, off to your left (west), is a pretty Cornelian cherry, with opposite leaves, rather roundish oval and distinctly short-pointed. Tilia dasystyla. (Crimean Linden. No. 2.) As you enter the Park at the West Ninety-sixth Street Gate, on either side of the Drive, in the very points of the beds between Walk and Drive, almost as you go in, you will see these two slender young trees. They are but sapplings, now, but will grow into hand- some trees, if they develop to their full capacity. Their leaves are dark glossy-green on the uppersides, but, beneath, are pale-green, and if you look closely, 309 you will see little tufts of small brown hairs gathered in the axils of the larger leaf-veins. The leaves of the Crimean linden are rather tough and leathery, and are obliquely truncate (cut across) at the base. The tree gets its botanical specific name, dasystyla, from its flowers, whose pistils are densely tomentose or hairy (Greek, dasos), about the base of the rather pyramidal style. The style, speaking technically, is that part of the pistil which joins the ovary with the stigma. The stigma is the part of the pistil which receives the pollen, and the ovary is that part of the pistil which contains the embryonic seeds. The fruit of the Crimean linden is very distinctly five-angled, and is obovoid in shape. Ulmus racemosa. (American Cork Elm. Rock Elm. No. 12.) Pretty well back from Walk (the northerly one from the West Ninety-sixth Street Gate), and near the border of Transverse Road No. 4, you will find this slim specimen of our native cork elm. You can pick it out easily by the very distinct corky ridges on its branches. It is a small-sized tree, with a trunk not over a few inches thick, and has a lean and spindling look. Its leaves are smooth, hard and thick, dark green on the uppersides, but pale green below. In March or April, dancing little raceme- like (whence the name of the tree) clusters of tiny flowers float out upon the branches. Fairy sights they are, so tenderly delicate, it seems the sharp winds must surely tear them from their abiding places. How lovely they are! The tiny little calyx of each flower is bell-shaped. There is no corolla, 310 but there are seven or eight stamens, and these with their dark purple anthers give that lovely flush of color which is so charming. The bark of the tree is gray, through which you can detect a reddish cast. The bark is broken in rather broad scaly ridges. The fruit of the tree is a wafer-like samara, winged all around the seed. The edge of this wing is densely hairy (ciliate), as are also the sides of the whole samara. (ie RB a ed at eho ; trey yore vi i i bu ret 5 ap aA eee es ae mers: bhi gal : ait ot f i fe ( ae e m" at Ke f sy ay Lin a te hy A me \ f ei op e ‘ ‘i La, he SNNINVY sib 49 0r-+-e ae —- © sy = 62 ys eS X Ss VOK SS SS ~ i b. £0 [- / 69 Cy, Cor = — ALINIOIA GNW Baan Wa TeV GION LS SO!) TW Dur -& Ww | . Ash-leaved Maple, . Hackberry, Explanations, Map No. 15 CoMMON NAME . Lombardy Poplar. RP ay Gals. . American Beech. Honey Locust. . Turkey Oak. Cottonwood, Carolina Popiar. . Many-flowered Rose. . American Hornbeam, Blue Beech. Beech, Water Box Elder. . Silverbell Tree. . Chinese Cork Tree. . Striped Maple, Moose- wood, Whistlewood. . White Mulberry. . Purple-leaved English Elm. . Norway Maple. . European White Birch. . Black Walnut. . Shagbark or Shellbark Hickory. Sugarberry, Nettle Tree. American Linden, Bass- wood, Bee Tree. . Jdesia. . Sweet Bay, Swamp Mag- nolia. . Kentucky Coffee Tree. . Common Horsechestnut. . Sycamore Maple. . Western Yellow Pine. . English Oak. BoTANICAL NAME Populus dilatata. Quercus palustris. Fagus ferruginea. Gleditschia triacanthos. Quercus cerrts. Populus monalifera. Rosa multiflora. | Carpinus Caroliniana. Negundo aceroides. Halesia tetraptera. Phellodendron Amurense. Acer Pennsylvanicum. Morus alba. Ulmus campestris, var. stricta purpurea. Acer platanoides. Betula alba. Juglans nigra. Carya alba. Celtis Occidentalis. Tilia Americana. Idesia polycarpa. Magnolia glauca. Gleditschia triacanthos. 4isculus hippocastanum. Acer pseudoplatanus. Pinus ponderosa. Quercus robur. 316 Common NAME . Japan Arbor Vitz(Variety squarrosa). . Austrian Pine. . Nordmann’s Silver Fir. . Italian Maple. . Cockspur Thorn (Variety pyracanthafolia). . Corylopsis. . Large-thorned Hawthorn. . Large-leaved Maple, Ore- gon Maple. . Purple-leaved European Hazel. . Deodar, Indian Cedar. . Japan Lemon. . Austrian Pine. . Lovely Azalea. . Buckthorn. . European White Birch. . Witch Hazel. . Indian Bean Tree or Southern Catalpa. . Katsura Tree. . Early-flowering Jessa- mine. . American Holly. Japan Azalea. . Lily of the Valley Tree. . Tree Célandine, Plume Po Ppy ; earice fruited Haw- thorn, White Thorn. . Black Haw. . Red Oak. . Norway Spruce. . European Larch. . Sassafras. . Ash-leaved Maple, Box Elder. . Red Maple. . Red’ Oak. . Smooth Sumac. . Weeping Golden Bell or Forsythia. BoTaNIcAL NAME Chamecyparis (or rosa. Pinus Austriaca. Abtes Nordmanniana. Acer Italum. Crategus crus-gallt, var. pyra- canthafolta. Corylopsis spicata. Crategus macracantha. Acer macrophyllum. Corylus avellana, var. atropur- purea. Cedrus Deodara. Citrus trifoltata. Pinus Austriaca. Azalea amena. Rhamuus cathartica. Betula alba. Hamamelis Virginiana. Catalpa bignontotdes. Cercidiphyllum Japonicum. Jasminum