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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55145 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55145)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Orchid Album, Volume 1, by
-Robert Warner and Benjamin Samuel Williams and Thomas Moore
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Orchid Album, Volume 1
- Comprising coloured figures and descriptions of new, rare,
- and beautiful Orchidaceous Plants
-
-Author: Robert Warner
- Benjamin Samuel Williams
- Thomas Moore
-
-Illustrator: John Nugent Fitch
-
-Release Date: July 18, 2017 [EBook #55145]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORCHID ALBUM, VOLUME 1 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Carol Spears and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- ORCHID ALBUM,
-
-
- COMPRISING
- COLOURED FIGURES AND DESCRIPTIONS
- OF
- NEW, RARE, AND BEAUTIFUL
- ORCHIDACEOUS PLANTS.
-
-
- CONDUCTED BY
- ROBERT WARNER, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
- Author of SELECT ORCHIDACEOUS PLANTS,
- AND
- BENJAMIN SAMUEL WILLIAMS, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
- Author of the ORCHID-GROWERS’ MANUAL, etc.
-
- The Botanical Descriptions by THOMAS MOORE, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
- CURATOR of the CHELSEA BOTANIC GARDENS.
-
- _THE COLOURED FIGURES BY JOHN NUGENT FITCH, F.L.S._
-
-
- VOLUME I.
-
-
- LONDON:
- Published by B. S. Williams,
- AT THE
- VICTORIA AND PARADISE NURSERIES, UPPER HOLLOWAY, N.
- MDCCCLXXXII.
-
- DEDICATED
- BY SPECIAL PERMISSION
- TO
- _H.R.H. The Princess of Wales,_
- BY
- HER ROYAL HIGHNESS’
- Very obedient and humble Servants,
- ROBERT WARNER,
- BENJAMIN S. WILLIAMS.
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
-
-The great advances which have been made within the last few years in the
-introduction and the cultivation of Exotic Orchids, have suggested the
-desirability of devoting a monthly publication to the illustration of
-the best forms of these singular and captivating aristocratic plants,
-and also to the explanation of the most successful methods of growing
-them, its object being to supply such information concerning them as the
-Orchid Grower may be likely to find useful in directing his purchases,
-and in suggesting the various points of discreet and masterly
-management. Moreover, we have found that figures of the better varieties
-of Orchids are much in request.
-
-These considerations have induced us to commence the publication of the
-Orchid Album, in the confident expectation that we shall meet with
-sufficient support and encouragement to enable us to continue it, and,
-so far as our experience goes, we have no reason to feel disappointed,
-for we find that Orchid growers, both amateur and professional, are
-taking a marked interest not only in the plates but also in the cultural
-notes.
-
-In regard to the subjects for illustration, we hope in due course to
-figure not only the typical form of all the more popular and interesting
-species, but also the leading varieties, when they prove sufficiently
-distinct and meritorious. It is for these that we anticipate our
-subscribers and readers will most anxiously look.
-
-Being of Royal Quarto size, the pages of the Album are sufficiently
-large to enable the artist to produce ample and intelligible portraits
-of the plants without their becoming cumbersome; and, as they will be
-drawn and coloured in the best style, we confidently hope they will
-prove to be acceptable to the lovers and growers of Orchids generally.
-Thus we trust we may be permitted to lay before our patrons an
-acceptable Annual Album of Floral Pictures, which will be, at once,
-welcomed both to the Drawing-room and the Library.
-
-The work has been commenced in deference to the urgent representations
-of many of the leading cultivators of these remarkable and fascinating
-plants, who have pointed out to us the want which we are now
-endeavouring to meet. The great advantage and pleasure which Orchid
-Growers have derived from the publication of such illustrated works as
-the _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, and such practical instructions as are
-given in the _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, lead us to believe that there
-exists a desire and a taste for further Orchidic literature, which we
-trust the Orchid Album may in some considerable degree supply. Our chief
-aim will be to give authentic information as to the nomenclature of the
-plants, and to disseminate correct instructions in regard to their
-cultural requirements. The finer new Orchids, as well as the older
-meritorious species and varieties, will be figured with equal fidelity,
-and described with equal accuracy. We shall at all times feel grateful
-to those Amateurs or Trade growers who may give us information as to the
-flowering either of novelties or of remarkably fine forms of the older
-kinds, especially if they are such as will be suitable for figuring.
-
-The Annual Volumes will consist of the twelve Monthly Parts issued up to
-June in each year, when the volume will be completed by the publication
-of a Title Page and Index.
-
- B. S. WILLIAMS.
-
- Victoria and Paradise Nurseries,
- Upper Holloway, London, N.,
- _June 1st, 1882_.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX TO PLATES.
-
-
- PLATE
- AËRIDES LOBBII, _Hort. Veitch_ 21
- ANGRÆCUM EBURNEUM, _Du Pet.-Th._ 41
- ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA, _Lindl._ 19
- BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA, _Lindl._ 18
- CALANTHE VEITCHII, _Lindl._ 31
- CATTLEYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII, _Lind. et Rchb. f._ 16
- CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA, _Williams et Moore_ 3
- CATTLEYA MORGANÆ, _Williams et Moore_ 6
- CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS, _Lem._ 33
- CATTLEYA TRIANÆ, _Lind. et Rchb. f._ 45
- CATTLEYA VELUTINA, _Rchb. f._ 26
- CŒLOGYNE MASSANGEANA, _Rchb. f._ 29
- CYMBIDIUM PARISHII, _Rchb. f._ 25
- CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM, _Rchb. f._ 37
- CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCEANUM, _Rchb. f._ 22
- CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM, _Rchb. f._ 36
- CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI, _Low_ 8
- DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM, _Moore_ 20
- DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM, _Lindl._ 38
- DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM, _Rchb. f._ 13
- DENDROBIUM SUPERBUM, _Rchb. f._ 42
- EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS, _Hort._ 4
- LÆLIA ANCEPS DAWSONI, _Anders._ 44
- LÆLIA ELEGANS ALBA, _Williams et Moore_ 30
- LÆLIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII, _Hort._ 9-10
- LÆLIA SCHRÖDERII, _Williams et Moore_ 2
- LÆLIA XANTHINA, _Lindl._ 23
- MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA CŒRULESCENS, _Hort._ 24
- MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII, _Rchb. f._ 5
- MILTONIA CUNEATA, _Lindl._ 46
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDRÆ, _Batem._ 47
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDRÆ FLAVEOLUM, _Williams et Moore_ 43
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM, _Rchb. f._ 35
- ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM, _Lindl._ 27
- ODONTOGLOSSUM KRAMERI, _Rchb. f._ 40
- ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR, _Hook._ 1
- ONCIDIUM GARDNERI, _Lindl._ 12
- ONCIDIUM HÆMATOCHILUM, _Lindl._ 32
- PAPHINIA CRISTATA, _Lindl._ 34
- PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM, _Rchb. f._ 17
- PHALÆNOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA, _Hort._ 11
- PHALÆNOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS, _Rchb. f._ 39
- PROMENÆA CITRINA, _Don._ 7
- TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA, _Hort._ 14
- VANDA CŒRULESCENS, _Griff._ 48
- VANDA PARISHII, _Rchb. f._ 15
- ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI, _Lem._ 28
-
-
-
-
- INDEX TO NOTES AND SYNONYMS.
-
-
- UNDER PLATE
- Aërides Fieldingii, Dr. Ainsworth’s 4
- Aërides Leeanum, Mr. Law-Schofield’s 37
- Aërides odoratum majus, Mrs. Arbuthnot’s 14
- Aërides Schröderii, Dr. Ainsworth’s 4
- Aërides suavissimum, Mr. Coates’ 18
- Angræcum eburneum virens 41
- Angræcum sesquipedale, Mr. Coates’ 18
- Angræcum superbum, _Du Pet.-Th._ 41
- Bletia xanthina, _Rchb. f._ 23
- Bollea cœlestis, as a block plant 40
- Bolleas, Mr. Gair’s 17
- Cattleya Dowiana, Mr. Dodgson’s 19
- Cattleya Dowiana, Mr. Lee’s 2
- Cattleya gigas, Mr. Bockett’s 6
- Cattleya gigas, Mr. Lee’s 2
- Cattleya labiata Lindigiana, _Karst._ 45
- Cattleya labiata Trianæ, _Duch._ 45
- Cattleya Leopoldii, _Hort. Versch._ 16
- Cattleya superba, Sir T. Lawrence’s 3
- Cattleya Trianæ, Mr. Wright’s 41
- Cattleya Trianæ Dodgsoni 40
- Cattleya Trianæ Osmani 40
- Cymbidium eburneum, correction 29
- Cypripedium barbatum superbum, Mr. Dodgson’s 4
- Cypripedium insigne, Mrs Haywood’s 27
- Cypripedium Spicerianum, Mr. Bockett’s 19
- Cypripedium villosum, Mr. Wyatt’s 42
- Cyrtochilum citrinum, _Hook._ 1
- Dendrobium Ainsworthii, _Moore_ 20
- Dendrobium Falconeri, Marquis of Lothian’s 44
- Dendrobium Findleyanum, Mr. Bowring’s 32
- Dendrobium Hillii, Mr. Wyatt’s 42
- Dendrobium macranthum, _Hook._ 42
- Dendrobium macrophyllum, _Lindl._ 42
- Dendrobium nobile, a three-lipped 48
- Dendrobium superbum (macrophyllum), Prince of Wales’ 36
- Dendrobium Wardianum, Mr. Salamon’s 44
- Dendrochilum filiforme, Mr. Hill’s 15
- Epidendrum elatius, var., _Rchb. f._ 45
- Epidendrum labiatum Trianæ, _Rchb. f._ 45
- Epidendrum nemorale, Sir T. Lawrence’s 3
- Lælia anceps Dawsoni, Mr. Dodgson’s 28
- Lælia autumnalis atrorubens, Mr. Chamberlain’s 28
- Lælia Dominiana rosea, _Hort. Veitch_ 12
- Lælia elegans prasiata 40
- Lælia Philbrickiana, _Hort. Veitch_ 5
- Limodorum eburneum, _Bory._ 41
- Masdevallia chimæra, Dr. Ainsworth’s 26
- Masdevallia Harryana, _Rchb. f._ 24
- Masdevallia Lindeni, _Hook._ 24
- Masdevallia Lindeni Harryana, _André_ 24
- Maxillaria citrina, _Lyons_ 7
- Maxillaria cristata, _Lindl._ 34
- Miltonia speciosa, _Kl._ 46
- Odontoglossum Alexandræ, Dr. Ainsworth’s 26
- Odontoglossum Alexandræ flaveolum, Mr. Hardy’s 34
- Odontoglossum Alexandræ reginæ 48
- Odontoglossum Bluntii, _Rchb. f._ 47
- Odontoglossum crispum, _Lindl._ 47
- Odontoglossum crispum flaveolum, _Rchb. f._ 43
- Odontoglossum Londesboroughianum, Mr. Law-Schofield’s 27
- Odontoglossum Roezlii, Mr. Todd’s 43
- Odontoglossum vexillarium, Mr. Bull’s autumn-flowering variety 23
- Odontoglossums at Trentham 43
- Oncidium luridum purpuratum, _Lodd._ 32
- Oncidium speciosum, _Rchb. f._ 46
- Orchids, Dr. Ainsworth’s 26
- Orchids, Mr. Dodgson’s 4
- Orchids, Mr. Dorman’s 40
- Orchids, Mr. Hardy’s 4
- Orchids, Baron Schröder’s 22
- Orchids at Arnot Hill 15
- Orchids at Ferguslie 18
- Orchids at Manchester, 1881 4
- Orchids in Belgium, Dr. Boddaert’s 1
- Orchids in Belgium, M. D. Massange’s 16
- Orchids from Dr. Paterson 45
- Orchids, from Perth, N.B. 48
- Orchids, raised blinds for 35
- Orchids, shading 30, 35
- Pescatoreas, Mr. Gair’s 17
- Phalænopsids, Mr. Bockett’s 11
- Phalænopsis intermedia Portei, Baron Schröder’s 22
- Phalænopsis Stuartiana, _Rchb. f._ 39
- Restrepia antennifera, M. D. Massange’s 16
- Rodriquezia candida, _Batem._ 18
- Sphagnum, best kind for Odontoglots 43
- Trichopilia suavis, _Lindl._ 14
- Vanda Cathcartii, M. D. Massange’s 16
- Vanda cœrulea, Marquis of Lothian’s 17
- Vanda Lowii, Sir T. Lawrence’s 3
- Vanda suavis, Dr. Ainsworth’s 4
- Vanda suavis, Mr. Dodgson’s 4
- Vanda tricolor, Mr. Broome’s 25
- Vanda tricolor planilabris, M. Massange’s 16
- Zygopetalum Klabochorum, _Rchb. f._ 17
-
- [Illustration: PL. 1.
- ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR.]
-
-
-
-
- ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR.
- [Plate 1.]
- Native of the Organ Mountains of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ small, tufted, ovate or ovate-oblong,
- compressed, somewhat furrowed, two-leaved. _Leaves_ subcoriaceous,
- oblong-linear or ligulate, acute, bright green. _Scape_ radical,
- springing from the base of the young pseudobulbs, drooping, furnished
- with small bracts. _Flowers_ yellow, racemose; _sepals_ (dorsal)
- ovate-lanceolate or obovate, acute, the lateral ones smaller,
- lance-shaped, and united behind the lip for about half their length;
- _petals_ obovate, acute, somewhat undulated, about as long as the
- sepals; _lip_ (labellum) large and prominent, roundish subpanduriform,
- emarginate, somewhat clawed, furnished with a pair of plates or
- lamellæ (bilamellate) at the base, of a clear yellow colour, as are
- the sepals and petals. _Column_ about half as long as the petals, with
- a projecting tooth on each side.
-
- Oncidium concolor, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 3752; _Lindley_,
- _Folia Orchidacea_, Art. _Oncidium_, No. 65 (excl. syn. Klotzsch);
- _Reichenbach fil._ in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi.
- 731.; _Carrière_, in _Revue Horticole_, 1881, 30, with tab.
-
- Cyrtochilum citrinum, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4454.
-
-
-The brilliant little plant here figured—a representation in the tribe
-_Vandeæ_, of the great genus _Oncidium_—belongs to the group of Oncids
-which Lindley named _Tetrapetala micropetala_, in which two of the
-sepals are united so that the petaloid organs, as distinguished from the
-lip, are reduced to four in number (_tetrapetala_), and at the same time
-the petals, which are about equal in size to the sepals, are
-comparatively small by comparison with the remaining organ.
-
-This species, although not new, was until recently extremely rare, and
-was, indeed, seldom met with in collections; now, however, the little
-gem is very plentiful, thanks to the indefatigable zeal of our
-collectors, so that growers who do not possess it may obtain it at a
-very small cost. The species is one of the most compact-growing and
-beautiful of the _Oncidiums_, producing, as it does, from the base of
-the new bulbs, many-flowered drooping spikes of rich yellow blossoms. It
-is an excellent subject for planting in a pan or basket to be suspended
-from the roof of the house, where the brightly-coloured flowers produce
-a charming effect; indeed, we do not know of any Orchid which has a
-better appearance when grown in this way.
-
-_Oncidium concolor_ succeeds best in a compost of peat with a little
-sphagnum moss added, and with plenty of good drainage. We have grown it
-most successfully in small pans, but it can be cultivated either in a
-basket or on a block. It would succeed equally well in a pot, but the
-drooping character of the flower-spikes renders it a most fitting
-subject for growing in either of the above-named receptacles, and for
-suspension from the roof. As to temperature, we find it succeeds best in
-the Odontoglossum-house during the summer months. After it has flowered,
-and while it is making its growth, a copious supply of water should be
-given to it, always keeping the soil moist until the growth of the bulbs
-is completed. When it has finished its growth, it should be removed to
-the Cattleya-house, where it should be kept moderately dry until it
-produces its spikes about March or April.
-
-For exhibition purposes this is a most valuable little plant, being easy
-of cultivation, distinct in colour, and flowering during the principal
-exhibition months, May and June; its long lasting quality is also a
-great point in its favour. In order to preserve the flowers for a
-considerable time, they should be kept free from damp, for if allowed to
-get wet they soon become spotted, and fade, but when kept in this way,
-they will last at least six or seven weeks. The plant is altogether a
-most valuable Orchid, and as it takes up but little room, we recommend
-growers to procure a good stock of it, as its effect when suspended
-among other flowering Orchids is charming.
-
-
-Orchids in Belgium.—When in Ghent a few days ago, I had the good fortune
-to receive an invitation to view the celebrated collection of Dr.
-Boddaert of that city. The collection is a very extensive one, and the
-plants are exceedingly well grown and healthy. There was a good show of
-flowering Orchids, among which may be mentioned:—_Trichopilia crispa
-marginata_ with forty-two expanded flowers, a marvel of cultivation;
-_Odontoglossum Phalænopsis_ with twenty-six flowers, a fine well-grown
-plant; _Cypripedium Argus_ with six flower spikes; the new _Trichopilia
-suavis alba_, of which we hope to give a plate later on; _Anguloa
-Ruckerii sanguinea_ with several flowers; also the rare _Nanodes
-Medusæ_, with _Odontoglossums_, _Vandas_, _Masdevallias_, &c., in great
-variety.
-
- H. Williams.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 2.
- LÆLIA SCHRÖDERII.]
-
-
-
-
- LÆLIA SCHRÖDERII.
- [Plate 2.]
- Native of Bahia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) club-shaped, about a foot and a
- half high, monophyllous, furrowed when mature. _Leaves_ coriaceous,
- oblong, acute, broad to the base, light green. _Scape_ three to
- four-flowered, issuing from a terminal oblong compressed bract, an
- inch wide and five inches long. _Flowers_ large, subhorizontal, about
- seven inches across, delicately coloured, with a prettily veined lip;
- _sepals_ lanceolate, reflexed, three-fourths of an inch wide, white;
- _petals_ convex, ovate, narrowed to the base, somewhat crispy at the
- edge, pure white, scarcely as long as the lip; _lip_ (labellum)
- membranaceous, three-lobed, the lateral lobes convolute around the
- column, yellow outside, striped with deeper yellow veins, the middle
- lobe ovate, obtuse, undulated, the anterior portion and margin white,
- the mouth veined with magenta-rose, the disk naked, and the tubulose
- basal portion deep yellow, veined with magenta. _Column_ much shorter
- than the lateral lobes of the lip.
-
- Lælia Schröderii, _supra_.
-
-
-This plant belongs to that tribe of the Orchid family which is called
-_Epidendreæ_, and of which the genus _Epidendrum_ is regarded as the
-type. This group is known by its waxy pollen-masses, which are attached
-to a distinct caudicle, but bear no separable stigmatic gland as occurs
-in the tribe _Vandeæ_. The genus is closely related to _Cattleya_, and
-contains some of the finest ornaments of our Orchid-houses.
-
-The subject of our present illustration is a new and most beautiful
-Orchid, now figured and described for the first time. It is closely
-allied to _Lælia grandis_, but is distinct from that species, inasmuch
-as the sepals and petals are white, whereas those of _L. grandis_ are of
-a nankeen yellow. It is named in honour of Baron Henry Schröder, an
-enthusiastic admirer of this handsome class of plants. The species
-flowered for the first time this year, in the Victoria and Paradise
-Nurseries.
-
-The flowers are produced in May and June, three or four together, on
-spikes which are produced from the apex of the new bulbs; they have a
-delicate and pleasing appearance, the sepals and petals being pure
-white, while the lip is white, striped with rose, throat deep yellow,
-veined with magenta. It should be kept free from damp when in flower, as
-the blossoms being of a delicate nature, soon spot and go off; but kept
-in this way free from moisture they will last about four weeks in a
-fresh and perfect state.
-
-In growth the plant somewhat resembles _L. purpurata_, the bulbs and
-foliage being about eighteen inches in height, and of a light green
-colour. It succeeds well grown in the Cattleya-house in pots filled with
-peat and a little sphagnum moss, over plenty of drainage. It should
-receive a moderate supply of water at the root during the growing
-season, and should never be allowed to get thoroughly dry. When it has
-made its growth it should be allowed to rest, and at that time should be
-kept rather dry, only giving it sufficient water to prevent it from
-shrivelling.
-
-_Lælias_ are subject to the attacks of white scale, but this can easily
-be got rid of by sponging with clean water. Thrips sometimes attack the
-young growths, and if allowed to increase, soon disfigure the leaves.
-
-
-Cattleya gigas and C. Dowiana.—These _Cattleyas_ have been considered to
-be shy-flowering species, and we have sometimes found them to be so in
-our own experience, but we are beginning to change our opinion on this
-subject. No doubt there are some plants that grow and flower more freely
-than others, but a great deal depends on the conditions in which they
-are placed and the treatment they receive. I recently had the pleasure
-of visiting the collection of W. Lee, Esq., of Leatherhead, which in
-time will be one of the finest to be seen in this country. The Estate is
-situated in an open part of the country, and the Orchid-houses are built
-on the side of a hill where they get the full light and sun, while they
-are sheltered from the driving winds; these houses are, indeed, all that
-can be desired, the requisitions of the various classes of plants having
-been well studied. Every accommodation is provided for those kinds, such
-as _Cattleya gigas_ and _C. Dowiana_, that are difficult to bloom. These
-two were splendidly in flower, and are most lovely and distinct kinds;
-the flowers of _C. gigas_ were nearly nine inches in diameter, the
-sepals and petals of the purest dark rosy colour, and the lip a fine
-rich dark crimson magenta. _C. Dowiana_ was also very fine and
-attractive in colour, the sepals and petals being of a nankeen yellow,
-and the lip of a rich dark purple, elegantly pencilled and striped with
-lines of gold. We hope at some future time to give our readers a plate
-of the fine variety of _C. gigas_ above referred to. Both these species
-are here grown as near the light as possible, and the treatment they
-receive is, first to induce a vigorous growth, and then to give them a
-good rest after the growth is completed, at the same time keeping them
-well exposed to the light, and giving them merely sufficient water to
-prevent them from shrivelling, a more ample supply of water being given
-as soon as they show signs of flowering. There was also in this
-collection another species that is generally considered difficult to
-grow, namely, _Vanda teres_, of which there were three plants which had
-been blooming very finely. When cultivated as these are, they well repay
-all the trouble taken with them. These are grown at one end of the
-house, without any shade.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 3.
- CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA.
- [Plate 3.]
- Native of the United States of Columbia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ oblong, club-shaped, furrowed when mature, twelve
- to eighteen inches high. _Leaves_ solitary coriaceous,
- ligulate-oblong, acute, dark green above, paler beneath. _Scape_ three
- to four-flowered, issuing from a terminal oblong compressed bract,
- which is three to four inches long, and an inch broad. _Flowers_ very
- large and exceedingly handsome, measuring eight inches across;
- _sepals_ an inch wide, lanceolate, recurved, white; _petals_
- spreading, clawed, broadly ovate, measuring nearly three inches
- across, plane towards the base prettily frilled in the anterior
- portion, the apex recurved, white, with a scarcely perceptible tint of
- blush near the edge; _lip_ obovate emarginate, three and a quarter
- inches long, the basal half entire, rolled over the column, the
- anterior portion expanded and beautifully fringed, about two inches in
- breadth and rather more in depth, the apical half occupied with a
- solid blotch of rich magenta rose, passing to white at the frilled
- edge, the side portions white, the disk and throat of a delicate tint
- of nankeen yellow, the extreme base white, with numerous divergent
- lines of magenta rose, a few of which (about two) run out to join the
- blotch at the tip of the anterior lobe. _Column_ about half as long as
- the convolute base of the lip, club-shaped, decurved, semiterete, with
- a rounded keel at the back.
-
- Cattleya Mendelii grandiflora, _supra._
-
-
-When _Cattleya Mendelii_ was first flowered by S. Mendel, Esq., some few
-years ago, many botanists were of opinion that it was not sufficiently
-dissimilar from, but only a variety of, _C. Trianæ_. Since that time it
-has been flowered in many different collections with but little
-variation of character, and, as we think, has fully vindicated its
-right, whether as a species or race, to be regarded as a distinct Orchid
-of first-rate merit.
-
-The subject of our plate is a gigantic variety of the _Cattleya
-Mendelii_, which has just flowered in our own collection. It proves to
-be in every way larger, and altogether superior, to the old type, the
-flowers having much more substance, and being of better form, which
-results from the greater width of the lip and petals. The sepals and
-petals are white, the latter being very broad and of good substance,
-while the lip is broad and well fringed, pure white in its upper part,
-with a large bright magenta patch at the front part, and the throat is
-orange, with reddish crimson veins, which stand out in fine contrast
-against the pure white of the remaining portions of the flower. It
-produces as many as four flowers on a spike, each flower measuring over
-eight inches across, and the flowers are thrown well up above the
-foliage, and thus produce the grandest appearance we have as yet seen in
-any _Cattleya_.
-
-_Cattleya Mendelii_ succeeds well in a compost of peat, with the
-addition of a little sphagnum moss, and requires good drainage. We have
-found it to do best in pots, with the plant well elevated above the rim,
-but it can be grown with success either on a block or in a basket
-suspended from the roof of the house. The temperature of the
-Cattleya-house suits it best.
-
-This is a grand plant for exhibition or decorative purposes, as the pure
-white and magenta of its flowers are exceedingly effective amongst the
-other species of _Cattleya_ which flower at the same time of year. The
-flowering season is May and June, after which time _C. Mendelii_ begins
-to make its growth. It should then receive a moderate supply of
-water—not too much, as an over bountiful supply is apt to cause the
-young growths to rot. After the annual growths are completed the plants
-should be gradually dried off, only giving them sufficient water to keep
-them from shrivelling.
-
-The species of _Cattleya_ are all subject to white scale and thrips.
-These insect pests may, however, be easily removed by careful sponging,
-either with water or a little insecticide; they should be cleaned off as
-soon as discovered, as if allowed to establish themselves they disfigure
-the leaves and bulbs, and so spoil the appearance of the plants.
-Cleanliness and good cultivation are the chief points to be considered
-in the successful keeping of _Cattleyas_.
-
-
-Vanda Lowii, &c.—One often hears that _Vanda Lowii_ does not bloom until
-it attains a large size. This, however, is erroneous, for we have
-flowered it when not more than two feet high; and we have also seen a
-plant of about the same size in the collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence,
-Bart., with a flower spike some four or five feet long, in full beauty,
-with its two bright orange-yellow flowers at the base, the rest of the
-blossoms being of a bright brownish-crimson colour. This was a most
-extraordinary spike for so small a plant. When the specimens attain a
-larger size they often produce six of these long spikes, which extend to
-seven feet in length. We have one now showing this number of spikes, but
-the plant is fully five feet high. We were glad to see in this
-collection a grand mass of _Epidendrum nemorale majus_, which is figured
-in the first series of Warner’s _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, but we
-never expected to see such a specimen as that in the collection of Sir
-Trevor Lawrence, which must have been three or four feet across, and had
-eighteen spikes of its beautiful rosy and mauve-coloured flowers. This
-plant was well worth going to see, as were many others: indeed, the fame
-of this collection is so widely spread that it is almost needless to
-comment upon it; suffice it to say, that it is the finest and best kept
-collection we know of. At the time of our visit we were pleased to see
-some fine plants of _Cattleya superba_ with their splendid deep rose and
-crimson flowers; this is one of the most distinct and beautiful of all
-_Cattleyas_, and had been grown in the East India House, suspended from
-the roof.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 4.
- EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS.]
-
-
-
-
- EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS.
- [Plate 4.]
- Native of Mexico.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate, clustered, two-leaved. _Leaves_
- oblong-ligulate, acute, sheathing at the base. _Scape_ erect, six to
- nine inches high, racemose, many-flowered, longer than the leaves.
- _Flowers_ brilliant orange-scarlet, nearly two inches across, much
- larger than the typical form; _sepals_ spreading; _petals_ flat,
- elliptic, somewhat broader than the sepals, spreading, lanceolate,
- acute; _lip_ clawed, linear, abruptly acute, with a bifoveate
- (two-holed) callosity below the middle, deep yellow passing to
- orange-scarlet at the tip. _Column_ parallel with and nearly half the
- length of the lip, to which it is adnate towards the base, the
- anther-bed marginate in front.
-
- Epidendrum vitellinum majus, _of gardens_.
-
-
-The original form of _Epidendrum vitellinum_, of which a good though
-pale-coloured figure will be found in the _Botanical Register_ for 1840
-(t. 35), is one of the most brilliant of the _Epidendreæ_, on account of
-its remarkable fiery colour, which makes it invaluable for contrasting
-with other subjects, both in the Orchid-house, in the jardinière, or in
-the bouquet. The same colour, or something near it, occurs in a few
-other Orchids, which are equally valuable from a decorative point of
-view, as for example in _Lælia cinnabarina_, _Lælia harpophylla_, and
-_Ada aurantiaca_, all of them being plants, which, under favourable
-conditions, yield a brilliant effect. The subject of our plate has the
-advantage of producing larger and more showy flowers than its type, and
-to this extent is the more desirable of the two for the house-stage, or
-exhibition table.
-
-Until within the last few years this plant was very rare, but having
-been imported in large quantities it is now to be found in every
-collection, however limited its pretensions. The bright colour of its
-orange-scarlet flowers, produced in considerable numbers on upright
-spikes, renders it a most striking and distinct species. We have known
-the flowers to last as long as twelve weeks in perfection; in fact, we
-have on several occasions exhibited a plant of it at as many as six
-different successive exhibitions. Mixed with other Orchids it has a most
-telling effect; and a well-flowered specimen once seen by a novice is
-likely to produce a lasting impression. In the Broomfield collection it
-is used very largely in association with Odontoglossums, and the effect
-of the orange-scarlet flowers amongst the numerous spikes of
-_Odontoglossum Alexandræ_, and other species, is charming.
-
-We have found this _Epidendrum_ to do well in the Odontoglossum-house in
-a compost of peat and sphagnum moss. It does equally well in a pot or in
-a basket, and should receive a fair supply of water while growing. The
-plant seems to revel in a good amount of sunlight, but it must be kept
-from the burning rays of the sun by a slight shading, too much sunshine
-being apt to make the foliage become blotched and sickly-looking.
-
-The variety _majus_ blooms at a different time of the year from the
-original species, which has the flowers much smaller, and which blooms
-in August and September from the young growths; whereas the variety
-_majus_ flowers from the tips of the bulbs of the previous year’s
-growth. There are several forms of the plant, some with flowers much
-larger and brighter than others; indeed, the one here figured is not so
-large as some that were flowered years ago, which may be due to the fact
-that they were old-established plants. We remember the late Mrs.
-Lawrence, of Ealing Park, exhibiting a remarkably strong specimen at one
-of the Chiswick shows, thirty-five years since, a perfect blaze of
-flower. S. Brunton, Esq., also exhibited a grand plant of a good variety
-a few years back; and C. W. Lea, Esq., Parkfield, Worcester, had a
-wonderful example in bloom, last year. These several plants were all
-part of the early importations.
-
-
-The Manchester Show of Orchids, June, 1881.—The display of Orchids at
-the Manchester Exhibition was a very fine one, and no Orchid grower
-should have missed the sight. The specimens were truly marvellous,
-especially the sixteen plants shown by R. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn,
-amongst which were a _Vanda suavis_ with about a dozen flower-spikes;
-_Lælia purpurata_ and _Cattleya Warneri_, both wonderful specimens, as
-also was _Masdevallia Harryana_; _Cypripedium barbatum superbum_ which
-had a hundred blooms upon it, and was not made up for the occasion, but
-had been grown on from a single plant; and _Dendrobium Wardianum_ which
-was a magnificent plant. Great credit is due to Mr. Osman for his
-talent, in successfully cultivating so fine a collection. G. Hardy,
-Esq., of Timperley, exhibited some wonderful plants, especially of
-_Cattleyas_, _Lælias_, _Dendrobium thyrsiflorum_, _Oncidium
-Marshallianum_, _Odontoglossum vexillarium_, &c. R. F. Ainsworth, Esq.,
-M.D., also exhibited some fine specimens, especially _Vanda suavis_,
-_Aërides Fieldingii_, and _A. Schröderii_; these three are most
-extraordinary plants, and have been grown in the collection for eighteen
-years, which is a sufficient proof of what can be done by perseverance,
-and, moreover, gives one an idea how well Orchids can be grown and
-exhibited for many successive years. We have known these three specimens
-to be shown at the Manchester exhibitions and elsewhere for the past ten
-or fifteen years, and they are now in the finest possible condition, as
-they have always been, under the successful management of Mr. Mitchell.
-There were besides, other exhibitors whose specimens were well worthy of
-note.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 5.
- MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII.]
-
-
-
-
- MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII.
- [Plate 5.]
- Native of the United States of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Rhizome_ slender, slowly creeping. _Leaves_ crowded,
- petiolate, the petiole with a sheathing scale at the base, the blade
- about equalling the petiole, two to three inches long,
- elliptic-oblong, acute, pale green, obscurely three to five-nerved.
- _Scapes_ numerous, slender, as long as or longer than the petioles,
- green, with an ovate acuminate appressed bract at the top. _Flowers_
- yellowish, tinted with rose, rather large for the size of the plant;
- the perianth tube very short and swollen at the base; _dorsal sepal_
- of a pale yellowish red, indistinctly dotted with pale rosy red spots,
- and marked with from five to seven (or nine according to Reichenbach)
- longitudinal wine-coloured nerves, fully an inch long, sub-erect,
- concave or somewhat hooded, obovate, suddenly contracted into a tail
- two or three times its own length, the tail green below and becoming
- orange-yellow towards the tip; _lateral sepals_ obliquely ovate,
- spreading, and decurved, thickly studded with deep red spots, and
- tapering off into a tail similar to that of the dorsal sepal; _petals_
- small, linear-oblong or ligulate, bilobed at the apex; _lip_ very
- small, broadly oblong, recurved at the tip, with two keels or ridges
- running down the centre. _Column_ short, three-toothed at the apex.
-
- Masdevallia Shuttleworthii, _Reichenbach fil._ in _Gardeners’
- Chronicle_, N.S. iii., 170; _Hooker fil._, _Botanical Magazine_, t.
- 6372.
-
-
-Of this interesting plant, one of a popular genus inhabiting the cool
-temperate humid regions of Northern and Western South America, Professor
-Reichenbach, by whom it was dedicated to Mr. Shuttleworth, one of Mr. W.
-Bull’s collectors, remarks that it is “rather a nice thing amongst
-_Masdevallias_ of the second order of beauty.” It was first flowered in
-1878 by W. H. Punchard, Esq., of Poulett Lodge, Twickenham. Our figure
-was prepared from a plant which has bloomed in our own collection
-recently. We find it to be a very free-blooming species.
-
-The _Masdevallias_ comprise many interesting species and varieties, some
-of very remarkable structure, and others with colours of extraordinary
-richness and brilliancy. Our present subject is not one of the most
-showy, but it may be ranked with the more curious of the species, and is
-certainly of a distinct and pleasing character, as is well represented
-in our Plate. The plant was discovered by Mr. Shuttleworth, when
-travelling for Mr. Bull, and by him it was first transmitted to Europe.
-Since then we have received it from the same country through our own
-collector, Mr. Carder. The _Masdevallias_ are plentiful in their native
-habitats, but the difficulty of obtaining them in this country lies in
-the risks attending importation, which are mainly attributable to the
-fact that they have no thick fleshy bulbs to support them during their
-journey. We have heard of thousands of plants of this particular species
-having been sent off, but of these comparatively few have been received
-alive, so that unless some more successful means of introducing them
-into England can be found, it will always remain a rare plant.
-
-_Masdevallia Shuttleworthii_ is of free-blooming habit, and the flowers
-last a long time in perfection. It generally blossoms during the spring
-and summer months. The plants require but little room, as the foliage is
-of neat growth, and the whole height of the plant does not exceed from
-six to eight inches. The leaves are of a dark green colour and firm
-texture. The flower-scapes proceed from the young growth, and attain the
-height of about eight inches, the more conspicuous spreading long-tailed
-sepals being of a pleasing yellowish rose colour thickly marked with
-wine-red spots, while the petals and lip are small and inconspicuous.
-
-We find the plants grow well when potted in small pots or pans suspended
-from the roof, and filled with peat and sphagnum moss; but they require
-thorough drainage, since they need a liberal supply of water during
-summer. In the autumn and winter months they do not require so full a
-supply, but they must have sufficient to keep them moist. They thrive
-best in the same house with the _Odontoglots_, where they obtain shade,
-and are kept cool. None of the _Masdevallias_ like heat, and most of
-them require the same kind of treatment. The house in which they are
-grown should have a north aspect, so that they may not get too much
-sun-heat, as this causes the leaves to become spotted, to the great
-disfigurement of the plant.
-
-Insects become a nuisance if allowed to accumulate on the plants. The
-thrips, which is one of their greatest insect enemies, constantly
-attacks them, and must be subdued by cleansing them frequently and
-thoroughly with a sponge and warm soft water.
-
-The propagation of _Masdevallias_ is effected by dividing the plants,
-leaving a few old bulbs with a leading one in front. They are the
-easiest of all Orchids to increase, and are best divided up
-occasionally, as when the plants get too large they do not flower so
-freely. The most suitable time to perform this operation is just as they
-commence to make their growth. They should at first be put into small
-pots, and shifted into larger ones as they increase in size, and
-develope abundance of roots.
-
-
-Lælia Philbrickiana.—This new Hybrid was exhibited at the Royal
-Horticultural Society, South Kensington, by the Messrs. Veitch and Sons.
-It was raised between _Cattleya Aclandiæ_ and _Lælia elegans_, partaking
-of the dwarf habit of _C. Aclandiæ_. The plant grows about eight inches
-high, and produces its leaves in pairs, of a dark green colour, about
-four inches in length; from between these the flower-sheaths proceed.
-The sepals and petals are of a glossy purplish crimson-brown, spotted
-with darker spots; the lip is of a bright crimson, the basal part purple
-and white. It blooms in June and July, and will be a very useful
-addition to our collections.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 6.
- CATTLEYA MORGANÆ]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA MORGANÆ.
- [Plate 6.]
- Native of the United States of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ short, oblong or somewhat clavate, furrowed when
- mature, attaining with the leaves about eighteen inches in height.
- _Leaves_ solitary, coriaceous, ligulate-oblong, acute, of a light
- green colour. _Scape_ three to four-flowered, issuing from a terminal
- oblong compressed bract, which is about two and a half inches long.
- _Flowers_ large and pleasing on account of their delicate colouring,
- about six inches across when expanded; _sepals_ lanceolate, entire,
- three-fourths of an inch broad and about three inches long, recurved
- at the tip, white; _petals_ spreading, clawed, broadly ovate, fully
- two inches across, the margin entire at the base and much undulated in
- the anterior portion, white; _lip_ obovate, emarginate, about three
- inches long, the basal portion entire and rolled over the column, the
- anterior portion moderately expanded and beautifully frilled, white,
- like the rest of the flower, with a small blotch of pale magenta near
- the apex, but not quite extending to the margin, and stained on the
- disk with an obcordate blotch of clear yellow, passing into
- orange-yellow in the throat, the deeper portion being veined with
- yellow lines. _Column_ concealed by the convolute base of the lip.
-
- Cattleya Morganæ, _supra_.
-
-
-One of the most chaste and charming of the summer-flowering _Cattleyas_,
-and quite distinct in aspect from all others in cultivation. We have
-great pleasure in dedicating it to Mrs. M. Morgan, of New York, who is a
-great admirer of this noble class of Orchidaceous plants, and, moreover,
-has a fine and valuable collection of them. The first specimen we
-bloomed produced ten flower spikes, and was exhibited at the Manchester
-Botanical and Horticultural Society’s Show in June, 1879; the plant was
-the admiration of all who saw it, and was on that occasion awarded a
-First Class Certificate on account of its distinct and pleasing
-character.
-
-_Cattleya Morganæ_ belongs to the same section of the genus as _C.
-Mendelii_, of which section there are many races or varieties, all of
-which are beautiful and rich in the colouring of the lip, some having
-the sepals and petals white, while in others they are of a rosy hue,
-more or less intense. The plant now before us grows about eighteen
-inches in height, and has light green foliage with a somewhat drooping
-habit. It produces its flowers freely, as many as four together on the
-spike. The sepals and petals are pure white; and the lip is white with a
-light magenta blotch near the apex, its throat orange colour, the
-incurved base white, and the edge beautifully fringed. The flowers are
-produced in May and June, and last from five to six weeks in perfection.
-It makes a fine subject for decorative purposes, since its pure white
-flowers form a charming contrast with the high-coloured varieties of
-other species of _Cattleya_, of which there are many that come into
-bloom at about the same time.
-
-_Cattleya Morganæ_ requires the same treatment as _C. Mendelii_ and _C.
-Mossiæ_, and will thrive well, grown either in a pot or basket, planted
-in good fibrous peat and sphagnum moss. It will also succeed on a block
-suspended from the roof. As in the case of the other _Cattleyas_, it
-prefers to have all the light possible, but to be just sufficiently
-shaded to keep off the direct rays of the sun. It must be borne in mind
-that the plants are found growing naturally on the branches and stems of
-trees in the forests, where they get some shade, and a free circulation
-of air, which it is of great benefit to secure, and which should be made
-a point of the utmost importance in the artificial cultivation of all
-Orchids, as of most other plants. It would be a great boon to
-cultivators if our collectors would note down and supply fuller and more
-precise information on these points, for although of course the natural
-conditions could not in all cases be carried out to the full extent, yet
-we should then be better able to imitate them, and thus supply the
-natural wants of the plants. In giving as much air and light as
-possible, however, cold draughts must be avoided, which may be effected
-by fixing the ventilators near the hot-water pipes, and should a cold
-wind prevail by giving air on the opposite side, always closing the
-house in good time. In summer water should be freely sprinkled about the
-tables and paths twice a day, namely, in the morning, and about three or
-four o’clock in the afternoon. During the dull dark days of winter, very
-little moisture is required, but on warm days some water may be given to
-the plants, especially in springtime when the days begin to lengthen.
-Syringing should be avoided during the winter, except in the case of
-those on blocks, for a little dewing with the syringe during the day,
-will not hurt these, as the moisture quickly dries off. The water should
-always be used in a tepid state.
-
-One of the most important items in Orchid culture is cleanliness. Every
-plant should be cleansed as soon as any indications of insect life are
-perceived upon it, since there are Insecticides and other remedies sold
-to destroy all such pests. Cockroaches, Snails, and Woodlice are very
-troublesome, and should be well looked after at night when they come out
-to feed on the young shoots and flowers. Woodlice may be caught by
-laying down here and there traps, consisting of some moss, at night, or
-half potatos or turnips scooped out in the centre, and placed about in
-quiet nooks and corners, or on the pots; the woodlice will harbour under
-them, and may be caught and destroyed in the morning.
-
-
-Cattleya gigas.—See note under Plate 2. We have since received a
-wonderfully grand flower of _Cattleya gigas_ from the fine collection of
-J. S. Bockett, Esq., of Stamford Hill; it is eight and a half inches in
-diameter; the sepals and petals are of a light rose colour, the lip
-three inches across, and three in length, of the richest
-crimson-magenta, margined with a lighter colour, and the throat partly
-magenta and partly orange. The spike bore four of these flowers.—B. S.
-W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 7.
- PROMENÆA CITRINA.]
-
-
-
-
- PROMENÆA CITRINA.
- [Plate 7.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ small, ovate, tetragonal. _Leaves_ three to
- four inches in length, oblong-ligulate, acute, tapering below into a
- narrow petiole, growing two together at the apex of the pseudobulb, of
- a pale green colour. _Scapes_ two to three inches long, bearing
- largish ovate bracts in the upper part, and smaller bracts below, and
- terminated by a solitary deep yellow showy flower, measuring about an
- inch and a half across; _sepals_ obovate, acute, concave or curving
- forwards at the tip, bright yellow; _petals_ yellow, also converging,
- similar to the sepals in size, form, and colouring; _lip_ larger and
- broader than the sepals and petals, spreading, three-lobed, the two
- lateral lobes erect, oblong obtuse, rising up on each side of the
- column, yellow spotted with red on the inner face, the front lobe
- plane, obovate, apiculate, unspotted yellow, with a prominent crest at
- its base. _Column_ erect, semi-terete, incurved, stained in the front
- with brownish red.
-
- Promenæa citrina, _Don_, _Hortus Cantabrigiensis_, ed. 13, 720 (1845);
- _London_, _Hortus Britannicus Supp._ 618 (1850); _Williams_, _Orchid
- Growers’ Manual_, ed. 4, 253, ed. 5, 281; _Rand_, _Orchids_, 377.
-
- Maxillaria citrina, _Lyons_, _Treatise on Orchidaceous Plants_, 176.
-
-
-_Promenæa_ is a small genus of Orchids which was separated from
-_Maxillaria_ about forty years ago (1843) by Lindley, who at the same
-time also dissociated from it the plants respectively referred to
-_Warrea_, _Paphinia_, _Lycaste_, and _Scuticaria_. Later on Reichenbach
-classed _Promenæa_ as a section of _Zygopetalum_. Dr. Lindley
-distinguished the group of species which he referred to _Promenæa_, and
-which he regarded as fully entitled to generic rank, by the following
-peculiar features, namely, their spreading sepals, their three-lobed
-lip, crested or tuberculate at the base, their short semi-terete column,
-and their ovate glandule with four, that is two double, sessile pollen
-masses. The species then proposed were _P. stapelioides_, _P. xanthina_,
-_P. lentiginosa_, _P. Rollissonii_, and _P. graminea_. To these
-Reichenbach added _P. guttata_ in 1856, and _P. microptera_ in 1881.
-Neither of these authorities, so far as we can trace, refer to _P.
-citrina_; but, according to Don and Loudon, the plant was introduced to
-our gardens in 1840, though they attribute to it the erroneous habitat
-of Mexico. Our good friend, Professor Reichenbach, suggests that it is a
-garden name, sometimes applied to _P. Rollissonii_ and sometimes to _P.
-guttata_; but it has long been recognised as a distinct plant by English
-and Continental Orchid growers, and is certainly different from the _P.
-Rollissonii_ figured by Dr. Lindley; nor does it correspond with the
-description of _P. guttata_, so far as the materials at hand enable us
-to judge.
