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Trees and Shrubs for English Gardens

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A practical, illustrated manual offering guidance on selecting, grouping, and planting hardy trees and shrubs suited to English gardens. It explains propagation and pruning techniques, seasonal care, and methods for transplanting, staking, and preserving mature specimens. Dedicated chapters address site-specific challenges such as seaside exposure, wind-swept grounds, poor soils, waterside and rock-garden planting, and urban or small-plot situations. The work surveys major plant groups, including conifers, bamboos, heaths, and variegated and weeping forms, and recommends ornamental uses, hedging, pleaching, orchard and rose management. Appendices and tables list hardy species, while numerous photographs and sketches illustrate ideal forms and groupings.

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Title: Trees and Shrubs for English Gardens

Author: E. T. Cook

Release date: June 24, 2010 [eBook #32969]
Most recently updated: January 6, 2021

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Brownfox and the Online Distributed Proofreading
Team at https://www.pgdp.net

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREES AND SHRUBS FOR ENGLISH GARDENS ***

TRANSCRIBERS' NOTES

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TREES AND SHRUBS FOR ENGLISH GARDENS

THE CLUSTER PINE (Pinus Pinaster).

The "Country Life" Library.

TREES & SHRUBS

FOR

ENGLISH GARDENS

BY

E. T. COOK.

SECOND EDITION.

PUBLISHED BY

"COUNTRY LIFE"   GEORGE NEWNES, Ltd.
20, TAVISTOCK STREET,   7-12, SOUTHAMPTON STREET,
COVENT GARDEN, W.C.   COVENT GARDEN, W.C.

1908.

PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION

It cannot be urged against this work that it travels along a path already well worn, for the subject of trees and shrubs for English gardens, though almost inexhaustible, has never been so fully treated and illustrated as it deserves. The book may have many defects, but its pages will show that an honest effort has been made to offer helpful and instructive information to the many who wish to know more of the beauty of trees and shrubs.

In writing this book, the labour of my spare hours for many months, I have been greatly helped by Mr. Bean, the assistant-curator of the Royal Gardens, Kew, whose deep knowledge of the subject has been willingly imparted; and by Miss Jekyll, to whom I am indebted for many valuable suggestions and notes. Among others to whom grateful thanks are tendered are Mrs. Davidson, Mr. J. Clark, Mr. Dallimore, and Mr. S. W. Fitzherbert.

Some of the chapters have already appeared in the Garden, with the object of making known as widely as possible the importance of the most beautiful trees and shrubs for English woodland and pleasure-grounds.

The illustrations will show how a shrub, so often stunted and mutilated by unwise pruning, becomes beautiful when allowed to develop naturally.

The illustrations have their own teaching value, and in this matter also I desire to thank many willing helpers, especially Miss Jekyll, Miss Willmott, and Mr. Crump, of the Madresfield Court Gardens. Many of them are from photographs taken in the Royal Gardens, Kew. Under the present director (Sir William Thiselton-Dyer) much has been done in the judicious grouping of plants. Here is a living place of instruction open to all.

Those who desire to know more about trees and shrubs than it is possible to give in this book should consult such famous works as Loudon's "Arboretum Britannicum" (8 vols.), and "Encyclopædia of Trees and Shrubs"; Professor Sargent's "Silva of North America," and "Forest Flora of Japan"; "Manual of Coniferæ," by Messrs. James Veitch & Sons; "The Pinetum," by George Gordon; The "Bamboo Garden," by Lord Redesdale; Sir Joseph Hooker's "Rhododendrons of the Sikkim Himalaya"; and the excellent Kew Hand-list of Trees and Shrubs. Much information can also be gleaned from the volumes of Garden and Forest (American), edited by Professor Sargent, but not now in publication.

The nomenclature at Kew—that is, according to the Index Kewensis—is that adopted in this book.

It is the wish and hope of the author, whose notes, taken during many years, are embodied, that the book may do something to make English gardens more beautiful and interesting, and that it may win many to see the better ways of planting; also that it may be the means of bringing forward the many trees and shrubs of rare charm that are generally unknown or unheeded.

E. T. C.

November 1902.

PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION

This edition has been thoroughly revised to render it as useful as possible to those who desire a larger acquaintance with the many beautiful trees and shrubs that are hardy in this country. I must tender my heartiest thanks to Mr. William Atkinson (Messrs. Fisher, Son, & Sibray) for his valuable help in preparing this edition. Many of the illustrations represent trees and shrubs in the Royal Gardens, Kew, which are not only beautiful in themselves, but are the centre of scientific research.

E. T. C.

March 1908.