nudtflorum. Ilex opaca. Azalea mollis. Andromeda floribunda. Bocconta cordata. Crategus coccinea. Viburnum pruntifolium. Quercus rubra. Picea excelsa. Larix Europea. Sassafras officinale. Negundo acerotdes. Acer rubrum. Quercus rubra. Rhus glabra. Forsythia suspensa. ar: Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. squar- 317 CoMMON NAME . Scarlet Oak. . Prostrate English Yew (Low and spreading). . Spicebush. . Yellowwood. . Japan Holly. . Cedar of Lebanon. . Thunberg’s or Japan Bar- berry . Common Horsechestnut. . Dwarf Mountain Sumac. . European Larch. . Black Cherry. . Ninebark. . Smooth Sumac. . European Mountain Ash, Rowan Tree. . European Beech. . Black Oak. . English Elm. . American White Ash. . Red Cedar. . American Chestnut. . Hop Hornbeam or Iron- wood. . Tulip Tree. . Flowering Dogwood. . Spicebush. . Arrowwood. . Smooth Alder. . Bald Cypress. . Reeve’s Spirza. . Oriental Spruce, Eastern Spruce. . Plume-leaved Japan Ar- bor Vite. . Cherry Birch, Sweet Birch, Black Birch. . Mock Orange or Sweet Syringa. . Washington Thorn. . European Silver Linden. BoTaNiIcaL NAME Quercus coccinea. Taxas baccata, var. prostrata. Benzotin benzotn. Cladrastis tinctoria. Ilex crenata. Cedrus Libant. Berberis Thunbergii. Az sculus hippocastanum. Rhus copallina. Larix Europea. Prunus serotina. Physocarpus (or Spiree) opu- lifolia. Rhus glabra. Pyrus aucuparia. Fagus sylvatica. Quercus coccinea, var. tinctoria. Ulmus campestris. Fraxinus Americana. Juniperus Virginiana. Castanea sativa, var. Amerti- cana. Ostrya Virginica. Lirtodendron Tulipifera. Cornus florida. Benzoin benzoin. Viburnum dentatum. Alnus serrulata. Taxodium distichum. Spirea Reevesiana. Picea Ortentalis. Chamecyparis (or Retinos- pora) pisifera, var. plumosa. Betula lenta. Philadelphus coronarius. Crategus cordata. Tiha Europea, var. argentea (or alba). 96. 97: 98. 99. Too. rol. TO2. 103. 104. 105. 106. 7. Weeping Willow, Baby- Io 318 CoMMON NAME Common Locust. White Pine. Keelreuteria or Varnish Tree. Weeping European, White Birch. Kentucky Coffee Tree. Wild Red Osier. Silver or White Maple. California Privet. White Poplar, Abele Tree. Ginkgo Tree. European Linden. lonian Willow, BOTANICAL NAME Robinia pseudacacia. Pinus strobus. Kelreuterta paniculata. Betula alba, var. pendula. Gymnocladus Canadensis. Cornus stolontfera. Acer dasycarpum. Ligustrum ovalifolium, Populus alba. Salisburia adiantifolia. Tilia Europea. Salix Babylonica. XV. HARLEM MEER AND VICINITY This Section, the vicinity of the Green Houses and McGowan’s Pass Tavern, is full of many interest- ing things which will be sure to claim your atten- tion. Most of the trees and shrubs of this area you have met before on your rambles in the lower sections of the Park, but there are several here which are new, that is, which are not represented in other parts of the Park. Let us consider these in detail :— Acer Italum. (Jtalian Maple. No. 31.) This in- teresting tree, a native of Italy, Switzerland, and Southern Europe, will be found at the extreme south- west corner of the Green Houses. It is very close to the wall, and you can pick it out by its leaves which resemble cut-down editions of the sycamore maple’s leaves. They look very much like the leaves of that tree, with the lobes obtusely rounded off. They are five-lobed, about five inches long, and whitened be- neath. The tree flowers in drooping corymbs, and its keys (fruit) have slightly spreading wings. The tree stands just below the Crategus crus-galli, var. pyra- canthafolia, to the east of it. Acer macrophyllum. (Large-leaved Maple. Oregon Maple. No. 35.) South of the Green Houses, close to the line of frames of the nursery that backs up this interesting patch of slope here, you will find a fine 320 specimen of this tree. That you may find it readily, if you skirt the southerly end of the Green Houses and follow the line of nursery frames, south, for about half way between the Green Houses and the southerly end of the nursery frames, you will see this tree standing, pretty well hidden by neighboring growths, a little north of a point where an imaginary line would strike, if the Walk at the southerly end of the Green Houses’ beds were carried westward to the nursery frames. If you know the purple-leaved Eu- ropean hazel, the Oregon maple stands just northwest of it. But I think you will have no difficulty in find- ing it, for its leaves are very large, eight to ten inches broad. These broad leaves are cut into five (often seven) deep lobes, and the lobes themselves are cut again into sections that make them rather three-lobed. They have something of the look of a large-sized leaf of the Oriental plane tree. On the undersides they are pubescent, when young, of a pale green hue. The tree flowers in the spring, with erect panicles of fra- grant yellow flowers, densely woolly, appearing after the leaves have opened. The yellow fruit is also very hairy and has large broad wings which spread at an angle of about forty-five degrees. The specimen be- fore you here is the only one in the Park, and it is to be hoped that it will be allowed to stand here, even if it falls into decline, for it is a rare tree to see in our section. Along the Pacific coast it grows to magnificent proportions, developing into a noble and imposing tree, reaching a height of a hundred feet or more, fh eat > @