-
-This, it will be seen, is a very neat-growing plant, the small
-tetragonal pseudobulbs slowly creeping over the surface of the blocks on
-which the plants are grown. It is, moreover, of small stature, the
-leaves, which grow in pairs from the top of the pseudobulbs, rarely
-exceeding three or four inches in height, and the flower-scapes
-attaining even less elevation. The flowers, which are rather large for
-so small a plant, being of a rich and brilliant colour, become rather
-effective; and though, of course, they do not compare at all in gorgeous
-beauty with those of many of the larger-flowered Orchids, they are by no
-means to be despised even from the decorative point of View; indeed,
-when grown on a block, as represented in the accompanying Plate, and
-suspended from the roof of the house, the plant forms a very pretty and
-distinct object, occupying, as it does, but a small space in which it
-displays much beauty and attractiveness. The bright orange-yellow
-flowers are, moreover, very freely produced, and if kept dry, continue
-for a long time in a fresh and pleasing condition.
-
-There is another species of the same habit, _Promenæa stapelioides_,
-which comes into bloom about the same time as this, and in which the
-flowers are spotted with dark purple, so that they appear to be nearly
-black. The contrast of these two when grown and flowered on the same
-block is very effective. In the noble collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence,
-Bart., M.P., we saw a large pan-full of _P. citrina_ growing freely,
-which had a very beautiful appearance, but we prefer to see the plant
-grown on a block, as in this manner the flowers hang downwards, and are
-shown off to much greater advantage. There are certain varieties to be
-occasionally met with, in which the flowers are without spots on the
-lip, but those which have this latter peculiarity are to be preferred,
-as the two colours afford a pleasant relief.
-
-Fibrous peat and sphagnum moss seem to suit the plant well when it is
-grown in either pots or pans; but when cultivated on blocks of wood, a
-little sphagnum moss only about its roots will be quite sufficient,
-though if grown in this latter way it requires a more liberal and more
-frequent supply of water, in order to keep the roots moist. We find the
-Cattleya-house to suit it best, and we grow it suspended against a wall
-at the end of the house, where it gets syringed in warm weather. The
-manner in which its blooms are produced may be seen from our
-Illustration, which is an excellent representation of the habit of the
-plant, not only as regards its general manner of growth, but also of its
-mode of flowering.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 8.
- CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI.
- [Plate 8.]
- Native of Borneo.
-
-
- Terrestrial. _Stem_ wanting, the short erect crowns each furnished
- with numerous radical evergreen leaves, and emitting stout fleshy
- roots. _Leaves_ distichous (two-ranked), a foot or more in length,
- leathery or somewhat fleshy, oblong, obtuse, with a short recurved
- mucro, dark green above, of a paler green beneath. _Scape_ dark
- purple, issuing from the centre of the leaves and furnished with a
- sheathing bract at its base, about two feet in height, three to
- four-flowered, the pedicels subtended by green lanceolate acuminate
- bracts. _Flowers_ large, richly-coloured, measuring when spread out
- four inches in the direction of the sepals, and nine to ten inches in
- that of the petals; _dorsal sepal_ broadly cordate, acuminate, nearly
- two inches broad, white, marked in front with a bold central, and on
- each side with two or three curved lateral stripes of deep
- purple-brown, keeled behind, and there stained with purple-brown;
- _lateral sepals_ (united) ovate-acuminate, with a central and on each
- side three lateral stripes extending nearly to the base,
- greenish-white, edged with purple-brown; _petals_ set at a right angle
- to the sepals, one-fourth of an inch broad, five inches long, tapering
- gradually to the apex, decurved, greenish-white with dark purple-brown
- veins and spots, becoming wholly purple at the tip, and having near
- the base a purple margin, and a few scattered marginal purple hairs;
- _lip_ large, prominent, calceoliform, the basal portion unguiculate
- from the introflexion of the margin, greenish, the apex large,
- pouch-shaped, like the front of a shoe or slipper, dull purplish-red
- reticulately veined with darker purple. _Column_ white, with a ring of
- yellow hairs at the base, two-branched, the lower branch three-lobed,
- the later lobes bearing each a small orbicular sessile yellow anther,
- the terminal lobe forming a large white ovate fleshy disk (abortive
- third stamen) the upper or stigmatic branch cordate-obovate, convex,
- whitish, tinged with purple, and fringed at the back and sides with
- yellow hairs.
-
- Cypripedium Stonei, _Low_; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5349;
- _Van Houtte_, _Flore des Serres_, xvii., t. 1792-3; _Lemaire_,
- _Illustration Horticole_, ix., p. 107; x. t. 355; _Bateman_, _2nd
- Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 141; _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t. 12.
-
-
-This magnificent plant is one of the most beautiful species of the genus
-_Cypripedium_. Several varieties of it are known, and though they are
-all good and well worth growing, that which we have selected for
-illustration is the best and darkest that has come under our notice. The
-plant from which our figure was taken, bloomed in the Victoria Nursery,
-and had five flower-spikes, two of which have been in bloom for the past
-six weeks, and are now as fresh as ever.
-
-_Cypripedium Stonei_ was first flowered by Mr. Stone, gardener to John
-Day, Esq., of High Cross, Tottenham, after whom it has been named. It
-was for a long period a very rare species, and, indeed now, though small
-plants may be purchased for a moderate sum, yet large specimens are
-scarce and valuable. It makes a fine show plant, its lasting qualities
-being a great recommendation to it, both from an exhibition and
-decorative point of view.
-
-The plant is a native of Borneo, and was introduced to this country by
-the Messrs. Low, of Clapton. It produces dark green foliage of about
-twelve or in some of the varieties we have seen as much as fifteen
-inches in length. From the centre of this tuft of leaves the
-flower-spikes are produced and rise to a height of about two feet, each
-bearing three or four of its large slipper-shaped blossoms, which are
-the most exact representations of a shoe or slipper of those of any of
-the species, and most completely justify the trivial name of the genus,
-Lady’s Slipper. The sepals are large, white, striped on the veins or
-nerves, with dark purple, and tinged with yellow; the petals are five
-inches in length, and are yellowish, streaked and blotched with purple;
-and the lip is large and of a dull reddish-purple, veined with deeper
-purple-red. It is of free-blooming habit, and when the growths are
-strong it produces a flower-spike from each crown, but it takes some
-considerable time to complete its growth before it sends forth its
-spikes; indeed, it begins to grow soon after its blossoms have faded.
-The plant having no thick fleshy bulbs from which to derive support,
-requires a more continuous supply of moisture than many other Orchids.
-The roots are coarse and fleshy, and should in consequence be supplied
-with a stronger soil than is required by some of the other kinds. We
-find it to thrive best in good fibrous loam, with a small quantity of
-charcoal, and a little leaf-mould or peat, all being well mixed
-together, giving the pots good drainage, but not so much as is required
-in the case of _Cattleyas_, for example. As it is a strong rooting
-plant, it is best grown in a pot, and should be a little elevated above
-the rim. We have found the East India house to supply the most suitable
-atmospheric conditions in which to cultivate it; here it should be
-placed on the side-tables near the light, but out of the sun. The finest
-specimen we have seen exhibited was staged by Mr. Child, gardener to
-Mrs. Torr, Garbrand Hall, Ewell, Surrey, at the South Kensington Show,
-in 1878.
-
-There is a very distinct variety of this plant called _Cypripedium
-Stonei platytænium_, of which a figure has been lately published in Mr.
-Warner’s _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, 3 ser., t. 16. Of this form,
-living plants were till recently only to be found in the collection of
-John Day, Esq., but they were distributed when that collection was
-recently dispersed by auction sales, and were purchased at high prices
-by Baron Schröder and Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., in whose
-collections they may now be seen. This variety is just like _C. Stonei_
-in its growth, and the flowers are closely similar, the chief difference
-being, that the petals are shorter and broader, and resemble those of
-_C. superbiens_.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 9-10.
- LÆLIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII.]
-
-
-
-
- LÆLIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII.
- [Plates 9-10.]
- Native of St. Catherine’s, Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) clavate-oblong, monophyllous, two
- feet or more in height, somewhat furrowed when mature. _Leaves_
- coriaceous, evergreen, narrowly oblong, emarginate, dark green.
- _Scape_ three to four-flowered, issuing from a stout sheathing oblong
- bract or spathe, four to five inches long. _Flowers_ large, and very
- handsome; measuring eight inches across, of a delicate rose colour,
- with a purple-crimson lip; _sepals_ linear-lanceolate, acute, of a
- pale rosy tint, pencilled with simple rosy-purple longitudinal lines;
- _petals_ oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, of a beautiful delicate rose
- colour, pencilled with divergent forked lines of deeper purple; _lip_
- (labellum) three-lobed, the lateral lobes obsolete, convolute around
- the column, the front lobe large, broad, and roundish, of a rich dark
- crimson-magenta, the tip paler and reticulately veined, and the throat
- yellow, beautifully veined with crimson-magenta. _Column_ scarcely
- reaching to the middle of the convolute base of the lip.
-
- Lælia purpurata Williamsii, _Hort._; _Williams’ Orchid Grower’s
- Manual_, ed. 4, 196; ed. 5, 208.
-
-
-The species, of which this is one of the finest known varieties, and the
-genus _Lælia_ to which it belongs, together with the neighbouring genus
-_Cattleya_, are placed by the great Orchidist, Reichenbach, in his
-amplified genus _Bletia_, so that the _Lælia purpurata_ of Lindley, in
-_Paxton’s Flower Garden_, becomes the _Bletia purpurata_ of Reichenbach
-in _Walpers’ Annales_, vi. 423. The name of _Lælia_ is, however, that
-which is adopted amongst cultivators of Orchids.
-
-The _Lælia_ which we have now to describe, was named many years ago in
-the _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, when it was exhibited at the Crystal
-Palace and received its present appellation. The plant now represented
-was flowered at the Victoria and Paradise Nurseries, but has now passed
-into the select collection of Baron Schröder, of The Dell, near Staines.
-It was a wonderfully strong plant, and produced two spikes of its highly
-coloured blossoms, which led all those who saw it in its beauty, to
-pronounce it to be the finest _Lælia_ they had ever witnessed. Our
-artist has given a good representation of the plant and its blossoms.
-The club-shaped stems and foliage stood thirty inches in height, and
-were provided with very strong sheathing bracts whence the flower-spikes
-issued, each bearing four flowers, which were individually eight inches
-in diameter. It has bloomed with us in the same style for two successive
-years. The plant that we flowered some years ago was not so large as
-that now figured, the reason being that it was not so strong a specimen,
-and, therefore, not able to produce such fine flowers. This is
-sufficient evidence of the advance the plants make before they get to
-their full strength and vigour. In the variety before us the sepals and
-petals are of a delicate rose, veined with a beautiful dark tint of the
-same colour, while the lip is very broad, large, and splendidly
-coloured, the prominent parts of a rich dark crimson-magenta, paler and
-veiny at the tip, and beautifully veined with crimson on the yellow
-ground-colour of the throat. The blooming season is in May and June, the
-flowers continuing in perfection for three or four weeks, if kept free
-from damp and in a dry place. We have a house set aside specially for
-Orchids when in flower, and in it very little moisture is used, by which
-means we seldom get the flowers spotted or prematurely decayed.
-
-There is another fine form of _Lælia purpurata_ with white sepals and
-petals that are quite flat, not at all recurved; this variety has a rich
-dark crimson-magenta lip. We exhibited this form with nine flower spikes
-at the Regent’s Park Exhibition, and it produced a grand effect. There
-are many other fine varieties.
-
-_Lælia purpurata_ when well cultivated is a good looking plant, and even
-when not in bloom it is an object of attraction, on account of its
-stately evergreen foliage. It is a native of Brazil, and is found
-growing on the branches of trees on the outskirts of the forests where
-the plants get light, and are yet shaded from the burning sun. They are
-best grown in the Cattleya-house, and will thrive either in pots or
-baskets, but we find the pot system the best, as they are strong growing
-plants, and require ample space to bring them to perfection. They are
-the better for being moved about, especially if they are required for
-exhibition. There are no more showy Orchids for exhibition purposes, and
-this is especially true of such varieties as that now before us.
-
-We find that they thrive best in good fibrous peat, and some live
-sphagnum moss on a part of the surface; when in a growing state the moss
-keeps them moist without too much water being given whilst they are
-making their growth. In watering them be careful not to wet the young
-shoots. The pots should be three parts filled with drainage, which must
-be formed of broken pots and lumps of charcoal intermixed. The plants
-must be elevated about two inches above the rim of the pot. The best
-time to pot them is after they have done blooming just as they begin to
-make new growths, and before the roots start, when they will soon
-commence to work into the clean sweet peat. If the plant is in a
-sufficiently large pot, and the soil about it is sweet and clean, it
-will not require re-potting, but it will benefit the plants greatly to
-give them some fresh fibrous peat just before they begin to root, as the
-old soil is apt to become hard and inert through constant watering. They
-require to be kept moist during the growing season, but must not even
-then be soddened with water. In winter only just sufficient must be
-given them to keep them moist, and to prevent their stems and leaves
-from shriveling.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 11.
- PHALÆNOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA.]
-
-
-
-
- PHALÆNOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA.
- [Plate 11.]
- Native of the Eastern Archipelago.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ none, or consisting of a short crown furnished with
- rigid fleshy leaves, and emitting succulent roots, which latter are
- flattened, and cling to any congenial object with which they come in
- contact. _Leaves_ large, thick and coriaceous, distichous, oblong,
- obliquely retuse, dark green above, purple beneath. _Scape_ long,
- drooping, issuing from the base of the plant, or the leaf axils, and
- bearing the large moth-like flowers in a two-ranked raceme. _Flowers_
- large, pure opaque white, spreading, the lip beautifully coloured;
- _sepals_ oblong-obtuse, white, the lower ones prettily dotted with
- carmine; _petals_ larger and broader, sub-rhomboid, narrowed towards
- the base, pure white; _lip_ furnished with a callus at the base,
- smaller than the petals, three-lobed, the lateral lobes ovate obtuse,
- ascending or incurved, yellowish along the antical margin and dotted
- with carmine-crimson near the base, the central lobe trowel-shaped,
- carmine-crimson across the base and at the edge, and marked with a
- central crimson stripe; the lip is concave, bearing at the narrowed
- apex two incurved twisted white cirrhi. _Column_ semi-terete,
- recumbent on the ovary.
-
- Phalænopsis amabilis Dayana, _Hort._
-
-
-The genus _Phalænopsis_ belongs to the tribe _Vandeæ_, which is
-distinguished amongst those with waxy pollen-masses, by having these
-attached to a distinct caudicle, united to a deciduous stigmatic gland.
-It no doubt comprises several of our finest Orchids, which are prized no
-less on account of the graceful development of their inflorescence than
-for the attractive white blossoms of the more familiar species. Our
-drawing of the charming _Phalænopsis amabilis Dayana_ here figured, was
-taken from a fine specimen in the collection of W. Lee, Esq., of
-Downside, Leatherhead, who was kind enough to allow us to publish an
-illustration of it. The variety is very rare; indeed, we believe this is
-the only specimen known to be in cultivation in this country. It was
-named in compliment to John Day, Esq., of Tottenham, from whose
-collection it was obtained by Mr. Lee. From the markings about the base
-of the lip it will be seen to be very distinct, though it is no doubt a
-form of _P. amabilis_, with which it agrees in foliage and in the
-general character of the flowers, but differs in the distinct markings
-just referred to. The plant grows to about the same size as _P.
-amabilis_.
-
-There is at Downside a grand collection of _Phalænopsids_, which are
-especially well managed by Mr. Woolford, the gardener. They are great
-favourites with Mr. Lee, and he has built a house to meet their special
-wants. This is undoubtedly a good plan to adopt where there is such a
-fine and comprehensive set of plants as are to be found in this
-establishment, since they require different treatment to most other
-Orchids. They have thick fleshy leaves, and the stems of the plant are
-also fleshy, while, unlike many Orchids, they have no thick pseudobulbs
-from which to derive support; hence it follows that they require more
-moisture than many others. We do not, however, agree with giving them so
-much as we often see supplied. One great advantage of having a separate
-house for them is that their individual treatment and wants can be more
-carefully studied and more exactly met.
-
-We have seen _Phalænopsids_ grown well amongst other East Indian
-Orchids. For instance, we exhibited a plant so grown of _Phalænopsis
-grandiflora_ for ten successive years at the Chiswick and Regent’s Park
-Exhibitions, and at several shows during each year, and it generally
-bore from sixty to seventy blossoms. This was the variety imported from
-Java, which we consider the best, as it produces more flowers than the
-variety from Borneo. We see that growers now-a-days are obliged to put
-several plants together in order to make a specimen fit for exhibition.
-There were others who about that time also exhibited these large plants,
-and, amongst them Mr. Kinghorn showed at Chiswick a wonderful specimen,
-bearing the best flower-spike we have ever seen.
-
-_Phalænopsis amabilis Dayana_ requires the same treatment as _P.
-grandiflora_ and _P. amabilis_, and will do either in a pot, basket, or
-pan, suspended from the roof. It will also thrive on the side stages,
-but in this case requires to be elevated so that the roots can hang
-free, for they are abundant rooting plants. If suspended from the roof
-the plants have more room to throw out their thick fleshy roots, and in
-this way they approach nearer to the manner in which they grow in their
-native habitats, for they are found on the branches and stems of trees,
-where they obtain a free circulation of air. When thus suspended they
-get without restraint the fresh air that circulates through the house.
-They can also be cultivated on blocks, but under these circumstances
-they will require to be more freely supplied with moisture. These are
-plants that like plenty of light, but they must be shielded from the sun
-by shading. The best material to grow them in is sphagnum moss, with
-good drainage, and they require to be kept moist all the year round. In
-warm weather they of course require more than in winter, when just a
-sufficient quantity to keep the moss in a moist condition will be all
-that they will need. It is imperative never to allow water to reach the
-heart of the plant, for that will sometimes induce it to rot, and will
-often cause the leaves to go spotted.
-
-The plants must, of necessity, be kept free from insects. Sometimes the
-thrips will attack them, but this should be cleaned off. To be
-thoroughly successful with Orchids they require constant watching.
-Cockroaches are a great pest to all those that throw out thick fleshy
-roots, which they injure by gnawing them off, thereby weakening the
-constitution of the plant. J. S. Bockett, Esq., of Stamford Hill, has
-one of the finest grown collections of _Phalænopsis_ we have ever seen,
-but this, of course, has been in process of formation for years, and the
-plants have become large established specimens.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 12.
- ONCIDIUM GARDNERI.]
-
-
-
-
- ONCIDIUM GARDNERI.
- [Plate 12.]
- Native of the Organ Mountains of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong-ovate, furrowed, about two inches in
- height, dark green, purplish beneath. _Leaves_ oblong-lanceolate,
- acute, coriaceous, about six inches long, growing two together from
- the apex of the pseudobulbs. _Scape_ one and a half foot high,
- including the panicle of handsome flowers, lateral, that is, springing
- from the base of the pseudobulbs. _Flowers_ showy, of medium size,
- deliciously fragrant; _sepals_ oblong, acute, the lateral ones
- semi-connate; _petals_ twice as large as the sepals, roundish in
- outline, clawed at the base, the edges undulated, and as well as the
- bars across the sepals of a light chestnut or bronzy brown colour with
- a narrow margin of pale yellow; _lip_ large, three-lobed, the middle
- lobe large, transversely emarginate, bright yellow, with a belt of
- confluent parallel oblong chestnut brown blotches just within the
- margin, the lateral lobes auriculæform, obsolete, yellow; the crests
- of the lip consist of two pairs of tubercles with the intermediate
- space warted. _Column_ furnished with dwarf roundish wings.
-
- Oncidium Gardneri, _Lindley_, _London Journal of Botany_, ii., 662;
- _Id._ _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Oncidium_, 19; _Reichenbach fil._, in
- _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi. 728.
-
-
-This charming Orchid is very nearly related to _Oncidium curtum_, _O.
-prætextum_, and _O. amictum_. It belongs to an extensive genus of
-Vandeous Orchids, many of the species of which are exceedingly beautiful
-on account of the brilliancy of their flowers, which are mostly of a
-bright yellow colour, often prettily spotted, and generally produced in
-graceful spikes or panicles. No collection should be without some of the
-best and most ornamental of them. The figure which we now publish
-represents a very charming Brazilian species, one of the best forms of
-the plant we have seen. Our drawing was made from a specimen in the
-select and varied collection of W. Vanner, Esq., of Chislehurst, who was
-kind enough to permit our artist to avail himself of it. This collection
-occupies several houses which are respectively filled with species
-belonging to the different groups or classes, and among which are some
-very rare specimens, all well cultivated by Mr. Milford, the gardener,
-who, for many years has been a successful grower of Orchids.
-
-_Oncidium Gardneri_ is a compact growing plant, furnished with dark
-green pseudobulbs, which are from two to three inches in height. The
-foliage is also dark green in colour, and about six inches in length.
-The flowers are very freely produced in branching spikes or panicles,
-and are generally developed in June and July, lasting for several weeks
-in perfection. The sepals and petals are brown, narrowly margined with
-pale yellow. The lip is large, of a bright golden-yellow colour,
-margined with bright brown oblong parallel blotches. The flowers,
-moreover, are deliciously scented. There are many varieties of this
-plant, all of which are worth growing, since they take up but little
-space, and when grown in quantity, produce a good effect. We saw about
-fifty spikes of the different varieties, some in bloom, and others
-showing, in the collection of C. G. Hill, Esq., of Arnot Hill, near
-Nottingham, and we shall not soon forget the effect produced, as the
-group of plants appeared to be one mass of bloom. By cultivating plants
-of this character space may be economised, since they grow as freely on
-blocks as in baskets. We also find them to thrive well in small pans
-suspended from the roof of the Cattleya-house or in any situation
-affording them the same temperature, with very slight shading from the
-sun. They are best grown near the glass, so that they may get all the
-light possible. As a root medium, a mixture of good sphagnum moss and
-fibrous peat suits them best, but the plants must have good drainage,
-since they must be kept moist during the growing season, though when at
-rest a more limited supply will suffice—just sufficient being given to
-keep the bulbs plump, for on the other hand, it is not a plant that
-likes to be dried up. The bulbs sometimes shrivel when they flower too
-freely; if this is observed do not allow the blossoms to remain too long
-on the plants, as they will keep a good time in water when cut from the
-plant. Being of a graceful character they are well adapted for the
-decoration of drawing-room stands, in which, if intermixed with foliage
-and other flowers, they help to produce a very charming effect. Indeed
-no flowers are so useful as Orchids for decorative purposes, as they
-last so long when cut.
-
-
-Lælia Dominiana rosea.—This is the finest hybrid _Lælia_ that has come
-under our notice. It is the result of a cross between _Cattleya
-Dowiana_, and _C. exoniensis_, and the parentage is very evident in the
-novel form thus obtained. The lip is like that of _C. Dowiana_, of a
-rich purple-crimson, crisped at the margin; the sepals and petals are of
-a pale lilac colour. It is a most beautiful _Lælia_, and is named in
-honour of Mr. Dominy, who has been most successful in raising seedling
-Orchids. There have been many wonderful hybrids brought out by the
-Messrs. Veitch and Sons, through the indefatigable exertions of Mr.
-Dominy, who has long been known as one of the oldest and most successful
-of Orchid growers, and whose name will be kept in remembrance as long as
-Orchids are cultivated.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 13.
- DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM.]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM.
- [Plate 13.]
- Native of Burmah.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) about a foot long,
- cuneately-fusiform, tapering below into a longish stalk-like base,
- bluntly angulate, bearing one or two pairs of leaves at the top, and
- invested below with close ovate membranaceous bracts. _Leaves_
- somewhat coriaceous, oblong-ligulate, cuneate at the base and acute at
- the apex. _Flower-spikes_ ten to twelve inches long, bracteate at the
- base, terminal or nearly terminal, produced freely on the two-year-old
- stems. _Flowers_ large, showy, numerous, of a brilliant yellow;
- _sepals_ ligulate acute, bright golden yellow; _petals_ broader,
- cuneately-oblong, obtusely-acute, of the same colour as the sepals;
- _lip_ (labellum) deep bright yellow, marked on the disk with a broad
- curved band of rich dark sanguineous purple, almost black, cucullate,
- cuneate-oblong at the base, where it is folded over the column,
- roundish and emarginate in front, undulate and ciliolate at the
- margin, densely asperulous with erect acute papillæ forming a close
- crispy covering over the surface.
-
- Dendrobium suavissimum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- N.S., i. 406; v. 756.
-
-
-This fine Dendrobe, of which Reichenbach remarks:—“I believe it is one
-of the best _Dendrobia_ ever imported,” was introduced in 1873 by Mr.
-Low, of Clapton, as recorded in the _Gardeners’ Chronicle_ for 1874
-(N.S., i. 406), where it was first described. It is again referred to in
-the same publication in 1876 (N.S., v. 756), where the German Professor
-remarks:—“The species stands indeed, as has been stated before, close to
-_Dendrobium chrysotoxum_. The flowers are smaller, the fringe is made by
-much shorter papillæ, the chin is shorter, the petals are narrower, the
-lip does not expand to an open mass, but its lateral parts keep bent
-over the base, thus forming a cucullate body so as to allow the
-beautiful dark blackish spot to be seen, and which contrasts so well
-with the deep yellow of the flower. There are also a few blackish
-streaks on each side of the base of the lip.”
-
-_Dendrobium suavissimum_ is one of the most beautiful species of the
-yellow-flowered section of this vast genus, and one that is much admired
-and sought after by Orchid growers. The accompanying plate is a good
-representation of the plant, and from this it will be seen that it is
-one of the most attractive of summer-flowering Orchids. Our sketch was
-taken from a specimen exhibited by us during the present year, at the
-Royal Botanic Society’s Garden in the Regent’s Park.
-
-Formerly this was a very rare plant, but within the last few years it
-has been sent home in considerable quantities by collectors, and it has
-in consequence become comparatively cheap. In growth it resembles
-_Dendrobium chrysotoxum_, but the flowers are much more showy; in _D.
-chrysotoxum_ they are wholly yellow, whereas in this species there is a
-large sanguineous purple blotch on the lip, forming a striking contrast
-to the rich golden yellow of the sepals and petals; in addition to this
-they are sweet-scented. The plant is of free-flowering habit, and when
-well-grown produces finely-developed flower-spikes. We have seen as many
-as three spikes proceeding from a single stem.
-
-In habit of growth _Dendrobium suavissimum_ is very compact. The stems
-or pseudobulbs are about a foot in height, and furnished with one or two
-pairs of dark green leaves at the apex. The flower-spikes proceed from
-the tops of the two-year-old bulbs, and average from ten to twelve
-inches in length. The stems will sometimes produce spikes for several
-years in succession. The flowers last from two to three weeks in
-perfection if kept from damp.
-
-Like other Dendrobiums, this species is found growing on the trunks and
-branches of trees in positions where it gets plenty of light and air.
-With us it thrives well grown in a basket suspended near the roof, so as
-to obtain all the light and air possible; the bulbs thus become well
-matured. The best material for growing it in is sound sweet fibrous
-peat, with a good supply of drainage. The plants should be watered
-liberally at the roots during the period of growth, which is after they
-have done blooming. The temperature that suits them best is that of the
-East India-house while they are making their growth; but when the growth
-is completed very little water should be given them until they begin to
-show their spikes in spring, when it may be increased, as it will assist
-them to produce stronger spikes. The plant is propagated by division;
-two or more old bulbs should be taken off with a young growth in front.
-Insects should be well looked after, and when found be speedily removed.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 14.
- TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA.]
-
-
-
-
- TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA.
- [Plate 14.]
- Native of Central America.
-
-
- Epiphytal, _Pseudobulbs_ roundish-oblong or obcordate, thin, _i.e._,
- very much compressed, clustered, monophyllous. _Leaves_ broadly
- oblong, acute, leathery in texture, almost sessile, of a pale green
- colour. _Scapes_ radical, two to four-flowered, pendent. _Flowers_
- large, showy, and fragrant, each emerging from the axil of a thin
- ovate bract. _Sepals_ linear-lanceolate, acute, somewhat undulated,
- spreading, and, as well as the similarly-formed _petals_, of a pure
- white colour; _lip_ large, rolled up closely at the base, suddenly
- expanded upwards so as to become funnel-shaped, and then spread out
- into a large oblique limb, which is three-lobed, with the edges wavy
- and crisped, the middle lobe larger, slightly deflexed and emarginate
- or bilobed: _Column_ elongate, terete, bearing at the back of the
- anther a hood of three fimbriated lobes.
-
- Trichopilia suavis, _Lindley_, in _Paxton’s Flower Garden_, i. 44; 53,
- t. 11; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4654; _Van Houtte_, _Flore
- des Serres_, viii. 761; _Lemaire_, _Jardin Fleuriste_, iii. 277;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, iii.
- 553, et vi. 681.
-
- _Var._ ALBA: flowers pure white, the lip with a yellow blotch in the
- throat.
-
- Trichopilia suavis alba, _Hort._
-
-
-This plant belongs to a small genus of Vandeous Orchids, some of the
-species of which are exceedingly pretty, and well worthy of a place in
-every collection. Dr. Lindley calls _Trichopilia suavis_ “a delicious
-Orchid,” and says that “the flowers emit the most delicate odour of
-hawthorn.” The fragrant and richly spotted flowers make it a great
-favourite amongst growers, and no doubt it is one of the best and most
-showy of the species yet known. The variety _alba_, of which we have now
-the pleasure of publishing an authentic figure, the first which has
-appeared, is new to cultivation, and is also extremely rare. Our plate
-was prepared from a specimen which flowered in the fine collection of
-Dr. G. Boddaert, of Ghent, Belgium, who kindly allowed us to have a
-drawing made from it.
-
-_Trichopilia suavis alba_ was imported, with the typical _T. suavis_,
-and is a compact evergreen plant, with foliage attaining from six to ten
-inches in height, and three inches in width, and of a light green
-colour. The pendent flower-scapes are produced from the base of the
-bulbs, and bear two or three, or sometimes four, flowers, which thus
-hang over the sides of the pan or basket in which the plant is
-cultivated. When suspended from the roof of the house they thus have a
-very charming appearance. The sepals and petals are pure white; the lip
-is white, with a pale yellow stain in the throat. The plant blossoms
-during May and June, and lasts about two weeks in perfection. We have
-flowered this variety during the present year, and it was very much
-admired by every one who saw it.
-
-_Trichopilia suavis alba_ was exhibited by J. S. Bockett, Esq., of
-Stamford Hill, at one of the meetings of the Royal Horticultural
-Society, and was awarded a First Class Certificate of Merit.
-
-The Cattleya house is the best position for the plant, but it should be
-placed at the coolest end. It will flourish either in a basket or pot,
-in a compost of fibrous peat, with good drainage, but it must be well
-elevated above the rim, so that the flowers may hang down according to
-their natural habit. Propagation is effected by division of the plant
-after blooming; two or three bulbs should be severed from the original
-plant, or more if a larger specimen is desired.
-
-
-Aërides odoratum majus.—This fine old Orchid was shown by Mrs. Arbuthnot
-at the Chislehurst Exhibition, on the 16th of July, and in this case it
-was a most wonderful example of good cultivation. The plant was one mass
-of its beautiful racemes of flowers, about fifty in number, many of them
-measuring fifteen inches in length. The flowers are white, tipped with
-pink, and are produced in long graceful spikes which overhang the
-foliage and produce a most charming effect. The perfume given off by
-this variety is very delightful, and was in this case most refreshing to
-those who passed by, many of whom wondered where the pleasant odour came
-from, as it was shown among the stove and greenhouse plants. This plant
-was two and a half feet in diameter, and three feet in height. Great
-credit is due to Mr. Mitchell, the gardener, for his skill in
-cultivating so fine a specimen. We often wonder why this plant is not
-more popular at our exhibitions, especially as it is easy to grow,
-taking very few years to make a good specimen, and being purchasable in
-small sizes for a few shillings. When not in bloom, it is, moreover, an
-attractive plant.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 15.
- VANDA PARISHII.]
-
-
-
-
- VANDA PARISHII.
- [Plate 15.]
- Native of Moulmein.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Plant_ evergreen, dwarf. _Stem_ a span high,
- stout-growing, densely leafy. _Leaves_ distichous, broadly
- ligulate-obtuse, with an unequal bilobed apex, very stout and fleshy
- in texture. _Scape_ stiff, erect, bearing a spike of several showy
- blossoms. _Flowers_ large, distinct in character, prettily spotted;
- _sepals_ and _petals_ cuneate-oblong, acute, somewhat undulated, of a
- greenish-yellow colour, decorated with numerous round reddish-brown
- spots, white inside at the base; _lip_ furnished with linear-ligulate
- auricles at the base, and produced into a short gibbous spur, white,
- with a pair of orange-coloured stripes, the larger anterior part
- violaceous, rhomboid, gibbous below the apex, with a keel along the
- median line, and a violet-coloured conical callus at the base.
- _Column_ white, the caudicle ligulate, the glandule triangular.
-
- Vanda Parishii, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1870,
- 890.
-
-
-This glorious thing, as Professor Reichenbach calls it, was first
-discovered by the Rev. C. Parish in 1862, and then lost sight of, but
-was rediscovered in 1870, from which discovery, we presume, the first
-plants were obtained by Mr. S. Low, of the Clapton Nursery; since then
-we have received living plants of it on several occasions, and the plant
-now figured was from one of these importations. It is a small and
-distinct growing _Vanda_, and is well worthy of a place in every
-collection on account of its compact habit of growth, which resembles
-that of a _Phalænopsis_. The Vandas are for the most part large growers,
-but, as will be seen from the accompanying figure, _Vanda Parishii_ is
-an exception to the general rule. Our plate was prepared from a plant
-which bloomed in the collection of the Right Hon. J. Chamberlain, M.P.,
-of Birmingham—a gentleman who is making a grand collection of Orchids,
-and is a great admirer of them. The plant above referred to was a
-well-grown specimen, bearing a good spike of flowers.
-
-The leaves are about eight inches in length by four inches in breadth,
-and of a lively green colour; and the flower-spike reaches from ten to
-twelve inches in length, the flowers being as large as those of _Vanda
-gigantea_ and _V. lissochiloides_. The sepals and petals are
-greenish-yellow, freely spotted with reddish-brown; the base of the lip,
-which is keeled, is white, the front lobe violet-mauve, faintly margined
-with white. Altogether it is a very distinct species, and is very
-strongly scented, with a peculiar odour; it lasts for several weeks in
-bloom.
-
-_Vanda Parishii_ requires about the same treatment as other Vandas, and
-should be grown in the East India-house, in sphagnum moss, with plenty
-of drainage. It would appear never to attain more than about a foot in
-height, being unusually short and stout in growth. It is best grown in a
-basket or pot suspended from the roof, and should be well shaded from
-the sun. It revels in a good supply of water during the growing period,
-which extends over summer and autumn; but in winter only just sufficient
-water should be given to keep the moss damp, for if allowed to become
-over-dry it will shrivel, having no pseudobulbs to support it. Thrips
-and scale are sometimes found on this plant; these should be diligently
-searched for and destroyed, as the leaves, being of a fleshy nature,
-would otherwise soon become disfigured by the onslaught of these pests.
-
-
-Orchids at Arnot Hill.—We append a few notes on the Orchids at Arnot
-Hill, near Nottingham, the residence of C. G. Hill, Esq., a gentleman
-who is forming a fine collection of these plants, and one which we have
-no doubt will in time take a foremost rank, as Mr. Hill is specially
-fond of good Orchids, and intends to grow only those which are most
-worthy of cultivation. There is a fine range of houses built to suit the
-cool, the intermediate, and the East Indian kinds, and the arrangements
-are all that can be desired, having been made the chief study. Of the
-genus _Odontoglossum_, we found at the time of our visit, some few
-months since, there was a large collection, including some hundreds of
-plants of _O. Alexandræ_ and _O. Pescatorei_, amongst which were many
-fine specimens. There was also a fine lot of Masdevallias; the
-Bull’s-blood variety of _M. Harryana_ was in splendid condition, and
-there were many other fine varieties. We noticed a house full of
-_Oncidium Gardneri_ mixed with _O. prætextum_ and _O. curtum_, the
-plants bearing about fifty spikes, the greater part of which were in
-bloom, the flowers deliciously fragrant, and presenting a beautiful
-picture, as the bright yellow lip with its definite margin of brown
-shows off the flowers to great advantage. In the Cattleya house there
-were many fine plants which were rooting and growing well. We noticed a
-good specimen plant of the new _Cattleya Trianæ Russelliana_, also of
-the rare _C. exoniensis_, of the beautiful _C. Reineckiana_, of the best
-variety of _C. labiata_ showing flower-sheaths, and many others.
-_Oncidium incurvum_ was beautifully in bloom, and with its snow-white
-lip had a very pretty appearance.
-
-In the next house we noticed three good plants of _Dendrochilum
-filiforme_ finely in flower; one plant had fifty of its graceful spikes
-of yellow blossoms hanging among the foliage, and the other two plants
-were equally good.
-
-In the adjoining house there were many fine East Indian Orchids. We
-noticed four plants of the rare _Aërides Schröderi_, and a wonderful
-variety of _A. Lobbii_ in full bloom, with a fine branching spike—one of
-the best we have seen, and one of which we hope at some future time to
-furnish our readers with a figure. There was a good collection of East
-Indian Orchids being got together, and from the appearance and health of
-the young stock they seemed likely to thrive well. We were glad to see
-this class of Orchids so well appreciated, as there can be no doubt that
-the East Indian kinds are among the richest and finest of the family,
-and they will flourish in a lower temperature than most people
-imagine.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 16.
- CATTELYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII.
- [Plate 16.]
- Native of the Island of St. Catherine, Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) elongate, fusiform, many-jointed,
- two to two and a half feet in height, bearing a pair of leaves at the
- apex. _Leaves_ broadly-oblong obtuse, dark green, coriaceous. _Scape_
- terminal, issuing from a short ovate acute ancipitous spathe developed
- between the leaves on the more vigorous stems, and bearing a
- many-flowered raceme, with small lance-shaped bracts. _Flowers_
- fleshy, in dense racemes, “sometimes as large as a man’s head;”
- _sepals_ cuneate-oblong acute, the lateral ones subfalcate, of a light
- cinnamon or orange-tinted brown, spotted thickly with crimson;
- _petals_ similar in form and colour, but rather broader and wavy;
- _lip_ three-lobed, the lateral lobes semi-ovate, acute in front,
- rolled over the column, the middle lobe cuneate-flabellate and
- bilobed, of a bright magenta colour, the disk tuberculate with lines
- of elevated papillae.
-
- Cattleya guttata Leopoldii, _Linden and Reichenbach fil._,
- _Pescatorea_, t. 43.
-
- Cattleya Leopoldii, _Hort. Verschaffelt_; _Lemaire_, _Illustration
- Horticole_, ii. 69.
-
- Epidendrum elatius, var., _Reichenbach fil._, _MSS._; _Id._, in
- _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi. 319.
-
-
-This noble plant is remarkable for the large mass of richly-coloured
-flagrant blossoms which terminates the flower-scape, and is very much
-superior to the old _Cattleya guttata_, which was introduced to our
-collections some fifty years ago, and of which a fine figure was
-published in the _Transactions of the Horticultural Society_, ix. t. 8.
-The variety _Leopoldii_ differs from the type, in its much larger
-flowers, and in the rich olive or reddish-brown colour of its sepals and
-petals, which are freely spotted with dark crimson. _C. guttata
-Leopoldii_ is, moreover, of much more recent introduction than the type,
-having been imported to the gardens of Belgium by M. Ambroise
-Verschaffelt, through his collector, M. Devos, in 1850. It was by him
-dedicated to his Majesty the late King of the Belgians. As will be seen
-from our illustration, it is a very great improvement on the typical
-form. We are indebted to H. Shaw, Esq., of Buxton, for the opportunity
-of securing our figure, the plant having flowered in his choice and
-valuable collection during the month of August in the present year,
-producing a spike of eleven fine flowers, each measuring three inches in
-diameter. This must be regarded as a very valuable Orchid, since it
-blossoms during the late summer months, when flowers are comparatively
-scarce in our Orchid houses; while for exhibition purposes, again, it is
-of great value.
-
-The plant now before us is a strong grower, like _Cattleya guttata_, and
-sometimes produces as many as thirty flowers in a spike. A plant bearing
-a spike of this noble character was exhibited some years ago by Mr.
-Page, then gardener to the late W. Leaf, Esq., of Streatham, and was a
-most wonderful object. The stems grow from twenty to thirty inches in
-height, and are furnished at the apex with a pair of broad leathery
-leaves of a dark green colour. It produces its flowers from the top of
-the bulb after it has finished its growth. The sepals and petals are of
-a lively cinnamon-brown, spotted with rich deep crimson; while the lip
-is of a bright magenta, with the basal lobes of a paler rose colour. The
-blossoms last some two or three weeks in perfection.
-
-_Cattleya guttata Leopoldii_ requires the same treatment as that
-recommended for other Cattleyas under Plates 3 and 6. Being a
-tall-growing plant, pot culture will be found to suit it best.
-
-
-M. Massange’s Orchids.—Château de Baillonville, the country seat of
-Mons. D. Massange de Louvrex, is situated in the Ardennes, about 6 miles
-from Marche, and some 80 miles from Brussels. The collection of Orchids
-at the Château is very large, one of the finest in Belgium. In the house
-devoted to East Indian Orchids there are some grand specimens of Vandas,
-Aërides, and Saccolabiums. During a visit in July last, we noticed in
-bloom a very fine variety of _Vanda tricolor planilabris_, the flowers
-of which were very large, with fine broad sepals and petals, the
-markings being well defined and the colour bright. Here was also a grand
-plant of _V. Cathcartii_, about four feet high, in perfect health.
-Cypripediums are, moreover, treated with great success in this house;
-indeed, we noticed some plants of _C. caudatum_ with extraordinary
-growths upon them, one plant having leaves as much as eighteen inches
-long, and quite distinct in the character of its growth, being almost
-erect. In the Cattleya house were some fine examples of _Cattleya
-labiata_, the true autumn-flowering variety; also _C. Warnerii_ in
-abundance, and _C. Mendelii_. _Zygopetalum Gautieri_, the best variety,
-with dark blue flowers, was also open. _Cælogyne Massangeana_, had a
-spike of twenty-three flowers; this species is a grand subject for
-treating as a basket plant, the spikes being of a drooping character; we
-have seen it bearing as many as twenty-seven flowers on a spike. There
-were, moreover, in the same house, some enormous plants of _Cattleya
-Trianæ_, marvels of cultivation, with good specimens of _Lælia elegans_,
-_L. anceps_, _L. Perrinii alba_, _L. elegans prasiata_, _L.
-Stelzneriana_, _Cattleya Dowiana_, &c., all in perfect health, and doing
-well. In the Odontoglossum houses there was not much in flower, but the
-plants were looking remarkably well and making enormous bulbs. Here we
-noticed the largest plant of _Restrepia antennifera_ we have ever seen;
-the plant probably measured as much as eighteen inches across, and had
-some hundreds of leaves. Masdevallias were well represented, and there
-were some good varieties in flower: amongst others was a grand plant of
-_M. macrura_, as well as _M. Houtteana_ and _M. trochilus_, forming good
-specimens. We saw a splendid specimen of _Odontoglossum citrosmum
-roseum_ with nine flower-spikes, a marvel of good cultivation.
-Altogether, we believe, this is the most select collection of Orchids in
-Belgium, and great credit is due to Mr. Wilkie, the gardener, for the
-way in which he cultivates his plants; his employer, however, spares no
-expense in providing the appurtenances necessary to good cultivation.—H.
-Williams.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 17.
- PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM.]
-
-
-
-
- PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM.
- [Plate 17.]
- Native of Ecuador.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ none or consisting of a short crown or growing
- point from which the leaves and stout fibrous roots proceed. _Leaves_
- tufted, numerous, imbricated at the base, erect or spreading,
- lanceolate, acute, twelve to fifteen inches long, and about two inches
- wide, deep green above, paler beneath, thin but firm in texture.
- _Flowers_ large and showy, measuring about three inches in diameter,
- the peduncles springing from the axils of the lower leaves; _dorsal
- sepal_ obovate-oblong, acute, about an inch and a half long, white in
- the lower half, and of a velvety chocolate purple in the upper
- portion; _lateral sepals_ more distinctly oblong, being less narrowed
- at the base, acute, and attached obliquely to the chin of the flower;
- _petals_ obovate-oblong, like the dorsal sepal, acute, white, deeply
- tipped with chocolate purple; _lip_ distinctly stalked, with a sharply
- incurved claw, normally trowel-shaped when spread out, three-lobed,
- the lateral lobes prolonged, acute, and incurved so as to meet the
- base of the column, the middle lobe obtusely cordate, sulcate, with
- the edge recurved so as to bring it to a narrow triangular outline; it
- is white, with the whole surface, except the margin, covered with
- short purple-tipped papillæ, or ‘styliform processes,’ ranged in
- combined lines; on the _disk_ is a large semicircular lamellate ruff
- or frill, extending to the base, and consisting of numerous (about 20)
- erect folds or lamellæ, which are white below and of a deep rich
- purple along the edge of the folds, forming a series of stripes
- extending inwards to the base of the lip. _Column_ stoutish, angulate
- on both sides at the base, semiterete, dark purple, three-fourths of
- an inch long, projected over the basal ruff.
-
- Pecatorea Klabochorum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- N.S. xi., 684; xii., 167; _Paxton’s Flower Garden_, re-issue, t. 21.
-
- Zygopetalum Klabochorum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’
- Chronicle_, N.S. xi., 684.
-
-
-Until quite recently but few species of _Pescatorea_ were known in
-cultivation. Latterly, however, several new ones have been introduced
-into this country, and Orchid cultivators have now more numerous
-opportunities of admiring the beautiful plants which are referred to
-this genus.
-
-_Pescatorea Klabochorum_ was introduced from Ecuador, by Franz Klaboch,
-a nephew of Herr Roezl, one of the most successful plant collectors of
-our time, and is named in commemoration of him and his surviving
-brother, also a traveller and collector, The first plants, brought home
-some four or five years since, were purchased by Messrs. James Veitch
-and Sons, of Chelsea, and were distributed by them; but since then it
-has been several times re-introduced, and is now to be found in numerous
-collections. Several varieties have been already noticed. It appears to
-have been first flowered in 1878 in England, by John Day, Esq., and in
-Scotland by J. Gair, Esq., and again in 1879 in the noble collection of
-Sir Trevor Lawrence Bart., M.P. The drawing reproduced in our plate was
-prepared from a plant which flowered last August in our own collection,
-and represents a very fair variety. A fine variety, which bloomed with
-W. Cobb, Esq., of Silverdale Lodge, Sydenham, is figured in the revised
-edition of _Paxton’s Flower Garden_.