CONTENTS

CHAP.   PAGE
I. WANT OF VARIETY A BLEMISH 1
II. ORNAMENTAL PLANTING IN WOODLAND 6
III. GROUPING OF TREES AND SHRUBS 8
IV. HEATHY PATHS IN OUTER GARDEN SPACES 13
V. TREES AND SHRUBS IN POOR SOILS 17
VI. PRUNING FLOWERING TREES AND SHRUBS 19
VII. PROPAGATION OF HARDY TREES AND SHRUBS 38
VIII. A WINTER GARDEN OF TREES AND SHRUBS 47
IX. TREES AND SHRUBS WITH BEAUTIFUL CATKINS 65
X. AUTUMN COLOURS 71
XI. TREES AND SHRUBS WITH FINE FRUITS 77
XII. WEEPING TREES AND THEIR USES 88
XIII. THE USE OF VARIEGATED TREES AND SHRUBS 93
XIV. TREES AND SHRUBS FOR SEA-COAST 101
XV. TREES AND SHRUBS FOR WIND-SWEPT GARDENS 106
XVI. CONIFERS (INCLUDING PINES) IN ORNAMENTAL PLANTING 110
XVII. CARE OF OLD TREES 129
XVIII. TREES AND SHRUBS FOR WATERSIDE 134
XIX. TREES AND SHRUBS FOR ROCK GARDEN 138
XX. REMOVAL OF LARGE TREES AND SHRUBS 151
XXI. YOUNG TREES AND SUNSTROKE 159
XXII. SHADE TREES FOR STREETS 163
XXIII. TREES AND SHRUBS IN SCOTLAND 166
XXIV. TENDER SHRUBS AND TREES IN THE SOUTH-WEST 187
XXV. TENDER WALL PLANTS IN THE SOUTH-WEST 208
XXVI. TREES AND SHRUBS IN IRELAND 215
XXVII. HARDY BAMBOOS 218
XXVIII. THE HEATHS 226
XXIX. NATIVE AND OTHER HARDY EVERGREENS 240
XXX. SHRUBS FOR SMALL AND TOWN GARDENS 251
XXXI. SHRUB AND FLOWER BORDERS 257
XXXII. SHRUBS UNDER TREES 260
XXXIII. HARDY SHRUBS IN THE GREENHOUSE 263
XXXIV. SHRUB GROUPS FOR WINTER AND SUMMER EFFECT 283
XXXV. THE USE OF HARDY CLIMBING SHRUBS 303
XXXVI. FLOWERING AND OTHER HEDGES 324
XXXVII. PLEACHED OR GREEN ALLEYS 334
XXXVIII. THE GARDEN ORCHARD 338
XXXIX. THE WORTHY USE OF ROSES 342
XL. PLANTING AND STAKING TREES 353
XLI. HARDY TREES AND SHRUBS, TABLES OF 357
  INDEX 489

