PYRUS SPECTABILIS ON LAWN. (Spring.)
THE SIBERIAN CRAB (Pyrus Malus baccata) SHOWING ITS BEAUTY ON LAWN.
PYRUS (Mespilus) LOBATA.
RHODODENDRONS ARBOREUM HYBRID. (Outdoors, Kew.)
| Name. | Country or Origin and Natural Order. | Colour and Season. | General Remarks. |
| Rhododendron Species. | |||
| Rhododendron arboreum | Himalaya; Ericaceæ | Bell-shaped, various colours—blood-red, white, rose, and, as a rule, spotted | This is a famous Himalayan Rhododendron, a tree attaining a height of 40 feet in its native country. It has bold, thick foliage, green above but quite silvery beneath, and the bell-shaped flowers vary in colour. There are several varieties, such as album, cinnamomeum, kingianum, Nilagiricum, puniceum, and others, but difference in flower colouring is the chief reason for distinctive names. Not hardy except in a few very favoured spots, chiefly Cornwall and south-west generally. Must be grown under glass, and requires a big house. Many beautiful trees in the Temperate House at Kew. |
| R. barbatum | Sikkim | Bell-shaped, blood-red, 1½ inches across | This is a tree 40 feet to 60 feet high in its native country. It is hardier than R. arboreum. |
| R. californicum | California | Rose-purple, upper petal spotted with greenish yellow; broadly campanulate, almost without a tube. Good sized umbels; June | This is a strong-growing Californian species, the leaves dark-green; fairly hardy. |
| R. campanulatum | Himalaya | Lilac, with purplish spots; June. Leaves elliptic or elliptic oblong, blunt as a rule at both ends, April | This is a beautiful species, about 4 feet high. We have seen it in several Surrey gardens, but it requires shelter. It is not one of the hardiest. |
| R. campylocarpum | Himalaya | Bell-shaped, clear, pale yellow, 2 inches or so across, in rather loose clusters; May or late April | The best hardy yellow Rhododendron at present known is this. It is hardy at Kew in sheltered spots, but succeeds better farther to the south. It is a shrub of neat compact habit, with leaves 2 inches to 3 inches long, dark-green and glossy above, blue-white beneath. When full of flower it is a singularly pretty and distinct Rhododendron. It varies somewhat in shade, and the flowers are sometimes of a pale lemon tint, becoming almost white with age. The late Mr. Mangles, we believe, raised some hybrids from this species, but we know of none in commerce. |
| R. catawbiense | Mountainous regions of Southern United States | Good-sized heads of lilac or purplish flowers; late May and June | This is a strong growing species and one of the hardiest of all Rhododendrons, and has played a large part in the production of the present race of garden Rhododendrons, and is with R. ponticum the best stock on which to graft the various varieties, and is useful for covert. It is hardier than R. ponticum, and varieties with much of the Catawbiense blood in them are hardier than those closely allied to other species. Fastuosum fl. pl. is a well known form. |
| R. caucasicum | Introduced nearly a century ago from high rocks close to the snow-line in Caucasus | Rose or whitish green spotted flowers, in compact and upright clusters | This is a quite hardy Rhododendron. The true species is rare in gardens, but there are several forms, and it has been used to a great extent by the hybridist. It is dwarf, spreading, little more than a foot high, with ovate leaves with brownish tomentum on the under surface. It flowers late in July or in August, but its progeny is in beauty during May and June. A hybrid, which flowers at a considerable earlier date than the others, is nobleanum; it claims R. arboreum as its other parent, and flowers from December onwards until the end of March. At Kew there are several large groups in the Rhododendron dell. |
| R. ciliatum | Sikkim | Flowers are white, suffused with rose; April outdoors | This is a Rhododendron more adapted, except in the quite southern counties such as Cornwall, South Wales, &c., for a cold house. It is of compact and bushy growth, 2 feet or 3 feet or less high, but varies according, of course, to locality, and is part responsible for a number of hybrids, such as præcox, Rosy Bell, and Queen of Dwarfs. The hybrids mentioned are all hardy, but owing to their early flowering often get injured by frost. |
| R. cinnabarinum | Himalaya | Flowers are tubular, with short, spreading limb, pendulous, and orange-scarlet, orange, or red; they vary somewhat in size, but are usually about 2 inches long and ¾ of an inch across the mouth, and thick and fleshy | This is a very distinct-looking shrub, about 3 feet; but only an approximate height can be given, as it is sometimes more than this. The growth is somewhat loose, and the branches upright and slender, the leaves ovate, 2 to 2½ inches long, and glaucous. Only moderately hardy. |
| R. dauricum | Alpine regions of Eastern Asia | Rosy purple; January | This is quite hardy, but flowers so rarely that it is only seen in beauty very often in a cold house. It is almost deciduous, as most of the leaves fall off in winter. It is a bush, and has been crossed with R. ciliatum, the well-known præcox and Rosy Gem being two of the hybrids. |
| R. ferrugineum (Alpine Rose) | European Alps. Introduced about 150 years ago | Flowers small, funnel-shaped, and in small upright terminal clusters in June; bright rose or scarlet | This is frequently seen in rock gardens, and grows about 1 foot high, forming a rounded mass thickly clothed with small green leaves, covered with minute reddish-brown spots. When young the leaves are slightly hairy, but the mature foliage is almost free from hairs. There are varieties, one with white (albiflorum), another with rosy or scarlet flowers (myrtifolium), but there are others. Its popular name is Alpine Rose. |