-
-The treatment which we find to suit this plant the best is to place it
-in the Cattleya-house at the cool end. It should be potted in a compost
-of peat and sphagnum moss, with a few lumps of charcoal added; and a
-liberal supply of water should be given during the growing season, this
-being gradually decreased as the winter approaches. The plants should be
-well elevated above the rim of the pot, so as to allow any superfluous
-water to drain away from the crown.
-
-We do not find that noxious insects attack the species of _Pescatorea_
-in any great degree. The scale will sometimes take up its abode on the
-young growths, but when found this can easily be removed by the use of a
-brush or sponge and water.
-
-We saw a fine lot of Pescatoreas and Bolleas in splendid condition at
-Falkirk in September last, in the collection of J. Gair, Esq. These
-plants are not so easy of cultivation as many Orchids, their treatment
-not being generally so well understood; but this was not the case in
-this instance, for they were perfect plants, well cultivated, and
-blooming freely. We noticed more especially a fine species named in
-honour of Mr. Gair, which bears the richest coloured flowers we have
-ever seen; of this we hope to give our readers an illustration when it
-flowers next year. These plants were grown at the end of a house where a
-mixed collection of Orchids, such as Cattleyas, Dendrobiums, Aërides,
-and Saccolabiums, were doing well. Being a large house, the plants could
-be treated according to their several requirements, whereas in a small
-house the varied collection would not be found to do so well.
-
-
-Vanda cœrulea.—This _Vanda_, whose flowers are of such a distinct and
-beautiful colour, is no doubt one of the finest Orchids in cultivation.
-We have had the pleasure of seeing the plant we are about to mention for
-two successive years blooming in great perfection in the collection of
-the Marquis of Lothian, at Newbattle, Dalkeith. The plant, which stands
-one foot in height, and is well furnished with good foliage, produced
-two spikes of its charming flowers, fourteen on each spike. The sepals
-and petals are of a delicate lavender blue colour, barred and veined
-with a deeper tint of the same; the lip is small, and of a dark violet
-colour. It was a most showy object, and the amount of bloom upon it was
-extraordinary, considering the small size of the plant. We have seen
-larger specimens, but never one that has pleased us so well. Great
-credit is due to Mr. Priest for producing such a plant, which is
-increasing in size, and in the number of its flowers every year. There
-Is a good collection of Orchids being formed at this place, where the
-houses are suitable for their cultivation, and the plants are well
-looked after and cared for.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 18.
- BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA.]
-
-
-
-
- BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA.
- [Plate 18.]
- Native of Demerara.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ elliptic-oblong, compressed, monophyllous.
- _Leaves_ evergreen, broadish oblong, acute, somewhat channelled.
- _Racemes_ pendulous, issuing from the base of the pseudobulbs, three
- to five-flowered. _Flowers_ two and a half inches long, white,
- semitransparent, with a delightful violet-like fragrance; _sepals_
- projected forwards in the plane of the lip, the _dorsal_ one
- obovate-oblong, emarginate, the _anterior_ one bifid, linear-oblong,
- about half the length of the lip, curved sharply forwards, and
- channelled so as to closely invest the spur of the lip; _petals_
- parallel with the sepals and lip, obovate, oblique, the base
- encircling the column, spreading at the apex; _lip_ parallel with the
- column, with a channelled claw, dilated and bilobed in front, cuneate
- below, decorated in the centre with a yellow bar, the disk furnished
- with four or five yellowish lamellæ on each side, of which the
- anterior ones are longer, the spur short, enclosed in the anterior
- sepal. _Column_ smooth, slender, clavate, with two fleshy teeth at the
- apex.
-
- Burlingtonia candida, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, t. 1927; _Id._
- _Paxton’s Flower Garden_, i. 158; _Rand’s Orchids_, 179; _Floral
- Magazine_, t. 548.
-
- Rodriquezia candida, _Bateman in litteris_; _Reichenbach fil._, in
- _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi., 695.
-
-
-The genus _Burlingtonia_ was dedicated to the amiable and accomplished
-Countess of Burlington, and contains a few small-growing but very
-beautiful species, which come mostly from Brazil. The plant now under
-notice, which was the earliest introduction, and the type of the genus,
-was imported from Demerara, in British Guiana, so long since as 1834, by
-James Bateman, Esq., now a veteran in the study and cultivation of
-Orchids. It is consequently well-known to the growers and collectors of
-this class of plants.
-
-As a subject for growing in a basket suspended from the roof, this
-species has few, if any, equals. When grown in this way, the pendent
-spikes of white flowers hanging over the sides of the basket produce a
-charming and distinct appearance.
-
-The plant is compact-growing, and, like all the species of
-_Burlingtonia_, is evergreen. The pendent flower-spikes are produced
-from the sides of the pseudobulbs, and each bear from four to six
-flowers, which are white, marked with yellow in the throat, and have a
-slight but pleasant odour of violets.
-
-_Burlingtonia candida_ should be grown in the Cattleya-house, in a
-basket or pan, suspended from the roof. Sphagnum moss, with a good
-drainage composed of crocks, is the best material for its roots, and the
-bulbs should be well elevated above the rim of the pan or basket. This
-plant delights in a plentiful supply of water at the roots—in fact, it
-should never be allowed to get dry, as it requires but little rest. It
-is propagated by division of the pseudobulbs.
-
-Few insects attack this plant. The scale is the most frequent intruder,
-and this is easily removed by the use of a sponge and clean water.
-
-
-Ferguslie House, Paisley.—We have been in the habit of visiting the
-gardens of T. Coates, Esq., for many years past, and have always been
-surprised to see the Orchids grown by Mr. Thompson, the gardener who has
-charge of them. There is no house specially devoted to the cultivation
-of this class of plants, but they are grown in different houses
-intermixed with stove-flowering plants, foliage plants, and ferns, and
-in no instance have we seen East Indian Orchids grown to greater
-perfection. We have from time to time witnessed the progress of the
-specimens we are about to enumerate—in fact, we have seen them grown on
-from quite small plants purchased some ten or twelve years ago, and the
-size to which they have attained during this time, viz., up to the first
-week in September, 1881, will no doubt astonish some of our readers, and
-convince them it is not true that Orchids cannot be cultivated unless
-they have houses set apart for their especial benefit. In order to show
-the error of this conclusion, we will name a few of the Specimens that
-we saw growing on one side of a span-roofed house, with stove plants on
-the centre stage. _Aërides suavissimum_, grown from a small plant, is
-now a fine specimen three feet high, having four stems, and in perfect
-health, the foliage reaching down to the pot; it bore twenty spikes of
-its long racemes of flowers, many of them having thirty-seven flowers on
-a spike, and was one of the most beautiful objects that have come under
-our notice. There is also another plant produced from the same specimen,
-bearing twelve spikes of its lovely blossoms, which were in full beauty.
-_A. Warnerii_ is a well-grown specimen, having several stems two to
-three feet in height, and this blooms freely every year. _A. virens_, is
-also a fine plant, with three stems three feet in height. _A. affine_ is
-a wonderful specimen of good cultivation; it is generally of slow
-growth, but in this case it has not proved so. _A. crispum_ again, is
-well cultivated, having two stems nearly three feet high, and perfect,
-and there is also a second plant of the same, three feet in height. _A.
-Fieldingii_ is a fine specimen. _Vanda tricolor_, a well-furnished
-plant, and _V. suavis_ four feet high, with three stems, are both
-beautifully grown. A plant of the curious long-tailed _Angræcum
-sesquipedale_, from eighteen inches to two feet in height, has four
-stems, and is undoubtedly the best grown specimen we have seen.
-_Phalænopsis Schilleriana_, a good specimen, with seven of its
-beautifully-marked leaves, is growing suspended over the centre table.
-There are other choice Orchids, such as _Cypripediums_, _Cœlogynes_, &c.
-We also noticed, grown in two other houses, intermixed with various
-plants, beautiful specimens of _Lælia Turnerii_, _L. elegans_, _L.
-anceps_, _Cattleya Trianæ_, and others. There are also well-grown
-examples of _Calanthe Masuca_, of _Dendrobium_, and other good Orchids;
-but space will not admit of these being here enumerated.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 19.
- ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA.]
-
-
-
-
- ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA.
- [Plate 19.]
- Native of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ large, ovate-oblong, four to six inches high,
- furrowed when mature. _Leaves_ several, growing from the apex of the
- younger pseudobulbs, broadly lanceolate, acute, two to two and a half
- feet long and four to six inches broad, strongly ribbed and plaited.
- _Flower-scapes_ radical, one-flowered, shorter than the leaves,
- clothed below with imbricated sheathing bracts. _Flowers_ large,
- fleshy, nearly erect; _sepals_ roundish with an apiculus, strongly
- convex, conniving into a semi-globular shape, which with their nearly
- erect position gives them a somewhat tulip-like appearance, creamy
- yellow outside, and of a deep sanguineous red on the inner surface;
- _petals_ similar in form and colour to the sepals; _lip_ clawed,
- subconvolute, three-lobed, the lateral lobes broadish and obtuse, the
- middle portion hairy, funnel-shaped and two-lipped, the front lobe
- tridentate, and with the middle part crimson blotched and barred with
- white. _Column_ entire, creamy white, spotted with crimson.
-
- Anguloa Ruckerii sanguinea, _Lindley_ in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1852,
- 271; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5384; _Williams’ Orchid
- Growers’ Manual_, ed. iv., 90; ed. v., 92.
-
-
-The subject of our present illustration is an exceedingly rare plant,
-and is met with in only a few collections. In its habit of growth and
-general appearance it resembles the type _Anguloa Ruckerii_, but it is
-very distinct in colour, and is altogether a more desirable plant, the
-flowers being of a much richer colour—a deep rich blood-red spotted with
-a darker tint of the same—whereas in the original _A. Ruckerii_ they are
-of a fine orange colour spotted with dark brown.
-
-The growth of this plant is very majestic, producing as it does bulbs
-four to six inches high, and leaves from eighteen to thirty inches long,
-by four to six inches broad. The flowers, which proceed from the base of
-the pseudobulb, are erect, tulip-shaped, and of great substance and
-size, lasting as long as four weeks in perfection. _A. Ruckerii
-sanguinea_ is a very suitable plant for exhibition purposes on account
-of the distinct appearance produced by its massive flowers when
-intermixed with other Orchids.
-
-The temperature best suited for this plant is that of the cool
-Orchid-house. We have found it succeed well in pots in a compost of good
-fibrous peat, with plenty of drainage. It requires a good season of
-rest, during which period the plant should be kept rather dry until it
-begins to show renewed signs of growth, when the supply of water may be
-increased. It is propagated by division of the pseudobulbs just before
-they start into growth. We are indebted for the opportunity of figuring
-this plant to Dr. Boddaert, of Ghent, Belgium, in whose collection it
-flowered last July.
-
-A fine figure of the original _Anguloa Ruckerii_ will be found in
-_Warner’s Select Orchidaceous Plants_, 2nd series, t. 10; and it is also
-figured in the _Botanical Register_, 1846, t. 41; and in _Moore’s
-Illustrations of Orchidaceous Plants_, art. Auguloa, plate 3.
-
-
-Cattleya Dowiana.—We have received a very beautiful flower of this grand
-Cattleya, by post, from R. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn, in whose fine
-collection the plant has been grown. Mr. Osman, the gardener, says, “we
-had three imported plants last year, and two of them are now in bloom.”
-We were pleased to hear this, as _Cattleya Dowiana_ is considered a
-difficult plant to flower, though we have seen many plants blooming this
-season. There is no doubt that its cultivation is becoming better
-understood. The variety above referred to has a large lip of a most
-intense dark purple, striped and reticulated with golden yellow, in a
-very prominent manner. The sepals and petals are large, of good
-substance, of a bright nankeen colour, and produce a very pleasing and
-altogether distinct appearance. This is, undoubtedly, one of the most
-distinct and beautiful of all Cattleyas. There is a grand figure of this
-species in the 2nd series of _Warner’s Select Orchidaceous Plants_, t.
-27.—B. S. W.
-
-
-Cypripedium Spicerianum.—We were pleased to receive last month a
-splendid bloom of this fine variety from J. S. Bockett, Esq., of
-Stamford Hill. There is no doubt that it is one of the most distinct
-species of the whole genus. The dorsal sepal is erect, curiously curved,
-pure white, of a wax-like texture, having a purple streak extending from
-the base to the apex; the linear-oblong petals are much crisped on the
-edge, and, like the other parts of the flower, are of a bronzy-green
-colour, the lip being darker, of a reddish-brown and glossy. It has been
-named in honour of H. Spicer, Esq., and was introduced from India some
-few years ago. We also received at the same time a fine form of
-_Odontoglossum Chestertoni_, and a most distinctly spotted variety of
-_O. Alexandræ_, the sepals and petals of which are white, spotted with
-reddish-crimson, and the lip white, with a large reddish-brown blotch on
-the lower portion.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 20.
- DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM.[]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM.
- [Plate 20.]
- A Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (pseudobulbs) clustered, elongate, spreading,
- terete, stoutish above, tapering to the base, jointed, the surface
- furrowed between the joints. _Leaves_ distichous, linear-oblong,
- acute, three-fourths of an inch broad, sheathing the stems at the
- base, the sheaths remaining as a membranous investment. _Peduncles_
- proceeding from the joints of the stem, slender, two to
- three-flowered, the pedicels with small ovate bracts at their base.
- _Flowers_ showy, white, with rich amaranth-crimson blotch, measuring
- about three inches across; _sepals_ lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate,
- spreading, white, tinged with rose colour, as are the larger and
- broader oblong-ovate _petals_; _lip_ (labellum) broadly obovate,
- cucullate, the basal portion rolled in over the column, the anterior
- portion spread out into a broad concave heart-shaped front lobe, which
- is undulated at the margin, and nearly covered by a large rich
- amaranth-crimson blotch, feathered at the edge, and traversed by
- deeper crimson veins, the extreme margin being paler. _Column_ short,
- enclosed by the basal portion of the lip.
-
- Dendrobium Ainsworthii, _Moore_ in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_ (1874), N.S.
- i. 443, figs. 93, 94; _Id._ N.S. viii., 166, figs. 30, 31, 32;
- _Anderson_ in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, N.S. vii., 751; _Floral
- Magazine_, 2 s. t. 196; _Rand’s Orchids_, 242; _Williams’ Orchid
- Growers’ Manual_, ed. v., 163.
-
- _Var._ ROSEUM; sepals and petals tinted with magenta rose; lip almost
- wholly covered by the large mulberry-crimson feathered blotch.
-
- Dendrobium Ainsworthii _var._ ROSEUM, _Moore_ in _Gardeners’
- Chronicle_ (1877), N.S. vii., 655; _Id._ N.S. viii., 166; _Anderson_
- in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, N.S. vii., 750.
-
-
-The beautiful _Dendrobium Ainsworthii_ is the result of a cross between
-_D. nobile_ and _D. heterocarpum_, and was raised by Mr. Mitchell,
-gardener to R. F. Ainsworth, Esq., M.D., Of Higher Broughton,
-Manchester, after whom it is named. In habit of growth and in general
-appearance the plant partakes mostly of the character of _D. nobile_,
-while the flowers more closely resemble those of _D. heterocarpum_ in
-form, and have in a slight degree the delicious fragrance of those
-produced by that species. In _D. Ainsworthii_ the flowers have white
-sepals and petals, while the lip is marked by a dense blotch of a rich
-amaranth or mulberry-crimson. In the _D. Ainsworthii roseum_ now
-figured, the sepals and petals are of a bright rosy-magenta, and the lip
-is more fully covered with a richer coloured deep crimson blotch. This
-variety is extremely rare, and forms a charming contrast to the white
-blossoms of its sister hybrid. The flowers will be found very useful for
-cutting, as they last for a considerable time in water.
-
-_Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum_ requires treatment similar to that given
-to _D. nobile_. We have found it to do well in a compost of peat and
-sphagnum moss, planted in pans suspended from the roof of the East India
-house, in a position where it can get plenty of light and air. During
-the growing season this plant enjoys a liberal supply of water, which
-after the bulbs have completed their development may be gradually
-withheld, and the plant cooled down by placing it in the Cattleya-house,
-where it should remain until the time of flowering, which extends from
-February to June. Mr. Stevens, of Trentham, grows it very successfully,
-suspended in a well-appointed plant stove, where it has abundance of
-light.
-
-We remember seeing a splendid plant of _Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum_
-exhibited by Mr. Mitchell, at the Whitsuntide Manchester Show, in May,
-1877, in the form of a well furnished specimen two and a half feet in
-height and two feet in breadth, the stems being literally smothered with
-some hundreds of its beautiful crimson-lipped rosy-tinted flowers.
-
-Referring to this same Manchester Show of 1877, Mr. Anderson, of Meadow
-Bank, a well-known Orchid grower, writes of this plant, as follows
-(_Gardeners’ Chronicle_, N.S. vii., 750):—“Possibly the gem of the
-Exhibition was _Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum_. This is a most
-remarkable seedling partaking of the character of both its parents (_D.
-nobile_ and _D. heterocarpum_), and in some respects superior to either.
-In point of floriferousness none of its parents can lay claim to such a
-quantity of nodes on the deciduous stems, each bearing, or rather
-emitting, its quota of flowers. I counted on one stem sixteen short
-racemes, each two and three-flowered. The flower itself has the sepals
-and petals of _moniliforme_ rather than of _nobile_, white shaded with
-an almost imperceptible tint of rose, and tipped distinctly with that
-soft pleasing colour. The labellum is flat, like an expanded
-_heterocarpum_, reflexing a little towards the centre, with a blotch
-covering three-quarters of its surface with deep veined purplish or
-rather mulberry-crimson, edged very distinctly with white, and the
-extremity slightly tipped with crimson. This I look upon as one of the
-greatest gains in hybridization, whether we regard the colour of the
-flower, or the general floriferousness of the plant, or its free
-although not awkward habit of growth. As an Orchid enthusiast of the
-last five and twenty years, I would pronounce it one of the greatest
-gains that may be counted up in the whole known Orchid family.”
-
-Altogether this is a most desirable plant, and being easy of
-cultivation, and of remarkably free-flowering habit, it should find a
-place in every collection.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 21.
- AERIDES LOBBII.]
-
-
-
-
- AËRIDES LOBBII.
- [Plate 21.]
- Native of Moulmein.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ erect, densely foliose, producing the stout aërial
- roots from between the leaf bases. _Leaves_ evergreen, close set,
- distichous, leathery in texture, loriform, channelled, obliquely
- bilobed at the apex, of a deep green colour, obsoletely spotted with
- purple, paler on the under surface. _Racemes_ axillary, many-flowered,
- long, branched, cylindrical, pendulous. _Flowers_ very numerous,
- medium-sized, fragrant, the sepals and petals white, flushed with rosy
- purple and spotted with deeper rose-purple, the broader lip with a bar
- of rosy purple, darkest in the centre, from base to apex, and bordered
- with white; _sepals_ and _petals_ elliptic-oblong, nearly equal,
- incurved; _lip_ much larger, clawed, the claw hollowed out and
- coadunate with the base of the column, the limb ovate or somewhat
- lozenge-shaped, wavy at the margin; _spur_ arcuate, somewhat
- compressed laterally. _Column_ short, in form resembling the neck and
- beak of a bird, with the front edge produced and folded over the
- stigmatic cavity.
-
- Aërides Lobbii, _Hort. Veitch_; _Lemaire_, _Illustration Horticole_,
- xv., t. 559; _Williams_, _Orchid Growers’ Manual_, ed. 5, 67; _Rand_,
- _Orchids_, 149; _Britten & Gower_, _Orchids for Amateurs_, 177.
-
-
-This very beautiful brightly-coloured plant was discovered in Moulmein
-by Mr. Thomas Lobb, who sent it to the Messrs. Veitch & Sons, of
-Chelsea, about the year 1856. It is of remarkably free-flowering and
-decorative character, and is no doubt one of the most beautiful species
-of this fine genus of Orchids, being valuable alike on account of its
-compact-growing habit, and the strikingly ornamental nature of its
-inflorescence. There appear to be several varieties of this plant
-distributed through our Orchid collections, all of them handsome and
-deserving of cultivation, but that which we now illustrate, from a
-finely grown, elegantly branching spike, kindly sent to us by C. J.
-Hill, Esq., of Nottingham, and referred to in the note published under
-Plate 15, is the finest form, and the most freely bloomed specimen we
-have met with. We were, in truth, charmed with the size and colour of
-the flowers of this plant, when recently inspecting Mr. Hill’s
-collection, the long spikes of blossom which were produced by so small a
-plant being quite extraordinary.
-
-There is no genus of Orchids that surpasses _Aërides_ in having handsome
-evergreen foliage, so that, even when not in blossom, they are
-exceedingly pretty objects; while to this it must be added, that their
-flower-spikes are beautiful, and their flowers deliciously fragrant;
-some, of course, are more handsome than others, but all are worth
-growing: in fact, we have never seen an indifferent _Aërides_. They have
-every good quality that a plant of this character can possess, and they
-are of easy cultivation, so that anyone who has a stove may manage them
-successfully. They do not require so much heat as some persons imagine;
-the temperature need not be above 65° in the winter; more is, indeed,
-required in summer, but even then sun-heat should be fully utilised, and
-very little fire-heat should be used.
-
-_Aërides Lobbii_ blooms in June and July, and lasts for three or four
-weeks in beauty. The plant, from which our illustration was taken, was
-but a foot in height, and the magnificent flowering racemes we saw upon
-it were fully two feet six inches in length, with two branches each a
-foot in length. The sepals and petals are white, spotted with bright
-rose colour; the lip is also of a bright rose colour, slightly veined
-and margined with white. The flowers are deliciously fragrant.
-
-The plant being very compact in growth, occupies but little space, so
-that anyone having a small vacant place in the Orchid-house or plant
-stove, might readily grow it. It will thrive either in a basket
-suspended from the roof of the house, or in a pot planted in sphagnum
-moss, with good drainage, and a moderate supply of water during the
-summer season, while in winter only just sufficient should be given to
-keep the moss damp. The plants do not, however, like to be dried up, as
-this often causes them to loose their bottom leaves, which is a great
-disfigurement. They require plenty of light, but do not like to be
-exposed to the burning sunshine. Canvas should therefore be used as a
-shading during all the bright sunny portion of the day, but when the sun
-has, in some degree, lost its burning heat the blinds may be raised.
-Never allow water to get into the hearts of the plants in winter. In
-summer a fine rose should be employed to syringe them, which operation
-should be done about three o’clock in the afternoon, when the house is
-closed.
-
-They should be always kept free from insects. Scale, thrips, and many
-other insects are to be reckoned amongst their enemies, and cockroaches,
-if allowed to attack them, will often eat away their young roots and
-flower-spikes.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 22.
- CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCIANUM.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCEANUM.
- [Plate 22.]
- Native of Borneo.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ almost none, the leaves springing from the crown of
- stout roots. _Leaves_ radical, distichous, coriaceous, broadly oblong,
- acute, channelled, a foot long, the upper surface marbled with a dark
- green mosaic pattern on a whitish-green ground colour. _Scapes_
- solitary in the leaf-axils, stout, pubescent, with an oblong-ovate
- acute sheathing bract near the top, from which the flower or flowers
- emerge. _Flowers_ very large, in the way of those of _C. barbatum
- majus_; _dorsal sepal_ sub-rotund or very broadly-ovate, acute, white,
- with numerous (about thirteen) shining curved purplish veins which run
- out nearly or quite to the edge, and usually alternate with others
- which are short and less boldly marked; _lateral sepals_ connate,
- small, oblong, greenish white, with five dark purplish veins; _petals_
- fully half an inch wide, divaricate, linear-oblong ciliate, green in
- the upper half, with purple margin, stained with dull purple towards
- the tip, and with several dark fleshy warts along each margin, the
- lower half flushed with pale wine red; _lip_ very large, pouch-shaped,
- the lateral horns much developed, purplish brown above, yellowish
- green below, with numerous warts on the inside. _Staminode_ of a
- wax-like yellowish white, the posterior exterior border split in the
- centre, and having five anterior teeth, the middle one much larger
- than the rest.
-
- Cypripedium Lawrenceanum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’
- Chronicle_, N.S., x., 748; _Veitch and Sons_, _Catalogue of New
- Plants_, 1879, p. 9, 23, with figure; _Florist and Pomologist_, 1880,
- 112, with figure.
-
-
-The introduction of this splendid species of Lady’s Slipper is one of
-the results of Mr. F. W. Burbidge’s visit to Borneo, in the service of
-Messrs. Veitch & Sons, of Chelsea. It is a very robust grower, and
-flowered for the first time in the autumn of 1878, when it was named by
-Professor Reichenbach, in the place above quoted, in honour of Sir
-Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., an ardent orchidophilist, and the
-possessor of a collection of Orchids of unequalled richness and beauty.
-
-The Cypripediums now form a large family group, and rank amongst the
-most useful of Orchids that can be cultivated, since the lasting quality
-of their flowers, especially for exhibition and decorative purposes, is
-something extraordinary. Many of them in addition possess beautifully
-variegated foliage, as in the species we now figure, which has the
-leaves most distinctly marked with light and dark green. Our drawing was
-taken from a very fine plant in the select collection of H. M. Pollett,
-Esq., Fernside, Bickley, a gentleman who is a great lover of Orchids,
-and who has the wisdom to secure healthy young plants at the outset, in
-order that he may see them grow on into good specimens, such as the one
-now before us has done. It gives one great pleasure to see plants so
-well cultivated.
-
-_Cypripedium Lawrenceanum_ has, as we have already said, beautifully
-marked foliage, so that even when not in blossom, it is found to be an
-object of attraction. The upper or dorsal sepals of the flowers were in
-this case three inches across, white, striped with plum-purple, which
-runs in curved lines from the base nearly to the margin. The petals are
-green along the upper edge, suffused with purple towards the end, and
-having black wart-like spots, and a fringe of purple hairs along the
-margin. The pouch or lip is large, of a reddish brown colour in front,
-the under and hinder part yellowish green.
-
-These plants are best grown in pots with peat, and a little charcoal, or
-sometimes a little good fibrous loam mixed with the peat. It is a
-free-rooting species, and likes to be well elevated above the pot rim,
-so that its roots can penetrate readily and work freely in the rough
-material. The pot should be half filled with drainage, so that a good
-supply of moisture may be given to the roots during the growing season.
-The Cattleya or the East India-house seems to suit the plants well, as
-in these structures they grow and flower freely.
-
-The flowers are very useful for cutting, as they will keep a long time
-in vases if the water is kept sweet and pure.
-
-
-Baron Schröder’s Orchids.—On the occasion of a recent visit to The Dell,
-Staines, the seat of Baron Schröder, we had the good fortune to inspect
-the fine collection of Orchids which has been got together. The houses
-are well built, after the plans of Mr. Ballantyne, the gardener, and are
-placed in good positions; not only have the ventilation and heating
-power been well considered, but cleanliness also; indeed the arrangement
-of the houses leaves nothing to be desired. The Orchids were, at the
-time, looking remarkably well. Entering the Phalænopsis house we noticed
-a fine plant in flower of the rare and beautiful _Phalænopsis intermedia
-Portei_, a treat which seldom falls to one’s lot, for it is a matter of
-regret that this splendid Phalænopsis is so rare in collections: it must
-be very scarce in its native habitat or collectors would surely find it
-oftener. _Cypripedium Spicerianum_ was also flowering here. Several
-different species of _Nepenthes_ were in fine character, growing above a
-tank, with their pitchers gracefully drooping over the water, in which
-position they seemed to be quite at home. In this house were also some
-grand plants of different species of _Saccolabium_, _Cypripedium_, &c.,
-all doing well. Leaving the Phalænopsis house the Cattleya house, which
-runs at right angles to it, is next entered. Here we noticed a gigantic
-specimen of _Cattleya exoniensis_, carrying several spikes of flower;
-_Lælia autumnalis atrorubens_, with grand spikes, and flowers of unusual
-size and fine colour; and _Dendrobium Wardianum_ in full beauty,
-suspended from the roof. The Cattleyas, &c., in this house were in grand
-condition, and bid fair to produce some fine spikes next season. In the
-Odontoglossum house _Zygopetalum Gautieri_ was flowering well, also
-_Miltonia candida_ and _Sophronitis grandiflora_. The East Indian
-Orchids were in an especially healthy condition, the collection
-containing some grand specimens of _Vanda_, _Aërides_, and
-_Saccolabium_.
-
-This collection, which has been lately formed, bids fair to become one
-of the finest in the country, Baron Schröder being an enthusiastic lover
-of this handsome class of plants, and being also careful to obtain only
-the best varieties.—H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 23.
- LÆLIA XANTHINA.]
-
-
-
-
- LÆLIA XANTHINA.
- [Plate 23.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ clavate fusiform, the narrowed base closely
- invested by imbricating bracts, monophyllous. _Leaves_ oblong-lorate,
- bluntish, coriaceous, longer than the pseudobulbs, and with them
- reaching to about a foot in height. _Scape_ four to six flowered,
- issuing from a terminal linear-oblong acute compressed bract or
- spathe, three-fourths of an inch wide and about four inches long, and
- of a pale green colour. _Flowers_ leathery in texture, three to four
- inches across, very distinct in aspect; _sepals_ and _petals_
- oblong-ligulate obtuse, undulated, the sides rolled back so that they
- appear convex, the petals most so, both of a deep golden yellow, more
- or less stained or flushed with olive-green; _lip_ cucullate,
- subquadrate, obtusely three-lobed at the apex, yolk of egg colour,
- paler at the edge, the front border white, and marked on the disc by a
- few crimson-purple veins, which are not raised like crests above the
- surface, as in the allied _L. flava_. _Column_ semiterete, clavate,
- lobulate at the apex, projected forwards, about as long as the entire
- edges of the lip and convergent therewith.
-
- Lælia xanthina, _Lindley_, in _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5144;
- _Bateman_, _Second Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 180; _Rand_,
- _Orchids_, 303.
-
- Bletia xanthina, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices
- Systematicæ_, vi. 425; _Id._ _Xenia Orchidaceæ_, ii. 54.
-
-
-This interesting and distinct-looking _Lælia_ was introduced from Brazil
-many years ago by Messrs. Backhouse & Son, of York, but from the limited
-quantity then obtained it has always remained a scarce plant. It appears
-to have been imported about 1858, as it was figured in 1859 in the
-_Botanical Magazine_, as above quoted. It is, indeed, with great
-pleasure that we are enabled to introduce to our readers a figure of so
-rare and so distinct a species, for it is seldom seen in collections,
-having always been a rare plant. The colour of the flowers is of a
-nankeen-yellow, consequently they strongly contrast with those of the
-generality of Orchids of this affinity, the usual colours of which are
-purple, or rose colour in various tints, or white.
-
-Our plate was prepared from a drawing which was made in September last
-from a plant which flowered in our own collection. It will be seen from
-the representation, which is a very faithful one, that _Lælia xanthina_
-is really a very pretty species, and one that our collectors ought to be
-looking after, so that Orchid growers may have it supplied to them at a
-more reasonable price than at present.
-
-The plant grows about a foot in height, and is somewhat like _Lælia
-purpurata_ in its habit of growth, only it is very much smaller and more
-compact and free-blooming. The flowers continue about three weeks in
-perfection. It requires the same kind of treatment as other species of
-_Lælia_ and _Cattleya_, and thrives best when cultivated in a pot or
-basket, with fibrous peat, and good drainage. Like the rest of its class
-it requires to be kept as fully exposed to the light as possible, in
-order that the pseudobulbs may be thoroughly ripened; and the growth
-being thus more completely matured, it will be found to become more
-vigorous in character, and enabled to throw up its flower-spikes more
-freely. There is a grand specimen of this species, over two feet in
-diameter, in the collection of H. Shaw, Esq., Corbar, Buxton.
-
-
-Lælia autumnalis atrorubens.—It is highly gratifying to find that this
-splendid variety of _Lælia autumnalis_, is becoming more plentiful, and
-that it keeps up its original character. Many growers were of opinion
-when it was first introduced, that the large size of its flowers and the
-rich colour of the sepals and petals were due mainly to superior
-cultivation and a pure atmosphere, but such is not the case. We have
-flowered some plants of it this season in our own establishment at
-Holloway, which have been as good, both in regard to the size and colour
-of the flowers, as those of any of the plants grown in a purer
-atmosphere, away from the smoke of this great City. We have received
-from the Right Honorable J. Chamberlain, Esq., M.P., of Birmingham, a
-splendidly developed spike of a grand form of this beautiful variety,
-which had been grown under the care of his gardener, Mr. Cooper.—B. S.
-W.
-
-Odontoglossum vexillarium (Autumn-flowering variety)—A short time back
-Mr. W. Bull exhibited at South Kensington a recently imported form of
-_Odontoglossum vexillarium_, which had all the appearance of being a
-distinct variety, flowering during the autumn months of the year. It is,
-however, we think, somewhat premature to regard this autumn-flowering
-character as thoroughly established, though there is no doubt the
-variety is a distinct one, and remarkably fine in colour. This being the
-first time of its flowering, the particular growth shown may have been
-influenced by the time at which the plants were started. However, in due
-time, and with good cultivation we shall see whether this peculiarity of
-flowering towards the end of the year is really a constant character, or
-whether it may have resulted from the circumstances above referred
-to.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 23.
- MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA CŒRULESCENS.]
-
-
-
-
- MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA CŒRULESCENS.
- [Plate 24.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ slender, tufted. _Leaves_ evergreen, coriaceous,
- ten to twelve inches long, with a nerveless elongate oblong-spathulate
- blade, obtuse or somewhat acute at the apex, channelled at the base,
- keeled behind, of a very dark green colour, narrowed downwards into
- the stout petiole, which is three to four inches long, deeply grooved
- in front, and invested at the base by long membranous brownish
- sheaths. _Scape_ a foot long or more, brown, covered below with three
- or four bluntish sheaths, the upper of which is distant from the
- flower and closely appressed. _Flowers_ large, peculiar in form,
- richly coloured, the colour varying in different forms, typically of a
- brilliant magenta-crimson; _dorsal sepal_ elongate linear from a
- triangular base, sub-erect or reflexed; _lateral sepals_ broadly
- semiovate, apiculate, connate to below the middle, deflexed, the tips
- approximate, all united below into a decurved _tube_, which is yellow
- (in the allied _M. Lindeni_ the tube is white); petals small, hidden
- within the tube, linear-oblong emarginate, the base auriculate on one
- side; _lip_ also small, enclosed, clawed, tongue-shaped, cordate at
- the base. _Column_ rather longer than the lip, entire, not winged.
-
- Masdevallia Harryana, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- 1871, 1421; _Florist & Pomologist_, 1873, 169, with coloured figure;
- _Belgique Horticole_, 1873, t. 21; _Flore des Serres_, t. 2250.
-
- Masdevallia Lindeni, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, _t._ 5990—_fide_
- Reichenbach.
-
- Masdevallia Lindeni, _var._ Harryana, _André_, _Illustration
- Horticole_, 3 ser., t. 142.
-
- _Var._ CŒRULESCENS: flowers of a rich magenta-crimson, with a
- bluish-purple flush or bloom; otherwise as in the type.
-
- Masdevallia Harryana cœrulescens, _Hort._ _plurim._; _Bull_,
- _Catalogue of New Plants_, 1877, p. 83.
-
-
-We ought to be cordially grateful to our plant collectors for
-introducing to European gardens so brilliant, varied, and charming a set
-of epiphytal plants, as the several showy ornamental, and pleasingly
-grotesque species of the genus _Masdevallia_. There are indeed but few
-Orchids that possess such bright colours as are found therein. A few
-years since we had but two species that were really worth growing,
-namely, _M. coccinea_, of an orange-scarlet colour, and _M. tovarensis_,
-pure white. Then came _M. Lindeni_, a charming plant with flowers of a
-rich magenta-purple colour. _M. Veitchiana_, of which there are some
-very fine forms, made a fine contrast with its glowing orange-scarlet
-and bright yellow, the scarlet flushed with purple. The most beautiful,
-however, of all the Masdevallias are the varieties of _M. Harryana_, the
-colours of which—shades of magenta-crimson—are most intense and
-brilliant, many of the forms being also distinct in shape.
-
-_Masdevallia Harryana cœrulescens_, our present subject, was forwarded
-to us by R. P. Percival, Esq., of Southport, who is forming what will in
-time doubtless become one of the best collections of these plants in the
-North of England. Whatever Mr. Percival takes in hand he carries out
-thoroughly, and this has led him to build separate houses to suit the
-different classes of Orchids. Now as Masdevallias prefer cool treatment
-they are best kept in a house by themselves: they require but a small
-one, as they take up very little room; indeed they will thrive well
-enough in the Odontoglossum house, for if their few wants are attended
-to, there are no freer growing plants in cultivation. They increase very
-fast under good treatment, and soon repay all the care which is bestowed
-upon them. They last a long time in beauty and make grand exhibition
-plants, producing also, when in bloom, a charming effect in the houses
-if intermixed with the various Odontoglots and other cool Orchids. There
-are so many varieties that some of them will always be in flower, but
-the best time to see them is from May to July. They are so accommodating
-to the grower that many wonderful specimens have been produced and
-exhibited during the last few years. When a plant is found to be too
-large it may be divided, and the divided portions will go on increasing.
-
-We have found good fibrous peat and sphagnum moss to suit well as
-material for the potting of these plants. They thrive best in small
-pots. The roots should not be disturbed too often; when, however, they
-require fresh material to root in, it must be given them, as they are
-free rooting plants and prefer to have sweet wholesome soil about them.
-They must also have good drainage, for they need an abundant supply of
-water, and by giving them efficient drainage the water passes off
-quickly without doing any harm, which it would do if allowed to become
-stagnant about them. The plants should be placed near the light but so
-as to avoid the sun’s rays. A north house suits them best, as it shields
-them in summer from the heat of the day, which they do not like, in
-fact, they should be kept as cool as possible at all times, very little
-fire-heat being required in winter, and none during the summer. They
-like fresh air, but in winter cold draughts must be avoided. We find
-that they will thrive in a heat of from 45° to 50°: even somewhat less
-would suffice, but the temperature here named is the most suitable.
-Anyone, therefore, who possesses a small low house could grow them at a
-trifling expense.
-
-They are easily propagated by dividing the tufts, leaving about three
-old stems and a leading growth associated. The best time for the
-division to be effected is just as they are beginning to grow. They
-should be placed in small pots until they are established, when they
-should be removed to larger ones.
-
-Insects should be annihilated as soon as they put in an appearance. The
-thrips is their greatest pest. Cool Orchids, as a rule, are also subject
-to the attack of a small kind of snail, that increases very rapidly, if
-not kept under by constant watching night and morning. A few lettuce
-leaves placed in different parts of the house, or potatos or turnips cut
-in half and scooped out in the centre, form good traps for them, and by
-looking these over frequently many of them may be caught, as also by
-moving the plants, as they are apt to harbour about the pots.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 25.
- CYMBIDIUM PARISHII.]
-
-
-
-
- CYMBIDIUM PARISHII.
- [Plate 25.]
- Native of Moulmein.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ fusiform, three to four inches long, annulately
- marked with the remains of the leaf-bases. _Leaves_ evergreen,
- distichous, ligulate-linear, keeled behind, bifid with acute lobes,
- from one to two feet long, of a rich green colour. _Racemes_ springing
- from the axils of the outer leaves, three to seven-flowered, the
- scapes furnished with lanceolate, falcate, acuminate, scariose
- sheaths. _Flowers_ large, sweet-scented, ivory-white, with an orange
- disk and crimson-purple spots on the lip; _sepals_ and _petals_
- oblong-ligulate, acute, of a creamy white colour, the lateral sepals
- largest; _lip_ white with an orange coloured central band,
- flabellately dilated from a narrowed base, three-cleft in front, the
- side lobes oblong directed forwards, white, with numerous
- violet-purple spots, the middle or front lobe cuneate-ovate,
- undulated, with an orange-coloured silky or velvety disk, spotted with
- purplish crimson; disk having near the base a callus which terminates
- abruptly in front, and is furnished on the outer side with velvety
- hairs. _Column_ white behind, yellow at the edges, and in front having
- brownish purple spots at the base; caudicle provided in front, on both
- sides, with an awl-shaped extrorse process.
-
- Cymbidium Parishii, _Reichenbach fil._, _MS. Herb. Kew_; _Id._
- _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, N.S. I., 338, 566; x., 74; _Id._ _Transactions
- of the Linnean Society_, xxx., 144.
-
-
-The genus _Cymbidium_ forms a small group of Orchids of which there are
-but few species worthy of cultivation for ornamental purposes. That
-which we now figure is one of the best of them, and is a very rare and
-very beautiful plant, which has but seldom bloomed in this country. In
-the summer of 1878 Mr. Swan, gardener to W. Leach, Esq., of Oakley
-Fallowfield, Manchester, flowered it for the first time in Europe, and
-about the same time another specimen blossomed with John Day, Esq., of
-Tottenham, which was subsequently purchased by us for 100 guineas. This
-latter plant has again flowered, and our sketch was taken from it.
-
-Though a near relative of _Cymbidium eburneum_, this plant is considered
-by Reichenbach to be a distinct species, the points of difference
-being—the broader leaves with more prominent nerves on the upper
-surface; the somewhat smaller flowers with shorter sepals and petals;
-and the different form of the segments of the lip, together with some
-peculiarities in its callus and pubescence. It is one of the treasures
-of India, having been originally discovered so long since as 1859, in
-Moulmein, by the Rev. C. Parish, who found _Dendrobium crassinode_ at
-the same time. The plants of both these fine Orchids, then collected,
-were lost in the Ganges, and the _Cymbidium_ was not seen again for many
-years. It appears to have been actually introduced shortly prior to
-1874, since at that date living plants are recorded as being rarities in
-the collection of Mr. J. Day, of Tottenham, and Mr. R. Warner, of
-Broomfield, though it had not then flowered in Europe. It is a most
-chaste and lovely plant, its graceful green foliage, and creamy white
-blossoms in which the lip is spotted with crimson, producing a beautiful
-effect. The flowers have also a pleasant perfume, and last for three or
-four weeks in perfection. The flowering season is July and August, and
-several flowers are produced upon a spike, in which respect it has a
-decided advantage on the score of beauty over _C. eburneum_, which
-produces but one flower on a spike. The latter, however, is a charming
-Orchid for winter and spring flowering, its ivory-white blossoms being
-then especially acceptable. There is also another fine species, _C.
-Mastersii_, which produces its white flowers during the dull months of
-autumn, when Orchid as well as other white flowers, are scarce. These
-are all worth growing for the purpose of cutting, as they keep for a
-long time in water.
-
-_Cymbidium Parishii_ is very much like _C. eburneum_ and _C. Mastersii_
-in its manner of growth, and also in its general appearance; in fact, it
-is somewhat difficult, when the plants are not in bloom, to distinguish
-the one from the other. An inspection of our figure will, however, show
-that the foliage of _C. Parishii_ is broader and that it is of a lighter
-green colour.
-
-It requires the same treatment as _C. eburneum_. We grow the plants in
-pots, in the Cattleya house, on the side tables, near the glass. The
-material we use for potting is rough fibrous peat and loam, with
-thoroughly good drainage, the plants being also elevated above the rim
-of the pot. Their roots are thick and fleshy, and they therefore require
-a good supply of water during the growing season, but when at rest, the
-soil must be kept only just moist. They must be shielded from bright
-sunshine, by blinds or some other means, otherwise their foliage will
-become spotted. In winter they do not like to have their leaves damped,
-although in summer, on warm days, it will not injure them.
-
-They are propagated by dividing the tufts just as they are starting to
-make fresh growth, leaving some of the established portion at the back
-of the new growth. They must be kept free from insects. The white scale,
-which sometimes endeavours to make its way on the foliage, is that
-chiefly to be guarded against.
-
-
-Vanda tricolor.—In November last, we saw in the collection of J. Broome,
-Esq., of Didsbury, a very finely grown plant of _V. tricolor_, with two
-spikes of exceedingly richly coloured flowers—one of the best we have
-ever seen. It is in the way of the Dalkeith variety, but the flowers are
-large and of a remarkably bright colour. Mr. Broome sent us a spike to
-figure but it was spoilt in the transit; we hope, however, to be able to
-procure another when the plant again blooms, so that our subscribers may
-see what a well-grown specimen it is. It stands two feet six inches in
-height, and has beautifully healthy foliage down to the pot.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 26.
- CATTLEYA VELUTINA.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA VELUTINA.
- [Plate 26.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ slender, terete, from twelve to eighteen inches
- high, supporting the evergreen foliage, and furnished at intervals
- with short ovate appressed bracts. _Leaves_ in pairs, oblong, acute,
- widest near the base, leathery, about eight inches long, and an inch
- and a half broad, of a dark green colour. _Scape_ two-flowered,
- issuing from a terminal compressed sheath or bract. _Flowers_ of
- medium size, stout in texture, tawny orange, the lip white marked with
- purplish spots arranged in radiating lines, very fragrant; _sepals_
- ligulate-oblong, acute, recurved, rich tawny orange, spotted with
- purple; _petals_ of the same colour, cuneate-oblong, acute, somewhat
- lobulate or wavy; _lip_ three-lobed, the side lobes very short
- semi-ovate, partially enclosing the column, the front lobe large,
- roundish-ovate, apiculate, wavy and toothletted, the disk between the
- side lobes yellow with purplish streaks, the radiating veins purplish,
- the front or middle lobe white with dark purple veins, everywhere
- clothed with velvety pubescence. _Column_ free at the back, marked
- with many purple spots, and having a purplish border to the
- anther-bed.
-
- Cattleya velutina, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- 1870, 140, 1373; _Id._ 1872, 1259, figs. 288, 289; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Grower’s Manual_, 5 ed. 135.
-
-
-This fine Orchid first flowered in 1870, under the care of Mr. A.
-Williams, in the collection of Joseph Broome, Esq., of Didsbury,
-Manchester, and subsequently in that of E. G. Wrigley, Esq., of Bury.
-What is described as a still finer variety of the same plant appeared
-shortly after in the collection of Consul Schiller, of Hamburgh. One of
-the most remarkable and special peculiarities of the species is the
-powerful fragrance of its flowers, which is so strongly developed as to
-scent the whole house in which a blooming plant is placed.