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

Cluster Pine (Pinus Pinaster) Frontispiece
Guelder Rose To face page 2
Magnolia stellata " " 3
Æsculus parviflora (late July) " " 4
Sloe, Double-Flowered (Prunus spinosa, fl. pl.) " " 5
In the Woodland at Kew " " 6
Wayfaring Tree (Viburnum Lantana) " " 7
Grouping of Shrub and Daffodil " " 10
Natural Grouping of Shrub in Rough Ground " " 11
Shrub and Iris Groups by Woodland " " 14
Azalea Garden at Kew " " 15
Ceanothus azureus at Kew " " 24
Ceanothus azureus, Marie Simon " " 25
Pearl Bush (Exochorda grandiflora) " " 26
Hydrangea paniculata grandiflora (Unpruned) " " 30
Hydrangea paniculata grandiflora " " 31
Tulip Tree at Ranelagh (Winter) " " 46
Lime (Winter Beauty) " " 47
Witch Hazel (Hamamelis japonica, var. zuccariniana) " " 62
Ulmus alata " " 63
Willow, Babylonian by Waterside " " 88
Ash, Weeping " " 89
Weeping Aspen (Populus tremula, var. pendula) " " 90
Weeping Wych Elm " " 91
Elæagnus pungens " " 98
Cornus Mas (var. variegata) " " 99
Taurian Tamarisk (Tamarix tetrandra) in Flower " " 103
Ashes by Water Edge " " 106
Lombardy Poplar " " 107
Corsican Pine Walk " " 110
Araucaria imbricata (Chili Pine) Avenue " " 111
Maidenhair Tree at Frogmore " " 112
Maidenhair Tree at Kew " " 113
Corsican Pine (var. tenuifolia) " " 114
Avenue of Abies (nobilis glauca) " " 118
Cedrus atlantica glauca Avenue " " 119
Libocedrus decurrens (Frogmore) " " 121
Avenue of Yew (Murthly) " " 124
Alders near Water " " 134
White Willow (Salix alba) by Waterside " " 135
Natural Tree Growth by Water (Burnham Beeches) " " 136
Willows by Waterside " " 137
Cistuses and Roses in Rock Garden " " 140
Dwarf Shrubs in Rock Garden " " 141
Ononis fruticosa (Shrubby Rest-Harrow) at Exeter " " 150
Tree in course of Removal " " 151
Plane Tree (Platanus orientalis) " " 164
Cytisus præcox " " 178
A Variety of Mahaleb Cherry (Prunus Mahaleb, var. chrysocarpa) " " 179
Guelder Rose or Snowball Tree " " 184
Wych Elms by Hedgerow " " 185
Edwardsia grandiflora " " 198
Fabiana imbricata " " 199
Pinus Montezumæ " " 204
Pueraria thunbergiana " " 212
Yuccas, Pampas Grass, and Bamboos (Kew) " " 218
Bamboo Garden at Kew " " 219
Erica carnea " " 232
A Grouping of Heaths " " 233
White Scotch Heather (Erica cinerea alba) " " 234
White Mediterranean Heath (Erica mediterranea alba) " " 235
Weeping Holly " " 247
Arbutus Menziesii " " 248
Hibiscus syriacus (Althæa frutex, var. cæruleus) " " 252
Mock Orange (Philadelphus coronarius) " " 253
Tall Evergreen Shrubs in Flower Border " " 258
Spiræa canescens " " 294
Clematis montana over Rough Wall " " 300
Clematis montana over Archway " " 301
Camellia Leaf and Fruit (Outdoors) " " 316
Dutch Honeysuckle on Wall " " 317
Polygonum baldschuanicum over Fir " " 318
Prunus triloba on Sunny Wall " " 319
Old Wistaria at Hampton Court " " 322
Wistaria racemes " " 323
Great Beech Hedge " " 330
Hedge of Maidens' Blush Rose " " 331
Nut Walk " " 334
Old Apple Walk " " 335
Old Mulberry Tree, Syon " " 338
Old Medlar Tree " " 339
Rosa multiflora " " 348
Hybrid Rose Una " " 349
Staking Trees " " 354
Horse Chestnut " " 358
Catalpa or Indian Bean Tree (C. bignonioides) " " 366
Cistus villosus " " 370
Cytisus capitatus " " 373
Moonlight Broom (Cytisus scoparius, var. pallidus) " " 376
A Hybrid Broom (Cytisus kewensis) " " 377
Garland Flower (Daphne Cneorum) " " 382
Erinacea pungens " " 383
May-Flower (Epigæa repens) " " 384
Escallonia philippiana " " 385
Spanish Furze (Genista (Ulex) hispanica) " " 388
Spanish Furze on Rough Slope " " 389
Genista monosperma " " 390
Shoot of Snowdrop Tree (Halesia tetraptera) " " 392
Hydrangeas " " 393
Hydrangea petiolaris " " 394
Kalmia latifolia " " 395
Yulan (Magnolia conspicua) " " 402
Yulan as a Wall Shrub " " 403
Magnolia conspicua, var. soulangeana (late Spring) " " 404
Olearia macrodonta " " 405
Prunus Persica " " 410
Spiræa arguta " " 414
Prunus serrulata " " 416
Prunus padus, fl. pl. " " 417
Pyrus sinaica " " 420
Pyrus spectabilis " " 422
Siberian Crab (Pyrus Malus baccata) " " 423
Pyrus lobata " " 427
Rhododendron arboreum (Hybrid) " " 428
Rhododendron Hybrid (Donegal) " " 429
Rhododendron præcox " " 432
Rhododendron Sapho in Irish Garden (Donegal) " " 433
Californian Poppy (Romneya Coulteri) " " 449
Neillia (Spiræa) opulifolia " " 452
Spiræa lindleyana " " 453
Lilacs " " 456
Standard Lilac " " 457
Viburnum macrocephalum " " 464
Yucca gloriosa in a Surrey Garden " " 466
Yucca filamentosa " " 467
Pterocarya caucasica " " 480
Cork Oak (Quercus Suber) " " 481
Evergreen Oaks " " 482
Dovaston Yew on Steep Bank " " 486

TREES AND SHRUBS

CHAPTER I

WANT OF VARIETY A BLEMISH

There is a sad want of variety amongst evergreen and deciduous shrubs in the average English garden. Faith is placed in a few shrubs with a reputation for robbing the soil of its goodness and making a monotonous ugly green bank, neither pleasant to look at nor of any protective value. As one who knows shrubs well and the way to group them says, "Even the landscape gardeners, the men who have the making of gardens—with, of course, notable exceptions—do not seem to know the rich storehouse to draw from." Very true is this. We see evidence of it every day. The mixed shrubbery is fondly clung to as a place for all shrubs, whether flowering or otherwise, and the result is a thicket of growths, a case indeed of a survival of the fittest. There are other shrubs than Privet in this fair world of ours, and as for providing shelter, the wind whistles through its bare stems and creates a draught good for neither man, beast, nor plant. Of the cherry laurel again there is far too much in gardens. Few other plants can stand against its greedy, searching roots, and its vigorous branches and big leaves kill other leaf-growth near them. Grown in the proper way, that is, as an isolated shrub, with abundance of space to develop its graceful branches and brilliant green leaves, the Cherry Laurel is a beautiful evergreen; it is quite happy in shady, half-wooded places. But grown, as it is so often, jammed up and smothering other things, or held in bounds by a merciless and beauty-destroying knife, its presence has not been to the advantage of English gardening.

When the planting season comes round, think of some of the good shrubs not yet in the garden, and forget pontic Rhododendron, Laurel, Aucuba, and Privet. By this is not meant rare shrubs, such as may only be had from the few nurseries of the very highest rank or from those that make rare shrubs a speciality, but good things that may be grown in any garden and that appear in all good shrub catalogues.