| R. Fortunei | China | Fragrant, pale rose-coloured flowers, with seven petals; Mid-May | This is one of the hardiest of the Himalayan species, and, as it does not flower until well into May, it is generally untouched by late frosts, which so disturb early-flowering species. It grows from 10 feet to 12 feet high, and has large, handsome oblong leaves. It is the origin of a distinct race. |
| R. fulgens | Eastern Himalaya | Blood-red; April and May | There are several forms of this Himalayan Rhododendron in gardens, the best producing compact clusters of medium-sized flowers of the colour mentioned. The leaves bear a striking resemblance to those of R. campanulatum in both size and colour. Although hardy, it is seldom seen in true beauty outdoors, because of its naturally early-flowering season. |
| R. glaucum | Himalaya | Rose, waxy, ¾ of an inch across, and in small upright heads; May | This is a dwarf species, with small oblong leaves, seldom more than 2 feet high, and rarely seen in cultivation, although very pretty. |
| R. hirsutum | Alps | Pale red; May and July | In many ways this is the counterpart of R. ferrugineum, the chief difference being in the intensely hairy leaves of this species. The two species grow side by side in the Alps, and the one under notice is one of the few species that will grow in a limy soil. It has also been used by the hybridist. |
| R. Keysii | Bhotan | Flowers tubular, red and yellow, and 1½ inches long; May | A distinct, upright-growing, scantily branched species, suggesting affinity to R. cinnabarina, but it is quite distinct. It grows from 4 feet to 6 feet high, has narrow quite distinct ovate or lanceolate leaves 2 inches long. |
| R. lepidotum | Temperate and Alpine Himalayas | Colour varies, usually purple and yellowish; curious flattened form, and about 1 inch across; May and June | The individual flower does not suggest a Rhododendron, so unlike other species is it in this respect. It is a low-growing plant with small oblong leaves; it succeeds outdoors at Kew. |
| R. maximum (Great American Laurel) | North America | Rose, or whitish spotted with yellow or red | This will grow to a height of 35 feet, and has large, thick, elliptical, oblong leaves. It is not much grown here. In the "Cyclopædia of American Horticulture," it is mentioned: "This is one of the hardiest species, being hardy as far north as Quebec and Ontario.... This species and the former (catawbiense) are now often extensively used in park-planting, and taken by the car-load from the woods. If properly handled and taken from a turfy soil with a sufficient ball of earth around the roots, they are usually successfully planted." There are three varieties, album, purpureum, and roseum. |
| R. Metternichii | Japan; known here about 30 years | Rose; about 2 inches across, and in small clusters; March | This is not in general cultivation, but is hardy. As yet no opportunity has arisen of ascertaining to what dimensions it will grow in this country; it has thick and leathery oblong leaves, 3 to 4 inches long, green above, and covered underneath with a thick grey or brownish tomentum. |
| R. niveum | Himalaya; 8 to 9 feet | Purplish; April | At Kew this species lives outdoors, but is not a success, and even in Cornish gardens gets injured in severe weather. It makes a dense bush, with medium-sized leaves, green above, and covered with a dense greyish tomentum beneath. It has been in cultivation about 40 years. |
| R. ponticum | This has a curious distribution, being found in Portugal and not again until Asia Minor is reached | Purple; about 2 inches across; May | Of all the hardy Rhododendrons this is the most largely grown and most popular; it is much used as an undergrowth in woods and other places. In many parts it has become naturalised, reproducing itself from self-sown seeds. It has been much used by the hybridist, and with R. caucasicum and R. catawbiense has produced many beautiful hybrids. It will grow beneath trees, and its evergreen foliage is not the least of its attractions. There are several varieties. |
| R. punctatum | North America, Alleghany Mountains, from North Carolina to Georgia | Flowers rose; 1 inch across; in clusters in June | A dwarf and evergreen species. R. minus is a synonym. |
| R. racemosum | First exhibited by the introducers, Messrs. Veitch, in 1892, and is a native of Western China, where it is found 6000 to 10,000 feet elevation | Pink-white; April | The introduction of this added another type to this genus, for both in flower and general habit it is distinct from other species. It is dwarf, with small oval leaves, and flowers borne in axillary and terminal clusters, and so profusely that every branch is a mass of blossom. It is quite hardy and very welcome. There is a form with deep rose flowers. |
| R. Rhodora (Rhodora canadensis) | North America | Magenta-purple; April | Not much grown, but colour probably not popular. It makes an upright deciduous shrub, 3 feet to 4 feet, slender, twiggy wood, and small ovate lanceolate leaves. Should have moist peaty soil. A failure on dry and sandy ground. Does not object to partial shade. Easily increased by seeds and layering. |
| R. Smirnowi | Caucasus | Crimson-purple; 3 inches across; April and May | This has large flowers and leaves, and, as recorded elsewhere, has founded a distinct race. It blooms freely when about a foot or so high. The leaves are about 5 inches long, 2 inches wide, and covered on underside with a soft white felt. |
| R. Thomsoni (see page 437) | |||
| R. yunnanense | Yunnan; first flowered at Kew in 1899 | White, with blood-red spots on upper petal; in loose clusters in May | This is an erect shrub, with glossy green leaves 2 to 2½ inches wide. A very useful shrub, and should not be forgotten by the hybridist. |
HYBRID RHODODENDRON IN DONEGAL. (A wild bit of planting.)
RHODODENDRON PRÆCOX. EDINBURGH BOTANIC GARDENS.
RHODODENDRON SAPHO IN IRISH GARDEN. (Donegal.)