-
-It is a very rare as well as a very distinct species. We have,
-ourselves, only met with one example in bloom, besides that from what
-our illustration was taken, and that was the specimen in the collection
-of Mr. J. Broome, above referred to, as being the first which bloomed in
-this country. Our figure was taken from a plant which flowered recently
-in the grand collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., who was
-good enough to send it for our artist to sketch, and he has succeeded in
-securing a very faithful likeness of it. We have no doubt our collectors
-will meet with it in their journeyings in its native country, but it
-must be rare there, or we should have obtained more of it; most
-probably, like others of its genus, it is difficult to secure. It
-resembles _Cattleya bicolor_ in its habit of growth, the stems bearing
-two leaves, which grow about twelve to eighteen inches in length. The
-sepals and petals are of a rich tawny orange colour, irregularly spotted
-with purple, and the lip has the side lobes yellow, and is white in
-front, and distinctly striped with violet. Mr. Spyers says it blooms in
-September and October, when its fragrance, combined with its distinct
-colour, renders it a very acceptable inmate of the Orchid house; it also
-flowers at a time when few other Cattleyas are in bloom.
-
-_Cattleya velutina_ requires the same treatment as the other Cattleyas,
-that is, to be potted in peat soil with good drainage; it does not need
-so much water at the roots as some kinds, but it should be borne in
-mind, on the other hand, that it must not be allowed to shrivel, and
-therefore a little moisture should always be supplied to the roots. If
-the plant once gets into an unhealthy condition its recovery will be
-very doubtful. Those of the Cattleyas, such as _C. bicolor_ and _C.
-velutina_, which have very slender bulbs are more liable to go wrong
-than those that form thick fleshy bulbs, the latter having more
-substance from which to draw their support. They require to be kept near
-the light, with very little shade, excepting just sufficient to keep
-them from the burning sun.
-
-Like other Cattleyas, this species is subject to the inroads of the
-scale insect, which should be frequently sought for, and, if found,
-promptly removed. The foliage should be kept in a plump condition and
-not allowed to shrivel. In cleansing the leaves injury is often caused
-by too hard rubbing, by which they become bruised; rather should they be
-handled delicately, as, if once damaged, they cannot be restored to a
-sound healthy appearance. A damaged leaf is not only a disfigurement,
-but is of great injury to the health of the plant, by interfering with
-the action of its pores. Cleanliness is one of the great secrets of
-success in plant cultivation, but the operation of cleansing should be
-taken in hand before the insects get a-head, or they will assuredly eat
-into the leaves, which will thus become permanently injured at the
-points of attack.
-
-
-Dr. Ainsworth’s Orchids.—When in Manchester we had the pleasure of
-visiting the collection of R. F. Ainsworth, Esq., M.D., in whose fine
-and varied collection the plant that most especially attracted our
-attention was _Masdevallia Chimæra_, the blossoms of which were very
-large, each flower measuring seventeen inches across. The effect of
-these beautiful and curiously spotted flowers hanging around the basket
-was very striking. We have had it sent to us to figure, but the flowers
-do not travel well; we hope, however, some day, when it is in bloom, to
-be able to figure it. We also noticed, in the same house, a wonderfully
-fine form of _Odontoglossum Alexandræ_, with broad sepals and petals of
-beautiful white, while the centre of the petals is marked with a
-pleasing rose colour, which gives it a very pretty appearance; the lip
-is large, white, beautifully crisped round the edge, the upper part
-bright orange-yellow. It was, altogether, a very showy flower. Mr.
-Mitchell, the gardener, said it had been in bloom for several weeks, and
-it was still fresh and fine when we saw it.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 27.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM.
- [Plate 27.]
- Native of the Cordillera of Peru.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate-oblong, compressed, monophyllous.
- _Leaves_ short, oblong, two inches broad, and sometimes not much
- exceeding that in length, spreading. _Scape_ simple, radical, bearing
- at the apex a many-flowered erect raceme, the membranaceous bracts of
- which are oblong acute, and as long as the pedicels. _Flowers_ nearly
- or quite two inches in diameter, of a rich chestnut brown on the
- inner, and olive-green on the outer surface; _sepals_ roundish-ovate,
- somewhat undulated, narrowed at the base, of a bright chestnut-brown,
- narrowly bordered with yellow; _petals_ similar in size and colour,
- oblong-ovate; _lip_ clawed, auriculate, wedge-shaped, emarginate,
- shorter than the sepals, bright yellow, bearing at the base five warty
- tubercles, with a three-toothed appendage in front of them. _Column_
- small, the edges of the anther-bed serrated, and decurrent in the form
- of membranous wings.
-
- Odontoglossum brevifolium, _Lindley_ in _Bentham’s Plantæ
- Hartwegianæ_, 152; _Id._ _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Odontoglossum_ no.
- 61; _André_ in _Illustration Horticole_, 3 ser. t. 170; _Reichenbach,
- fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_. vi. 846.
-
-
-This very distinct species was first found by Hartweg, on the Peruvian
-Andes, near Loxa, and was described by Lindley, in Mr. Bentham’s account
-of the plants collected by that traveller. It appears to have been
-introduced by M. Linden, and to have been first flowered in his
-establishment, the figure published in _L’Illustration Horticole_ having
-been derived from this source. The small compressed pseudobulbs are
-formed at the end of a sucker or offshoot, which is invested by large
-membranous bracts or scales, the upper of which covering the base of the
-flower-scape is somewhat broader and leaf-like.
-
-This Odontoglot ranks among the most distinct species of its genus, as
-may indeed be seen by a glance at our illustration. It produces dense
-spikes of its beautiful flowers, which are more in the way of those of
-_Odontoglossum coronarium_ than of any other cultivated species; it,
-however, blooms more freely. The spike of flowers we have here
-represented was sent to us by Mons. F. Massange, of Liége, in whose
-collection the gardener—Mr. Kramer—induces it to flower freely every
-year. M. Massange is a great _connoisseur_ of Orchids, and in his
-collection are to be found many rare and valuable specimens, which have
-been frequently exhibited during the past few years, including the Liége
-Exhibition of 1881.
-
-_Odontoglossum brevifolium_ is a dwarf growing plant, and produces its
-erect spikes of flowers from the side of the pseudobulbs. There were
-seventeen blossoms on that which is here represented. The sepals and
-petals are of a bright chestnut-brown, margined and slightly marked near
-the base with yellow, the lip is rich yellow with two light brown
-patches at its base. It is altogether a strikingly showy plant, and one
-that should be always cultivated amongst Odontoglots for its
-distinctness of colouring.
-
-The treatment which we find to suit the plant, is to grow it in a basket
-suspended from the roof, as it requires and enjoys all the light that
-can be given to it; but, of course, it needs to be shaded from the
-burning sun. The most suitable material in which to grow the plant is
-sphagnum moss and fibrous peat. It requires also a good supply of water
-in the growing season, so that it must be thoroughly drained. It thrives
-best in a cool house in which the same temperature is maintained as is
-found congenial to _Odontoglossum Alexandræ_, and others of that class.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Londesboroughianum.—We have been under the impression that
-this species was not so good as it was first reported to be, but we are
-now of a different opinion. There are no doubt many varieties of the
-plant, as is the case with nearly all Orchids. In their native countries
-they are produced freely from seeds, all of the variations not being
-equally good. If our collectors could only pick out the best, when in
-bloom, we should be saved many disappointments, but of course they
-cannot spend their time in doing this. We were agreeably surprised when
-we paid a visit to the collection of G. W. Law-Scholefield, Esq.,
-New-Hall-Hey, Rawtenstall, near Manchester, to see a fine spike of the
-_O. Londesboroughianum_ with twenty-five of its large blossoms, much
-finer than any we had ever seen before. The sepals and petals are
-yellow, barred with brown; the lip is large, of a bright golden yellow,
-and very showy, and, as the long spikes hung drooping among the white
-and coloured flowers of the other Orchids the effect was very good. No
-one could complain of having such a species as this, for it is a most
-showy flower.
-
-
-Cypripedium insigne.—When calling at Mrs. Haywood’s, Norris Green,
-Liverpool, a few weeks ago, we were pleased to see a fine specimen of
-this old Orchid, which was two feet in diameter; on nearly all the
-numerous scapes there were two flowers, and very fine ones they were.
-Mr. Bardney, the gardener, informed us that they come so every year,
-which makes this plant the more interesting, as the character of the
-species is merely to produce one flower on a stalk. This plant was grown
-in the grand conservatory, in which there was a most wonderful display
-of blossom, in fact, the grandest lot of greenhouse flowers we ever
-remember to have seen in winter, consisting of Pelargoniumns, Primulas,
-Camellias, Cyclamens, and the _Luculia gratissima_, with 40 or 50 heads
-of bloom. There are not many Orchids at this place, but, what there are,
-are doing well, and are well looked after.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 28.
- ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI.]
-
-
-
-
- ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI.
- [Plate 28.]
- Native of St. Catherine’s, Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong, deeply furrowed, the younger ones
- ancipitous, attached to a branched creeping rhizome. _Leaves_
- fascicled, distichous, the outer ones shorter, the central ones
- narrowly elongate-oblong, plicate with a strongly developed costa, ten
- to twelve inches long, bright green. _Scape_ issuing from the centre
- of the leaf-tufts, and terminating in a drooping raceme of three to
- six flowers, furnished with elongate-oblong amplexicaul bracts, those
- subtending the flowers being nearly as long as the pedicels. _Flowers_
- large, showy, green blotched with brown, the lip purple with darker
- purple ruff in front of the column; _sepals_ and _petals_ oblong,
- acute, nearly equal, the petals directed upwards, all pale green
- transversely barred and blotched with purplish brown; _lip_ broad,
- three-lobed, furnished with an obtuse spur, the lateral lobes erect,
- rich deep purple, forming a crenated unguliform ruff or frill around
- the column, the middle lobe very large, two inches across, roundish,
- broader than long, apiculate, deep bluish purple, lighter at the edge.
- _Column_ short, half surrounded by the purple ruff, arcuate, the
- anther case yellow, with a projecting point at the apex.
-
- Zygopetalum Gautieri, _Lemaire_, _Illustration Horticole_, t. 535;
- _Williams_, _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, 5 ed., 311.
-
-
-This genus of Orchids does not comprise so many species as many others,
-but among those which are known and introduced, are some which make very
-useful autumn and winter flowering subjects, and which are well adapted
-for decorating our stoves and Orchid houses. Amongst them occur some of
-the oldest of cultivated Orchids, such as are generally to be met with
-in good old-fashioned places. We remember to have seen plants of
-_Zygopetalum Mackayi_ and _Z. crinitum_ some thirty years ago, also of
-_Z. maxillare_—grand specimens with from seventy to a hundred flowers
-upon them, and a magnificent sight they were, with their numerous spikes
-hanging around the foliage, as represented in the plate, and being
-similar in colour.
-
-The species which we now desire to bring to the notice of our readers,
-is a very lovely one, which has been sometimes considered as a variety
-of _Zygopetalum maxillare_, but the flowers are larger, and it not only
-blooms much earlier, but continues in blossom for several weeks. In
-addition to this, it is a much freer grower than _Z. maxillare_. We have
-had different plants in flower for several months, and then they seemed
-as though they would continue blooming much longer; in fact this species
-seems to flower whenever it makes its young growth—a peculiar feature
-which renders it the most useful of its class.
-
-Our plate was prepared from a plant which bloomed in the fine collection
-of Mons. D. Massange, of Marche, in Belgium, under the care of Mr.
-Wilcke, who is one of the most successful continental growers of
-Orchids. We had the pleasure of seeing specimens from M. Massange’s
-grand collection, exhibited at the great show held at Brussels in July,
-1880.
-
-_Zygopetalum Gautieri_ is a dwarf growing kind, attaining a height of
-about twelve inches, and is provided with distinct plaited green
-foliage. The flowers are large, and borne several together on the
-spikes; the sepals and petals are green, blotched with purplish brown,
-while the lip is of purplish blue, edged with a lighter tint of the same
-colour.
-
-There are several varieties of this species, varying from very pale
-violet to a rich purplish blue, the variety here figured being one of
-the darkest-coloured forms we have yet met with. The flowers are
-particularly showy, and last a long time in perfection.
-
-It is of easy cultivation, and not only free-growing but also
-free-blooming. It does well in the Cattleya house, planted in peat and
-moss, with good drainage, and it may be grown either in a pot or a
-basket, or on a block of wood, or on the stem of a tree fern, on which
-latter it is frequently imported from its native country. In its wild
-state, it appears naturally to creep up these fern stems, and it must
-look very beautiful growing in this way, since its drooping spikes
-cannot fail to have a good effect when thus seen hanging among the green
-foliage. It requires a good supply of water during the growing season,
-but, when at rest, less will suffice. The plant needs plenty of light,
-but it must be shaded from the fierce sun-rays during the summer months.
-
-
-Lælia anceps Dawsoni.—One of the best specimens we have had the pleasure
-of seeing of _L. anceps Dawsoni_ is in the collection of R. S. Dodgson,
-Esq., Blackburn; it had four spikes of buds when we saw it in November
-last; since then we have received a spike of three flowers, and a very
-fine variety it is. Mr. Osman informs us that the plant has ten expanded
-blossoms. It is one of the best plants and as good a variety as we have
-met with; the sepals and petals are large, pure white, and of great
-substance; the lip is bright rosy purple edged with white, the throat
-orange, veined with purple. No doubt there are different varieties in
-cultivation which were imported along with this some years ago. Mr.
-Dodgson’s plant is grown suspended from the roof, and from its
-appearance this seems to be the best method of growing it to perfection.
-It likes plenty of light all the year round, and should be just kept
-shaded from the burning sun.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 29.
- CŒLOGYNE MASSANGEANA.]
-
-
-
-
- CŒLOGYNE MASSANGEANA.
- [Plate 29.]
- Native of Assam.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ pyriform, three to four inches in height,
- smooth, bearing two leaves at the apex. _Leaves_ persistent,
- cuneate-oblong, acute, stalked, somewhat plicate, a foot and a half
- high including the stalk, and four inches broad. _Peduncle_ pendulous,
- produced from the base of the pseudobulbs, one and a half to two feet
- long, nigro-asperate; _bracts_ cuneate-oblong obtuse, much shorter
- than the pedicels. _Flowers_ showy, in loose racemes of two dozen or
- more, yellow with a brown lip; _sepals_ ligulate obtuse, somewhat
- keeled outside, light ochre-yellow; _petals_ linear-ligulate, of the
- same colour as the sepals; _lip_ three-lobed, concave, the side lobes
- semi-ovate, acute in front, of a beautiful maroon-brown with
- ochre-coloured veins, the middle lobe creamy white at the edge, with a
- large brown disk, short, transversely oval with an apiculus, and
- having three light yellow rather prominent toothletted keels extending
- from the base to the anterior lobe, and “six confluent rows of green
- retuse many-angled cells, reminding one of human molar teeth” in front
- of them. _Column_ light ochre-yellow, streaked with brown, winged in
- front, the anther-bed with a retuse membranous border.
-
- Cœlogyne Massangeana, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- N.S., x., 684; _Floral Magazine_, 2 ser., t. 373.
-
-
-The plant which we now bring under the notice of our readers belongs to
-a rather extensive genus of Orchids, some of the species of which are
-very beautiful, while others are not worth cultivating as decorative
-plants. That which is now before us, is, however, an exceedingly
-handsome and very remarkable species, which was imported from Assam, by
-MM. Jacob-Makoy & Cie., of Liège, Belgium. Our illustration was taken
-from a very fine plant, which produced no fewer than eight of its long
-pendulous racemes of flowers, some of these having as many as
-twenty-seven blossoms on them. This grand specimen was grown in the
-notable collection of Mons. D. Massange, at the Château de Baillonville,
-near Marche, in Belgium, in whose honour the species was named by
-Professor Reichenbach. We had the pleasure of seeing this
-extraordinarily fine plant, growing under pot-culture, in M. Massange’s
-Cattleya house, and since then we have received the materials from which
-our artist has made the capital representation which accompanies these
-remarks. In regard to its botanical affinities it stands near to the
-Bornean _Cœlogyne asperata_, which is sometimes called _C. Lowii_.
-
-One remarkable feature of this _Cœlogyne Massangeana_ is the
-extraordinary shortness of time which it takes to develope its rather
-ample spikes of flowers; these are often pushed up from the pseudobulbs
-in their corkscrew-like fashion, and become extended to their full
-length in a very few days, the buds swelling off at once, and the
-flowers very soon appearing in full beauty, in which state they continue
-for four or five weeks.
-
-We have seen a wonderfully fine example of this plant in the grand
-collection of R. Smith, Esq., Brentham Park, Stirling; this was
-suspended from the roof, and bore several fine flower-spikes. Mr. Smith
-regards this as one of the most beautiful Cœlogynes in cultivation. When
-we saw the plant, it was overhanging a wonderful specimen of _Cattleya
-exoniensis_, a grand variety, and there were also many other fine
-Cattleyas in the same house.
-
-_Cœlogyne Massangeana_ is a free-growing evergreen plant, with stout
-pseudobulbs from three to four inches in height, each supporting a pair
-of light green plicate leaves, which are about eighteen inches high, and
-about four inches broad. The flower-spikes are produced from the base of
-the pseudobulbs, and, when the plants are in vigorous health, they
-frequently attain the length of eighteen inches, or sometimes two feet.
-The sepals and petals are of a light yellow-ochre colour; the lip rich
-brown, its upper part or side lobes creamy yellow, lined with brown. The
-plant flowers at various times of the year. We have more than once had
-it in bloom twice in one year, and it continues for several weeks in a
-state of freshness and beauty.
-
-In its native country, Assam, this species is found growing on the
-branches and stems of trees. Here, provided it receives proper
-treatment, it is a very free-growing Orchid, and is also easy of
-increase, as it often produces two growths from one bulb. It will thrive
-either in a basket or in a pot, but, when in bloom, it should be
-suspended from the roof in order that it may be seen to the best
-advantage, to accomplish which, if it be grown in a pot, some wire may
-be fixed around the rim by which to hook it up. When growing it may
-occupy any part of the Cattleya house, but it should be placed so that
-it can obtain plenty of light. When hung up near the glass it must be
-shaded from the burning sun. With us it thrives well in good fibrous
-peat, and we have found it to be a free-rooting plant, requiring to be
-kept moist during the growing season; indeed, we never allow the plants
-to become too dry, but just supply them with sufficient moisture to
-prevent them from shrivelling. Every effort must be made to keep the
-foliage clean, and free from insects, in respect to which the cultivator
-should adopt and act up to the golden maxim—“Prevention is better than
-cure.”
-
-
-Cymbidium eburneum.—In our remarks on this plant, under Plate 25, we
-have inadvertently referred to it as producing but one flower on a
-scape. This, however, is not quite correct; as, although the scapes each
-usually bear but a solitary blossom, we have known them to produce two,
-or sometimes even three flowers.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 30.
- LÆLIA ELEGANS ALBA.]
-
-
-
-
- LÆLIA ELEGANS ALBA.
- [Plate 30.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ terete, somewhat club-shaped, about eighteen inches
- in height, the weaker ones bearing one, the stronger two, leaves at
- the apex. _Leaves_ solitary or in pairs, ligulate-oblong, from six
- inches to a foot in length, very thick and leathery in texture, of a
- bright green colour. _Scape_ two to three-flowered, issuing from a
- terminal oblong compressed bract, about three inches in length.
- _Flowers_ white and crimson-purple, large and very handsome, about six
- inches in expansion; _sepals_ oblong lanceolate, acute, plane, pure
- white; _petals_ rather shorter than the sepals, broadly-lanceolate,
- undulated at the margins, pure white; _lip_ three inches long,
- three-lobed, the lateral lobes rolled over the column, the front
- portion spreading, undulated, and marked within the edge with a blotch
- of crimson-purple, the middle lobe roundish, flabellately expanded,
- crispato-undulate, of a rich crimson-purple, the colour breaking out
- near the tip into crimson veins on a purplish ground, and extended
- into a claw-like base through the pale yellowish disk. _Column_ about
- as long as the convolute base of the lip, enclosed.
-
- Lælia elegans var. alba, _Williams_, _Catalogue_ 1881, 68.
-
-
-We have here one of the most beautiful of this charming class of
-Orchids, and one which no Orchid fancier can fail to admire. The showy
-blossoms of the forms of this species offer many shades of colour, those
-of the variety before us being exceedingly chaste and delicate. The
-accompanying figure is a good representation of this charming variety,
-and was prepared from a sketch of a well-grown specimen which bloomed in
-the fine collection of W. Lee, Esq., Downside, Leatherhead, under the
-care of Mr. Woolford, the gardener.
-
-This Lælia grows about eighteen inches high; it is furnished with bold
-thick foliage of a pleasant green, and produces its blossoms in June and
-July, continuing for about three weeks in beauty. The sepals and petals
-are of a pure white, while the lip is of a rich magenta-crimson, the two
-colours making a well-marked and charming contrast. This delicately
-beautiful variety is extremely rare.
-
-_Lælia elegans alba_ is like the Cattleyas in its growth, with the
-exception of the stems being more slender, most of them producing two
-short leaves about six inches in length. The plants require the same
-temperature and the same material in which to grow as the allied
-Cattleyas, and also about the same amount of water during the growing
-season. The rest required is also the same as for Cattleyas. There are
-some of the species, such as _L. albida_, _autumnalis_, _majalis_,
-_pumila_, and others, which will thrive better in a cooler temperature.
-They are all subject to insects, which should be diligently looked
-after. White scale is sometimes troublesome, and if allowed to remain on
-them will disfigure the foliage by causing yellow spots. Thrips will
-also attack them, and increase very fast if they are not kept under by
-adopting the usual remedies.
-
-
-Shading Orchids.—This is a subject of the greatest importance in Orchid
-culture, and one that is often overlooked until it is too late—the
-mischief being done. What is required is a strong durable material that
-will wear well, and, where rollers are used, stand the strain upon it.
-It must also be understood that shading does not consist of merely
-daubing upon the glass some opaque material, such as paint, summer
-cloud, whitening, or the like, which though all very well as palliatives
-in positions where rollers cannot be used, such as at the ends and sides
-of a house, are greatly to be deprecated as a shading for the roof, for
-this reason, that in our English climate we are so subject to sudden
-changes of the weather, that were such a permanent shading to be used,
-we should frequently, especially during dull weather, have our plants in
-comparative darkness when they should be getting all the light possible.
-This cannot fail to lead to bad results and produce a sickly growth.
-Some growers use thick canvas; indeed, we have done so ourselves many
-years ago, but, by experience, we have found out the ill effects of it,
-for when we employed this kind of shading, we found the plants under its
-influence became weak and sickly, producing small puny flower-spikes. A
-lighter shading was then employed, and the difference was marvellous;
-the plants assumed quite a different aspect. It was at this time that we
-were exhibiting at Chiswick the fine specimens of East Indian
-Orchids—Aërides, Saccolabiums, Vandas, Dendrobiums, and many others—such
-as we seldom see equalled now. Since then we have used thinner shadings,
-with the best results. Our Vandas thus treated have always been strong
-and healthy, with broader foliage, producing their flower-spikes as
-often as three times a year, with the flowers of a good colour, lasting
-a long time in perfection; in fact we are never without flower, always
-having a good display. We refer more particularly to the suavis and
-tricolor section of the genus. Some people imagine Vandas do not flower
-till they attain a large size, but such is not the case if they are
-properly grown, and thin shading is used. Our experience leads us to the
-belief that all Orchids, with a few exceptions, require a thin shading,
-that is to say, one that, while warding off the direct rays of the sun,
-will allow the light to enter through it. To arrive at this result we
-use a strong, durable, cotton netting, woven in small squares, close
-enough to exclude the rays of the sun, while the light penetrates it
-with but little interruption. This netting stands exposure to the
-weather much longer than canvas, and on that account is cheaper in the
-long run. We have used this material for some years; in the case of Cool
-Orchids, Mexican, and East Indian kinds, with the best results, the
-netting being attached to rollers with appropriate gear. For the cool
-Orchid houses we employ raised blinds, upon which we hope to speak
-further shortly. The blinds can be managed with but little trouble. In
-the winter we take them off the house and put them in a dry place until
-they are required again in the ensuing spring.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 31.
- CALANTHE VEITCHII.]
-
-
-
-
- CALANTHE VEITCHII.
- [Plate 31.]
- A Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Terrestrial. _Pseudobulbs_ fleshy, conical, bluntly angular, four to
- six inches in height. _Leaves_ deciduous, about two from the apex of
- each pseudobulb, lanceolate, narrowed both towards the base and apex,
- plicate or plaited, of a bright green, produced before the flowers.
- _Scapes_ radical, downy, invested in the lower part with sheathing
- bracts, and each supporting a tall showy raceme of flowers, sometimes
- reaching three to four feet long. _Flowers_ abundant, each subtended
- by an ovate bract, of a very attractive and pleasing tint of rich deep
- rosy pink, darker in some varieties; _sepals_ oblong lanceolate, the
- dorsal one erect, the lateral ones spreading, deep rose-pink; _petals_
- of the same form and colour, patent, directed upwards; _lip_ adherent
- to the column, round which it is rolled at the base, front part
- clawed, and expanded into a squarish four-lobed limb, rich rose-pink,
- deepening almost to crimson around the creamy white eye or centre, the
- spur straight, downy. _Column_ small, terete, downy at the back.
-
- Calanthe Veitchii, _Lindley_, _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1859, 1016;
- _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5375; _Bateman_, _Second Century of
- Orchids_, t. 106; _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t. 48; _Floral Magazine_, t.
- 280; _Williams_, _Orchid Growers’ Manual_, 5 ed., 109.
-
-
-This Hybrid is one of the most distinct and charming of Orchids, as well
-as one of the most useful for winter decoration. Our illustration was
-prepared from some admirably grown materials which were kindly sent to
-us from the rich collection of William Leach, Esq., of Oakley,
-Fallowfield, near Manchester, where we have seen as many as one hundred
-flower spikes of one of the most highly coloured forms of this somewhat
-variable plant in full beauty; and, intermixed as they were with the
-white _Calanthe vestita_, the effect produced was exceedingly pleasing
-and attractive. Mr. Swan seems to have hit upon the most successful
-method of cultivating these very charming plants, for some of the spikes
-bore as many as forty flowers. He evidently knows also how to arrange
-the plants to advantage, namely, by placing them in rows among the
-foliage of the East Indian Orchids, so that the Calanthes, blooming as
-they do without their leaves, have their beauty enhanced by the foliage
-of the associated plants, especially that of the Aërides and Vandas.
-
-_Calanthe Veitchii_ is of deciduous habit, losing its foliage just as it
-comes into flower. We have, however, occasionally seen it with leaves
-accompanying its flowers, though its natural habit is to lose them. It
-produces flower spikes from three to four feet or more in length, and
-sometimes bears as many as fifty flowers on one spike. The plants are
-free-blooming and continue in flower for two months. The sepals and
-petals, as well as the lip, are of a rich rosy pink colour. A gay
-appearance may be kept up throughout the dull months of winter by having
-a sufficient number of plants and starting them successively into
-blossom.
-
-These Calanthes are very accommodating, since they will thrive well in
-baskets suspended from the roof, as well as in pots suspended by wire in
-the same way as the baskets; they will also thrive in pots standing on
-the tables, where room is not an object. If grown in baskets, they will
-require more water in their growing season. We prefer them grown in this
-manner where there is room, as they look so pleasing with their spikes
-hanging gracefully from the roof. Where hundreds of spikes have to be
-produced, as for instance is the case with Mr. C. Penny, of Sandringham
-Gardens, for decorating the Prince of Wales’ table, the effect produced
-is charming, and even for filling large vases they form a most elegant
-adornment.
-
-They are of easy cultivation when they get the treatment they require.
-Like all other deciduous and bulbous plants their blooming season
-follows that of the completion of the growth of the bulbs, and their
-growing season commences when they have finished blooming, after which
-they will soon begin to throw up their young growths. When this is
-observed, let them be fresh potted. We have found it best to do this
-every year, as they lose all their old roots annually. We shake the soil
-away and cut off all the roots, and repot them, when, as soon as they
-begin to grow, they will send out their new roots into fresh soil. The
-material we use for potting is good rough fibrous loam and leaf mould,
-with a little rotten manure, mixing them well together, and giving good
-drainage with a layer of rough peat and moss on the top of it. In
-potting, fill the pot up with the soil and place the bulb on the top,
-just making it firm; it will soon root and support itself. If planted in
-baskets, it is necessary to place some rough fibrous peat round the
-sides and at the bottom to keep the soil from washing out; fill the
-basket up with the same kind of compost as that recommended for the
-pots, with drainage at the bottom; place the bulbs upright in the
-basket, about three in number, on the top of the soil, and finish by
-giving a little water. After the plants get into growth and are making
-roots freely, they should always be kept moist until they have finished
-their growth, when a less copious supply will suffice; and after they
-have bloomed they may be kept dry for a time until they are ready for
-potting. When the plants are in vigorous growth a little manure water
-may, with advantage, be applied to their roots once or twice a week, but
-it must be well diluted before being used, as, if given too strong, it
-might destroy the roots.
-
-We find the East India house to suit these Calanthes best, or they will
-thrive well in a house where stove plants are grown. They are propagated
-by separating the pseudobulbs at the time they are potted, and as they
-generally make two growths from one bulb the increase is comparatively
-rapid. Like other orchidaceous plants, they must be kept free from
-insects.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 32.
- ONCIDIUM HÆMATOCHILUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ONCIDIUM HÆMATOCHILUM.
- [Plate 32.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ none or obsolete, the leaves and
- flower-scapes springing directly from the axils of the scaly bracts
- which surround the crown. _Leaves_ solitary, flat, oblong, acute,
- leathery in texture, dull green spotted with reddish brown, nine to
- twelve inches long. _Scape_ radical, deep red, supporting a dense
- panicle of green spotted crimson-lipped flowers. _Flowers_ about an
- inch and a half across, showy on account of their rich colouring and
- markings; _sepals_ oval-oblong, yellowish green, thickly marked with
- irregular transverse bands of rich reddish brown; _petals_ oblong,
- spathulate, wavy, similar in colour to the sepals, but less heavily
- marked; _lip_ clawed, with a pair of auricles at the base, the claw
- and auricles deep magenta-rose colour, the front expanded portion
- roundish or transversely reniform, of a deep sanguineous crimson, and
- having the margin yellow, closely mottled with deep rose-crimson, the
- disk furnished with a flexuose crest shaped like the letter W, and
- thence raised into an eminence with a toothlet on each side. _Column_
- short, with rounded wings curved downwards and somewhat lobed.
-
- Oncidium hæmatochilum, _Lindley_, in _Paxton’s Flower Garden_, i., t.
- 6; _Id._, re-issue, t. 26; _Id._, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Oncidium_,
- No. 132; _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices
- Systematicæ_, vi., 783.
-
- Oncidium luridum purpuratum, _Loddiges_, _List_—_fide_ Lindley.
-
-
-This is undoubtedly one of our oldest Orchids—one that we recollect to
-have seen in bloom with the Messrs. Loddiges, in their noble collection
-of Orchids, about thirty years ago. We have always been under the
-impression that it was one of the prettiest of the spotted Oncidiums,
-but, although we have occasionally bloomed it, since then we have seen
-it in very few collections. We were accordingly very greatly pleased to
-meet with a remarkably fine example of it in the collection of G. W. L.
-Schofield, Esq., of Rawtenstall, near Manchester, from which our
-illustration was taken. The plant bore two flower-spikes, one of which
-was three feet six inches in length, bearing forty fine blossoms, and
-was a most beautiful example of the species; the other was shorter, and
-from this our drawing was made, as our page would not afford space for
-the representation of the larger spike. Our readers will, however, be
-enabled from the description and figure to form a good idea of the
-beauty of this rare species when well grown. Mr. Schofield is a great
-lover of good Orchids, and apparently intends having a fine collection
-of them, as he has had houses built for the different classes; his
-gardener also takes great interest in the plants, and consequently they
-are closely looked after and well cared for.
-
-The _Oncidium hæmatochilum_ is a very compact-growing plant, with leaves
-from nine to twelve inches in height, and two and a half inches broad,
-of a dark green colour, spotted with brown. The sepals and petals are of
-a greenish yellow, mottled with crimson; the lip is of a rich crimson,
-edged with yellow, and spotted round the margin with magenta-rose
-colour. It flowers in November, the blossoms continuing for several
-weeks in perfection, and is a plant that will no doubt become popular,
-as it blooms at a time when flowers are in request. The specimen we are
-describing was grown in a basket in the Cattleya house, in peat and
-moss, which form an unexceptionable compost for it, with good drainage,
-and a moderate supply of water in the growing season. It is best
-suspended from the roof where it may obtain plenty of light, but it does
-not like bright sunshine, and consequently must be shaded in sunny
-weather.
-
-The Oncidiums are a class of Orchids among which occur some most showy
-and beautiful species; while almost every colour we could mention is to
-be found represented among them. They come from different regions, and
-in consequence their treatment must vary. Some of them rank among our
-finest exhibition plants, as well as amongst the best for the decoration
-of our stoves and Orchid houses. We often see fine specimens of
-Oncidiums in our grand old collections of plants where there is no
-pretence at growing a collection of Orchids, but where they are merely
-cultivated for cutting purposes. What is more airy and elegant for vases
-than the inflorescence of _Oncidium flexuosum_, or even _O.
-sphacelatum_, or that of many others we could mention if space would
-allow? What more brilliant than such species as _O. varicosum_ and its
-variety _O. Rogersii_, _O. ampliatum majus_, _O. tigrinum_, _O.
-Marshallianum_, or _O. macranthum_?
-
-
-Dendrobium Findleyanum.—This plant is now (January, 1882) finely in
-flower in the collection of J. C. Bowring, Esq., Windsor Forest. It must
-be a grand specimen, as Mr. Clinkaberry, the gardener, informs us that
-it has one hundred and ninety-two expanded blossoms. We have never
-before heard of such a well-flowered specimen as this; indeed, large
-plants of this species are somewhat rare. It is a most curious grower,
-and very remarkable for its long tapering compressed and deeply nodose
-stem-like pseudobulbs. The flowers are large, white, tipped with rosy
-pink, in the same way as those of _D. Wardianum_, and they are produced
-in great profusion. It is a plant that takes but little room, and should
-be in every collection.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 33.
- CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS.
- [Plate 33.]
- Native of Brazil in the region of the Rio Negro.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ slender, subterete, furrowed, with distant nodes,
- nearly a foot in height. _Leaves_ in pairs, ovate or ovate-oblong,
- obtuse, barely four inches in length, of a deep bluish green colour
- and stout coriaceous texture. _Scape_ four to five-flowered, issuing
- from a terminal oblong obtuse compressed sheathing bract, of a pale
- brown colour, which is about two inches long and three-quarters of an
- inch broad. _Flowers_ richly coloured, nearly six inches in breadth;
- _sepals_ elliptic-lanceolate, plane, about two and a half inches long,
- of a deep rich purplish rose colour; _petals_ of the same colour
- somewhat broader and longer, rhomboid, more or less undulated at the
- margin in the upper half; _lip_ about two inches long, three-lobed,
- the basal lobes elongately connivent into a tube acute in front, of a
- rich magenta-crimson, white at the base, middle lobe transversely
- rounded, broader than long, emarginate, narrowed into a claw, the
- front portion of the same rich crimson colour, the disk and interior
- of the tube yellow, the former traversed by five elevated golden
- yellow lines. _Column_ enclosed.
-
- Cattleya superba splendens, _Lemaire_, _Illustration Horticole_ xvi.,
- t. 605; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, 4 ed., 127; 5 ed., 132.
-
-
-The plant we are now about to describe is one of the most magnificent
-members of its genus, so far as regards the brilliant colouring of its
-flowers. This may be seen by a reference to the accompanying
-illustration, which was taken from a fine plant that flowered at the
-Victoria Nursery, and was subsequently purchased by William Lee, Esq. of
-Downside, Leatherhead. The plant was seen to great advantage when
-suspended in a basket from the roof of the Orchid-house, and in this
-position was greatly admired, by _connoisseurs_ on account of its rich
-and brilliant colours. The plants of _Cattleya superba_ vary
-considerably in the colour of their flowers, those of the original or
-type form being well represented in the first series of _Warner’s Select
-Orchidaceous Plants_ (t. 24), where a most beautiful spike with six of
-its really superb flowers is shown.
-
-The variety which we now introduce to the notice of our
-readers—_Cattleya superba splendens_—is one of distinct character, and
-of unparalleled beauty. It comes from a different country, viz., the Rio
-Negro region of Para instead of Guiana. The plant is of compact growth
-like _C. superba_, and generally flowers during July and August; the
-stems (pseudobulbs) are ten to twelve inches in height; the leaves are
-produced in pairs, and are longer and more pointed, and its splendidly
-coloured flowers are produced four or five together in the spike from
-the top of the stem when it is making its growth. The individual
-blossoms are as much as five inches across, and are well expanded, the
-sepals and petals being of a bright but delicate rose colour, and the
-lip white at the base, the front and side lobes rich magenta-crimson,
-the disk and interior of the tube being of a bright golden yellow. The
-plant continues in blossom for three or four weeks if the flowers are
-kept from damp; indeed, all Cattleya blooms retain their freshness for a
-longer period if kept dry, especially the large light-flowered forms of
-_C. Mossiæ_, _C. Trianæ_, _C. Mendelii_, &c., which soon become spotted
-if the atmosphere surrounding them is much charged with moisture.
-
-_Cattleya superba_ is not in general well cultivated, but we have seen
-some specimens which were grown with extraordinary skill and success in
-the select collection of O. Schneider, Esq., of Cromwell Grange,
-Fallowfield, near Manchester. These specimens, as many as nine in
-number, were suspended in baskets from the roof of the warm house. They
-were grown from imported plants, and we have noticed them in the same
-position growing and blooming freely for the past three years, and, as
-they succeed so well, we should certainly recommend their being retained
-in the same situation. It is a golden rule for cultivators that when a
-particular kind of plant is found to thrive in a certain position, it
-should be kept there, so long at least as the conditions are suitable.
-In the instance just referred to the plants were suspended close to the
-glass, where they enjoyed a great abundance of light, and this was
-possibly the secret of their success. Other important considerations are
-that the plants do not like to be disturbed and will not bear cutting
-up.
-
-It is necessary at all times to keep sweet healthy material about the
-roots by removing the old effete soil and replacing it by that which is
-fresh and sound. We find rough fibrous peat and charcoal to suit it, but
-this must be accompanied by good drainage. We have seen them thrive well
-on blocks of wood, but when grown in this way they require more water.
-If cultivated in baskets they also need a good supply during the season
-of growth. In winter less will suffice, merely enough being given to
-keep the bulbs in a plump condition. As soon as they show signs of
-growth, more water should be given, but it is necessary to avoid wetting
-the young growths, as this often causes them to damp off, and when this
-is the case the succeeding growth will be weakly and unable to develop
-blossoms.
-
-The plants should be kept free from insects; sometimes thrips will
-attack the young growths, but it should be speedily removed, as, if
-allowed to remain, it will soon make great havoc.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 34.
- PAPHINIA CRISTATA.]
-
-
-
-
- PAPHINIA CRISTATA.
- [Plate 34.]
- Native of Trinidad and Guiana.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ small, clustered, oblong-ovate, compressed,
- somewhat furrowed, bearing one to three leaves at the apex, and
- leaf-like scales at the base. _Leaves_ oblong-lanceolate, plicate,
- submembranaceous, spreading, about eight inches in height. _Scapes_
- proceeding from the base of the pseudobulbs, pendent, two or
- three-flowered, clothed with loose brown membranaceous bracts.
- _Flowers_ smooth, spreading, whitish on the outside, beautifully
- marked with purple lines within, about three and a half inches across;
- _sepals_ lanceolate acute, fleshy, pale straw colour, almost entirely
- covered by thin transverse lines of chocolate-purple; _petals_ similar
- in form and colour, but somewhat narrower; _lip_ much smaller than the
- foregoing, fleshy, tripartite, almost entirely of a rich purplish
- black, ovate in outline, shortly unguiculate, with four stalked glands
- on the reddish orange purple-spotted claw, the lateral lobes
- sickle-shaped, the middle lobe rhomboidal, terminated by a tuft of
- club-shaped fimbriæ; disk crested, bidentate, with a few deep yellow
- spots down the centre. _Column_ club-shaped, semiterete, greenish at
- the base, the upper portion auriculate, with a projecting tooth on
- each side, deep yellow.
-
- Paphinia cristata, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, 1843, misc. 14;
- _Lyons_, _Treatise on Orchidaceous Plants_, 203; _Van Houtte_, _Flore
- des Serres_, iv., t. 335; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4836;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi.,
- 614; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, 5 ed., 265; _Bateman_, _2nd
- Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 117.
-
- Maxillaria cristata, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, t. 1811.
-
-
-_Paphinia_ is a genus of very limited extent, and of which but few
-species are at present known. That now before us is a very old and
-familiar species, one of the best known amongst them, and a singularly
-handsome little plant. It was the _Maxillaria cristata_ of early Orchid
-days, and considerable quantities of it were formerly imported, but it
-has now become very rare. We have flowered several plants during the
-past year at the Victoria Nursery, where they were greatly admired by
-those who saw them. It is a plant which comparatively few persons
-interested in Orchids have met with in blossom, and of which our plate
-gives a very correct representation. The flowers are remarkably curious,
-not only for their structure, but also for their colouring, as will be
-seen by reference to our illustration. The plant has, moreover, a very
-peculiar mode of throwing out its flower-spikes.
-
-We have also flowered _Paphinia rugosa_, another very singular and
-pretty plant, after the same style, but differing in colour, and well
-worth cultivation. They occupy but little space in the Orchid-houses,
-and are best grown in small pans suspended near the glass where they
-have the full benefit of the light, but must be shaded from the sun
-since their thin-textured leaves would suffer injury from too complete
-an exposure.
-
-_Paphinia cristata_, is a low-growing plant, with small shiny
-pseudobulbs, and light green plicate foliage about eight inches in
-height. It is a free-blooming species, generally producing three flowers
-on a scape which proceeds from the base of the pseudobulb after that has
-completed its growth. The flowers last in beauty for about a fortnight,
-and are produced at different periods of the year. The sepals and petals
-are nearly covered with transverse parallel lines of dark
-chocolate-purple on a creamy yellow ground; the lip is coloured in a
-similar manner, and furnished with some curious tufted fringes.
-
-These plants are not so easy to cultivate as some other Orchids; but, by
-bestowing on them a little extra care and attention, they may be kept in
-a thriving and healthy condition. We find them to grow best in small
-pans, nearly filled with drainage, and a lump of charcoal on the top of
-it; place the plant on the top of this with but little rough fibrous
-peat or live sphagnum moss about the roots, and so that it is elevated a
-little above the rim, as it has the peculiarity of throwing its
-flower-spike downwards.
-
-This species is a native of Guiana, and of the adjacent island of
-Trinidad. In the latter it is found growing on decayed branches of trees
-in the neighbourhood of the mud lake. In the former it occurs in the
-warmer parts of Demerara, and, consequently, must be cultivated in the
-warm house, and kept in a moist atmosphere during the season of its
-growth; when at rest, however, a smaller quantity of water will suffice,
-but it should never be allowed to shrivel, as, when once its condition
-becomes bad, it is very difficult to restore its health.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Alexandræ flaveolum.—Whoever expected ten years ago to see
-a yellow-flowered _Odontoglossum Alexandræ_ (?) No one, we should think,
-unless it were by a great stretch of the imagination. However, here is
-one from the fine collection of G. Hardy, Esq., of Timperley,
-Manchester. The flowers in every respect resemble those of _O.
-Alexandræ_, except in their colour, which is a bright canary-yellow. The
-spike before us bears fifteen expanded flowers, and is one of the
-greatest surprises we have had the good fortune to meet with for a long
-time. It is true that distinct varieties of this “the Queen of Orchids”
-are turning up almost every day, but one seldom has a chance of seeing
-an entirely new break of colour of this sort. We believe that a variety
-with yellow flowers bloomed some time ago in the Broomfield collection,
-but the colour was not so decided in Mr. Warner’s plant as it is in the
-case now before us.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 35.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM.
- [Plate 35.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ligulate-pyriform, costate, two or three
- inches high. _Leaves_ broadly linear, acute, about a foot long, of a
- light green colour, two from the top of each pseudobulb, with
- occasionally another from its base. _Scape_ radical, spreading, more
- or less drooping, supporting a branching raceme about two feet long.
- _Flowers_ resembling those of _Odontoglossum Alexandræ_, but smaller,
- prettily spotted; _sepals_ ovate-oblong, acute, slightly crispy,
- creamy white, heavily and irregularly blotched on the lower half with
- bright chestnut-brown, the attenuated upper half unspotted; _petals_
- similar in form and colour, the blotches which are also on the lower
- half smaller, and more thickly placed; _lip_ from a cuneate base,
- pandurate, narrow in front, apiculate, distinctly wavy and toothed,
- creamy white, yellow at the base, with fewer and smaller brown spots;
- disk deep yellow, with a prominent crest dividing in front into two
- divergent horns. _Column_ greenish towards the base, brown in front,
- the wings and anther-case white.
-
- Odontoglossum Andersonianum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’
- Chronicle_, 1868, 599; _Id._ 1872, 41; _Floral Magazine_, 2 ser., t.
- 45.
-
-
-The charming _Odontoglossum Andersonianum_, supposed to be a wild mule
-between _O. Alexandræ_ (_crispum_) and _O. præstans_ or _O. gloriosum_,
-is one of the many prettily spotted Odontoglots which have been
-introduced into our collections during the past few years, and among
-which new varieties are continually appearing. One of the best forms of
-this plant which has come under our notice is that represented in the
-accompanying plate, prepared from a very beautiful specimen which
-bloomed last year among many other fine Odontoglots, well cultivated in
-the collection of Messrs. William Thomson & Sons, of Clovenfords near
-Galashiels.
-
-The _Odontoglossum Andersonianum_ is a compact-growing plant, with
-pyriform pseudobulbs two to three inches high, pale green leaves, and
-gracefully drooping branched flower-spikes about two feet in length. The
-sepals and petals are at first creamy white, spotted with purplish
-brown, the lip being also white, but less heavily spotted. The plant is
-of free-blooming habit, the flowers continuing fresh and perfect for a
-period of five or six weeks. It is exceedingly difficult to recognize
-this form until it produces its blossoms, as its growth is remarkably
-similar to that of _O. Alexandræ_. Indeed there are many forms and
-varieties of this particular group which it is impossible to recognize
-until their flowers are seen; and, though cultivators may sometimes feel
-assured of the identity of individual plants, the production of flowers
-not unfrequently proves them to be mistaken.
-
-_Odontoglossum Andersonianum_ requires the same treatment as _O.
-Alexandræ_ and other cool Orchids, also the same amount of water. The
-plants must have good fibrous peat to grow in, and plenty of drainage,
-as they need to be freely supplied with water all the year round, and
-this, if allowed to become stagnant, would prove very injurious to them.
-The material in which they are grown must also be clean and sweet; and
-though they must never be over-potted, sufficient space should be
-allowed for their roots. We have sometimes seen Odontoglots in pots far
-too large for them, and though this may tend to make the plants more
-important-looking, yet it will eventually spoil them, as the larger
-amount of soil becomes soddened with water, and this produces rotting of
-the roots.
-
-
-Raised Blinds for Orchid Houses.—During the summer months we have found
-Raised Blinds very beneficial to the growth of Orchids, especially to
-those requiring cool-house culture. When the hot summer’s sun is shining
-upon the glass, it is very difficult, where Raised Blinds are not
-employed, to keep the temperature sufficiently low. The glass roof of
-the structure upon which the sun is shining becomes very hot, even when
-shaded with ordinary blinds; but if Raised Blinds are used a current of
-air is allowed to pass over the entire surface of the roof, and the
-glass is kept comparatively cool. The effect of this is to decrease very
-appreciably the internal temperature of the house; and the moisture,
-which would otherwise be dried up by the burning heat of the sun,
-produces a nice humid genial atmosphere in which Orchids delight. Having
-thus far referred to the advantages to be derived from the use of this
-method of shading, we may now explain briefly the mode of construction.
-Supposing that the house to be furnished with Raised Blinds is an
-ordinary span-roofed structure, it is necessary in the first place to
-provide a second ridge elevated about six inches above the top of the
-existing one. This should not consist of a solid plank, but of a strip
-of timber sufficiently strong to bear the weight and strain of the
-blinds and roller, and should be supported on blocks of wood placed at
-intervals in order to allow the current of air from below to find an
-outlet, which would not be the case if a solid ridge-board were adopted.
-Having arranged for the ridge, the next thing is to provide supports for
-the rollers; either wood or iron may be used for this purpose, but we
-have found iron to be the lightest looking and the most durable. Where
-the length of the rafters does not exceed say eight feet, half-inch rod
-iron will be found to be strong enough, and this should be cut into
-proper lengths, with the lower end turned up in a semi-circular form, so
-as to catch the roller when it descends, and prevent it from running off
-the supports. These supporting rods should be fixed to the bars or
-rafters of the house, about six inches above the woodwork, by being
-welded to vertical iron stays, which latter should be flattened out at
-the base, and provided with holes so that they can be screwed to the
-rafters or bars of the roof. In this way a strong support for the blinds
-to roll upon will be formed; the blinds themselves can be attached to
-the elevated ridge in the ordinary way, and the gearing usually employed
-for the purpose will be found to answer well for pulling them up or
-down. Many Orchid growers have already adopted these Raised Blinds with
-very beneficial results.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 36.
- CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM.
- [Plate 36.]
- Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Epiphytal. Acaulescent. _Leaves_ radical, distichous, coriaceous,
- oblong, acute, palish green thickly chequered with dark bottle-green
- markings, the under side dull reddish purple. _Scapes_ solitary in the
- leaf axils, pubescent, purplish, terminating in a lanceolate sharply
- keeled bract, from which the solitary blossom emerges. _Flowers_
- medium-sized, peculiar in form, rather showy; _dorsal sepals_
- ovate-acute, ciliate, the inner surface polished, suffused with
- reddish purple in the lower part, whitish towards the tip, traversed
- by numerous green veins of which the alternate ones are longer and
- stouter than the rest, all of them distinctly marked on the outer
- surface; _lateral connate sepals_ smaller, ciliate, greenish white
- with green veins, rather shorter than the lip; _petals_ linear-oblong,
- about two and a half inches in length, glossy, deflexed (more so than
- in the figure), ciliate with a fringe of unequal black hairs, bright
- wine-red, greenish towards the base, where it is marked with several
- Indian-purple warts most abundant near the upper edge, exterior
- surface green; _lip_ narrowly pouch-shaped, nearly as long as the
- petals, suffused in front with the same purplish red tint, and marked
- thickly with green veins at the sides and back, the basal auricles
- erect, obtuse, interior surface green, dotted with wine-red, the
- incurved margins of the claw greenish yellow, with reddish spots.
- _Staminode_ transverse, yellowish green, with two large exterior teeth
- in front and a small inner tooth, light brown with green markings.
-
- Cypripedium politum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- N.S. xiv., 525.
-
-
-This new Lady’s Slipper is one of a batch raised some few years since by
-Robert Warner, Esq., of Broomfield, near Chelmsford, who has been
-successful in producing several very good forms by the process of
-hybridisation. The plants are of dwarf habit, free-growing, and
-free-blooming, each small growth bringing forth its flower. This
-_Cypripedium politum_ has been flowered for several years past by Mr.
-Warner, and thus its characteristic features and its constancy are well
-ascertained. There are also some other distinct kinds obtained through
-the same cross, some of which we hope to figure on a future occasion. We
-should expect that the cross was made between _C. barbatum superbum_ and
-_C. venustum_.
-
-_Cypripedium politum_ is a plant of compact habit and of free growth.
-The leaves are of a distinct and well-marked character, as will be seen
-in the very accurate portrait furnished by our artist. They are oblong,
-acute, about five inches long, and somewhat over an inch broad, of a
-beautiful light green, barred and chequered with a very deep or
-bottle-green, which gives it a very pleasing appearance; the
-under-surface is stained with a deep reddish wine-purple. The downy
-flower-scapes are also purple, some six to eight inches in height, each
-supporting a solitary flower, in which the dorsal sepal is ovate,
-polished, flushed in the lower part with purplish red and spotted with
-purple at the base, the upper part white, and the whole traversed by
-bright green veins which are alternately long and short. The petals are
-oblong, broadest at the apex, of a bright wine-red, polished, with black
-hairs along the margin, and Indian-purple warts near the upper edge,
-greenish towards the base and along the lower edge. The pouch-shaped lip
-is nearly as long as the petals, purplish red with a coppery tinge,
-glossy, veined with green at the sides and back. The flowers are
-produced during January and February, a season when they are much in
-request for decorative purposes. The Cypripediums are very useful for
-furnishing a supply of cut flowers, as they will keep fresh for several
-weeks in water, and will last for at least six weeks on the plant.
-
-These interesting plants are of easy cultivation, and occupy but little
-space, hence they may be accommodated in every small collection, and may
-be grown without much expense. The species and varieties forming the
-_barbatum_ group, to which this plant belongs, all require similar
-treatment. They may be grown either in the Cattleya or East India house,
-and are best cultivated in pots. Some of our Orchid-growers prefer to
-plant them in sphagnum moss, others in peat; for ourselves, we prefer to
-use good fibrous peat, ample drainage being provided. We have seen them
-thrive well in fibrous loam. The plants must be kept above the rim of
-the pot, as they root freely over the surface of the rough material.
-Since they have no fleshy bulbs to support them, and their growth is
-continuous almost throughout the year, they require to be liberally
-supplied with water at the roots; for this reason the pots must be well
-drained.
-
-Insects require to be constantly searched for. The scale sometimes
-appears upon the plants, but may easily be subjugated by sponging the
-surface with clean water. Their greatest enemy, however, is the red
-thrips, which must be hunted up and destroyed if the health of the
-plants is to be maintained, but it may be easily kept under if promptly,
-perseveringly, and vigorously attacked.
-
-
-Dendrobium macrophyllum.—We have received two splendid spikes of this
-magnificent Dendrobe, with flowers of an unusually fine colour, from a
-well grown specimen, such as we might expect from so experienced a
-grower as Mr. Penny, of the Royal Gardens, Sandringham, who has been one
-of the most successful exhibitors of specimen Orchids at our London
-shows, where he has, with the large collections staged by him, carried
-off nearly all the leading prizes. We hope at some future period to be
-able to figure this fine Dendrobium, the sepals and petals of which are
-of a rose-magenta colour, and the lip of the same colour, with a
-purplish crimson throat. We received with the Dendrobe a fine spike of
-the white-lipped form of _Odontoglossum Hallii_ in grand condition, the
-sepals and petals being of a very bright golden yellow with rich
-markings of a brownish crimson colour. This variety forms a splendid
-contrast with the white-flowered _O. Alexandræ_ and _O. Pescatorei_, of
-which kinds there is a fine collection at Sandringham. The Prince of
-Wales is a great admirer of these as well as of other good Orchids.—B.
-S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 37.
- CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM.
- [Plate 37.]
- Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Epiphytal. Acaulescent. _Leaves_ radical, distichous, coriaceous,
- oblong acute, closely tessellated with dark hieroglyphic markings on a
- light green ground, the under surface reddish purple. _Scapes_
- solitary in the central leaf-axils, pubescent, reddish purple,
- one-flowered, with a very short ovate bract. _Flowers_ large, with
- expanded petals, rather attractive in colour; _dorsal sepal_ broadly
- ovate, bright yellow-green with white margin, and a narrow purple
- central stripe, on each side of which are about four strongly marked
- dark green longitudinal veins, connected by finer transverse veins;
- _lateral (connate) sepals_ small; _petals_ oblong, broader upwards,
- two and a half inches long, and three-fourths of an inch wide, with
- green longitudinal veins, and a dark purple central line, on one side
- of which (the upper half) they are washed with wine-purple, and have a
- yellowish buff margin, and a few black warts near the base, where they
- are ciliated; on the other (lower) half very slightly tinted with
- purple, the cross veins more apparent, and the margin green; _lip_
- rather large, shortly pouch-shaped, heavily stained with wine-purple,
- and freely marked with bold reticulations of a darker purple, the
- upper angles yellowish at the margins. _Staminode_ transversely
- reniform, pale green, with dark green feathery markings in front.
-
- Cypripedium chloroneurum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’
- Chronicle_, N.S., xiv., 525.
-
-
-This is one of the most distinct of the new hybrid Lady’s Slippers that
-have been recently introduced to the notice of Orchid-growers; it will
-also be appreciated as one of the most useful, being of a neat
-free-growing and abundant-blooming habit of growth. The Cypripediums are
-everybody’s plants, that is to say, any one who has a place adapted for
-their cultivation can manage them without difficulty. Many growers make
-them their especial care and study, procuring every species and variety
-that can be obtained, and thus forming a very interesting and diverse
-group.
-
-Our present subject was raised by Robert Warner, Esq., in whose
-collection at Broomfield it has been blooming very abundantly, and it
-was from Mr. Warner’s plant that our drawing was taken. The variety
-resembles the one figured on plate 36 in being of free-blooming habit,
-and also in being very attractive in regard to its foliage as well as
-its flowers. Many hybrid Cypripediums have been raised in this country
-of late years by the Messrs. Veitch and Sons, and also by other growers.
-Some of these have proved to be very beautiful and effective subjects,
-and no doubt there are others coming forward that have not yet bloomed.
-Many splendid novelties may yet be gained by crossing those kinds that
-have flowers of distinct forms and colours, and, as many of the
-varieties bloom simultaneously, the hybridiser will find abundant
-opportunities for carrying out his plans.
-
-These plants appear to be easily raised from seeds, and to reach the
-flowering stage sooner than most other seedling Orchids.
-
-Some of the Cypripediums thrive well in a cool house, and by fertilising
-these with the best of the stove species, a new set of cool-house forms
-would probably be obtained. Such a result would be one of considerable
-importance to Orchidists, as no doubt, if varieties of a different
-character to those we already possess could be obtained, some of our
-enthusiastic growers would take up their cultivation in good earnest. At
-present the majority of the Lady’s Slippers require a warm house.
-
-_Cypripedium chloroneurum_ is a dwarf compact-habited plant, with
-evergreen foliage about six inches in length, beautifully variegated
-with closely chequered markings of dark and light green. The flowers are
-produced in January and February, and continue on for several weeks. The
-colours are distinct and attractive, the broad flat dorsal sepal being
-of a bright lively pale green striped with darker green nerves and
-bordered with white, the petals suffused with purple on the upper half
-and marked with black marginal warts, and the purplish lip freely
-ornamented with bold dark purple reticulations, altogether presenting a
-remarkably effective appearance.
-
-This novel hybrid grows freely when potted in rough fibrous peat with
-good drainage. When in vigorous growth it requires a liberal supply of
-water at the roots. Propagation is accomplished by dividing the plants
-after they have finished blooming and are ready to start into fresh
-growth; they can then be divided with safety by cutting off a back
-growth with a leading shoot in front of it, but care must be taken in
-cutting that the remaining portion of the plant is provided with an eye
-so placed as to break and form a new growth. When this young growth has
-been made, the divided plant may be shaken out from the old soil and
-potted. The offshoots should be placed in small pots until the following
-year, when, if they have made good growth, they may require to be
-repotted. They must be kept moist and in a plump condition, as they have
-only slender resources of their own to rely upon, but they root freely.
-As the plants get established they will require larger supplies of
-water, for which reason good drainage must be secured.
-
-
-Aërides Leeanum.—This novelty has bloomed in the collection of G. W. L.
-Schofield, Esq., of New Hall, Hey, Rawtenstall, near Manchester,
-producing four flower-spikes. It is a beautiful object, its spikes of
-richly-coloured rosy pink blossoms hanging gracefully from the plant. It
-is very distinct from any other species of _Aërides_, and will doubtless
-become a great favourite. One of its great recommendations is that it
-blooms in the winter, which is not the case with the generality of these
-plants, their usual flowering season being during the spring and summer
-months. _A. Leeanum_ is a small growing plant, but produces its spikes
-of blossoms very freely; and requiring, as it does, but a limited space
-for its accommodation, it will be a most useful introduction for amateur
-cultivators.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 38.
- DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM.]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM.
- [Plate 38.]
- Native of Tropical North-east Australia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ long, slender, erect, fusiform, one to two
- feet in length, closely invested between the nodes with dry light
- brown sheaths, the older ones swollen at the very base. _Leaves_
- oblong-lanceolate, sub-acuminate, five ribbed, of a deep green colour,
- and a somewhat coriaceous texture, a few only (five or six) being
- developed towards the extremities of the stems. _Racemes_ erect or
- curving, six to twelve flowered, nearly a foot in length, usually
- produced from the upper nodes of the old leafless stems, but sometimes
- from the apex of the younger leafy stems. _Flowers_ large, showy, rich
- rosy purple; _sepals_ oblong acute, flat, of a rich purplish magenta,
- the lateral ones united at the base into a short blunt spur below the
- setting on of the lip, above which spur is a gibbosity, occasioned by
- a similar swelling at the base of the lip (whence comes the specific
- name _bigibbum_); _petals_ large, roundish, spreading, recurved, of
- the same colour as the sepals; _lip_ three-lobed, the lateral lobes
- incurved, the retuse middle lobe somewhat reflexed, rich
- crimson-purple veined with darker purple, the base decurrent and
- gibbose, and the disk with three white papillose crests. _Columns_
- compressed, grooved, the back united with the sepal.
-
- Dendrobium bigibbum, _Lindley_, in _Paxton’s Flower Garden_, iii, 25,
- fig. 245; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4898; _Walpers’ Annales
- Botanices Systematicæ_, vi., 302; _Warner_, _Select Orchidaceous
- Plants_, 2 ser. t. 8; _Van Houtte_, _Flore des Serres_, xi., t. 1143;
- _Bateman_, _Second Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 169;
- _Williams_, _Orchid Growers’ Manual_, 5 ed., 165.
-
-
-This plant belongs to one of the most noble and popular, one of the most
-showy and beautiful genera of the whole family of Orchids, and one among
-the flowers of which nearly every colour occurs—bright yellow, pure
-white, rich crimson, bright purple, soft mauve, rich orange, nankeen,
-and many others being found among the many and various habited species
-of Dendrobes.
-
-_Dendrobium bigibbum_, the subject of our plate, is a species of a
-remarkably beautiful and showy character, which, until within the last
-few years, has been somewhat rare. In 1876, however, we received a large
-consignment from our collector, Mr. Goldie, who was then on his way to
-New Guinea, and who met with it growing on an island in Torres Straits,
-it having hitherto, we believe, been found only on the mainland of
-Australia. These plants were very fine, some of the specimens being of
-enormous dimensions, with stems quite two feet long, and from one and
-a-half to two inches in circumference. The specimens from which our
-figure of one of the most charming forms of this species which we have
-yet seen, was prepared, were kindly sent to us from the fine collection
-of the Marquess of Lothian, at Newbattle Abbey. Dalkeith, where it
-bloomed in September last in full beauty, amongst many other notable
-Orchids which are well cultivated by the intelligent gardener, Mr.
-Priest, who takes great delight in the careful management of his plants.
-
-This species of _Dendrobium_ is partially deciduous, the fully ripened
-stems sometimes losing the whole of their foliage, while the young
-growths retain their leaves until the following year. It grows from one
-to two feet in height, and produces its racemes of flowers sometimes
-from the top of the young growths, and sometimes from the old stems, in
-the latter case often bearing many spikes on the same stem. The flowers
-are of a rich rosy purple, and last in perfection for a considerable
-period. It is a most useful subject for associating with a button-hole
-bouquet, single flowers being shown off to great advantage by placing a
-light-looking fern frond behind them. The racemes of flowers last a long
-time after being cut if placed in water, and are most useful in all
-floral decorations. By growing several plants, successional blooms may
-be had at different periods.
-
-This Tropical Australian species is best grown in a warm house, as the
-plants require a good amount of heat—70° to 80° while growing—and plenty
-of light, but the burning rays of the sun must be kept from them. They
-thrive best when planted in pans or baskets amongst rough fibrous peat
-and sphagnum moss, and suspended from the roof of the Orchid house.
-During the summer season they require a liberal supply of water, but in
-winter should have only sufficient to keep the stems plump. The plant
-will also succeed on blocks of wood, but, if grown in this way, it will
-in hot weather need watering twice a day, and once a day at other times.
-Some cultivators have been unsuccessful with this species, but we have
-found it to thrive well in a house where Crotons, Dipladenias,
-Stephanotis, etc., are grown; the Dendrobes seem to enjoy the moisture
-transmitted to them by the stove plants which are generally syringed in
-warm weather, and the dew arising from this operation appears to suit
-the Orchid. The syringe is also useful in subduing the red spider, which
-will sometimes attack the young growth. Insects often infest those kinds
-of _Dendrobium_ that are grown in strong heat, but they must by this and
-other means be kept under.
-
-Such treatment suits almost all the popular Dendrobes, namely, _D.
-Devonianum_, _D. Wardianum superbum_, _D. chrysanthum_, _D. superbum
-(macrophyllum)_, _D. crassinode_, etc.; and the plants are found to be
-much stronger by reason of hanging near the glass well exposed to light,
-in which position they can be syringed on warm days—this moistening not
-only invigorating their growth, but being also a means of keeping
-insects under control.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 39.
- PHALÆNOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS.]
-
-
-
-
- PHALÆNOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS.
- [Plate 39.]
- Native of the East.
-
-
- Epiphytal. Acaulescent, the plants clinging to their supports by stout
- flattened roots. _Leaves_ coriaceous, distichous, ligulate-oblong,
- acute, channelled, equitant at the base, the upper surface marbled
- with transverse grey blotches which disappear with age, the under
- surface purplish red, similar in size to those of _Phalænopsis
- Schilleriana_. _Scape_ radical, bearing a many-flowered (120 or more)
- branching panicle of very handsomely and peculiarly spotted blossoms.
- _Flowers_ nearly three inches across, expanded, cream-coloured at
- first, becoming white; _sepals_ oblong, or ovate-oblong, about an inch
- in length, the dorsal one white, the lateral ones white along the
- upper side, the lower side being yellow thickly spotted with
- cinnamon-red; _petals_ much broader, narrowed near the base, white;
- _lip_ three-lobed, with a four-horned yellow callosity at its base,
- the lateral lobes oblong, rounded, the middle lobe oval, with an
- anchor-like extremity, the apex terminating in a pair of narrow
- recurved laciniæ, all the lobes yellow at the base, white upwards and
- handsomely spotted with rich cinnamon-red. _Column_ clavate, white.
-
- Phalænopsis Stuartiana, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- N.S. xvi., 748, 753, fig. 149; Moore, _Florist and Pomologist_, 1882,
- 49, t. 559.
-
- _Var._ NOBILIS; flowers larger in all their parts, marked with fewer
- and larger spots; front lobe of the lip rhombic.
-
- Phalænopsis Stuartiana _var._ NOBILIS, _Reichenbach fil._, in
- _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, N.S. xvi., 748.
-
-
-There can be no doubt that the species of _Phalænopsis_ rank amongst our
-finest Orchids, on account of the purity and soft tinting of their
-blossoms and the profusion in which they are produced. Unfortunately, at
-present, we only possess a limited number of them. During the last few
-years, indeed, many new kinds, which are giving a fresh interest to the
-genus, have been introduced by our collectors; and, although it is
-barely possible that any new introduction should surpass the old
-species, yet it is gratifying to know that there are yet to be found
-distinct and novel kinds of great beauty. _P. Stuartiana_, which we now
-bring under the notice of our readers, is a very fine and well-marked
-species, recently imported from the East by Messrs. Low & Co., of Upper
-Clapton, and named by Professor Reichenbach in honour of Mr. Stuart Low,
-who is one of the largest importers of this class of Orchids. Our plate,
-which represents the variety called _P. Stuartiana nobilis_, was
-sketched from a plant now in the fine collection of William Lee, Esq.,
-of Downside, Leatherhead, who purchased it when in full beauty from the
-Messrs. Low, and we have to thank Mr. Lee for his kindness in allowing
-the drawing to be made. It is to be hoped that collectors may find more
-of it in its native country, although we believe it to be very rare,
-and, like many other recent discoveries to be probably a natural hybrid
-produced by insect fertilisation. We have no doubt that there are yet
-many fine forms of _Phalænopsis_; and if we could but obtain the scarlet
-one, which some years ago was reported to have been seen by a collector
-who was not able to bring it home, what a grand acquisition that would
-be!
-
-_Phalænopsis Stuartiana nobilis_ resembles _P. Schilleriana_ in the
-young growth, its newly developed leaves being of the same shape and
-colour and similarly spotted, but the older leaves assume more of the
-character of _P. amabilis_; while the flowers, instead of being
-mauve-coloured, are pure white, with the inferior halves of the lateral
-sepals yellow and boldly spotted with cinnamon-red, as also is a portion
-of the lip, the side lobes of which bear smaller and more closely set
-spots. We have little doubt that this plant is a wild hybrid between _P.
-Schilleriana_ and _P. amabilis_, as though the young leaves come
-spotted, they afterwards change to the colour of those of _P. amabilis_,
-as already described.
-
-This plant requires the same treatment as _P. Schilleriana_, and is best
-grown among sphagnum moss in baskets suspended from the roof, care being
-taken to give it a good supply of water during the growing season. It
-should have the heat of the East India house, and should at all times be
-kept moist at the roots, for if allowed to become dry, it will loose its
-lower leaves. If the plants are in a healthy and free-growing condition,
-flowering does not injure them; but, if at all sickly, they should not
-be allowed to blossom until they regain strength and vigour, as they are
-naturally free-flowering plants, and under such circumstances might
-bloom themselves to death. The moss about their roots must be sweet and
-in a living state; when it becomes decayed it should be removed, the
-roots washed, and the plant replaced in clean live moss with fresh free
-drainage, so that the water, of which a considerable quantity is
-required, may never become stagnant. Shading is an important element in
-the successful cultivation of these plants; therefore the sun, when at
-its full power in summer, must never be allowed to shine upon them, but
-in winter a little sun-heat is beneficial, and they then require all the
-light which it is possible to give them. Neither drip, nor water in any
-other form, must be suffered to reach the hearts of the plants, as it
-causes them to rot.
-
-Insects are troublesome at times. The thrips, if allowed to multiply,
-will greatly disfigure the plants, causing damage by depriving them of
-the juices which should go to sustain their vigour. When free from such
-pests, and in a healthy condition, the leaves of the Phalænopsids have a
-pleasing appearance; and, if they are well looked after, it will not be
-difficult to keep them clean, the more especially as being of large
-size, they can be readily operated upon.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 40.
- ODONTGLOSSUM KRAMERII.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM KRAMERI.
- [Plate 40.]
- Native of Costa Rica.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ nearly orbicular, much compressed, ancipitous
- or sharply two-edged, one and a-half inch in diameter, pale green.
- _Leaves_ solitary, oblong-lanceolate, acute, keeled, six to eight
- inches long, one and a-half to two inches broad, light green, with a
- smooth even surface. _Scapes_ radical, four to six inches long,
- shorter than the leaves, three to five flowered, drooping or
- ascending, flexuous, pale green, with small appressed bracts and
- longish peduncles. _Flowers_ one and a-half inch or more across, and
- delicately coloured; _sepals_ oblong acute, rosy lilac with a white
- margin; _petals_ about equalling the sepals in size, and similar to
- them in form and colour; _lip_ with a short stout neck, deeply
- hollowed in front, with two erect calli, the lateral lobes semi-ovate,
- narrow, deflexed, the much larger middle lobe three-fourths of an inch
- broad, roundish reniform, emarginate, bearing at the base a pair of
- erect lamellæ, the unguis or neck yellow spotted with red, the front
- lobe deep rosy lilac, marked near its base with two semi-circular
- bands of white and purplish rose. _Column_ short, thick, white in
- front.
-
- Odontoglossum Krameri, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_,
- 1868, 98, with woodcut; _Hooker fil._, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5778;
- _Bateman_, _Monograph of Odontoglossum_, t. 24; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Growers’ Manual_, 5 ed., 236; _Floral Magazine_, t. 406 (as O.
- Kremeri.)
-
-
-This is a most charming small-growing Orchid, with remarkably pretty
-delicately coloured flowers. It is at the present time very rare in
-collections, and, in fact, had become almost lost to cultivation, but
-fortunately during the last year a small number of plants was imported
-into this country and distributed. Our drawing was made from a plant
-which formed part of this importation, and which produced its chastely
-coloured blossoms in the Victoria Nursery. Many years ago we remember to
-have seen a fine lot imported by the late George Ure Skinner, Esq., but
-since then it has until last year disappeared from our notice. We are,
-however, glad to see it again making its appearance in our
-Orchid-houses; for, as will be seen by reference to our illustration, it
-is a plant of a most distinct and pleasing character, and will be a real
-acquisition to the group of Odontoglots, of which numerous highly
-popular species are at present in cultivation.
-
-_Odontoglossum Krameri_ is a plant of compact-growing habit, with small
-flattened light green pseudobulbs, each producing from the top a
-solitary leaf of a pale green colour. The plant generally attains about
-ten inches in height. The flower spikes or peduncles are freely produced
-from the base of the pseudobulbs after they have completed their growth,
-several flowers being produced on each peduncle. The sepals and petals
-are of a rosy lilac colour, margined with white; the lip is also rosy
-lilac, but of a darker shade, flushed with yellow and marked and spotted
-with purple at the neck, and having two semi-circular bands of dark
-purplish rose and white near the base. The plants continue in bloom for
-several weeks.
-
-We have found this species to thrive well in the Cattleya house, planted
-in small pans or pots with good peat and sphagnum moss. It might
-possibly do in a cooler structure, but we have as yet only cultivated it
-in the Cattleya house, and this treatment has been found to suit it. It
-requires to be kept moist during the growing season, but when at rest
-should have only just sufficient water to keep it in a plump condition.
-The plant possesses one great advantage—that of blooming during the
-autumn months, when such flowers are so much in request. It has also
-another good quality—that of occupying but a small space, so that any
-cultivator who has a spare niche in his Orchid house can grow it without
-any inconvenience.
-
-
-Cattleya Trianæ.—R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn, has kindly sent us a
-wonderfully fine series of flowers of the different varieties of _C.
-Trianæ_, including some of the grandest that have yet come under our
-notice. Of two or three of these our Artist is preparing plates, which
-will be issued in due course in the _Orchid Album_. The variety named
-_C. Trianæ Dodgsoni_ bears most beautiful flowers, which are quite
-distinct from all that we have previously seen, the sepals and petals
-being large, and of a pure white, while the lip is of a rich magenta
-colour, with the throat rich orange, white in the upper part. _C. Trianæ
-Osmani_ is also a very fine variety, the flowers being rich in colour,
-the sepals and petals rosy pink, and the lip large, of a bright magenta
-colour; it is in fact altogether a wonderfully fine flower. There were
-several other varieties sent, including one which we have selected as
-the original _C. Trianæ_; this we shall first bring under the notice of
-our readers, and the other two will follow.—B. S. W.
-
-
-Mr. Dorman’s Orchids.—When visiting this grand collection last month
-(March) we noticed the rare _Epidendrum Wallisii_ in flower. Mr.
-Coningsby, the gardener, informed us that the flowers on this plant had
-been open since November, and they still looked fresh. _Lælia flava_ was
-also good. _Galeandra Devoniana_, a plant one seldom sees in bloom, was
-quite at home here, flowering and growing luxuriantly. _Lycaste Skinneri
-alba_, with its pure white flowers looked very charming; this was an
-extra fine variety, with flowers as large as any we remember to have
-seen. In addition to these there were many fine things in flower, which
-space will not permit us to mention. Mr. Dorman’s Orchids are looking
-remarkably well, and are well cared for, both employer and gardener
-being enthusiastically fond of them.—H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 41.
- ANGRÆCUM EBURNEUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ANGRÆCUM EBURNEUM.
- [Plate 41.]
- Native of Madagascar and Bourbon.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ erect, leafy, producing roots from the lower part
- and from between the bases of the lower leaves. _Leaves_ distichous,
- ligulate, very oblique at the apex, coriaceous, of a shining green
- colour, striated, about two inches broad, carinate below and
- overlapping each other at the base. _Peduncles_ axillary, furnished
- with dark sheathing scales, and bearing an erect spike of numerous
- large flowers of peculiar form and appearance, all pointing in one
- direction and placed alternately back to back in a distichous or
- two-ranked manner. _Flowers_ of a thick fleshy texture, green, with a
- broad conspicuous white lip; _sepals_ and _petals_ lanceolate, pale
- green, the dorsal sepal and the petals reflexed, the lateral sepals
- patent; _lip_ large, broadly cordate, cuspidate, ivory white, the
- centre concave, and bearing a cleft acuminated ridge; _spur_ tapering,
- considerably longer than and parallel with the dorsal sepal, dark
- green. _Column_ short, thick, greenish white.
-
- Angræcum eburneum, _Du Petit-Thouars_, _Orchidées des Iles Australes
- d’Afrique_, t. 65; _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, t. 1522; _Hooker_,
- _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4761; _Paxton’s Magazine of Botany_, xvi.,
- 90, with woodcut; _Bateman_, _2nd Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t.
- 111; _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1873, 216, fig. 46; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Grower’s Manual_, 5 ed., 88, with woodcut.
-
- Angræcum superbum, _Du Petit-Thouars_, _Orchidées_, tt. 62-4.
-
- Limodorum eburneum, _Bory_, _Voyage_, i., 359; t. 19.
-
-
-A grand Orchid which was first introduced to this country from
-Madagascar by the Horticultural Society of London, through their
-collector, Mr. Forbes, in the third decade of the present century, that
-is, more than fifty years since. It is, without doubt, one of the finest
-of the species, and when well grown forms a noble plant, its long spikes
-of attractive flowers, in company with its bold and characteristic
-foliage and its majestic habit of growth, imparting to it an aspect of
-dignity which no one can fail to recognise. Indeed, the magnificent
-appearance it has when placed on the central stage of the East India
-house is quite sufficient to win for it the favour of Orchid fanciers.
-
-Wherever space can be given to it, it should always be grown, as it
-blooms during the winter months and continues in perfection for many
-weeks longer than any other of its family that has come under our
-notice. Our drawing was taken from a very fine specimen, producing three
-well developed spikes, in the collection of D. B. Crawshay, Esq.,
-Rosefield, Sevenoaks, Kent, who is a great lover of Orchids, and is
-forming a nice collection of them.
-
-_Angræcum eburneum_ is, as we have before noted, from Madagascar, and
-consequently requires the heat of the East India house. It is of
-comparatively easy cultivation. The strap-shaped leaves grow to about
-eighteen inches in length, and are of a pleasant glossy, light green
-colour; the flower spikes are produced from the leaf axils on each side
-of the stem, and extend to the length of eighteen inches, bearing many
-flowers of which the broad cordate lip is of a conspicuous ivory white.
-The plants will sometimes produce as many as four spikes at one time.
-The blooming period is in December, January, and February.
-
-There is in cultivation another variety of _Angræcum eburneum_, called
-_virens_, but is not nearly so handsome and effective a plant as the
-type, its flowers being of a greenish white, but the spike has a
-somewhat more graceful contour, and the foliage is of a dark green
-colour, so that it also is worth cultivating where room can be found for
-its accommodation.
-
-The Angræcums form a very interesting genus in the great Orchid family;
-and although amongst those that have bloomed in this country there are
-not many that we consider to be worth growing as ornamental plants, yet
-some, on the other hand, are very beautiful, and these we hope to be
-able to figure in due course. There have been several new introductions
-of late, and no doubt there are many yet to be acquired. We are glad to
-notice that Sir Trevor Lawrence is getting up a collection of all the
-best kinds, but it is found that some of them are difficult to obtain,
-and they are none of them so readily imported alive as many other
-Orchids are. They are mostly found growing on trees in their native
-country, different species being met with on the same trees. It was very
-interesting to hear the late Rev. W. Ellis talk of these plants, of
-which many years ago he brought home living specimens of some of the
-most beautiful of the species, such as _Angræcum sesquipedale_, _A.
-Ellisii_, and others.
-
-_Angræcum eburneum_ is best cultivated in a pot as it is a large growing
-plant, and produces thick fleshy roots. We find sphagnum moss to suit it
-well, but it must have good drainage as it requires a liberal supply of
-water during the summer months, for if it be allowed to shrivel the
-bottom leaves wither and decay; in the winter, on the other hand, it
-should have merely sufficient to keep the moss damp and the plant in a
-plump condition. It requires the same general treatment as the large
-growing Vandas, such as _Vanda suavis_, _V. tricolor_, and others. The
-plants are not subject to the attacks of insects, their thick fleshy
-leaves appearing to have no attraction for these pests.
-
-
-Cattleya Trianæ.—We have received from E. Wright, Esq., Gravelly Hill,
-Birmingham, a very fine form of this splendid _Cattleya_; the flowers
-were six inches in diameter, the sepals and petals broad and of a rosy
-pink colour, the lip of a rich magenta and beautifully fringed, having
-the throat bright orange colour and the upper part rose-pink. It is
-altogether a desirable and charming flower. The varieties of this
-species are very useful, as they bloom in winter, when there are but few
-other Cattleyas in flower.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 42.
- DENDROBIUM MACROPHYLLUM.]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM SUPERBUM [MACROPHYLLUM].
- [Plate 42.]
- Native of the Philippine Islands.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (pseudobulbs) stout, cylindrical, striated, the
- nodes of the flowering ones marked by the persistent scarious
- sheathing bases of the fallen leaves, drooping, and often attaining
- considerable length. _Leaves_ alternate elliptic-oblong, acute or
- obtuse, subcordate at the base, nervose, thin in texture, two-ribbed.
- _Flowers_ very numerous, usually in pairs from the joints of the
- stems, which form long floral wreaths; _sepals_ lanceolate, plane, the
- lateral ones produced at the base, of a deep rich purplish magenta,
- varying in intensity in different forms; _petals_ broadly
- oblong-ovate, somewhat undulated, of the same colour as the sepals;
- _lip_ pubescent, cordate-ovate, acuminate, convolute at the base, so
- that with the extended front lobe it assumes something of the shape of
- an oblique-mouthed funnel, the margin denticulate, the basal portion
- of an intense sanguineous purple, appearing like two deep blotches;
- the front lobe purplish magenta, marked with longitudinal ribs,
- connected with finer transverse veins of a deeper purple, and having a
- transverse three-lobed callosity. _Column_ short, included.
-
- Dendrobium superbum, _Reichenbach fil._ _MSS._; _Id._, _Walpers’
- Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi., 282; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower’s
- Manual_, 5 ed., 180.
-
- Dendrobium macrophyllum, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, 1839, misc.
- 46; 1844, misc. 62; _Id._ _Sertum Orchidaceum_, t. 35; _Pescatorea_,
- t. 40; _Paxton’s Magazine of Botany_, viii., 97.
-
- Dendrobium macranthum, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 3970;
- _Planchon_ in _Flore des Serres_, viii, t. 757.
-
-
-This is a magnificent Orchid, especially in the case of its finer
-varieties, whether superior on the score of size or colouration. It was
-first bloomed by the Messrs. Loddiges in 1839, in their wonderful plant
-emporium at Hackney, having been introduced by them from the Philippine
-Islands. A grand variety called _giganteum_, having flowers of immense
-size, is figured in Mr. R. Warner’s _Select Orchidaceous Plants_ (1
-ser., t. 26); and in respect to colour, the form of which we now give an
-illustration, is one of the richest and most effective we have yet seen.
-The materials from which our figure was prepared were obligingly sent to
-us by Mr. C. Penny, gardener to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, at
-Sandringham. It will be at once seen that the specimen in question was a
-well-grown example, and we understand that the plant yielded two
-similarly well furnished wreaths, bearing as many as forty blossoms.
-Besides this there are many other Orchids of superior merit to be seen
-in the collection at Sandringham gardens, these plants, the magnates of
-the vegetable world, being highly appreciated both by the Prince and the
-Princess of Wales.
-
-The Dendrobiums are among the most beautiful and charming of our Indian
-Orchids, many of the species being of a most graceful habit of growth,
-and by their brightly coloured flowers imparting a remarkably
-picturesque character to our Orchid houses. Some of them, moreover, have
-delicately fragrant blossoms. In very many cases they bloom most
-profusely, and with their long pendent stems look well suspended from
-the roof of the house. Our present subject belongs to this latter class,
-and is one of the most showy and beautiful of the species.
-
-_Dendrobium superbum_, which is more commonly known in gardens as
-_Dendrobium macrophyllum_, is a deciduous plant, losing its foliage just
-as it begins to blossom. It is a noble object when growing, producing
-stems from two to three feet long, furnished along each side with
-flowers growing in pairs; these flowers are four inches across, with
-sepals and petals of a lively magenta-rose, and a lip similar in colour,
-but with a purplish crimson throat. It blooms during February and March,
-the individual blossoms lasting about a fortnight in beauty. It thrives
-best when grown in a basket, and suspended from the roof. If hung up
-when in blossom, amongst the foliage of the other plants, the flowers
-are shown off to greater advantage, as it naturally blooms without
-foliage. It grows well in the East India Orchid house, and requires a
-good amount of heat and moisture during its growing season. After growth
-is completed it will do well in the Cattleya house during the dormant
-period, and when it begins to show its flower buds a little water may be
-given to induce the buds to swell and develop fine flowers. When the
-flowering season is over it may, if required, be placed in fresh
-sphagnum moss. It is a free growing plant, and thrives best suspended
-near the glass in the full light, but shaded from the burning sun. It
-is, indeed, absolutely necessary to give it all the light possible; and,
-in summer, a slight syringing when the house is closed will tend to keep
-the red spider and thrips in check.
-
-
-Dendrobium Hillii.—There is in the collection of R. Wyatt, Esq., Lake
-House, Cheltenham, a very fine specimen of this cool Orchid, which has
-been bearing numerous spikes of blossom, some of the spikes being as
-much as twenty inches in length. The specimen was a most beautiful
-object, with its long racemes of creamy white blossoms, which proceed
-from the apices of its thick fleshy pseudobulbs; it has, moreover, dark
-green foliage. This plant was growing in the conservatory, and had
-continued in bloom for about two months, so that it is a most useful
-subject for winter decoration. It is a very old Orchid, but is worth
-cultivating, especially as it will grow in a conservatory or in any cool
-house. There was also in the same collection a very fine variety of
-_Cypripedium villosum_, one of the best we have seen, the flowers being
-wonderfully bright in colour, and of large size. Of _Lycaste Skinneri_
-there was a well-grown plant, with very fine flowers, the sepals and
-petals being broad and pure white, and the front portion of the lip
-bright magenta, with the throat white.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 43.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDRÆ FLAVEOLUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDRÆ FLAVEOLUM.
- [Plate 43.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate, compressed, one or two leaved.
- _Leaves_ elongate, oblong-lanceolate, acute, of a bright green colour.
- _Scape_ radical, supporting a many-flowered raceme (or panicle) of
- showy flowers, each subtended by a small ovate-oblong acute bract.
- _Flowers_ large, differing from other known forms of the species by
- their yellow colour, about three inches across; _sepals_
- ovate-lanceolate, acute, slightly wavy at the edges, pale
- sulphur-yellow; _petals_ ovate, much undulated at the margins and
- irregularly toothed, of the same pale yellow as the sepals; _lip_
- oblong, the apex truncately rounded and cuspidate, the margins
- undulated and fimbriated, and the basal angles rounded and produced,
- all of a bright yellow colour, marked near the centre with about three
- conspicuous round reddish brown spots, and at the base with fine
- radiating lines of the same colour, in front of which are two
- divergent bars or crests. _Column_ arcuate, club-shaped, pale yellow
- behind, dull brown on the inner face, and furnished with the usual
- toothed wings at the edge.
-
- Odontoglossum Alexandræ flaveolum, _supra_.
-
- Odontoglossum crispum flaveolum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’
- Chronicle_, N.S. xiii., 41, 232.
-
-
-This very distinct variety is one which will become very useful in the
-decoration of our cool Orchid houses, for as the white-flowered
-varieties of _Odontoglossum Alexandræ_ and other species are now so
-numerous, that now before us, being yellow, will produce a good
-contrast, which we must have in order to make a pleasing display. Our
-drawing was taken from a fine example in the collection of G. Hardy,
-Esq., Pickering Lodge, Timperley, near Manchester. We may add that Mr.
-Hardy’s is one of the largest and best collections in the North of
-England, since he spares neither trouble nor expense in procuring the
-best varieties that can be obtained. As a proof of this we may refer to
-the recent Manchester Whitsuntide flower shows, where Orchids are one of
-the prominent features, and where Mr. Hardy’s collection has frequently
-taken high honours.
-
-_Odontoglossum Alexandræ flaveolum_ is a compact free-growing plant,
-like _O. Alexandræ_ itself, and produces fine drooping flower spikes
-which we have seen bearing fifteen expanded bright creamy yellow
-flowers, these continuing in beauty for several weeks. This variety is
-all the more useful because of its blooming in the winter months when so
-many of our white Odontoglots are also in flower. The plant requires the
-same treatment as others of its class. It was found growing on the
-branches of trees intermixed with _Odontoglossum Alexandræ_, and no
-doubt, as is probably the case with others of the so-called new
-varieties, it has originated by intercrossing with some allied species,
-which may have been growing near to it, and has been flowering at the
-same time. We hope shortly to give an illustration of the original or
-typical form of _O. Alexandræ_.
-
-The best material in which to grow the Odontoglots is fibrous peat; they
-must have good drainage because they want plenty of water during the
-growing season, in fact the material should always be kept moist. The
-plants must never be over-potted, but just sufficient root room must be
-permitted them to secure healthy progression; over-potting, indeed,
-often becomes dangerous. We find that live sphagnum moss placed on the
-top of the peat is a great help in their cultivation, as it holds water,
-and there is always some degree of moisture arising from it; moreover,
-when it is kept in a healthy growing state it has a very neat and
-pleasing appearance.
-
-
-Odontoglossums at Trentham.—The _régime_ adopted at Trentham for growing
-Cool Orchids, such as Odontoglots, is to give them water most profusely,
-the cold rain-water which falls from the roof being used summer and
-winter, and to allow fresh air to circulate freely amongst them at all
-times, night and day, except in very severe weather. The natural water
-at Trentham, as does any other water containing lime, will, after a
-time, kill the Sphagnum used for potting purposes, and this is most
-inimical to the plants, which never thrive so well as when the Sphagnum
-keeps fresh and in a growing state. In respect to the Sphagnum Moss used
-for Orchid growing, it does not appear to be generally known that
-amongst the different species the best for potting Odontoglots and
-similar plants is a dense-growing compact kind, whose very compactness
-gives it a sponge-like consistency, and enables it to suck up and retain
-water freely. This is what the Odontoglots like.—T. M.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Roezlii.—A fine example of this showy Orchid has reached
-us from D. Todd, Esq., Eastwood Park, near Glasgow. The spike was a
-particularly fine one, bearing well-developed flowers, of which the
-sepals and petals were white, the lower part of the latter being of a
-dark magenta, and the lip white, coloured with lines of crimson on the
-disk. Mr. Todd grows these plants remarkably well, and deserves great
-credit for his felicitous treatment of them, as few persons are so
-successful in their cultivation. There is a very good collection of
-Orchids forming at this place, Mr. Todd being an admirer of good kinds.
-At the Glasgow exhibitions his fine collection forms one of the greatest
-attractions of the show.—B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 44.
- LÆLIA ANCEPS DAWSONII.]
-
-
-
-
- LÆLIA ANCEPS DAWSONI.
- [Plate 44.]
- Native of Juquila in Mexico.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong-ovate, four to five inches long,
- compressed and two-edged, with prominent angles on the flattened sides
- so as to render them tetraquetrous, clothed with large membranaceous
- scales. _Leaves_ one or two from each pseudobulb, oblong-lanceolate
- acute, coriaceous, smooth and glossy on the surface, of a rich deep
- green colour. _Scape_ rising from between the leaves at the apex of
- the pseudobulb, two to three feet long, ancipitous, clothed with
- carinate bracts, and bearing about three large and charmingly
- beautiful blossoms. _Flowers_ large, measuring about four and a-half
- inches across; _sepals_ lanceolate, acuminate, white; _petals_ ovate,
- acuminate, white; _lip_ prominent, three-lobed: the lateral lobes
- convolute over the column, white at the margin, stained with rosy
- purple exteriorly, and marked with numerous bright purple branched
- lines within the closed portion, where there is also a yellow ridge
- lined with purple which passes out into the base of the front lobe in
- the form of three yellow crests; the front lobe oblong acute, recurved
- at the tip, the base white, the rest of the lobe (about three-fourths
- of its surface) of a deep rich magenta-purple, evenly but narrowly
- bordered with white. _Column_ enclosed.
-
- Lælia anceps Dawsoni, _Anderson_, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1868, 27;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1873, 254; _Warner_,
- _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, 2 ser., t. 34; _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t.
- 6; _Floral Magazine_, t. 530; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, 5
- ed., 202.
-
- Lælia anceps Dawsoniana, _Rand_, _Orchids_, 296.
-
-
-This is one of the most chaste and beautiful Orchids of its class. The
-type, _Lælia anceps_, has flowers of a rosy lilac and deep purple
-colour, while the one before us is pure white with the exception of the
-lip, which is of a rich sparkling purple, and makes a splendid contrast.
-
-This variety was imported many years ago by the Messrs. Low & Co., of
-Clapton. There have been several other white forms flowered lately, but
-none to equal the one represented in our plate, the drawing of which was
-taken from a very fine specimen bearing four spikes, growing in the rich
-collection of R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn; it was the finest plant
-we have seen in bloom, and the production of so grand a specimen
-reflects great credit on Mr. Osman, the Gardener, for his skill in
-cultivation.
-
-_Lælia anceps Dawsoni_ is, like the type form, of compact-growing habit.
-The pseudobulbs are from four to six inches in height, and the foliage
-of a light green colour. The flower spike is developed at the tip of the
-pseudobulb after it has completed its growth, and attains to about two
-feet in length, generally bearing two or three blossoms at the end; the
-sepals and petals are pure white, of good form and substance, and the
-lip is of a dark rosy purple edged with white, the disk orange coloured,
-the lower part of the throat pale orange veined with crimson, and the
-upper part white. It generally blooms in January and February, and
-continues in perfection for two and three weeks.
-
-This variety must be very rare in its native habitat, as we have
-received importations on several occasions purporting to be this white
-form, but after the plants have been grown on and flowered, they have
-invariably proved to be the type with rosy-coloured flowers. This is
-also the experience of other importers of Orchids.
-
-The plant is best grown in a pot or basket suspended from the roof,
-where it can obtain all the light possible, which induces it to grow
-with greater vigour and to flower more freely. It thrives well in the
-Cattleya house with a moderate supply of water in the growing season,
-but when at rest less water will suffice. We have found good rough
-fibrous peat to be the most advantageous material in which to grow it,
-allowing ample drainage; and when fresh potting material is required the
-operation of supplying it should be performed just as the plant begins
-to grow, which is after the blooming season. Always bear in mind that
-the plants must be kept free from insects.
-
-Propagation is effected by dividing the plant just as it begins to break
-into growth. In performing the operation two or three pseudobulbs should
-be detached from the plant, having a leading bulb; when taken off at
-this stage the plants soon become established.
-
-
-Dendrobium Wardianum.—A fine variety of this grand Dendrobe comes from
-D. Alroy Salamon, Esq., Clapham Park. The specimen has very large
-flowers, four and a-half inches in diameter, and of great substance. The
-sepals and petals are one and a-quarter inch broad, of a pure white,
-heavily tipped with rich magenta; the lip is very large, and also
-heavily blotched with magenta, the throat being rich orange with two
-dark brown eye-like spots. These flowers were from an imported plant,
-and we are curious to see whether it will produce equally fine flowers
-from the home made growths. If so we shall hope to figure it at some
-future time, as in the state in which it has just bloomed, it is
-certainly one of the finest and best forms of this splendid species
-which we have met with. It is also a free grower.—B. S. W.
-
-
-Dendrobium Falconeri.—Mr. Priest, Gardener to the Marquis of Lothian,
-has sent us some fine flowers of this favourite Dendrobe. He informs us
-that the plant from which the flowers were taken has 150 blossoms upon
-it. This must be a remarkably fine specimen, and well cultivated, to
-produce flowers in such profusion.—H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 45.
- CATTLEYA TRIANÆ.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA TRIANÆ.
- [Plate 45.]
- Native of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ oblong, club-shaped, furrowed, about a foot in
- height, clothed with whitish membranaceous sheaths. _Leaves_ solitary,
- coriaceous, ligulate-oblong, recurved at the tip, of a deep green
- colour, six to eight inches long. _Scape_ two or three-flowered,
- proceeding from a terminal oblong compressed brownish bract or sheath,
- about two inches long. _Flowers_ large, variable in colour, from white
- to a dilute delicate tint of rosy purple in the typical form, the lip
- being of a rich magenta; _sepals_ three inches or more in length,
- oblong-lanceolate, plane, of a delicate blush or pallid tint of rosy
- purple; _petals_ of the same colour, rhombeo-ovate, retuse, crispulate
- at the anterior edge; _lip_ convolute at the base, where it is of a
- pale purplish mauve, the front lobe obovate, rounded and crimped in
- the anterior part, where it is bilobed, wholly covered with
- crimson-magenta, exceedingly rich and brilliant, the disk marked with
- a broad rich orange-yellow bilobed blotch. _Column_ club-shaped,
- bearing at the tip a pair of sickle-shaped wings.
-
- Cattleya Trianæ, _Linden and Reichenbach fil._, in _Mohl and
- Schlechtendal’s Botanische Zeitung_, xviii., 74 (1860); _Reichenbach
- fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi., 315.
-
- Cattleya labiata Lindigiana, _Karsten_—fide _Reichenbach fil._
-
- Cattleya labiata Trianæ, _Duchartre_, _Journal de la Société Impériale
- d’Horticulture_, 1860, 369—fide _Reichenbach fil._
-
- Epidendrum labiatum, _var._ Trianæ, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers’
- Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi., 315.
-
-
-This very charming species of _Cattleya_ was first obtained from
-Colombia for European gardens, in 1856, by Mr. Linden, to whom we are
-indebted for so many choice introductions amongst exotic plants. It is
-one of the best and most useful of the species, especially for winter
-decoration, and though very variable as regards the tinting of the
-flowers in the many distinct forms which have been imported, it is
-always of a brilliant and strikingly beautiful appearance, owing to the
-rich colouring displayed on the lip. The shades of colour in the several
-kinds varies from pure White through blush white and pale pinkish rose
-to a pale shade of deep rose, the upper lobe of the lip being of a rich
-magenta-crimson.
-
-There are, as we have just said, many forms of _Cattleya Trianæ_. That
-which we now figure we consider to be a very good representative of the
-typical form of the species. Our drawing was taken from a very fine
-specimen grown in the beautiful collection of R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of
-Beardwood, Blackburn, in which many forms of this lovely species occur,
-as we have already intimated under Plate 40. We have also mentioned Mr.
-Osman as being a most successful cultivator of Orchidaceous plants.
-
-_Cattleya Trianæ_ is a free-growing as well as a free-blooming species.
-It has dark green foliage, and attains the height of about fifteen
-inches, producing its blossoms during the winter months, after the
-growths are completed. The sepals and petals are of a pale pink or
-delicate tint of rosy purple; the lip is of a bright magenta, margined
-with delicate rose-pink, the edge being fringed, and the disk marked
-with a rich orange-coloured two-lobed blotch. The flowers are produced
-in February and March, and continue for several weeks in perfection,
-provided they are kept free from moisture, which if it lodges upon them
-will cause them to become spotted, and destroy their beauty. It is an
-excellent plan to place the plants when in bloom in a drier house than
-that in which they are grown, and to bestow all possible care upon their
-preservation. Of themselves they form a fine group of Cattleyas, there
-being so many distinct varieties, of colours such as to make them
-thoroughly useful for decorative purposes. By their agency our Orchid
-houses may be kept gay for several months in the most dreary time of the
-year, for when there is a number of plants they may be flowered in
-succession. The plants can now be bought at a reasonable price, as, in
-consequence of the large importations of them, they have become
-plentiful.
-
-_Cattleya Trianæ_ requires the same treatment as _C. labiata_, _C.
-Mossiæ_, and others of the same class, all these plants being, indeed,
-regarded by some botanists as varieties of one species. For their
-successful growth the use of good fibrous peat and sphagnum moss, with
-ample drainage, are requisite, and they should be kept well elevated
-above the pot rim. They will also thrive well suspended from the roof in
-baskets, and also on blocks of wood, but in these cases they require
-more attention as to watering, in order to keep them moist at the roots.
-
-Cattleyas thrive best when placed under the influence of strong light,
-but they must be shaded from bright sunshine. This _régime_ induces them
-to blossom more freely, indeed, if the bulbs are not well ripened good
-results cannot be anticipated. The plants require a plentiful supply of
-water during the growing season, by which we mean that they should be
-kept constantly moist about the roots. When their growth is completed
-less may be applied, merely enough to keep them in a plump state. When
-the flower spikes begin to appear more water should again be given, as
-it will induce the buds to swell more freely, in consequence of which
-the flowers will be finer.
-
-
-Orchids from Dr. Paterson.—This gentleman has been kind enough to send
-us a grand spike of his _Vanda tricolor Patersoni_. It is a fine form of
-this noble Orchid, the flowers being of large size, and well marked, the
-lip beautifully coloured with rich magenta. A nice spike of the
-beautiful _Aërides nobile_ came in the same parcel, and a curious _Eria_
-with white flowers, named _stellata_ (the true _stellata_ has dull pale
-yellow flowers) on account of the star-shaped form of its blossoms.—B.
-S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 46.
- MILTONIA CUNEATA.]
-
-
-
-
- MILTONIA CUNEATA.
- [Plate 46.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate-oblong, compressed, light green,
- diphyllous. _Leaves_ ligulate-oblong, striate, somewhat carinate
- beneath, of a cheerful green colour. _Scape_ radical, erect, bearing a
- five to eight flowered raceme, each of the pedicels having at its base
- a whitish glumaceous triangular bract about half as long as the ovary.
- _Flowers_ large and showy, with a broad flat white lip; _sepals_
- oblong-lanceolate, narrowed to the base, of a deep chocolate-purple
- with a yellowish green tip on which is a dark spot, the margins
- undulated, the lateral ones connate at the base; _petals_ similar in
- form, size, and colour; _lip_ white, with a pink tinge, and one or two
- chocolate spots near the base, wedge-shaped, with a narrow claw-like
- base and a broad flat anterior expanded portion, somewhat repand on
- the margin, and furnished on the disk with two raised plates or
- lamellæ. _Column_ short, creamy white, bidentate on the middle
- portion, the anther-bed cucullate, membranaceous, denticulate, retuse.
-
- Miltonia cuneata, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, 1844, misc. 28;
- 1845, t. 8; _Id._, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Miltonia_, No. 8;
- _Reichenbach fil._, _Xenia Orchidacea_, i. 131; _Moore_,
- _Illustrations of Orchidaceous Plants_, art. _Miltonia_, 7 t. 2;
- _Lemaire_, _L’Illustration Horticole_, t. 237; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Grower’s Manual_, 5 ed., 223.
-
- Miltonia speciosa, _Klotzsch_, in _Otto and Dietrich’s Allgemeine
- Gartenzeitung_, xvii. 129.
-
- Oncidium speciosum, _Reichenbach fil._, _MSS._; _Id._, _Walpers’
- Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi. 761.
-
-
-This genus of Orchids is not a very extensive one, but among the species
-which are known there are some beautiful plants of distinct and striking
-character. The species which we now represent is a very pretty one,
-which we are pleased to have the opportunity of introducing to the
-notice of our readers. The specimen figured was grown in the fine
-collection of W. Cobb, Esq., of Sydenham, who is a great lover of
-Orchids, and makes it a study to procure the best kinds and cultivate
-them in the best possible manner.
-
-_Miltonia cuneata_ was introduced by the Messrs. Rollisson, of Tooting,
-about the year 1843, and first flowered with them in the spring of 1844.
-It is a free-growing plant, with light green foliage, which grows about
-a foot in height, and produces its flowers in erect racemes, seven or
-often more together. The sepals and petals are chestnut-brown, tipped
-with greenish yellow, and the lip is broad and of a creamy white colour.
-The flowers are produced in February and March, and last for several
-weeks in beauty.
-
-This _Miltonia_ requires the heat of the Cattleya house, and thrives in
-good fibrous peat; it must be well drained in order that the superfluous
-moisture may pass off, as the plant dislikes stagnant water about the
-roots. In the growing season a moderate supply of water may be given at
-the roots, but less will suffice when the growth is completed. We find
-the Miltonias to require more shade than most Orchids. Their leaves are
-thin in texture, and consequently are soon injured, which makes it
-necessary to pay strict attention to the requirements of the plants, as
-while too much sun would dry up the foliage, too much moisture about it
-would cause it to go spotted.
-
-They are propagated by dividing the bulbs, leaving two old ones and a
-growth in front. These divided portions should be potted in small pots
-until they get well established, and always at all times be kept free
-from insects. The white scale will sometimes attack them, and do much
-injury if not promptly removed.
-
-
-Lælia elegans prasiata.—From E. Harvey, Esq., Aigburth, Liverpool, comes
-a spike of a grand form of this fine _Lælia_. The flowers are six inches
-across, the sepals and petals purplish rose, the lip rich magenta. This
-is quite a distinct form, and worthy of a place in every collection.
-Accompanying this was a spike of _Scuticaria Hadweni_, var. _pardalina_,
-described some time ago in the _Gardeners’ Chronicle_.—B. S. W.
-
-
-Dendrobium nobile (three-lipped).—Mr. Knight, Gardener to the Right Hon.
-W. H. Smith, M.P., Greenlands, Henley-on-Thames, sends us a curious form
-of this grand old Orchid, with three lips, two of the lips taking the
-place of the petals of the normal flowers, and being marked and coloured
-in a similar manner to the ordinary lip. In addition, the flower was
-deliciously scented. We do not suppose that this variation will be
-constant, being more probably a malformation.—B. S. W.
-
-
-Bollea cœlestis as a block plant.—When visiting the establishment of
-Messrs. Vervaet et Cie., of Gand, Belgium, in April last, we were
-surprised to see this lovely Orchid quite at home on a block, growing
-luxuriantly, and rooting in all directions; the growths were very
-strong, and as healthy as any we have seen. Is it possible that this may
-be the secret of success with this Orchid? Being an epiphyte, found
-growing on the limbs of trees, we should imagine this treatment would be
-the most natural for it. It is evident that pot culture does not suit
-it, as it frequently dies off after two or three years.—H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 47.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDRÆ.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDRÆ.
- [Plate 47.]
- Native of Bogota, New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong-ovate, compressed, often stained
- brownish purple, two-leaved. _Leaves_ ligulate-oblong, acute,
- channelled toward the base, of a pleasing light green colour. _Scape_
- radical, supporting a many-flowered raceme, or in the more vigorous
- plants a panicle equalling or exceeding the leaves, and having small
- acute bracts at the base of the pedicels. _Flowers_ exquisitely chaste
- and beautiful, white, tinted with rose, and variously spotted, fully
- three inches across; _sepals_ ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, entire or
- toothed, white, suffused more or less with a delicate tint of
- rose-pink; _petals_ in the best forms, broadly ovate and much
- undulated, entire or toothed, white, rather less deeply tinted with
- pink; _lip_ shorter than the petals, oblong-ovate, the margin much
- crisped and the shortly acuminate apex recurved, white, with a rich
- yellow stain down the centre, and marked with reddish brown radiating
- lines on the disk, and with one or two (or in some forms many) rich
- red-brown spots or blotches half-way down, the disk also bearing a
- bilamellate crest. _Column_ arcuate, club-shaped, chestnut-red.
-
- Odontoglossum Alexandræ, _Bateman_, in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1864,
- 1083; _Id._, _Proceedings of the Royal Horticultural Society_, iv.,
- 186; _Id._, _Monograph of Odontoglossum_, t.t. 14, 19; _Hooker_,
- _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5691 (var. _Trianæ_), t. 5697 (var.
- _guttatum_); _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t. 26; _Warner_, _Select
- Orchidaceous Plants_, 2 ser., t. 23 (var. _Warneri_); _Floral
- Magazine_, t. 343; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, 5 ed., 228.
-
- Odontoglossum Bluntii, _Reichenbach, fil._, in _Mohl and
- Schlechtendal’s Botanische Zeitung_, “n. 53, Dec. 64;” _Van Houtte_,
- _Flore des Serres_, t. 1652.
-
- Odontoglossum crispum, _Lindley_, in _Annals of Natural History_, xv.,
- 256; _Id._, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Odontoglossum_, No. 57;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi.,
- 845.
-
-
-The Princess of Wales’ Odontoglossum, one of the most beautiful and one
-of the most useful of Orchids, was found in the province of Bogota, in
-New Grenada, at an altitude of from 7,000 to 8,000 feet, growing in
-great profusion on the branches of trees in the forests of that elevated
-region. It was introduced to this country in 1864 by Mr. Weir, when
-collecting for the Royal Horticultural Society, and was described in
-that year by Mr. Bateman as above quoted. There cannot be two opinions
-respecting its beauty, as it is one of the best Orchids in cultivation;
-and though there are amongst the imported plants great diversities in
-the form and colour of the flowers, yet all are beautiful. Some have the
-flowers of a pure white, in others they are variously suffused with a
-delicate rosy hue; some are spotted with crimson, and there are those
-with yellow flowers, but the most chaste and beautiful of them all are
-the pure white varieties, tinted with rose colour, which are mostly
-sought after by cultivators, though the many beautifully spotted forms
-produce a fine contrast when intermixed with the others.
-
-The figure we now publish was taken from a well-grown specimen in the
-collection of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, at Sandringham, and, as this
-species is named in honour of the Princess of Wales, who is a great
-lover of flowers, and especially of the Orchidaceæ, we are proud to be
-able to announce that our artist has been permitted to prepare an
-illustration of this charming plant from such a source. There is a very
-fine collection of these plants at Sandringham, and among them are some
-very fine specimens, the accomplished gardener, Mr. C. Penny, being most
-successful in flowering them with grand spikes of bloom. There are also
-numerous varieties in the collection, but the one we have figured is a
-good example of the typical form.
-
-_Odontoglossum Alexandræ_ is a compact-growing plant, attaining about a
-foot in height; it is furnished with lively green foliage, and produces
-its blossoms after the growth is completed on a drooping spike which, as
-it overhangs the green foliage, has a most graceful appearance. The
-sepals are white, slightly tinged with pale rose colour, the petals are
-pure white, and the lip is white, with reddish-brown spots upon it, and
-a patch of bright orange-yellow at the base. The plants bloom at
-different times of the year, according to the period of the completion
-of their growth, and, therefore, by having a good quantity of plants, a
-succession may be kept flowering all the year round. We are never
-without a good show of these plants in bloom, and it is the same in all
-collections where they are grown in considerable numbers. The individual
-flowers will last many weeks in beauty. They are extremely useful for
-cutting, as they keep for a long time in water.
-
-As this species requires what is called cool treatment very little
-expense need be incurred in its cultivation. Indeed, any one having a
-small house where a temperature can be kept up in winter of from 45° to
-50°, with as little fire-heat as possible, can grow a great quantity of
-them, since they occupy but little space. In summer no fire-heat is
-required, unless the nights are cold, which is seldom the case at that
-season, but no draughts should be allowed to reach them, as draughts are
-as deleterious to them as to all other plants grown in glass houses.
-They require shading from the scorching rays of the sun, but like to
-have all the light that can be given them. Under this treatment they
-will grow stronger and stronger, and flower more and more freely.
-
-The potting material which we find most suitable for them is good
-fibrous peat, with the finer earthy particles shaken out; they must have
-good drainage, in fact the pots must be three-parts filled with drainage
-material, and the plants well elevated above the pot rim. They are
-naturally free-rooting plants, but we find a little live sphagnum moss
-on the top of the peat causes them to root more freely, and as they
-require a good deal of moisture at the roots during their period of
-growth, the moss, if kept in a growing condition, will help to supply
-their wants.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 48.
- VANDA CŒRULESCENS.]
-
-
-
-
- VANDA CŒRULESCENS.
- [Plate 48.]
- Native of Burmah.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ one to two feet high or more, producing long stout
- flexuous roots from the leaf bases. _Leaves_ close set, distichous,
- linear-ligulate, truncately-bilobed, coriaceous, channelled, five to
- seven inches long, of a deep green colour, carinate, the keel forming
- an angular projection at the tip. _Scapes_ or _Peduncles_ slender,
- distantly vaginate, with small appressed sheaths, axillary, erect,
- bearing a ten to twenty flowered raceme longer than the leaves.
- _Flowers_ neat and very pleasing, pale mauve-blue; _sepals_ incurved,
- cuneate-ovate, obtuse, clawed, of a pale greyish blue; _petals_
- similar in size, form, and colour, twisted at the base, with the two
- lateral lobes tawny-yellow, and adnate to the column, the middle or
- front lobe obcuneate dilated and emarginate at the apex, the margins
- deflexed, of a rich violet-blue, with a pair of keel-shaped deep
- violet calli and a short intermediate one on the disk, the spur
- straight or incurved, conical, tipped with green. _Column_ small,
- blue.
-
- Vanda cœrulescens, _Griffith_, _Notulæ_, 352; _Id._, _Icones_, t. 331;
- _Lindley_, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Vanda_, No. 19; _Reichenbach
- fil._, in _Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ_, vi., 868; _Id._,
- in _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, 1869, 498; 1870, 529, fig. 97; _Hooker
- fil._, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5834 (colour faulty); _Williams_,
- _Orchid Grower’s Manual_, ed. 5, 305.
-
-
-The Vandas are a most noble family of Orchids, including amongst them
-many beautiful species, such as _V. suavis_, _V. tricolor_, _V.
-Batemanni_, and others. They are well furnished with leaves, and make
-splendid specimens, requiring considerable space in which to grow them,
-but they are plants of great beauty, and when not in bloom make grand
-objects of attraction. No collection should be without them, as they
-flower at all times of the year. Where a number of these Orchids are
-grown, as at Chatsworth, we have seen as many as 193 spikes in blossom
-at one time, presenting a most glorious sight.
-
-The Vandas are of easy cultivation. The species which we now figure is a
-small, elegant-growing, free-blooming plant, and also very distinct in
-character, as will be seen from the plate, which gives a good
-representation of it. Our drawing was taken from a beautiful specimen
-growing in the splendid collection of C. Dorman, Esq., The Firs, Laurie
-Park, Sydenham, who has one of the best grown collections of Orchids we
-have seen, and one which does great credit to Mr. Coningsby, the
-gardener.
-
-_Vanda cœrulescens_ is a compact growing species, as may be seen from
-our plate. In this instance it produced a flower spike of a drooping
-habit fifteen inches long, which is quite an exception, as the flower
-spikes are generally more or less erect or ascending. The sepals and
-petals are of a bluish-mauve, the lip of a deep blue. It is altogether
-most distinct in colour, and a plant that is greatly required in a
-collection of Orchids for the sake of the charming contrasts it yields.
-It blooms at different times of the year, and continues for several
-weeks in beauty. We find the heat of the East India house is congenial
-to it. It grows well in sphagnum moss, and must have good drainage,
-because it must be kept moist during the growing season; when at rest
-less moisture is required. The plant thrives either in a pot or in a
-basket suspended from the roof, so that it may get plenty of light, but
-must be shaded from the sun.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Alexandræ reginæ.—F. A. Philbrick, Esq., Oldfield,
-Bickley, has sent us two fine spikes of this grand variety, the white
-flowers of which are of good form and profusely blotched, both on the
-sepals and petals, with reddish crimson. It is one of the finest spotted
-forms of this valuable species.—B. S. W.
-
-
-Orchids from Perth, N.B.—We have received from W. Macdonald, Esq.,
-Woodlands, Perth, a nice spike of _Scuticaria Steelii_, with three
-flowers. This is a curious growing Orchid, and one seldom sees it in
-blossom. The flowers are produced from the base of the reed-like leaves,
-and are yellow, distinctly spotted with crimson. The plant makes a fine
-specimen for a block, and when suspended from the roof shows off its
-leaves and flowers to advantage. Accompanying this was a spike of a fine
-variety of _Odontoglossum Pescatorei_, with flowers measuring three and
-a half inches across. Mr. Macdonald informs us that this spike was
-produced from a plant with small bulbs, and he expects, as the plant
-gets stronger, that it will produce larger flowers. There was also in
-flower at The Woodlands a grand specimen of _Camarotis purpurea_, with
-about 100 spikes of its pretty rosy pink flowers fully open.—B. S. W.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
-
-—Added arabic page numbers to non-plate pages.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Orchid Album, Volume 1, by
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diff --git a/old/55145-0.zip b/old/55145-0.zip
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Orchid Album, Volume 1, by
-Robert Warner and Benjamin Samuel Williams and Thomas Moore
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Orchid Album, Volume 1
- Comprising coloured figures and descriptions of new, rare,
- and beautiful Orchidaceous Plants
-
-Author: Robert Warner
- Benjamin Samuel Williams
- Thomas Moore
-
-Illustrator: John Nugent Fitch
-
-Release Date: July 18, 2017 [EBook #55145]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORCHID ALBUM, VOLUME 1 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Carol Spears and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- ORCHID ALBUM,
-
-
- COMPRISING
- COLOURED FIGURES AND DESCRIPTIONS
- OF
- NEW, RARE, AND BEAUTIFUL
- ORCHIDACEOUS PLANTS.
-
-
- CONDUCTED BY
- ROBERT WARNER, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
- Author of SELECT ORCHIDACEOUS PLANTS,
- AND
- BENJAMIN SAMUEL WILLIAMS, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
- Author of the ORCHID-GROWERS' MANUAL, etc.
-
- The Botanical Descriptions by THOMAS MOORE, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
- CURATOR of the CHELSEA BOTANIC GARDENS.
-
- _THE COLOURED FIGURES BY JOHN NUGENT FITCH, F.L.S._
-
-
- VOLUME I.
-
-
- LONDON:
- Published by B. S. Williams,
- AT THE
- VICTORIA AND PARADISE NURSERIES, UPPER HOLLOWAY, N.
- MDCCCLXXXII.
-
- DEDICATED
- BY SPECIAL PERMISSION
- TO
- _H.R.H. The Princess of Wales,_
- BY
- HER ROYAL HIGHNESS'
- Very obedient and humble Servants,
- ROBERT WARNER,
- BENJAMIN S. WILLIAMS.
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
-
-The great advances which have been made within the last few years in the
-introduction and the cultivation of Exotic Orchids, have suggested the
-desirability of devoting a monthly publication to the illustration of
-the best forms of these singular and captivating aristocratic plants,
-and also to the explanation of the most successful methods of growing
-them, its object being to supply such information concerning them as the
-Orchid Grower may be likely to find useful in directing his purchases,
-and in suggesting the various points of discreet and masterly
-management. Moreover, we have found that figures of the better varieties
-of Orchids are much in request.
-
-These considerations have induced us to commence the publication of the
-Orchid Album, in the confident expectation that we shall meet with
-sufficient support and encouragement to enable us to continue it, and,
-so far as our experience goes, we have no reason to feel disappointed,
-for we find that Orchid growers, both amateur and professional, are
-taking a marked interest not only in the plates but also in the cultural
-notes.
-
-In regard to the subjects for illustration, we hope in due course to
-figure not only the typical form of all the more popular and interesting
-species, but also the leading varieties, when they prove sufficiently
-distinct and meritorious. It is for these that we anticipate our
-subscribers and readers will most anxiously look.
-
-Being of Royal Quarto size, the pages of the Album are sufficiently
-large to enable the artist to produce ample and intelligible portraits
-of the plants without their becoming cumbersome; and, as they will be
-drawn and coloured in the best style, we confidently hope they will
-prove to be acceptable to the lovers and growers of Orchids generally.
-Thus we trust we may be permitted to lay before our patrons an
-acceptable Annual Album of Floral Pictures, which will be, at once,
-welcomed both to the Drawing-room and the Library.
-
-The work has been commenced in deference to the urgent representations
-of many of the leading cultivators of these remarkable and fascinating
-plants, who have pointed out to us the want which we are now
-endeavouring to meet. The great advantage and pleasure which Orchid
-Growers have derived from the publication of such illustrated works as
-the _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, and such practical instructions as are
-given in the _Orchid Grower's Manual_, lead us to believe that there
-exists a desire and a taste for further Orchidic literature, which we
-trust the Orchid Album may in some considerable degree supply. Our chief
-aim will be to give authentic information as to the nomenclature of the
-plants, and to disseminate correct instructions in regard to their
-cultural requirements. The finer new Orchids, as well as the older
-meritorious species and varieties, will be figured with equal fidelity,
-and described with equal accuracy. We shall at all times feel grateful
-to those Amateurs or Trade growers who may give us information as to the
-flowering either of novelties or of remarkably fine forms of the older
-kinds, especially if they are such as will be suitable for figuring.
-
-The Annual Volumes will consist of the twelve Monthly Parts issued up to
-June in each year, when the volume will be completed by the publication
-of a Title Page and Index.
-
- B. S. WILLIAMS.
-
- Victoria and Paradise Nurseries,
- Upper Holloway, London, N.,
- _June 1st, 1882_.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX TO PLATES.
-
-
- PLATE
- ARIDES LOBBII, _Hort. Veitch_ 21
- ANGRCUM EBURNEUM, _Du Pet.-Th._ 41
- ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA, _Lindl._ 19
- BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA, _Lindl._ 18
- CALANTHE VEITCHII, _Lindl._ 31
- CATTLEYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII, _Lind. et Rchb. f._ 16
- CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA, _Williams et Moore_ 3
- CATTLEYA MORGAN, _Williams et Moore_ 6
- CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS, _Lem._ 33
- CATTLEYA TRIAN, _Lind. et Rchb. f._ 45
- CATTLEYA VELUTINA, _Rchb. f._ 26
- COELOGYNE MASSANGEANA, _Rchb. f._ 29
- CYMBIDIUM PARISHII, _Rchb. f._ 25
- CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM, _Rchb. f._ 37
- CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCEANUM, _Rchb. f._ 22
- CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM, _Rchb. f._ 36
- CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI, _Low_ 8
- DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM, _Moore_ 20
- DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM, _Lindl._ 38
- DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM, _Rchb. f._ 13
- DENDROBIUM SUPERBUM, _Rchb. f._ 42
- EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS, _Hort._ 4
- LLIA ANCEPS DAWSONI, _Anders._ 44
- LLIA ELEGANS ALBA, _Williams et Moore_ 30
- LLIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII, _Hort._ 9-10
- LLIA SCHRDERII, _Williams et Moore_ 2
- LLIA XANTHINA, _Lindl._ 23
- MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA COERULESCENS, _Hort._ 24
- MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII, _Rchb. f._ 5
- MILTONIA CUNEATA, _Lindl._ 46
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR, _Batem._ 47
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR FLAVEOLUM, _Williams et Moore_ 43
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM, _Rchb. f._ 35
- ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM, _Lindl._ 27
- ODONTOGLOSSUM KRAMERI, _Rchb. f._ 40
- ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR, _Hook._ 1
- ONCIDIUM GARDNERI, _Lindl._ 12
- ONCIDIUM HMATOCHILUM, _Lindl._ 32
- PAPHINIA CRISTATA, _Lindl._ 34
- PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM, _Rchb. f._ 17
- PHALNOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA, _Hort._ 11
- PHALNOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS, _Rchb. f._ 39
- PROMENA CITRINA, _Don._ 7
- TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA, _Hort._ 14
- VANDA COERULESCENS, _Griff._ 48
- VANDA PARISHII, _Rchb. f._ 15
- ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI, _Lem._ 28
-
-
-
-
- INDEX TO NOTES AND SYNONYMS.
-
-
- UNDER PLATE
- Arides Fieldingii, Dr. Ainsworth's 4
- Arides Leeanum, Mr. Law-Schofield's 37
- Arides odoratum majus, Mrs. Arbuthnot's 14
- Arides Schrderii, Dr. Ainsworth's 4
- Arides suavissimum, Mr. Coates' 18
- Angrcum eburneum virens 41
- Angrcum sesquipedale, Mr. Coates' 18
- Angrcum superbum, _Du Pet.-Th._ 41
- Bletia xanthina, _Rchb. f._ 23
- Bollea coelestis, as a block plant 40
- Bolleas, Mr. Gair's 17
- Cattleya Dowiana, Mr. Dodgson's 19
- Cattleya Dowiana, Mr. Lee's 2
- Cattleya gigas, Mr. Bockett's 6
- Cattleya gigas, Mr. Lee's 2
- Cattleya labiata Lindigiana, _Karst._ 45
- Cattleya labiata Trian, _Duch._ 45
- Cattleya Leopoldii, _Hort. Versch._ 16
- Cattleya superba, Sir T. Lawrence's 3
- Cattleya Trian, Mr. Wright's 41
- Cattleya Trian Dodgsoni 40
- Cattleya Trian Osmani 40
- Cymbidium eburneum, correction 29
- Cypripedium barbatum superbum, Mr. Dodgson's 4
- Cypripedium insigne, Mrs Haywood's 27
- Cypripedium Spicerianum, Mr. Bockett's 19
- Cypripedium villosum, Mr. Wyatt's 42
- Cyrtochilum citrinum, _Hook._ 1
- Dendrobium Ainsworthii, _Moore_ 20
- Dendrobium Falconeri, Marquis of Lothian's 44
- Dendrobium Findleyanum, Mr. Bowring's 32
- Dendrobium Hillii, Mr. Wyatt's 42
- Dendrobium macranthum, _Hook._ 42
- Dendrobium macrophyllum, _Lindl._ 42
- Dendrobium nobile, a three-lipped 48
- Dendrobium superbum (macrophyllum), Prince of Wales' 36
- Dendrobium Wardianum, Mr. Salamon's 44
- Dendrochilum filiforme, Mr. Hill's 15
- Epidendrum elatius, var., _Rchb. f._ 45
- Epidendrum labiatum Trian, _Rchb. f._ 45
- Epidendrum nemorale, Sir T. Lawrence's 3
- Llia anceps Dawsoni, Mr. Dodgson's 28
- Llia autumnalis atrorubens, Mr. Chamberlain's 28
- Llia Dominiana rosea, _Hort. Veitch_ 12
- Llia elegans prasiata 40
- Llia Philbrickiana, _Hort. Veitch_ 5
- Limodorum eburneum, _Bory._ 41
- Masdevallia chimra, Dr. Ainsworth's 26
- Masdevallia Harryana, _Rchb. f._ 24
- Masdevallia Lindeni, _Hook._ 24
- Masdevallia Lindeni Harryana, _Andr_ 24
- Maxillaria citrina, _Lyons_ 7
- Maxillaria cristata, _Lindl._ 34
- Miltonia speciosa, _Kl._ 46
- Odontoglossum Alexandr, Dr. Ainsworth's 26
- Odontoglossum Alexandr flaveolum, Mr. Hardy's 34
- Odontoglossum Alexandr regin 48
- Odontoglossum Bluntii, _Rchb. f._ 47
- Odontoglossum crispum, _Lindl._ 47
- Odontoglossum crispum flaveolum, _Rchb. f._ 43
- Odontoglossum Londesboroughianum, Mr. Law-Schofield's 27
- Odontoglossum Roezlii, Mr. Todd's 43
- Odontoglossum vexillarium, Mr. Bull's autumn-flowering variety 23
- Odontoglossums at Trentham 43
- Oncidium luridum purpuratum, _Lodd._ 32
- Oncidium speciosum, _Rchb. f._ 46
- Orchids, Dr. Ainsworth's 26
- Orchids, Mr. Dodgson's 4
- Orchids, Mr. Dorman's 40
- Orchids, Mr. Hardy's 4
- Orchids, Baron Schrder's 22
- Orchids at Arnot Hill 15
- Orchids at Ferguslie 18
- Orchids at Manchester, 1881 4
- Orchids in Belgium, Dr. Boddaert's 1
- Orchids in Belgium, M. D. Massange's 16
- Orchids from Dr. Paterson 45
- Orchids, from Perth, N.B. 48
- Orchids, raised blinds for 35
- Orchids, shading 30, 35
- Pescatoreas, Mr. Gair's 17
- Phalnopsids, Mr. Bockett's 11
- Phalnopsis intermedia Portei, Baron Schrder's 22
- Phalnopsis Stuartiana, _Rchb. f._ 39
- Restrepia antennifera, M. D. Massange's 16
- Rodriquezia candida, _Batem._ 18
- Sphagnum, best kind for Odontoglots 43
- Trichopilia suavis, _Lindl._ 14
- Vanda Cathcartii, M. D. Massange's 16
- Vanda coerulea, Marquis of Lothian's 17
- Vanda Lowii, Sir T. Lawrence's 3
- Vanda suavis, Dr. Ainsworth's 4
- Vanda suavis, Mr. Dodgson's 4
- Vanda tricolor, Mr. Broome's 25
- Vanda tricolor planilabris, M. Massange's 16
- Zygopetalum Klabochorum, _Rchb. f._ 17
-
- [Illustration: PL. 1.
- ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR.]
-
-
-
-
- ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR.
- [Plate 1.]
- Native of the Organ Mountains of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ small, tufted, ovate or ovate-oblong,
- compressed, somewhat furrowed, two-leaved. _Leaves_ subcoriaceous,
- oblong-linear or ligulate, acute, bright green. _Scape_ radical,
- springing from the base of the young pseudobulbs, drooping, furnished
- with small bracts. _Flowers_ yellow, racemose; _sepals_ (dorsal)
- ovate-lanceolate or obovate, acute, the lateral ones smaller,
- lance-shaped, and united behind the lip for about half their length;
- _petals_ obovate, acute, somewhat undulated, about as long as the
- sepals; _lip_ (labellum) large and prominent, roundish subpanduriform,
- emarginate, somewhat clawed, furnished with a pair of plates or
- lamell (bilamellate) at the base, of a clear yellow colour, as are
- the sepals and petals. _Column_ about half as long as the petals, with
- a projecting tooth on each side.
-
- Oncidium concolor, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 3752; _Lindley_,
- _Folia Orchidacea_, Art. _Oncidium_, No. 65 (excl. syn. Klotzsch);
- _Reichenbach fil._ in _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi.
- 731.; _Carrire_, in _Revue Horticole_, 1881, 30, with tab.
-
- Cyrtochilum citrinum, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4454.
-
-
-The brilliant little plant here figured--a representation in the tribe
-_Vande_, of the great genus _Oncidium_--belongs to the group of Oncids
-which Lindley named _Tetrapetala micropetala_, in which two of the
-sepals are united so that the petaloid organs, as distinguished from the
-lip, are reduced to four in number (_tetrapetala_), and at the same time
-the petals, which are about equal in size to the sepals, are
-comparatively small by comparison with the remaining organ.
-
-This species, although not new, was until recently extremely rare, and
-was, indeed, seldom met with in collections; now, however, the little
-gem is very plentiful, thanks to the indefatigable zeal of our
-collectors, so that growers who do not possess it may obtain it at a
-very small cost. The species is one of the most compact-growing and
-beautiful of the _Oncidiums_, producing, as it does, from the base of
-the new bulbs, many-flowered drooping spikes of rich yellow blossoms. It
-is an excellent subject for planting in a pan or basket to be suspended
-from the roof of the house, where the brightly-coloured flowers produce
-a charming effect; indeed, we do not know of any Orchid which has a
-better appearance when grown in this way.
-
-_Oncidium concolor_ succeeds best in a compost of peat with a little
-sphagnum moss added, and with plenty of good drainage. We have grown it
-most successfully in small pans, but it can be cultivated either in a
-basket or on a block. It would succeed equally well in a pot, but the
-drooping character of the flower-spikes renders it a most fitting
-subject for growing in either of the above-named receptacles, and for
-suspension from the roof. As to temperature, we find it succeeds best in
-the Odontoglossum-house during the summer months. After it has flowered,
-and while it is making its growth, a copious supply of water should be
-given to it, always keeping the soil moist until the growth of the bulbs
-is completed. When it has finished its growth, it should be removed to
-the Cattleya-house, where it should be kept moderately dry until it
-produces its spikes about March or April.
-
-For exhibition purposes this is a most valuable little plant, being easy
-of cultivation, distinct in colour, and flowering during the principal
-exhibition months, May and June; its long lasting quality is also a
-great point in its favour. In order to preserve the flowers for a
-considerable time, they should be kept free from damp, for if allowed to
-get wet they soon become spotted, and fade, but when kept in this way,
-they will last at least six or seven weeks. The plant is altogether a
-most valuable Orchid, and as it takes up but little room, we recommend
-growers to procure a good stock of it, as its effect when suspended
-among other flowering Orchids is charming.
-
-
-Orchids in Belgium.--When in Ghent a few days ago, I had the good
-fortune to receive an invitation to view the celebrated collection of
-Dr. Boddaert of that city. The collection is a very extensive one, and
-the plants are exceedingly well grown and healthy. There was a good show
-of flowering Orchids, among which may be mentioned:--_Trichopilia crispa
-marginata_ with forty-two expanded flowers, a marvel of cultivation;
-_Odontoglossum Phalnopsis_ with twenty-six flowers, a fine well-grown
-plant; _Cypripedium Argus_ with six flower spikes; the new _Trichopilia
-suavis alba_, of which we hope to give a plate later on; _Anguloa
-Ruckerii sanguinea_ with several flowers; also the rare _Nanodes
-Medus_, with _Odontoglossums_, _Vandas_, _Masdevallias_, &c., in great
-variety.
-
- H. Williams.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 2.
- LLIA SCHRDERII.]
-
-
-
-
- LLIA SCHRDERII.
- [Plate 2.]
- Native of Bahia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) club-shaped, about a foot and a
- half high, monophyllous, furrowed when mature. _Leaves_ coriaceous,
- oblong, acute, broad to the base, light green. _Scape_ three to
- four-flowered, issuing from a terminal oblong compressed bract, an
- inch wide and five inches long. _Flowers_ large, subhorizontal, about
- seven inches across, delicately coloured, with a prettily veined lip;
- _sepals_ lanceolate, reflexed, three-fourths of an inch wide, white;
- _petals_ convex, ovate, narrowed to the base, somewhat crispy at the
- edge, pure white, scarcely as long as the lip; _lip_ (labellum)
- membranaceous, three-lobed, the lateral lobes convolute around the
- column, yellow outside, striped with deeper yellow veins, the middle
- lobe ovate, obtuse, undulated, the anterior portion and margin white,
- the mouth veined with magenta-rose, the disk naked, and the tubulose
- basal portion deep yellow, veined with magenta. _Column_ much shorter
- than the lateral lobes of the lip.
-
- Llia Schrderii, _supra_.
-
-
-This plant belongs to that tribe of the Orchid family which is called
-_Epidendre_, and of which the genus _Epidendrum_ is regarded as the
-type. This group is known by its waxy pollen-masses, which are attached
-to a distinct caudicle, but bear no separable stigmatic gland as occurs
-in the tribe _Vande_. The genus is closely related to _Cattleya_, and
-contains some of the finest ornaments of our Orchid-houses.
-
-The subject of our present illustration is a new and most beautiful
-Orchid, now figured and described for the first time. It is closely
-allied to _Llia grandis_, but is distinct from that species, inasmuch
-as the sepals and petals are white, whereas those of _L. grandis_ are of
-a nankeen yellow. It is named in honour of Baron Henry Schrder, an
-enthusiastic admirer of this handsome class of plants. The species
-flowered for the first time this year, in the Victoria and Paradise
-Nurseries.
-
-The flowers are produced in May and June, three or four together, on
-spikes which are produced from the apex of the new bulbs; they have a
-delicate and pleasing appearance, the sepals and petals being pure
-white, while the lip is white, striped with rose, throat deep yellow,
-veined with magenta. It should be kept free from damp when in flower, as
-the blossoms being of a delicate nature, soon spot and go off; but kept
-in this way free from moisture they will last about four weeks in a
-fresh and perfect state.
-
-In growth the plant somewhat resembles _L. purpurata_, the bulbs and
-foliage being about eighteen inches in height, and of a light green
-colour. It succeeds well grown in the Cattleya-house in pots filled with
-peat and a little sphagnum moss, over plenty of drainage. It should
-receive a moderate supply of water at the root during the growing
-season, and should never be allowed to get thoroughly dry. When it has
-made its growth it should be allowed to rest, and at that time should be
-kept rather dry, only giving it sufficient water to prevent it from
-shrivelling.
-
-_Llias_ are subject to the attacks of white scale, but this can easily
-be got rid of by sponging with clean water. Thrips sometimes attack the
-young growths, and if allowed to increase, soon disfigure the leaves.
-
-
-Cattleya gigas and C. Dowiana.--These _Cattleyas_ have been considered
-to be shy-flowering species, and we have sometimes found them to be so
-in our own experience, but we are beginning to change our opinion on
-this subject. No doubt there are some plants that grow and flower more
-freely than others, but a great deal depends on the conditions in which
-they are placed and the treatment they receive. I recently had the
-pleasure of visiting the collection of W. Lee, Esq., of Leatherhead,
-which in time will be one of the finest to be seen in this country. The
-Estate is situated in an open part of the country, and the Orchid-houses
-are built on the side of a hill where they get the full light and sun,
-while they are sheltered from the driving winds; these houses are,
-indeed, all that can be desired, the requisitions of the various classes
-of plants having been well studied. Every accommodation is provided for
-those kinds, such as _Cattleya gigas_ and _C. Dowiana_, that are
-difficult to bloom. These two were splendidly in flower, and are most
-lovely and distinct kinds; the flowers of _C. gigas_ were nearly nine
-inches in diameter, the sepals and petals of the purest dark rosy
-colour, and the lip a fine rich dark crimson magenta. _C. Dowiana_ was
-also very fine and attractive in colour, the sepals and petals being of
-a nankeen yellow, and the lip of a rich dark purple, elegantly pencilled
-and striped with lines of gold. We hope at some future time to give our
-readers a plate of the fine variety of _C. gigas_ above referred to.
-Both these species are here grown as near the light as possible, and the
-treatment they receive is, first to induce a vigorous growth, and then
-to give them a good rest after the growth is completed, at the same time
-keeping them well exposed to the light, and giving them merely
-sufficient water to prevent them from shrivelling, a more ample supply
-of water being given as soon as they show signs of flowering. There was
-also in this collection another species that is generally considered
-difficult to grow, namely, _Vanda teres_, of which there were three
-plants which had been blooming very finely. When cultivated as these
-are, they well repay all the trouble taken with them. These are grown at
-one end of the house, without any shade.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 3.
- CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA.
- [Plate 3.]
- Native of the United States of Columbia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ oblong, club-shaped, furrowed when mature, twelve
- to eighteen inches high. _Leaves_ solitary coriaceous,
- ligulate-oblong, acute, dark green above, paler beneath. _Scape_ three
- to four-flowered, issuing from a terminal oblong compressed bract,
- which is three to four inches long, and an inch broad. _Flowers_ very
- large and exceedingly handsome, measuring eight inches across;
- _sepals_ an inch wide, lanceolate, recurved, white; _petals_
- spreading, clawed, broadly ovate, measuring nearly three inches
- across, plane towards the base prettily frilled in the anterior
- portion, the apex recurved, white, with a scarcely perceptible tint of
- blush near the edge; _lip_ obovate emarginate, three and a quarter
- inches long, the basal half entire, rolled over the column, the
- anterior portion expanded and beautifully fringed, about two inches in
- breadth and rather more in depth, the apical half occupied with a
- solid blotch of rich magenta rose, passing to white at the frilled
- edge, the side portions white, the disk and throat of a delicate tint
- of nankeen yellow, the extreme base white, with numerous divergent
- lines of magenta rose, a few of which (about two) run out to join the
- blotch at the tip of the anterior lobe. _Column_ about half as long as
- the convolute base of the lip, club-shaped, decurved, semiterete, with
- a rounded keel at the back.
-
- Cattleya Mendelii grandiflora, _supra._
-
-
-When _Cattleya Mendelii_ was first flowered by S. Mendel, Esq., some few
-years ago, many botanists were of opinion that it was not sufficiently
-dissimilar from, but only a variety of, _C. Trian_. Since that time it
-has been flowered in many different collections with but little
-variation of character, and, as we think, has fully vindicated its
-right, whether as a species or race, to be regarded as a distinct Orchid
-of first-rate merit.
-
-The subject of our plate is a gigantic variety of the _Cattleya
-Mendelii_, which has just flowered in our own collection. It proves to
-be in every way larger, and altogether superior, to the old type, the
-flowers having much more substance, and being of better form, which
-results from the greater width of the lip and petals. The sepals and
-petals are white, the latter being very broad and of good substance,
-while the lip is broad and well fringed, pure white in its upper part,
-with a large bright magenta patch at the front part, and the throat is
-orange, with reddish crimson veins, which stand out in fine contrast
-against the pure white of the remaining portions of the flower. It
-produces as many as four flowers on a spike, each flower measuring over
-eight inches across, and the flowers are thrown well up above the
-foliage, and thus produce the grandest appearance we have as yet seen in
-any _Cattleya_.
-
-_Cattleya Mendelii_ succeeds well in a compost of peat, with the
-addition of a little sphagnum moss, and requires good drainage. We have
-found it to do best in pots, with the plant well elevated above the rim,
-but it can be grown with success either on a block or in a basket
-suspended from the roof of the house. The temperature of the
-Cattleya-house suits it best.
-
-This is a grand plant for exhibition or decorative purposes, as the pure
-white and magenta of its flowers are exceedingly effective amongst the
-other species of _Cattleya_ which flower at the same time of year. The
-flowering season is May and June, after which time _C. Mendelii_ begins
-to make its growth. It should then receive a moderate supply of
-water--not too much, as an over bountiful supply is apt to cause the
-young growths to rot. After the annual growths are completed the plants
-should be gradually dried off, only giving them sufficient water to keep
-them from shrivelling.
-
-The species of _Cattleya_ are all subject to white scale and thrips.
-These insect pests may, however, be easily removed by careful sponging,
-either with water or a little insecticide; they should be cleaned off as
-soon as discovered, as if allowed to establish themselves they disfigure
-the leaves and bulbs, and so spoil the appearance of the plants.
-Cleanliness and good cultivation are the chief points to be considered
-in the successful keeping of _Cattleyas_.
-
-
-Vanda Lowii, &c.--One often hears that _Vanda Lowii_ does not bloom
-until it attains a large size. This, however, is erroneous, for we have
-flowered it when not more than two feet high; and we have also seen a
-plant of about the same size in the collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence,
-Bart., with a flower spike some four or five feet long, in full beauty,
-with its two bright orange-yellow flowers at the base, the rest of the
-blossoms being of a bright brownish-crimson colour. This was a most
-extraordinary spike for so small a plant. When the specimens attain a
-larger size they often produce six of these long spikes, which extend to
-seven feet in length. We have one now showing this number of spikes, but
-the plant is fully five feet high. We were glad to see in this
-collection a grand mass of _Epidendrum nemorale majus_, which is figured
-in the first series of Warner's _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, but we
-never expected to see such a specimen as that in the collection of Sir
-Trevor Lawrence, which must have been three or four feet across, and had
-eighteen spikes of its beautiful rosy and mauve-coloured flowers. This
-plant was well worth going to see, as were many others: indeed, the fame
-of this collection is so widely spread that it is almost needless to
-comment upon it; suffice it to say, that it is the finest and best kept
-collection we know of. At the time of our visit we were pleased to see
-some fine plants of _Cattleya superba_ with their splendid deep rose and
-crimson flowers; this is one of the most distinct and beautiful of all
-_Cattleyas_, and had been grown in the East India House, suspended from
-the roof.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 4.
- EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS.]
-
-
-
-
- EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS.
- [Plate 4.]
- Native of Mexico.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate, clustered, two-leaved. _Leaves_
- oblong-ligulate, acute, sheathing at the base. _Scape_ erect, six to
- nine inches high, racemose, many-flowered, longer than the leaves.
- _Flowers_ brilliant orange-scarlet, nearly two inches across, much
- larger than the typical form; _sepals_ spreading; _petals_ flat,
- elliptic, somewhat broader than the sepals, spreading, lanceolate,
- acute; _lip_ clawed, linear, abruptly acute, with a bifoveate
- (two-holed) callosity below the middle, deep yellow passing to
- orange-scarlet at the tip. _Column_ parallel with and nearly half the
- length of the lip, to which it is adnate towards the base, the
- anther-bed marginate in front.
-
- Epidendrum vitellinum majus, _of gardens_.
-
-
-The original form of _Epidendrum vitellinum_, of which a good though
-pale-coloured figure will be found in the _Botanical Register_ for 1840
-(t. 35), is one of the most brilliant of the _Epidendre_, on account of
-its remarkable fiery colour, which makes it invaluable for contrasting
-with other subjects, both in the Orchid-house, in the jardinire, or in
-the bouquet. The same colour, or something near it, occurs in a few
-other Orchids, which are equally valuable from a decorative point of
-view, as for example in _Llia cinnabarina_, _Llia harpophylla_, and
-_Ada aurantiaca_, all of them being plants, which, under favourable
-conditions, yield a brilliant effect. The subject of our plate has the
-advantage of producing larger and more showy flowers than its type, and
-to this extent is the more desirable of the two for the house-stage, or
-exhibition table.
-
-Until within the last few years this plant was very rare, but having
-been imported in large quantities it is now to be found in every
-collection, however limited its pretensions. The bright colour of its
-orange-scarlet flowers, produced in considerable numbers on upright
-spikes, renders it a most striking and distinct species. We have known
-the flowers to last as long as twelve weeks in perfection; in fact, we
-have on several occasions exhibited a plant of it at as many as six
-different successive exhibitions. Mixed with other Orchids it has a most
-telling effect; and a well-flowered specimen once seen by a novice is
-likely to produce a lasting impression. In the Broomfield collection it
-is used very largely in association with Odontoglossums, and the effect
-of the orange-scarlet flowers amongst the numerous spikes of
-_Odontoglossum Alexandr_, and other species, is charming.
-
-We have found this _Epidendrum_ to do well in the Odontoglossum-house in
-a compost of peat and sphagnum moss. It does equally well in a pot or in
-a basket, and should receive a fair supply of water while growing. The
-plant seems to revel in a good amount of sunlight, but it must be kept
-from the burning rays of the sun by a slight shading, too much sunshine
-being apt to make the foliage become blotched and sickly-looking.
-
-The variety _majus_ blooms at a different time of the year from the
-original species, which has the flowers much smaller, and which blooms
-in August and September from the young growths; whereas the variety
-_majus_ flowers from the tips of the bulbs of the previous year's
-growth. There are several forms of the plant, some with flowers much
-larger and brighter than others; indeed, the one here figured is not so
-large as some that were flowered years ago, which may be due to the fact
-that they were old-established plants. We remember the late Mrs.
-Lawrence, of Ealing Park, exhibiting a remarkably strong specimen at one
-of the Chiswick shows, thirty-five years since, a perfect blaze of
-flower. S. Brunton, Esq., also exhibited a grand plant of a good variety
-a few years back; and C. W. Lea, Esq., Parkfield, Worcester, had a
-wonderful example in bloom, last year. These several plants were all
-part of the early importations.
-
-
-The Manchester Show of Orchids, June, 1881.--The display of Orchids at
-the Manchester Exhibition was a very fine one, and no Orchid grower
-should have missed the sight. The specimens were truly marvellous,
-especially the sixteen plants shown by R. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn,
-amongst which were a _Vanda suavis_ with about a dozen flower-spikes;
-_Llia purpurata_ and _Cattleya Warneri_, both wonderful specimens, as
-also was _Masdevallia Harryana_; _Cypripedium barbatum superbum_ which
-had a hundred blooms upon it, and was not made up for the occasion, but
-had been grown on from a single plant; and _Dendrobium Wardianum_ which
-was a magnificent plant. Great credit is due to Mr. Osman for his
-talent, in successfully cultivating so fine a collection. G. Hardy,
-Esq., of Timperley, exhibited some wonderful plants, especially of
-_Cattleyas_, _Llias_, _Dendrobium thyrsiflorum_, _Oncidium
-Marshallianum_, _Odontoglossum vexillarium_, &c. R. F. Ainsworth, Esq.,
-M.D., also exhibited some fine specimens, especially _Vanda suavis_,
-_Arides Fieldingii_, and _A. Schrderii_; these three are most
-extraordinary plants, and have been grown in the collection for eighteen
-years, which is a sufficient proof of what can be done by perseverance,
-and, moreover, gives one an idea how well Orchids can be grown and
-exhibited for many successive years. We have known these three specimens
-to be shown at the Manchester exhibitions and elsewhere for the past ten
-or fifteen years, and they are now in the finest possible condition, as
-they have always been, under the successful management of Mr. Mitchell.
-There were besides, other exhibitors whose specimens were well worthy of
-note.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 5.
- MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII.]
-
-
-
-
- MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII.
- [Plate 5.]
- Native of the United States of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Rhizome_ slender, slowly creeping. _Leaves_ crowded,
- petiolate, the petiole with a sheathing scale at the base, the blade
- about equalling the petiole, two to three inches long,
- elliptic-oblong, acute, pale green, obscurely three to five-nerved.
- _Scapes_ numerous, slender, as long as or longer than the petioles,
- green, with an ovate acuminate appressed bract at the top. _Flowers_
- yellowish, tinted with rose, rather large for the size of the plant;
- the perianth tube very short and swollen at the base; _dorsal sepal_
- of a pale yellowish red, indistinctly dotted with pale rosy red spots,
- and marked with from five to seven (or nine according to Reichenbach)
- longitudinal wine-coloured nerves, fully an inch long, sub-erect,
- concave or somewhat hooded, obovate, suddenly contracted into a tail
- two or three times its own length, the tail green below and becoming
- orange-yellow towards the tip; _lateral sepals_ obliquely ovate,
- spreading, and decurved, thickly studded with deep red spots, and
- tapering off into a tail similar to that of the dorsal sepal; _petals_
- small, linear-oblong or ligulate, bilobed at the apex; _lip_ very
- small, broadly oblong, recurved at the tip, with two keels or ridges
- running down the centre. _Column_ short, three-toothed at the apex.
-
- Masdevallia Shuttleworthii, _Reichenbach fil._ in _Gardeners'
- Chronicle_, N.S. iii., 170; _Hooker fil._, _Botanical Magazine_, t.
- 6372.
-
-
-Of this interesting plant, one of a popular genus inhabiting the cool
-temperate humid regions of Northern and Western South America, Professor
-Reichenbach, by whom it was dedicated to Mr. Shuttleworth, one of Mr. W.
-Bull's collectors, remarks that it is "rather a nice thing amongst
-_Masdevallias_ of the second order of beauty." It was first flowered in
-1878 by W. H. Punchard, Esq., of Poulett Lodge, Twickenham. Our figure
-was prepared from a plant which has bloomed in our own collection
-recently. We find it to be a very free-blooming species.
-
-The _Masdevallias_ comprise many interesting species and varieties, some
-of very remarkable structure, and others with colours of extraordinary
-richness and brilliancy. Our present subject is not one of the most
-showy, but it may be ranked with the more curious of the species, and is
-certainly of a distinct and pleasing character, as is well represented
-in our Plate. The plant was discovered by Mr. Shuttleworth, when
-travelling for Mr. Bull, and by him it was first transmitted to Europe.
-Since then we have received it from the same country through our own
-collector, Mr. Carder. The _Masdevallias_ are plentiful in their native
-habitats, but the difficulty of obtaining them in this country lies in
-the risks attending importation, which are mainly attributable to the
-fact that they have no thick fleshy bulbs to support them during their
-journey. We have heard of thousands of plants of this particular species
-having been sent off, but of these comparatively few have been received
-alive, so that unless some more successful means of introducing them
-into England can be found, it will always remain a rare plant.
-
-_Masdevallia Shuttleworthii_ is of free-blooming habit, and the flowers
-last a long time in perfection. It generally blossoms during the spring
-and summer months. The plants require but little room, as the foliage is
-of neat growth, and the whole height of the plant does not exceed from
-six to eight inches. The leaves are of a dark green colour and firm
-texture. The flower-scapes proceed from the young growth, and attain the
-height of about eight inches, the more conspicuous spreading long-tailed
-sepals being of a pleasing yellowish rose colour thickly marked with
-wine-red spots, while the petals and lip are small and inconspicuous.
-
-We find the plants grow well when potted in small pots or pans suspended
-from the roof, and filled with peat and sphagnum moss; but they require
-thorough drainage, since they need a liberal supply of water during
-summer. In the autumn and winter months they do not require so full a
-supply, but they must have sufficient to keep them moist. They thrive
-best in the same house with the _Odontoglots_, where they obtain shade,
-and are kept cool. None of the _Masdevallias_ like heat, and most of
-them require the same kind of treatment. The house in which they are
-grown should have a north aspect, so that they may not get too much
-sun-heat, as this causes the leaves to become spotted, to the great
-disfigurement of the plant.
-
-Insects become a nuisance if allowed to accumulate on the plants. The
-thrips, which is one of their greatest insect enemies, constantly
-attacks them, and must be subdued by cleansing them frequently and
-thoroughly with a sponge and warm soft water.
-
-The propagation of _Masdevallias_ is effected by dividing the plants,
-leaving a few old bulbs with a leading one in front. They are the
-easiest of all Orchids to increase, and are best divided up
-occasionally, as when the plants get too large they do not flower so
-freely. The most suitable time to perform this operation is just as they
-commence to make their growth. They should at first be put into small
-pots, and shifted into larger ones as they increase in size, and
-develope abundance of roots.
-
-
-Llia Philbrickiana.--This new Hybrid was exhibited at the Royal
-Horticultural Society, South Kensington, by the Messrs. Veitch and Sons.
-It was raised between _Cattleya Aclandi_ and _Llia elegans_, partaking
-of the dwarf habit of _C. Aclandi_. The plant grows about eight inches
-high, and produces its leaves in pairs, of a dark green colour, about
-four inches in length; from between these the flower-sheaths proceed.
-The sepals and petals are of a glossy purplish crimson-brown, spotted
-with darker spots; the lip is of a bright crimson, the basal part purple
-and white. It blooms in June and July, and will be a very useful
-addition to our collections.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 6.
- CATTLEYA MORGAN]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA MORGAN.
- [Plate 6.]
- Native of the United States of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ short, oblong or somewhat clavate, furrowed when
- mature, attaining with the leaves about eighteen inches in height.
- _Leaves_ solitary, coriaceous, ligulate-oblong, acute, of a light
- green colour. _Scape_ three to four-flowered, issuing from a terminal
- oblong compressed bract, which is about two and a half inches long.
- _Flowers_ large and pleasing on account of their delicate colouring,
- about six inches across when expanded; _sepals_ lanceolate, entire,
- three-fourths of an inch broad and about three inches long, recurved
- at the tip, white; _petals_ spreading, clawed, broadly ovate, fully
- two inches across, the margin entire at the base and much undulated in
- the anterior portion, white; _lip_ obovate, emarginate, about three
- inches long, the basal portion entire and rolled over the column, the
- anterior portion moderately expanded and beautifully frilled, white,
- like the rest of the flower, with a small blotch of pale magenta near
- the apex, but not quite extending to the margin, and stained on the
- disk with an obcordate blotch of clear yellow, passing into
- orange-yellow in the throat, the deeper portion being veined with
- yellow lines. _Column_ concealed by the convolute base of the lip.
-
- Cattleya Morgan, _supra_.
-
-
-One of the most chaste and charming of the summer-flowering _Cattleyas_,
-and quite distinct in aspect from all others in cultivation. We have
-great pleasure in dedicating it to Mrs. M. Morgan, of New York, who is a
-great admirer of this noble class of Orchidaceous plants, and, moreover,
-has a fine and valuable collection of them. The first specimen we
-bloomed produced ten flower spikes, and was exhibited at the Manchester
-Botanical and Horticultural Society's Show in June, 1879; the plant was
-the admiration of all who saw it, and was on that occasion awarded a
-First Class Certificate on account of its distinct and pleasing
-character.
-
-_Cattleya Morgan_ belongs to the same section of the genus as _C.
-Mendelii_, of which section there are many races or varieties, all of
-which are beautiful and rich in the colouring of the lip, some having
-the sepals and petals white, while in others they are of a rosy hue,
-more or less intense. The plant now before us grows about eighteen
-inches in height, and has light green foliage with a somewhat drooping
-habit. It produces its flowers freely, as many as four together on the
-spike. The sepals and petals are pure white; and the lip is white with a
-light magenta blotch near the apex, its throat orange colour, the
-incurved base white, and the edge beautifully fringed. The flowers are
-produced in May and June, and last from five to six weeks in perfection.
-It makes a fine subject for decorative purposes, since its pure white
-flowers form a charming contrast with the high-coloured varieties of
-other species of _Cattleya_, of which there are many that come into
-bloom at about the same time.
-
-_Cattleya Morgan_ requires the same treatment as _C. Mendelii_ and _C.
-Mossi_, and will thrive well, grown either in a pot or basket, planted
-in good fibrous peat and sphagnum moss. It will also succeed on a block
-suspended from the roof. As in the case of the other _Cattleyas_, it
-prefers to have all the light possible, but to be just sufficiently
-shaded to keep off the direct rays of the sun. It must be borne in mind
-that the plants are found growing naturally on the branches and stems of
-trees in the forests, where they get some shade, and a free circulation
-of air, which it is of great benefit to secure, and which should be made
-a point of the utmost importance in the artificial cultivation of all
-Orchids, as of most other plants. It would be a great boon to
-cultivators if our collectors would note down and supply fuller and more
-precise information on these points, for although of course the natural
-conditions could not in all cases be carried out to the full extent, yet
-we should then be better able to imitate them, and thus supply the
-natural wants of the plants. In giving as much air and light as
-possible, however, cold draughts must be avoided, which may be effected
-by fixing the ventilators near the hot-water pipes, and should a cold
-wind prevail by giving air on the opposite side, always closing the
-house in good time. In summer water should be freely sprinkled about the
-tables and paths twice a day, namely, in the morning, and about three or
-four o'clock in the afternoon. During the dull dark days of winter, very
-little moisture is required, but on warm days some water may be given to
-the plants, especially in springtime when the days begin to lengthen.
-Syringing should be avoided during the winter, except in the case of
-those on blocks, for a little dewing with the syringe during the day,
-will not hurt these, as the moisture quickly dries off. The water should
-always be used in a tepid state.
-
-One of the most important items in Orchid culture is cleanliness. Every
-plant should be cleansed as soon as any indications of insect life are
-perceived upon it, since there are Insecticides and other remedies sold
-to destroy all such pests. Cockroaches, Snails, and Woodlice are very
-troublesome, and should be well looked after at night when they come out
-to feed on the young shoots and flowers. Woodlice may be caught by
-laying down here and there traps, consisting of some moss, at night, or
-half potatos or turnips scooped out in the centre, and placed about in
-quiet nooks and corners, or on the pots; the woodlice will harbour under
-them, and may be caught and destroyed in the morning.
-
-
-Cattleya gigas.--See note under Plate 2. We have since received a
-wonderfully grand flower of _Cattleya gigas_ from the fine collection of
-J. S. Bockett, Esq., of Stamford Hill; it is eight and a half inches in
-diameter; the sepals and petals are of a light rose colour, the lip
-three inches across, and three in length, of the richest
-crimson-magenta, margined with a lighter colour, and the throat partly
-magenta and partly orange. The spike bore four of these flowers.--B. S.
-W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 7.
- PROMENA CITRINA.]
-
-
-
-
- PROMENA CITRINA.
- [Plate 7.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ small, ovate, tetragonal. _Leaves_ three to
- four inches in length, oblong-ligulate, acute, tapering below into a
- narrow petiole, growing two together at the apex of the pseudobulb, of
- a pale green colour. _Scapes_ two to three inches long, bearing
- largish ovate bracts in the upper part, and smaller bracts below, and
- terminated by a solitary deep yellow showy flower, measuring about an
- inch and a half across; _sepals_ obovate, acute, concave or curving
- forwards at the tip, bright yellow; _petals_ yellow, also converging,
- similar to the sepals in size, form, and colouring; _lip_ larger and
- broader than the sepals and petals, spreading, three-lobed, the two
- lateral lobes erect, oblong obtuse, rising up on each side of the
- column, yellow spotted with red on the inner face, the front lobe
- plane, obovate, apiculate, unspotted yellow, with a prominent crest at
- its base. _Column_ erect, semi-terete, incurved, stained in the front
- with brownish red.
-
- Promena citrina, _Don_, _Hortus Cantabrigiensis_, ed. 13, 720 (1845);
- _London_, _Hortus Britannicus Supp._ 618 (1850); _Williams_, _Orchid
- Growers' Manual_, ed. 4, 253, ed. 5, 281; _Rand_, _Orchids_, 377.
-
- Maxillaria citrina, _Lyons_, _Treatise on Orchidaceous Plants_, 176.
-
-
-_Promena_ is a small genus of Orchids which was separated from
-_Maxillaria_ about forty years ago (1843) by Lindley, who at the same
-time also dissociated from it the plants respectively referred to
-_Warrea_, _Paphinia_, _Lycaste_, and _Scuticaria_. Later on Reichenbach
-classed _Promena_ as a section of _Zygopetalum_. Dr. Lindley
-distinguished the group of species which he referred to _Promena_, and
-which he regarded as fully entitled to generic rank, by the following
-peculiar features, namely, their spreading sepals, their three-lobed
-lip, crested or tuberculate at the base, their short semi-terete column,
-and their ovate glandule with four, that is two double, sessile pollen
-masses. The species then proposed were _P. stapelioides_, _P. xanthina_,
-_P. lentiginosa_, _P. Rollissonii_, and _P. graminea_. To these
-Reichenbach added _P. guttata_ in 1856, and _P. microptera_ in 1881.
-Neither of these authorities, so far as we can trace, refer to _P.
-citrina_; but, according to Don and Loudon, the plant was introduced to
-our gardens in 1840, though they attribute to it the erroneous habitat
-of Mexico. Our good friend, Professor Reichenbach, suggests that it is a
-garden name, sometimes applied to _P. Rollissonii_ and sometimes to _P.
-guttata_; but it has long been recognised as a distinct plant by English
-and Continental Orchid growers, and is certainly different from the _P.
-Rollissonii_ figured by Dr. Lindley; nor does it correspond with the
-description of _P. guttata_, so far as the materials at hand enable us
-to judge.
-
-This, it will be seen, is a very neat-growing plant, the small
-tetragonal pseudobulbs slowly creeping over the surface of the blocks on
-which the plants are grown. It is, moreover, of small stature, the
-leaves, which grow in pairs from the top of the pseudobulbs, rarely
-exceeding three or four inches in height, and the flower-scapes
-attaining even less elevation. The flowers, which are rather large for
-so small a plant, being of a rich and brilliant colour, become rather
-effective; and though, of course, they do not compare at all in gorgeous
-beauty with those of many of the larger-flowered Orchids, they are by no
-means to be despised even from the decorative point of View; indeed,
-when grown on a block, as represented in the accompanying Plate, and
-suspended from the roof of the house, the plant forms a very pretty and
-distinct object, occupying, as it does, but a small space in which it
-displays much beauty and attractiveness. The bright orange-yellow
-flowers are, moreover, very freely produced, and if kept dry, continue
-for a long time in a fresh and pleasing condition.
-
-There is another species of the same habit, _Promena stapelioides_,
-which comes into bloom about the same time as this, and in which the
-flowers are spotted with dark purple, so that they appear to be nearly
-black. The contrast of these two when grown and flowered on the same
-block is very effective. In the noble collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence,
-Bart., M.P., we saw a large pan-full of _P. citrina_ growing freely,
-which had a very beautiful appearance, but we prefer to see the plant
-grown on a block, as in this manner the flowers hang downwards, and are
-shown off to much greater advantage. There are certain varieties to be
-occasionally met with, in which the flowers are without spots on the
-lip, but those which have this latter peculiarity are to be preferred,
-as the two colours afford a pleasant relief.
-
-Fibrous peat and sphagnum moss seem to suit the plant well when it is
-grown in either pots or pans; but when cultivated on blocks of wood, a
-little sphagnum moss only about its roots will be quite sufficient,
-though if grown in this latter way it requires a more liberal and more
-frequent supply of water, in order to keep the roots moist. We find the
-Cattleya-house to suit it best, and we grow it suspended against a wall
-at the end of the house, where it gets syringed in warm weather. The
-manner in which its blooms are produced may be seen from our
-Illustration, which is an excellent representation of the habit of the
-plant, not only as regards its general manner of growth, but also of its
-mode of flowering.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 8.
- CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI.
- [Plate 8.]
- Native of Borneo.
-
-
- Terrestrial. _Stem_ wanting, the short erect crowns each furnished
- with numerous radical evergreen leaves, and emitting stout fleshy
- roots. _Leaves_ distichous (two-ranked), a foot or more in length,
- leathery or somewhat fleshy, oblong, obtuse, with a short recurved
- mucro, dark green above, of a paler green beneath. _Scape_ dark
- purple, issuing from the centre of the leaves and furnished with a
- sheathing bract at its base, about two feet in height, three to
- four-flowered, the pedicels subtended by green lanceolate acuminate
- bracts. _Flowers_ large, richly-coloured, measuring when spread out
- four inches in the direction of the sepals, and nine to ten inches in
- that of the petals; _dorsal sepal_ broadly cordate, acuminate, nearly
- two inches broad, white, marked in front with a bold central, and on
- each side with two or three curved lateral stripes of deep
- purple-brown, keeled behind, and there stained with purple-brown;
- _lateral sepals_ (united) ovate-acuminate, with a central and on each
- side three lateral stripes extending nearly to the base,
- greenish-white, edged with purple-brown; _petals_ set at a right angle
- to the sepals, one-fourth of an inch broad, five inches long, tapering
- gradually to the apex, decurved, greenish-white with dark purple-brown
- veins and spots, becoming wholly purple at the tip, and having near
- the base a purple margin, and a few scattered marginal purple hairs;
- _lip_ large, prominent, calceoliform, the basal portion unguiculate
- from the introflexion of the margin, greenish, the apex large,
- pouch-shaped, like the front of a shoe or slipper, dull purplish-red
- reticulately veined with darker purple. _Column_ white, with a ring of
- yellow hairs at the base, two-branched, the lower branch three-lobed,
- the later lobes bearing each a small orbicular sessile yellow anther,
- the terminal lobe forming a large white ovate fleshy disk (abortive
- third stamen) the upper or stigmatic branch cordate-obovate, convex,
- whitish, tinged with purple, and fringed at the back and sides with
- yellow hairs.
-
- Cypripedium Stonei, _Low_; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5349;
- _Van Houtte_, _Flore des Serres_, xvii., t. 1792-3; _Lemaire_,
- _Illustration Horticole_, ix., p. 107; x. t. 355; _Bateman_, _2nd
- Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 141; _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t. 12.
-
-
-This magnificent plant is one of the most beautiful species of the genus
-_Cypripedium_. Several varieties of it are known, and though they are
-all good and well worth growing, that which we have selected for
-illustration is the best and darkest that has come under our notice. The
-plant from which our figure was taken, bloomed in the Victoria Nursery,
-and had five flower-spikes, two of which have been in bloom for the past
-six weeks, and are now as fresh as ever.
-
-_Cypripedium Stonei_ was first flowered by Mr. Stone, gardener to John
-Day, Esq., of High Cross, Tottenham, after whom it has been named. It
-was for a long period a very rare species, and, indeed now, though small
-plants may be purchased for a moderate sum, yet large specimens are
-scarce and valuable. It makes a fine show plant, its lasting qualities
-being a great recommendation to it, both from an exhibition and
-decorative point of view.
-
-The plant is a native of Borneo, and was introduced to this country by
-the Messrs. Low, of Clapton. It produces dark green foliage of about
-twelve or in some of the varieties we have seen as much as fifteen
-inches in length. From the centre of this tuft of leaves the
-flower-spikes are produced and rise to a height of about two feet, each
-bearing three or four of its large slipper-shaped blossoms, which are
-the most exact representations of a shoe or slipper of those of any of
-the species, and most completely justify the trivial name of the genus,
-Lady's Slipper. The sepals are large, white, striped on the veins or
-nerves, with dark purple, and tinged with yellow; the petals are five
-inches in length, and are yellowish, streaked and blotched with purple;
-and the lip is large and of a dull reddish-purple, veined with deeper
-purple-red. It is of free-blooming habit, and when the growths are
-strong it produces a flower-spike from each crown, but it takes some
-considerable time to complete its growth before it sends forth its
-spikes; indeed, it begins to grow soon after its blossoms have faded.
-The plant having no thick fleshy bulbs from which to derive support,
-requires a more continuous supply of moisture than many other Orchids.
-The roots are coarse and fleshy, and should in consequence be supplied
-with a stronger soil than is required by some of the other kinds. We
-find it to thrive best in good fibrous loam, with a small quantity of
-charcoal, and a little leaf-mould or peat, all being well mixed
-together, giving the pots good drainage, but not so much as is required
-in the case of _Cattleyas_, for example. As it is a strong rooting
-plant, it is best grown in a pot, and should be a little elevated above
-the rim. We have found the East India house to supply the most suitable
-atmospheric conditions in which to cultivate it; here it should be
-placed on the side-tables near the light, but out of the sun. The finest
-specimen we have seen exhibited was staged by Mr. Child, gardener to
-Mrs. Torr, Garbrand Hall, Ewell, Surrey, at the South Kensington Show,
-in 1878.
-
-There is a very distinct variety of this plant called _Cypripedium
-Stonei platytnium_, of which a figure has been lately published in Mr.
-Warner's _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, 3 ser., t. 16. Of this form,
-living plants were till recently only to be found in the collection of
-John Day, Esq., but they were distributed when that collection was
-recently dispersed by auction sales, and were purchased at high prices
-by Baron Schrder and Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., in whose
-collections they may now be seen. This variety is just like _C. Stonei_
-in its growth, and the flowers are closely similar, the chief difference
-being, that the petals are shorter and broader, and resemble those of
-_C. superbiens_.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 9-10.
- LLIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII.]
-
-
-
-
- LLIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII.
- [Plates 9-10.]
- Native of St. Catherine's, Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) clavate-oblong, monophyllous, two
- feet or more in height, somewhat furrowed when mature. _Leaves_
- coriaceous, evergreen, narrowly oblong, emarginate, dark green.
- _Scape_ three to four-flowered, issuing from a stout sheathing oblong
- bract or spathe, four to five inches long. _Flowers_ large, and very
- handsome; measuring eight inches across, of a delicate rose colour,
- with a purple-crimson lip; _sepals_ linear-lanceolate, acute, of a
- pale rosy tint, pencilled with simple rosy-purple longitudinal lines;
- _petals_ oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, of a beautiful delicate rose
- colour, pencilled with divergent forked lines of deeper purple; _lip_
- (labellum) three-lobed, the lateral lobes obsolete, convolute around
- the column, the front lobe large, broad, and roundish, of a rich dark
- crimson-magenta, the tip paler and reticulately veined, and the throat
- yellow, beautifully veined with crimson-magenta. _Column_ scarcely
- reaching to the middle of the convolute base of the lip.
-
- Llia purpurata Williamsii, _Hort._; _Williams' Orchid Grower's
- Manual_, ed. 4, 196; ed. 5, 208.
-
-
-The species, of which this is one of the finest known varieties, and the
-genus _Llia_ to which it belongs, together with the neighbouring genus
-_Cattleya_, are placed by the great Orchidist, Reichenbach, in his
-amplified genus _Bletia_, so that the _Llia purpurata_ of Lindley, in
-_Paxton's Flower Garden_, becomes the _Bletia purpurata_ of Reichenbach
-in _Walpers' Annales_, vi. 423. The name of _Llia_ is, however, that
-which is adopted amongst cultivators of Orchids.
-
-The _Llia_ which we have now to describe, was named many years ago in
-the _Orchid Grower's Manual_, when it was exhibited at the Crystal
-Palace and received its present appellation. The plant now represented
-was flowered at the Victoria and Paradise Nurseries, but has now passed
-into the select collection of Baron Schrder, of The Dell, near Staines.
-It was a wonderfully strong plant, and produced two spikes of its highly
-coloured blossoms, which led all those who saw it in its beauty, to
-pronounce it to be the finest _Llia_ they had ever witnessed. Our
-artist has given a good representation of the plant and its blossoms.
-The club-shaped stems and foliage stood thirty inches in height, and
-were provided with very strong sheathing bracts whence the flower-spikes
-issued, each bearing four flowers, which were individually eight inches
-in diameter. It has bloomed with us in the same style for two successive
-years. The plant that we flowered some years ago was not so large as
-that now figured, the reason being that it was not so strong a specimen,
-and, therefore, not able to produce such fine flowers. This is
-sufficient evidence of the advance the plants make before they get to
-their full strength and vigour. In the variety before us the sepals and
-petals are of a delicate rose, veined with a beautiful dark tint of the
-same colour, while the lip is very broad, large, and splendidly
-coloured, the prominent parts of a rich dark crimson-magenta, paler and
-veiny at the tip, and beautifully veined with crimson on the yellow
-ground-colour of the throat. The blooming season is in May and June, the
-flowers continuing in perfection for three or four weeks, if kept free
-from damp and in a dry place. We have a house set aside specially for
-Orchids when in flower, and in it very little moisture is used, by which
-means we seldom get the flowers spotted or prematurely decayed.
-
-There is another fine form of _Llia purpurata_ with white sepals and
-petals that are quite flat, not at all recurved; this variety has a rich
-dark crimson-magenta lip. We exhibited this form with nine flower spikes
-at the Regent's Park Exhibition, and it produced a grand effect. There
-are many other fine varieties.
-
-_Llia purpurata_ when well cultivated is a good looking plant, and even
-when not in bloom it is an object of attraction, on account of its
-stately evergreen foliage. It is a native of Brazil, and is found
-growing on the branches of trees on the outskirts of the forests where
-the plants get light, and are yet shaded from the burning sun. They are
-best grown in the Cattleya-house, and will thrive either in pots or
-baskets, but we find the pot system the best, as they are strong growing
-plants, and require ample space to bring them to perfection. They are
-the better for being moved about, especially if they are required for
-exhibition. There are no more showy Orchids for exhibition purposes, and
-this is especially true of such varieties as that now before us.
-
-We find that they thrive best in good fibrous peat, and some live
-sphagnum moss on a part of the surface; when in a growing state the moss
-keeps them moist without too much water being given whilst they are
-making their growth. In watering them be careful not to wet the young
-shoots. The pots should be three parts filled with drainage, which must
-be formed of broken pots and lumps of charcoal intermixed. The plants
-must be elevated about two inches above the rim of the pot. The best
-time to pot them is after they have done blooming just as they begin to
-make new growths, and before the roots start, when they will soon
-commence to work into the clean sweet peat. If the plant is in a
-sufficiently large pot, and the soil about it is sweet and clean, it
-will not require re-potting, but it will benefit the plants greatly to
-give them some fresh fibrous peat just before they begin to root, as the
-old soil is apt to become hard and inert through constant watering. They
-require to be kept moist during the growing season, but must not even
-then be soddened with water. In winter only just sufficient must be
-given them to keep them moist, and to prevent their stems and leaves
-from shriveling.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 11.
- PHALNOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA.]
-
-
-
-
- PHALNOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA.
- [Plate 11.]
- Native of the Eastern Archipelago.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ none, or consisting of a short crown furnished with
- rigid fleshy leaves, and emitting succulent roots, which latter are
- flattened, and cling to any congenial object with which they come in
- contact. _Leaves_ large, thick and coriaceous, distichous, oblong,
- obliquely retuse, dark green above, purple beneath. _Scape_ long,
- drooping, issuing from the base of the plant, or the leaf axils, and
- bearing the large moth-like flowers in a two-ranked raceme. _Flowers_
- large, pure opaque white, spreading, the lip beautifully coloured;
- _sepals_ oblong-obtuse, white, the lower ones prettily dotted with
- carmine; _petals_ larger and broader, sub-rhomboid, narrowed towards
- the base, pure white; _lip_ furnished with a callus at the base,
- smaller than the petals, three-lobed, the lateral lobes ovate obtuse,
- ascending or incurved, yellowish along the antical margin and dotted
- with carmine-crimson near the base, the central lobe trowel-shaped,
- carmine-crimson across the base and at the edge, and marked with a
- central crimson stripe; the lip is concave, bearing at the narrowed
- apex two incurved twisted white cirrhi. _Column_ semi-terete,
- recumbent on the ovary.
-
- Phalnopsis amabilis Dayana, _Hort._
-
-
-The genus _Phalnopsis_ belongs to the tribe _Vande_, which is
-distinguished amongst those with waxy pollen-masses, by having these
-attached to a distinct caudicle, united to a deciduous stigmatic gland.
-It no doubt comprises several of our finest Orchids, which are prized no
-less on account of the graceful development of their inflorescence than
-for the attractive white blossoms of the more familiar species. Our
-drawing of the charming _Phalnopsis amabilis Dayana_ here figured, was
-taken from a fine specimen in the collection of W. Lee, Esq., of
-Downside, Leatherhead, who was kind enough to allow us to publish an
-illustration of it. The variety is very rare; indeed, we believe this is
-the only specimen known to be in cultivation in this country. It was
-named in compliment to John Day, Esq., of Tottenham, from whose
-collection it was obtained by Mr. Lee. From the markings about the base
-of the lip it will be seen to be very distinct, though it is no doubt a
-form of _P. amabilis_, with which it agrees in foliage and in the
-general character of the flowers, but differs in the distinct markings
-just referred to. The plant grows to about the same size as _P.
-amabilis_.
-
-There is at Downside a grand collection of _Phalnopsids_, which are
-especially well managed by Mr. Woolford, the gardener. They are great
-favourites with Mr. Lee, and he has built a house to meet their special
-wants. This is undoubtedly a good plan to adopt where there is such a
-fine and comprehensive set of plants as are to be found in this
-establishment, since they require different treatment to most other
-Orchids. They have thick fleshy leaves, and the stems of the plant are
-also fleshy, while, unlike many Orchids, they have no thick pseudobulbs
-from which to derive support; hence it follows that they require more
-moisture than many others. We do not, however, agree with giving them so
-much as we often see supplied. One great advantage of having a separate
-house for them is that their individual treatment and wants can be more
-carefully studied and more exactly met.
-
-We have seen _Phalnopsids_ grown well amongst other East Indian
-Orchids. For instance, we exhibited a plant so grown of _Phalnopsis
-grandiflora_ for ten successive years at the Chiswick and Regent's Park
-Exhibitions, and at several shows during each year, and it generally
-bore from sixty to seventy blossoms. This was the variety imported from
-Java, which we consider the best, as it produces more flowers than the
-variety from Borneo. We see that growers now-a-days are obliged to put
-several plants together in order to make a specimen fit for exhibition.
-There were others who about that time also exhibited these large plants,
-and, amongst them Mr. Kinghorn showed at Chiswick a wonderful specimen,
-bearing the best flower-spike we have ever seen.
-
-_Phalnopsis amabilis Dayana_ requires the same treatment as _P.
-grandiflora_ and _P. amabilis_, and will do either in a pot, basket, or
-pan, suspended from the roof. It will also thrive on the side stages,
-but in this case requires to be elevated so that the roots can hang
-free, for they are abundant rooting plants. If suspended from the roof
-the plants have more room to throw out their thick fleshy roots, and in
-this way they approach nearer to the manner in which they grow in their
-native habitats, for they are found on the branches and stems of trees,
-where they obtain a free circulation of air. When thus suspended they
-get without restraint the fresh air that circulates through the house.
-They can also be cultivated on blocks, but under these circumstances
-they will require to be more freely supplied with moisture. These are
-plants that like plenty of light, but they must be shielded from the sun
-by shading. The best material to grow them in is sphagnum moss, with
-good drainage, and they require to be kept moist all the year round. In
-warm weather they of course require more than in winter, when just a
-sufficient quantity to keep the moss in a moist condition will be all
-that they will need. It is imperative never to allow water to reach the
-heart of the plant, for that will sometimes induce it to rot, and will
-often cause the leaves to go spotted.
-
-The plants must, of necessity, be kept free from insects. Sometimes the
-thrips will attack them, but this should be cleaned off. To be
-thoroughly successful with Orchids they require constant watching.
-Cockroaches are a great pest to all those that throw out thick fleshy
-roots, which they injure by gnawing them off, thereby weakening the
-constitution of the plant. J. S. Bockett, Esq., of Stamford Hill, has
-one of the finest grown collections of _Phalnopsis_ we have ever seen,
-but this, of course, has been in process of formation for years, and the
-plants have become large established specimens.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 12.
- ONCIDIUM GARDNERI.]
-
-
-
-
- ONCIDIUM GARDNERI.
- [Plate 12.]
- Native of the Organ Mountains of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong-ovate, furrowed, about two inches in
- height, dark green, purplish beneath. _Leaves_ oblong-lanceolate,
- acute, coriaceous, about six inches long, growing two together from
- the apex of the pseudobulbs. _Scape_ one and a half foot high,
- including the panicle of handsome flowers, lateral, that is, springing
- from the base of the pseudobulbs. _Flowers_ showy, of medium size,
- deliciously fragrant; _sepals_ oblong, acute, the lateral ones
- semi-connate; _petals_ twice as large as the sepals, roundish in
- outline, clawed at the base, the edges undulated, and as well as the
- bars across the sepals of a light chestnut or bronzy brown colour with
- a narrow margin of pale yellow; _lip_ large, three-lobed, the middle
- lobe large, transversely emarginate, bright yellow, with a belt of
- confluent parallel oblong chestnut brown blotches just within the
- margin, the lateral lobes auriculform, obsolete, yellow; the crests
- of the lip consist of two pairs of tubercles with the intermediate
- space warted. _Column_ furnished with dwarf roundish wings.
-
- Oncidium Gardneri, _Lindley_, _London Journal of Botany_, ii., 662;
- _Id._ _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Oncidium_, 19; _Reichenbach fil._, in
- _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi. 728.
-
-
-This charming Orchid is very nearly related to _Oncidium curtum_, _O.
-prtextum_, and _O. amictum_. It belongs to an extensive genus of
-Vandeous Orchids, many of the species of which are exceedingly beautiful
-on account of the brilliancy of their flowers, which are mostly of a
-bright yellow colour, often prettily spotted, and generally produced in
-graceful spikes or panicles. No collection should be without some of the
-best and most ornamental of them. The figure which we now publish
-represents a very charming Brazilian species, one of the best forms of
-the plant we have seen. Our drawing was made from a specimen in the
-select and varied collection of W. Vanner, Esq., of Chislehurst, who was
-kind enough to permit our artist to avail himself of it. This collection
-occupies several houses which are respectively filled with species
-belonging to the different groups or classes, and among which are some
-very rare specimens, all well cultivated by Mr. Milford, the gardener,
-who, for many years has been a successful grower of Orchids.
-
-_Oncidium Gardneri_ is a compact growing plant, furnished with dark
-green pseudobulbs, which are from two to three inches in height. The
-foliage is also dark green in colour, and about six inches in length.
-The flowers are very freely produced in branching spikes or panicles,
-and are generally developed in June and July, lasting for several weeks
-in perfection. The sepals and petals are brown, narrowly margined with
-pale yellow. The lip is large, of a bright golden-yellow colour,
-margined with bright brown oblong parallel blotches. The flowers,
-moreover, are deliciously scented. There are many varieties of this
-plant, all of which are worth growing, since they take up but little
-space, and when grown in quantity, produce a good effect. We saw about
-fifty spikes of the different varieties, some in bloom, and others
-showing, in the collection of C. G. Hill, Esq., of Arnot Hill, near
-Nottingham, and we shall not soon forget the effect produced, as the
-group of plants appeared to be one mass of bloom. By cultivating plants
-of this character space may be economised, since they grow as freely on
-blocks as in baskets. We also find them to thrive well in small pans
-suspended from the roof of the Cattleya-house or in any situation
-affording them the same temperature, with very slight shading from the
-sun. They are best grown near the glass, so that they may get all the
-light possible. As a root medium, a mixture of good sphagnum moss and
-fibrous peat suits them best, but the plants must have good drainage,
-since they must be kept moist during the growing season, though when at
-rest a more limited supply will suffice--just sufficient being given to
-keep the bulbs plump, for on the other hand, it is not a plant that
-likes to be dried up. The bulbs sometimes shrivel when they flower too
-freely; if this is observed do not allow the blossoms to remain too long
-on the plants, as they will keep a good time in water when cut from the
-plant. Being of a graceful character they are well adapted for the
-decoration of drawing-room stands, in which, if intermixed with foliage
-and other flowers, they help to produce a very charming effect. Indeed
-no flowers are so useful as Orchids for decorative purposes, as they
-last so long when cut.
-
-
-Llia Dominiana rosea.--This is the finest hybrid _Llia_ that has come
-under our notice. It is the result of a cross between _Cattleya
-Dowiana_, and _C. exoniensis_, and the parentage is very evident in the
-novel form thus obtained. The lip is like that of _C. Dowiana_, of a
-rich purple-crimson, crisped at the margin; the sepals and petals are of
-a pale lilac colour. It is a most beautiful _Llia_, and is named in
-honour of Mr. Dominy, who has been most successful in raising seedling
-Orchids. There have been many wonderful hybrids brought out by the
-Messrs. Veitch and Sons, through the indefatigable exertions of Mr.
-Dominy, who has long been known as one of the oldest and most successful
-of Orchid growers, and whose name will be kept in remembrance as long as
-Orchids are cultivated.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 13.
- DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM.]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM.
- [Plate 13.]
- Native of Burmah.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) about a foot long,
- cuneately-fusiform, tapering below into a longish stalk-like base,
- bluntly angulate, bearing one or two pairs of leaves at the top, and
- invested below with close ovate membranaceous bracts. _Leaves_
- somewhat coriaceous, oblong-ligulate, cuneate at the base and acute at
- the apex. _Flower-spikes_ ten to twelve inches long, bracteate at the
- base, terminal or nearly terminal, produced freely on the two-year-old
- stems. _Flowers_ large, showy, numerous, of a brilliant yellow;
- _sepals_ ligulate acute, bright golden yellow; _petals_ broader,
- cuneately-oblong, obtusely-acute, of the same colour as the sepals;
- _lip_ (labellum) deep bright yellow, marked on the disk with a broad
- curved band of rich dark sanguineous purple, almost black, cucullate,
- cuneate-oblong at the base, where it is folded over the column,
- roundish and emarginate in front, undulate and ciliolate at the
- margin, densely asperulous with erect acute papill forming a close
- crispy covering over the surface.
-
- Dendrobium suavissimum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- N.S., i. 406; v. 756.
-
-
-This fine Dendrobe, of which Reichenbach remarks:--"I believe it is one
-of the best _Dendrobia_ ever imported," was introduced in 1873 by Mr.
-Low, of Clapton, as recorded in the _Gardeners' Chronicle_ for 1874
-(N.S., i. 406), where it was first described. It is again referred to in
-the same publication in 1876 (N.S., v. 756), where the German Professor
-remarks:--"The species stands indeed, as has been stated before, close
-to _Dendrobium chrysotoxum_. The flowers are smaller, the fringe is made
-by much shorter papill, the chin is shorter, the petals are narrower,
-the lip does not expand to an open mass, but its lateral parts keep bent
-over the base, thus forming a cucullate body so as to allow the
-beautiful dark blackish spot to be seen, and which contrasts so well
-with the deep yellow of the flower. There are also a few blackish
-streaks on each side of the base of the lip."
-
-_Dendrobium suavissimum_ is one of the most beautiful species of the
-yellow-flowered section of this vast genus, and one that is much admired
-and sought after by Orchid growers. The accompanying plate is a good
-representation of the plant, and from this it will be seen that it is
-one of the most attractive of summer-flowering Orchids. Our sketch was
-taken from a specimen exhibited by us during the present year, at the
-Royal Botanic Society's Garden in the Regent's Park.
-
-Formerly this was a very rare plant, but within the last few years it
-has been sent home in considerable quantities by collectors, and it has
-in consequence become comparatively cheap. In growth it resembles
-_Dendrobium chrysotoxum_, but the flowers are much more showy; in _D.
-chrysotoxum_ they are wholly yellow, whereas in this species there is a
-large sanguineous purple blotch on the lip, forming a striking contrast
-to the rich golden yellow of the sepals and petals; in addition to this
-they are sweet-scented. The plant is of free-flowering habit, and when
-well-grown produces finely-developed flower-spikes. We have seen as many
-as three spikes proceeding from a single stem.
-
-In habit of growth _Dendrobium suavissimum_ is very compact. The stems
-or pseudobulbs are about a foot in height, and furnished with one or two
-pairs of dark green leaves at the apex. The flower-spikes proceed from
-the tops of the two-year-old bulbs, and average from ten to twelve
-inches in length. The stems will sometimes produce spikes for several
-years in succession. The flowers last from two to three weeks in
-perfection if kept from damp.
-
-Like other Dendrobiums, this species is found growing on the trunks and
-branches of trees in positions where it gets plenty of light and air.
-With us it thrives well grown in a basket suspended near the roof, so as
-to obtain all the light and air possible; the bulbs thus become well
-matured. The best material for growing it in is sound sweet fibrous
-peat, with a good supply of drainage. The plants should be watered
-liberally at the roots during the period of growth, which is after they
-have done blooming. The temperature that suits them best is that of the
-East India-house while they are making their growth; but when the growth
-is completed very little water should be given them until they begin to
-show their spikes in spring, when it may be increased, as it will assist
-them to produce stronger spikes. The plant is propagated by division;
-two or more old bulbs should be taken off with a young growth in front.
-Insects should be well looked after, and when found be speedily removed.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 14.
- TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA.]
-
-
-
-
- TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA.
- [Plate 14.]
- Native of Central America.
-
-
- Epiphytal, _Pseudobulbs_ roundish-oblong or obcordate, thin, _i.e._,
- very much compressed, clustered, monophyllous. _Leaves_ broadly
- oblong, acute, leathery in texture, almost sessile, of a pale green
- colour. _Scapes_ radical, two to four-flowered, pendent. _Flowers_
- large, showy, and fragrant, each emerging from the axil of a thin
- ovate bract. _Sepals_ linear-lanceolate, acute, somewhat undulated,
- spreading, and, as well as the similarly-formed _petals_, of a pure
- white colour; _lip_ large, rolled up closely at the base, suddenly
- expanded upwards so as to become funnel-shaped, and then spread out
- into a large oblique limb, which is three-lobed, with the edges wavy
- and crisped, the middle lobe larger, slightly deflexed and emarginate
- or bilobed: _Column_ elongate, terete, bearing at the back of the
- anther a hood of three fimbriated lobes.
-
- Trichopilia suavis, _Lindley_, in _Paxton's Flower Garden_, i. 44; 53,
- t. 11; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4654; _Van Houtte_, _Flore
- des Serres_, viii. 761; _Lemaire_, _Jardin Fleuriste_, iii. 277;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, iii.
- 553, et vi. 681.
-
- _Var._ ALBA: flowers pure white, the lip with a yellow blotch in the
- throat.
-
- Trichopilia suavis alba, _Hort._
-
-
-This plant belongs to a small genus of Vandeous Orchids, some of the
-species of which are exceedingly pretty, and well worthy of a place in
-every collection. Dr. Lindley calls _Trichopilia suavis_ "a delicious
-Orchid," and says that "the flowers emit the most delicate odour of
-hawthorn." The fragrant and richly spotted flowers make it a great
-favourite amongst growers, and no doubt it is one of the best and most
-showy of the species yet known. The variety _alba_, of which we have now
-the pleasure of publishing an authentic figure, the first which has
-appeared, is new to cultivation, and is also extremely rare. Our plate
-was prepared from a specimen which flowered in the fine collection of
-Dr. G. Boddaert, of Ghent, Belgium, who kindly allowed us to have a
-drawing made from it.
-
-_Trichopilia suavis alba_ was imported, with the typical _T. suavis_,
-and is a compact evergreen plant, with foliage attaining from six to ten
-inches in height, and three inches in width, and of a light green
-colour. The pendent flower-scapes are produced from the base of the
-bulbs, and bear two or three, or sometimes four, flowers, which thus
-hang over the sides of the pan or basket in which the plant is
-cultivated. When suspended from the roof of the house they thus have a
-very charming appearance. The sepals and petals are pure white; the lip
-is white, with a pale yellow stain in the throat. The plant blossoms
-during May and June, and lasts about two weeks in perfection. We have
-flowered this variety during the present year, and it was very much
-admired by every one who saw it.
-
-_Trichopilia suavis alba_ was exhibited by J. S. Bockett, Esq., of
-Stamford Hill, at one of the meetings of the Royal Horticultural
-Society, and was awarded a First Class Certificate of Merit.
-
-The Cattleya house is the best position for the plant, but it should be
-placed at the coolest end. It will flourish either in a basket or pot,
-in a compost of fibrous peat, with good drainage, but it must be well
-elevated above the rim, so that the flowers may hang down according to
-their natural habit. Propagation is effected by division of the plant
-after blooming; two or three bulbs should be severed from the original
-plant, or more if a larger specimen is desired.
-
-
-Arides odoratum majus.--This fine old Orchid was shown by Mrs.
-Arbuthnot at the Chislehurst Exhibition, on the 16th of July, and in
-this case it was a most wonderful example of good cultivation. The plant
-was one mass of its beautiful racemes of flowers, about fifty in number,
-many of them measuring fifteen inches in length. The flowers are white,
-tipped with pink, and are produced in long graceful spikes which
-overhang the foliage and produce a most charming effect. The perfume
-given off by this variety is very delightful, and was in this case most
-refreshing to those who passed by, many of whom wondered where the
-pleasant odour came from, as it was shown among the stove and greenhouse
-plants. This plant was two and a half feet in diameter, and three feet
-in height. Great credit is due to Mr. Mitchell, the gardener, for his
-skill in cultivating so fine a specimen. We often wonder why this plant
-is not more popular at our exhibitions, especially as it is easy to
-grow, taking very few years to make a good specimen, and being
-purchasable in small sizes for a few shillings. When not in bloom, it
-is, moreover, an attractive plant.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 15.
- VANDA PARISHII.]
-
-
-
-
- VANDA PARISHII.
- [Plate 15.]
- Native of Moulmein.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Plant_ evergreen, dwarf. _Stem_ a span high,
- stout-growing, densely leafy. _Leaves_ distichous, broadly
- ligulate-obtuse, with an unequal bilobed apex, very stout and fleshy
- in texture. _Scape_ stiff, erect, bearing a spike of several showy
- blossoms. _Flowers_ large, distinct in character, prettily spotted;
- _sepals_ and _petals_ cuneate-oblong, acute, somewhat undulated, of a
- greenish-yellow colour, decorated with numerous round reddish-brown
- spots, white inside at the base; _lip_ furnished with linear-ligulate
- auricles at the base, and produced into a short gibbous spur, white,
- with a pair of orange-coloured stripes, the larger anterior part
- violaceous, rhomboid, gibbous below the apex, with a keel along the
- median line, and a violet-coloured conical callus at the base.
- _Column_ white, the caudicle ligulate, the glandule triangular.
-
- Vanda Parishii, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1870,
- 890.
-
-
-This glorious thing, as Professor Reichenbach calls it, was first
-discovered by the Rev. C. Parish in 1862, and then lost sight of, but
-was rediscovered in 1870, from which discovery, we presume, the first
-plants were obtained by Mr. S. Low, of the Clapton Nursery; since then
-we have received living plants of it on several occasions, and the plant
-now figured was from one of these importations. It is a small and
-distinct growing _Vanda_, and is well worthy of a place in every
-collection on account of its compact habit of growth, which resembles
-that of a _Phalnopsis_. The Vandas are for the most part large growers,
-but, as will be seen from the accompanying figure, _Vanda Parishii_ is
-an exception to the general rule. Our plate was prepared from a plant
-which bloomed in the collection of the Right Hon. J. Chamberlain, M.P.,
-of Birmingham--a gentleman who is making a grand collection of Orchids,
-and is a great admirer of them. The plant above referred to was a
-well-grown specimen, bearing a good spike of flowers.
-
-The leaves are about eight inches in length by four inches in breadth,
-and of a lively green colour; and the flower-spike reaches from ten to
-twelve inches in length, the flowers being as large as those of _Vanda
-gigantea_ and _V. lissochiloides_. The sepals and petals are
-greenish-yellow, freely spotted with reddish-brown; the base of the lip,
-which is keeled, is white, the front lobe violet-mauve, faintly margined
-with white. Altogether it is a very distinct species, and is very
-strongly scented, with a peculiar odour; it lasts for several weeks in
-bloom.
-
-_Vanda Parishii_ requires about the same treatment as other Vandas, and
-should be grown in the East India-house, in sphagnum moss, with plenty
-of drainage. It would appear never to attain more than about a foot in
-height, being unusually short and stout in growth. It is best grown in a
-basket or pot suspended from the roof, and should be well shaded from
-the sun. It revels in a good supply of water during the growing period,
-which extends over summer and autumn; but in winter only just sufficient
-water should be given to keep the moss damp, for if allowed to become
-over-dry it will shrivel, having no pseudobulbs to support it. Thrips
-and scale are sometimes found on this plant; these should be diligently
-searched for and destroyed, as the leaves, being of a fleshy nature,
-would otherwise soon become disfigured by the onslaught of these pests.
-
-
-Orchids at Arnot Hill.--We append a few notes on the Orchids at Arnot
-Hill, near Nottingham, the residence of C. G. Hill, Esq., a gentleman
-who is forming a fine collection of these plants, and one which we have
-no doubt will in time take a foremost rank, as Mr. Hill is specially
-fond of good Orchids, and intends to grow only those which are most
-worthy of cultivation. There is a fine range of houses built to suit the
-cool, the intermediate, and the East Indian kinds, and the arrangements
-are all that can be desired, having been made the chief study. Of the
-genus _Odontoglossum_, we found at the time of our visit, some few
-months since, there was a large collection, including some hundreds of
-plants of _O. Alexandr_ and _O. Pescatorei_, amongst which were many
-fine specimens. There was also a fine lot of Masdevallias; the
-Bull's-blood variety of _M. Harryana_ was in splendid condition, and
-there were many other fine varieties. We noticed a house full of
-_Oncidium Gardneri_ mixed with _O. prtextum_ and _O. curtum_, the
-plants bearing about fifty spikes, the greater part of which were in
-bloom, the flowers deliciously fragrant, and presenting a beautiful
-picture, as the bright yellow lip with its definite margin of brown
-shows off the flowers to great advantage. In the Cattleya house there
-were many fine plants which were rooting and growing well. We noticed a
-good specimen plant of the new _Cattleya Trian Russelliana_, also of
-the rare _C. exoniensis_, of the beautiful _C. Reineckiana_, of the best
-variety of _C. labiata_ showing flower-sheaths, and many others.
-_Oncidium incurvum_ was beautifully in bloom, and with its snow-white
-lip had a very pretty appearance.
-
-In the next house we noticed three good plants of _Dendrochilum
-filiforme_ finely in flower; one plant had fifty of its graceful spikes
-of yellow blossoms hanging among the foliage, and the other two plants
-were equally good.
-
-In the adjoining house there were many fine East Indian Orchids. We
-noticed four plants of the rare _Arides Schrderi_, and a wonderful
-variety of _A. Lobbii_ in full bloom, with a fine branching spike--one
-of the best we have seen, and one of which we hope at some future time
-to furnish our readers with a figure. There was a good collection of
-East Indian Orchids being got together, and from the appearance and
-health of the young stock they seemed likely to thrive well. We were
-glad to see this class of Orchids so well appreciated, as there can be
-no doubt that the East Indian kinds are among the richest and finest of
-the family, and they will flourish in a lower temperature than most
-people imagine.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 16.
- CATTELYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII.
- [Plate 16.]
- Native of the Island of St. Catherine, Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (or pseudobulbs) elongate, fusiform, many-jointed,
- two to two and a half feet in height, bearing a pair of leaves at the
- apex. _Leaves_ broadly-oblong obtuse, dark green, coriaceous. _Scape_
- terminal, issuing from a short ovate acute ancipitous spathe developed
- between the leaves on the more vigorous stems, and bearing a
- many-flowered raceme, with small lance-shaped bracts. _Flowers_
- fleshy, in dense racemes, "sometimes as large as a man's head;"
- _sepals_ cuneate-oblong acute, the lateral ones subfalcate, of a light
- cinnamon or orange-tinted brown, spotted thickly with crimson;
- _petals_ similar in form and colour, but rather broader and wavy;
- _lip_ three-lobed, the lateral lobes semi-ovate, acute in front,
- rolled over the column, the middle lobe cuneate-flabellate and
- bilobed, of a bright magenta colour, the disk tuberculate with lines
- of elevated papillae.
-
- Cattleya guttata Leopoldii, _Linden and Reichenbach fil._,
- _Pescatorea_, t. 43.
-
- Cattleya Leopoldii, _Hort. Verschaffelt_; _Lemaire_, _Illustration
- Horticole_, ii. 69.
-
- Epidendrum elatius, var., _Reichenbach fil._, _MSS._; _Id._, in
- _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi. 319.
-
-
-This noble plant is remarkable for the large mass of richly-coloured
-flagrant blossoms which terminates the flower-scape, and is very much
-superior to the old _Cattleya guttata_, which was introduced to our
-collections some fifty years ago, and of which a fine figure was
-published in the _Transactions of the Horticultural Society_, ix. t. 8.
-The variety _Leopoldii_ differs from the type, in its much larger
-flowers, and in the rich olive or reddish-brown colour of its sepals and
-petals, which are freely spotted with dark crimson. _C. guttata
-Leopoldii_ is, moreover, of much more recent introduction than the type,
-having been imported to the gardens of Belgium by M. Ambroise
-Verschaffelt, through his collector, M. Devos, in 1850. It was by him
-dedicated to his Majesty the late King of the Belgians. As will be seen
-from our illustration, it is a very great improvement on the typical
-form. We are indebted to H. Shaw, Esq., of Buxton, for the opportunity
-of securing our figure, the plant having flowered in his choice and
-valuable collection during the month of August in the present year,
-producing a spike of eleven fine flowers, each measuring three inches in
-diameter. This must be regarded as a very valuable Orchid, since it
-blossoms during the late summer months, when flowers are comparatively
-scarce in our Orchid houses; while for exhibition purposes, again, it is
-of great value.
-
-The plant now before us is a strong grower, like _Cattleya guttata_, and
-sometimes produces as many as thirty flowers in a spike. A plant bearing
-a spike of this noble character was exhibited some years ago by Mr.
-Page, then gardener to the late W. Leaf, Esq., of Streatham, and was a
-most wonderful object. The stems grow from twenty to thirty inches in
-height, and are furnished at the apex with a pair of broad leathery
-leaves of a dark green colour. It produces its flowers from the top of
-the bulb after it has finished its growth. The sepals and petals are of
-a lively cinnamon-brown, spotted with rich deep crimson; while the lip
-is of a bright magenta, with the basal lobes of a paler rose colour. The
-blossoms last some two or three weeks in perfection.
-
-_Cattleya guttata Leopoldii_ requires the same treatment as that
-recommended for other Cattleyas under Plates 3 and 6. Being a
-tall-growing plant, pot culture will be found to suit it best.
-
-
-M. Massange's Orchids.--Chteau de Baillonville, the country seat of
-Mons. D. Massange de Louvrex, is situated in the Ardennes, about 6 miles
-from Marche, and some 80 miles from Brussels. The collection of Orchids
-at the Chteau is very large, one of the finest in Belgium. In the house
-devoted to East Indian Orchids there are some grand specimens of Vandas,
-Arides, and Saccolabiums. During a visit in July last, we noticed in
-bloom a very fine variety of _Vanda tricolor planilabris_, the flowers
-of which were very large, with fine broad sepals and petals, the
-markings being well defined and the colour bright. Here was also a grand
-plant of _V. Cathcartii_, about four feet high, in perfect health.
-Cypripediums are, moreover, treated with great success in this house;
-indeed, we noticed some plants of _C. caudatum_ with extraordinary
-growths upon them, one plant having leaves as much as eighteen inches
-long, and quite distinct in the character of its growth, being almost
-erect. In the Cattleya house were some fine examples of _Cattleya
-labiata_, the true autumn-flowering variety; also _C. Warnerii_ in
-abundance, and _C. Mendelii_. _Zygopetalum Gautieri_, the best variety,
-with dark blue flowers, was also open. _Clogyne Massangeana_, had a
-spike of twenty-three flowers; this species is a grand subject for
-treating as a basket plant, the spikes being of a drooping character; we
-have seen it bearing as many as twenty-seven flowers on a spike. There
-were, moreover, in the same house, some enormous plants of _Cattleya
-Trian_, marvels of cultivation, with good specimens of _Llia elegans_,
-_L. anceps_, _L. Perrinii alba_, _L. elegans prasiata_, _L.
-Stelzneriana_, _Cattleya Dowiana_, &c., all in perfect health, and doing
-well. In the Odontoglossum houses there was not much in flower, but the
-plants were looking remarkably well and making enormous bulbs. Here we
-noticed the largest plant of _Restrepia antennifera_ we have ever seen;
-the plant probably measured as much as eighteen inches across, and had
-some hundreds of leaves. Masdevallias were well represented, and there
-were some good varieties in flower: amongst others was a grand plant of
-_M. macrura_, as well as _M. Houtteana_ and _M. trochilus_, forming good
-specimens. We saw a splendid specimen of _Odontoglossum citrosmum
-roseum_ with nine flower-spikes, a marvel of good cultivation.
-Altogether, we believe, this is the most select collection of Orchids in
-Belgium, and great credit is due to Mr. Wilkie, the gardener, for the
-way in which he cultivates his plants; his employer, however, spares no
-expense in providing the appurtenances necessary to good
-cultivation.--H. Williams.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 17.
- PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM.]
-
-
-
-
- PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM.
- [Plate 17.]
- Native of Ecuador.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ none or consisting of a short crown or growing
- point from which the leaves and stout fibrous roots proceed. _Leaves_
- tufted, numerous, imbricated at the base, erect or spreading,
- lanceolate, acute, twelve to fifteen inches long, and about two inches
- wide, deep green above, paler beneath, thin but firm in texture.
- _Flowers_ large and showy, measuring about three inches in diameter,
- the peduncles springing from the axils of the lower leaves; _dorsal
- sepal_ obovate-oblong, acute, about an inch and a half long, white in
- the lower half, and of a velvety chocolate purple in the upper
- portion; _lateral sepals_ more distinctly oblong, being less narrowed
- at the base, acute, and attached obliquely to the chin of the flower;
- _petals_ obovate-oblong, like the dorsal sepal, acute, white, deeply
- tipped with chocolate purple; _lip_ distinctly stalked, with a sharply
- incurved claw, normally trowel-shaped when spread out, three-lobed,
- the lateral lobes prolonged, acute, and incurved so as to meet the
- base of the column, the middle lobe obtusely cordate, sulcate, with
- the edge recurved so as to bring it to a narrow triangular outline; it
- is white, with the whole surface, except the margin, covered with
- short purple-tipped papill, or 'styliform processes,' ranged in
- combined lines; on the _disk_ is a large semicircular lamellate ruff
- or frill, extending to the base, and consisting of numerous (about 20)
- erect folds or lamell, which are white below and of a deep rich
- purple along the edge of the folds, forming a series of stripes
- extending inwards to the base of the lip. _Column_ stoutish, angulate
- on both sides at the base, semiterete, dark purple, three-fourths of
- an inch long, projected over the basal ruff.
-
- Pecatorea Klabochorum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- N.S. xi., 684; xii., 167; _Paxton's Flower Garden_, re-issue, t. 21.
-
- Zygopetalum Klabochorum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners'
- Chronicle_, N.S. xi., 684.
-
-
-Until quite recently but few species of _Pescatorea_ were known in
-cultivation. Latterly, however, several new ones have been introduced
-into this country, and Orchid cultivators have now more numerous
-opportunities of admiring the beautiful plants which are referred to
-this genus.
-
-_Pescatorea Klabochorum_ was introduced from Ecuador, by Franz Klaboch,
-a nephew of Herr Roezl, one of the most successful plant collectors of
-our time, and is named in commemoration of him and his surviving
-brother, also a traveller and collector, The first plants, brought home
-some four or five years since, were purchased by Messrs. James Veitch
-and Sons, of Chelsea, and were distributed by them; but since then it
-has been several times re-introduced, and is now to be found in numerous
-collections. Several varieties have been already noticed. It appears to
-have been first flowered in 1878 in England, by John Day, Esq., and in
-Scotland by J. Gair, Esq., and again in 1879 in the noble collection of
-Sir Trevor Lawrence Bart., M.P. The drawing reproduced in our plate was
-prepared from a plant which flowered last August in our own collection,
-and represents a very fair variety. A fine variety, which bloomed with
-W. Cobb, Esq., of Silverdale Lodge, Sydenham, is figured in the revised
-edition of _Paxton's Flower Garden_.
-
-The treatment which we find to suit this plant the best is to place it
-in the Cattleya-house at the cool end. It should be potted in a compost
-of peat and sphagnum moss, with a few lumps of charcoal added; and a
-liberal supply of water should be given during the growing season, this
-being gradually decreased as the winter approaches. The plants should be
-well elevated above the rim of the pot, so as to allow any superfluous
-water to drain away from the crown.
-
-We do not find that noxious insects attack the species of _Pescatorea_
-in any great degree. The scale will sometimes take up its abode on the
-young growths, but when found this can easily be removed by the use of a
-brush or sponge and water.
-
-We saw a fine lot of Pescatoreas and Bolleas in splendid condition at
-Falkirk in September last, in the collection of J. Gair, Esq. These
-plants are not so easy of cultivation as many Orchids, their treatment
-not being generally so well understood; but this was not the case in
-this instance, for they were perfect plants, well cultivated, and
-blooming freely. We noticed more especially a fine species named in
-honour of Mr. Gair, which bears the richest coloured flowers we have
-ever seen; of this we hope to give our readers an illustration when it
-flowers next year. These plants were grown at the end of a house where a
-mixed collection of Orchids, such as Cattleyas, Dendrobiums, Arides,
-and Saccolabiums, were doing well. Being a large house, the plants could
-be treated according to their several requirements, whereas in a small
-house the varied collection would not be found to do so well.
-
-
-Vanda coerulea.--This _Vanda_, whose flowers are of such a distinct and
-beautiful colour, is no doubt one of the finest Orchids in cultivation.
-We have had the pleasure of seeing the plant we are about to mention for
-two successive years blooming in great perfection in the collection of
-the Marquis of Lothian, at Newbattle, Dalkeith. The plant, which stands
-one foot in height, and is well furnished with good foliage, produced
-two spikes of its charming flowers, fourteen on each spike. The sepals
-and petals are of a delicate lavender blue colour, barred and veined
-with a deeper tint of the same; the lip is small, and of a dark violet
-colour. It was a most showy object, and the amount of bloom upon it was
-extraordinary, considering the small size of the plant. We have seen
-larger specimens, but never one that has pleased us so well. Great
-credit is due to Mr. Priest for producing such a plant, which is
-increasing in size, and in the number of its flowers every year. There
-Is a good collection of Orchids being formed at this place, where the
-houses are suitable for their cultivation, and the plants are well
-looked after and cared for.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 18.
- BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA.]
-
-
-
-
- BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA.
- [Plate 18.]
- Native of Demerara.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ elliptic-oblong, compressed, monophyllous.
- _Leaves_ evergreen, broadish oblong, acute, somewhat channelled.
- _Racemes_ pendulous, issuing from the base of the pseudobulbs, three
- to five-flowered. _Flowers_ two and a half inches long, white,
- semitransparent, with a delightful violet-like fragrance; _sepals_
- projected forwards in the plane of the lip, the _dorsal_ one
- obovate-oblong, emarginate, the _anterior_ one bifid, linear-oblong,
- about half the length of the lip, curved sharply forwards, and
- channelled so as to closely invest the spur of the lip; _petals_
- parallel with the sepals and lip, obovate, oblique, the base
- encircling the column, spreading at the apex; _lip_ parallel with the
- column, with a channelled claw, dilated and bilobed in front, cuneate
- below, decorated in the centre with a yellow bar, the disk furnished
- with four or five yellowish lamell on each side, of which the
- anterior ones are longer, the spur short, enclosed in the anterior
- sepal. _Column_ smooth, slender, clavate, with two fleshy teeth at the
- apex.
-
- Burlingtonia candida, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, t. 1927; _Id._
- _Paxton's Flower Garden_, i. 158; _Rand's Orchids_, 179; _Floral
- Magazine_, t. 548.
-
- Rodriquezia candida, _Bateman in litteris_; _Reichenbach fil._, in
- _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi., 695.
-
-
-The genus _Burlingtonia_ was dedicated to the amiable and accomplished
-Countess of Burlington, and contains a few small-growing but very
-beautiful species, which come mostly from Brazil. The plant now under
-notice, which was the earliest introduction, and the type of the genus,
-was imported from Demerara, in British Guiana, so long since as 1834, by
-James Bateman, Esq., now a veteran in the study and cultivation of
-Orchids. It is consequently well-known to the growers and collectors of
-this class of plants.
-
-As a subject for growing in a basket suspended from the roof, this
-species has few, if any, equals. When grown in this way, the pendent
-spikes of white flowers hanging over the sides of the basket produce a
-charming and distinct appearance.
-
-The plant is compact-growing, and, like all the species of
-_Burlingtonia_, is evergreen. The pendent flower-spikes are produced
-from the sides of the pseudobulbs, and each bear from four to six
-flowers, which are white, marked with yellow in the throat, and have a
-slight but pleasant odour of violets.
-
-_Burlingtonia candida_ should be grown in the Cattleya-house, in a
-basket or pan, suspended from the roof. Sphagnum moss, with a good
-drainage composed of crocks, is the best material for its roots, and the
-bulbs should be well elevated above the rim of the pan or basket. This
-plant delights in a plentiful supply of water at the roots--in fact, it
-should never be allowed to get dry, as it requires but little rest. It
-is propagated by division of the pseudobulbs.
-
-Few insects attack this plant. The scale is the most frequent intruder,
-and this is easily removed by the use of a sponge and clean water.
-
-
-Ferguslie House, Paisley.--We have been in the habit of visiting the
-gardens of T. Coates, Esq., for many years past, and have always been
-surprised to see the Orchids grown by Mr. Thompson, the gardener who has
-charge of them. There is no house specially devoted to the cultivation
-of this class of plants, but they are grown in different houses
-intermixed with stove-flowering plants, foliage plants, and ferns, and
-in no instance have we seen East Indian Orchids grown to greater
-perfection. We have from time to time witnessed the progress of the
-specimens we are about to enumerate--in fact, we have seen them grown on
-from quite small plants purchased some ten or twelve years ago, and the
-size to which they have attained during this time, viz., up to the first
-week in September, 1881, will no doubt astonish some of our readers, and
-convince them it is not true that Orchids cannot be cultivated unless
-they have houses set apart for their especial benefit. In order to show
-the error of this conclusion, we will name a few of the Specimens that
-we saw growing on one side of a span-roofed house, with stove plants on
-the centre stage. _Arides suavissimum_, grown from a small plant, is
-now a fine specimen three feet high, having four stems, and in perfect
-health, the foliage reaching down to the pot; it bore twenty spikes of
-its long racemes of flowers, many of them having thirty-seven flowers on
-a spike, and was one of the most beautiful objects that have come under
-our notice. There is also another plant produced from the same specimen,
-bearing twelve spikes of its lovely blossoms, which were in full beauty.
-_A. Warnerii_ is a well-grown specimen, having several stems two to
-three feet in height, and this blooms freely every year. _A. virens_, is
-also a fine plant, with three stems three feet in height. _A. affine_ is
-a wonderful specimen of good cultivation; it is generally of slow
-growth, but in this case it has not proved so. _A. crispum_ again, is
-well cultivated, having two stems nearly three feet high, and perfect,
-and there is also a second plant of the same, three feet in height. _A.
-Fieldingii_ is a fine specimen. _Vanda tricolor_, a well-furnished
-plant, and _V. suavis_ four feet high, with three stems, are both
-beautifully grown. A plant of the curious long-tailed _Angrcum
-sesquipedale_, from eighteen inches to two feet in height, has four
-stems, and is undoubtedly the best grown specimen we have seen.
-_Phalnopsis Schilleriana_, a good specimen, with seven of its
-beautifully-marked leaves, is growing suspended over the centre table.
-There are other choice Orchids, such as _Cypripediums_, _Coelogynes_,
-&c. We also noticed, grown in two other houses, intermixed with various
-plants, beautiful specimens of _Llia Turnerii_, _L. elegans_, _L.
-anceps_, _Cattleya Trian_, and others. There are also well-grown
-examples of _Calanthe Masuca_, of _Dendrobium_, and other good Orchids;
-but space will not admit of these being here enumerated.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 19.
- ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA.]
-
-
-
-
- ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA.
- [Plate 19.]
- Native of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ large, ovate-oblong, four to six inches high,
- furrowed when mature. _Leaves_ several, growing from the apex of the
- younger pseudobulbs, broadly lanceolate, acute, two to two and a half
- feet long and four to six inches broad, strongly ribbed and plaited.
- _Flower-scapes_ radical, one-flowered, shorter than the leaves,
- clothed below with imbricated sheathing bracts. _Flowers_ large,
- fleshy, nearly erect; _sepals_ roundish with an apiculus, strongly
- convex, conniving into a semi-globular shape, which with their nearly
- erect position gives them a somewhat tulip-like appearance, creamy
- yellow outside, and of a deep sanguineous red on the inner surface;
- _petals_ similar in form and colour to the sepals; _lip_ clawed,
- subconvolute, three-lobed, the lateral lobes broadish and obtuse, the
- middle portion hairy, funnel-shaped and two-lipped, the front lobe
- tridentate, and with the middle part crimson blotched and barred with
- white. _Column_ entire, creamy white, spotted with crimson.
-
- Anguloa Ruckerii sanguinea, _Lindley_ in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1852,
- 271; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5384; _Williams' Orchid
- Growers' Manual_, ed. iv., 90; ed. v., 92.
-
-
-The subject of our present illustration is an exceedingly rare plant,
-and is met with in only a few collections. In its habit of growth and
-general appearance it resembles the type _Anguloa Ruckerii_, but it is
-very distinct in colour, and is altogether a more desirable plant, the
-flowers being of a much richer colour--a deep rich blood-red spotted
-with a darker tint of the same--whereas in the original _A. Ruckerii_
-they are of a fine orange colour spotted with dark brown.
-
-The growth of this plant is very majestic, producing as it does bulbs
-four to six inches high, and leaves from eighteen to thirty inches long,
-by four to six inches broad. The flowers, which proceed from the base of
-the pseudobulb, are erect, tulip-shaped, and of great substance and
-size, lasting as long as four weeks in perfection. _A. Ruckerii
-sanguinea_ is a very suitable plant for exhibition purposes on account
-of the distinct appearance produced by its massive flowers when
-intermixed with other Orchids.
-
-The temperature best suited for this plant is that of the cool
-Orchid-house. We have found it succeed well in pots in a compost of good
-fibrous peat, with plenty of drainage. It requires a good season of
-rest, during which period the plant should be kept rather dry until it
-begins to show renewed signs of growth, when the supply of water may be
-increased. It is propagated by division of the pseudobulbs just before
-they start into growth. We are indebted for the opportunity of figuring
-this plant to Dr. Boddaert, of Ghent, Belgium, in whose collection it
-flowered last July.
-
-A fine figure of the original _Anguloa Ruckerii_ will be found in
-_Warner's Select Orchidaceous Plants_, 2nd series, t. 10; and it is also
-figured in the _Botanical Register_, 1846, t. 41; and in _Moore's
-Illustrations of Orchidaceous Plants_, art. Auguloa, plate 3.
-
-
-Cattleya Dowiana.--We have received a very beautiful flower of this
-grand Cattleya, by post, from R. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn, in whose
-fine collection the plant has been grown. Mr. Osman, the gardener, says,
-"we had three imported plants last year, and two of them are now in
-bloom." We were pleased to hear this, as _Cattleya Dowiana_ is
-considered a difficult plant to flower, though we have seen many plants
-blooming this season. There is no doubt that its cultivation is becoming
-better understood. The variety above referred to has a large lip of a
-most intense dark purple, striped and reticulated with golden yellow, in
-a very prominent manner. The sepals and petals are large, of good
-substance, of a bright nankeen colour, and produce a very pleasing and
-altogether distinct appearance. This is, undoubtedly, one of the most
-distinct and beautiful of all Cattleyas. There is a grand figure of this
-species in the 2nd series of _Warner's Select Orchidaceous Plants_, t.
-27.--B. S. W.
-
-
-Cypripedium Spicerianum.--We were pleased to receive last month a
-splendid bloom of this fine variety from J. S. Bockett, Esq., of
-Stamford Hill. There is no doubt that it is one of the most distinct
-species of the whole genus. The dorsal sepal is erect, curiously curved,
-pure white, of a wax-like texture, having a purple streak extending from
-the base to the apex; the linear-oblong petals are much crisped on the
-edge, and, like the other parts of the flower, are of a bronzy-green
-colour, the lip being darker, of a reddish-brown and glossy. It has been
-named in honour of H. Spicer, Esq., and was introduced from India some
-few years ago. We also received at the same time a fine form of
-_Odontoglossum Chestertoni_, and a most distinctly spotted variety of
-_O. Alexandr_, the sepals and petals of which are white, spotted with
-reddish-crimson, and the lip white, with a large reddish-brown blotch on
-the lower portion.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 20.
- DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM.[]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM.
- [Plate 20.]
- A Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (pseudobulbs) clustered, elongate, spreading,
- terete, stoutish above, tapering to the base, jointed, the surface
- furrowed between the joints. _Leaves_ distichous, linear-oblong,
- acute, three-fourths of an inch broad, sheathing the stems at the
- base, the sheaths remaining as a membranous investment. _Peduncles_
- proceeding from the joints of the stem, slender, two to
- three-flowered, the pedicels with small ovate bracts at their base.
- _Flowers_ showy, white, with rich amaranth-crimson blotch, measuring
- about three inches across; _sepals_ lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate,
- spreading, white, tinged with rose colour, as are the larger and
- broader oblong-ovate _petals_; _lip_ (labellum) broadly obovate,
- cucullate, the basal portion rolled in over the column, the anterior
- portion spread out into a broad concave heart-shaped front lobe, which
- is undulated at the margin, and nearly covered by a large rich
- amaranth-crimson blotch, feathered at the edge, and traversed by
- deeper crimson veins, the extreme margin being paler. _Column_ short,
- enclosed by the basal portion of the lip.
-
- Dendrobium Ainsworthii, _Moore_ in _Gardeners' Chronicle_ (1874), N.S.
- i. 443, figs. 93, 94; _Id._ N.S. viii., 166, figs. 30, 31, 32;
- _Anderson_ in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, N.S. vii., 751; _Floral
- Magazine_, 2 s. t. 196; _Rand's Orchids_, 242; _Williams' Orchid
- Growers' Manual_, ed. v., 163.
-
- _Var._ ROSEUM; sepals and petals tinted with magenta rose; lip almost
- wholly covered by the large mulberry-crimson feathered blotch.
-
- Dendrobium Ainsworthii _var._ ROSEUM, _Moore_ in _Gardeners'
- Chronicle_ (1877), N.S. vii., 655; _Id._ N.S. viii., 166; _Anderson_
- in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, N.S. vii., 750.
-
-
-The beautiful _Dendrobium Ainsworthii_ is the result of a cross between
-_D. nobile_ and _D. heterocarpum_, and was raised by Mr. Mitchell,
-gardener to R. F. Ainsworth, Esq., M.D., Of Higher Broughton,
-Manchester, after whom it is named. In habit of growth and in general
-appearance the plant partakes mostly of the character of _D. nobile_,
-while the flowers more closely resemble those of _D. heterocarpum_ in
-form, and have in a slight degree the delicious fragrance of those
-produced by that species. In _D. Ainsworthii_ the flowers have white
-sepals and petals, while the lip is marked by a dense blotch of a rich
-amaranth or mulberry-crimson. In the _D. Ainsworthii roseum_ now
-figured, the sepals and petals are of a bright rosy-magenta, and the lip
-is more fully covered with a richer coloured deep crimson blotch. This
-variety is extremely rare, and forms a charming contrast to the white
-blossoms of its sister hybrid. The flowers will be found very useful for
-cutting, as they last for a considerable time in water.
-
-_Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum_ requires treatment similar to that given
-to _D. nobile_. We have found it to do well in a compost of peat and
-sphagnum moss, planted in pans suspended from the roof of the East India
-house, in a position where it can get plenty of light and air. During
-the growing season this plant enjoys a liberal supply of water, which
-after the bulbs have completed their development may be gradually
-withheld, and the plant cooled down by placing it in the Cattleya-house,
-where it should remain until the time of flowering, which extends from
-February to June. Mr. Stevens, of Trentham, grows it very successfully,
-suspended in a well-appointed plant stove, where it has abundance of
-light.
-
-We remember seeing a splendid plant of _Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum_
-exhibited by Mr. Mitchell, at the Whitsuntide Manchester Show, in May,
-1877, in the form of a well furnished specimen two and a half feet in
-height and two feet in breadth, the stems being literally smothered with
-some hundreds of its beautiful crimson-lipped rosy-tinted flowers.
-
-Referring to this same Manchester Show of 1877, Mr. Anderson, of Meadow
-Bank, a well-known Orchid grower, writes of this plant, as follows
-(_Gardeners' Chronicle_, N.S. vii., 750):--"Possibly the gem of the
-Exhibition was _Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum_. This is a most
-remarkable seedling partaking of the character of both its parents (_D.
-nobile_ and _D. heterocarpum_), and in some respects superior to either.
-In point of floriferousness none of its parents can lay claim to such a
-quantity of nodes on the deciduous stems, each bearing, or rather
-emitting, its quota of flowers. I counted on one stem sixteen short
-racemes, each two and three-flowered. The flower itself has the sepals
-and petals of _moniliforme_ rather than of _nobile_, white shaded with
-an almost imperceptible tint of rose, and tipped distinctly with that
-soft pleasing colour. The labellum is flat, like an expanded
-_heterocarpum_, reflexing a little towards the centre, with a blotch
-covering three-quarters of its surface with deep veined purplish or
-rather mulberry-crimson, edged very distinctly with white, and the
-extremity slightly tipped with crimson. This I look upon as one of the
-greatest gains in hybridization, whether we regard the colour of the
-flower, or the general floriferousness of the plant, or its free
-although not awkward habit of growth. As an Orchid enthusiast of the
-last five and twenty years, I would pronounce it one of the greatest
-gains that may be counted up in the whole known Orchid family."
-
-Altogether this is a most desirable plant, and being easy of
-cultivation, and of remarkably free-flowering habit, it should find a
-place in every collection.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 21.
- AERIDES LOBBII.]
-
-
-
-
- ARIDES LOBBII.
- [Plate 21.]
- Native of Moulmein.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ erect, densely foliose, producing the stout arial
- roots from between the leaf bases. _Leaves_ evergreen, close set,
- distichous, leathery in texture, loriform, channelled, obliquely
- bilobed at the apex, of a deep green colour, obsoletely spotted with
- purple, paler on the under surface. _Racemes_ axillary, many-flowered,
- long, branched, cylindrical, pendulous. _Flowers_ very numerous,
- medium-sized, fragrant, the sepals and petals white, flushed with rosy
- purple and spotted with deeper rose-purple, the broader lip with a bar
- of rosy purple, darkest in the centre, from base to apex, and bordered
- with white; _sepals_ and _petals_ elliptic-oblong, nearly equal,
- incurved; _lip_ much larger, clawed, the claw hollowed out and
- coadunate with the base of the column, the limb ovate or somewhat
- lozenge-shaped, wavy at the margin; _spur_ arcuate, somewhat
- compressed laterally. _Column_ short, in form resembling the neck and
- beak of a bird, with the front edge produced and folded over the
- stigmatic cavity.
-
- Arides Lobbii, _Hort. Veitch_; _Lemaire_, _Illustration Horticole_,
- xv., t. 559; _Williams_, _Orchid Growers' Manual_, ed. 5, 67; _Rand_,
- _Orchids_, 149; _Britten & Gower_, _Orchids for Amateurs_, 177.
-
-
-This very beautiful brightly-coloured plant was discovered in Moulmein
-by Mr. Thomas Lobb, who sent it to the Messrs. Veitch & Sons, of
-Chelsea, about the year 1856. It is of remarkably free-flowering and
-decorative character, and is no doubt one of the most beautiful species
-of this fine genus of Orchids, being valuable alike on account of its
-compact-growing habit, and the strikingly ornamental nature of its
-inflorescence. There appear to be several varieties of this plant
-distributed through our Orchid collections, all of them handsome and
-deserving of cultivation, but that which we now illustrate, from a
-finely grown, elegantly branching spike, kindly sent to us by C. J.
-Hill, Esq., of Nottingham, and referred to in the note published under
-Plate 15, is the finest form, and the most freely bloomed specimen we
-have met with. We were, in truth, charmed with the size and colour of
-the flowers of this plant, when recently inspecting Mr. Hill's
-collection, the long spikes of blossom which were produced by so small a
-plant being quite extraordinary.
-
-There is no genus of Orchids that surpasses _Arides_ in having handsome
-evergreen foliage, so that, even when not in blossom, they are
-exceedingly pretty objects; while to this it must be added, that their
-flower-spikes are beautiful, and their flowers deliciously fragrant;
-some, of course, are more handsome than others, but all are worth
-growing: in fact, we have never seen an indifferent _Arides_. They have
-every good quality that a plant of this character can possess, and they
-are of easy cultivation, so that anyone who has a stove may manage them
-successfully. They do not require so much heat as some persons imagine;
-the temperature need not be above 65 in the winter; more is, indeed,
-required in summer, but even then sun-heat should be fully utilised, and
-very little fire-heat should be used.
-
-_Arides Lobbii_ blooms in June and July, and lasts for three or four
-weeks in beauty. The plant, from which our illustration was taken, was
-but a foot in height, and the magnificent flowering racemes we saw upon
-it were fully two feet six inches in length, with two branches each a
-foot in length. The sepals and petals are white, spotted with bright
-rose colour; the lip is also of a bright rose colour, slightly veined
-and margined with white. The flowers are deliciously fragrant.
-
-The plant being very compact in growth, occupies but little space, so
-that anyone having a small vacant place in the Orchid-house or plant
-stove, might readily grow it. It will thrive either in a basket
-suspended from the roof of the house, or in a pot planted in sphagnum
-moss, with good drainage, and a moderate supply of water during the
-summer season, while in winter only just sufficient should be given to
-keep the moss damp. The plants do not, however, like to be dried up, as
-this often causes them to loose their bottom leaves, which is a great
-disfigurement. They require plenty of light, but do not like to be
-exposed to the burning sunshine. Canvas should therefore be used as a
-shading during all the bright sunny portion of the day, but when the sun
-has, in some degree, lost its burning heat the blinds may be raised.
-Never allow water to get into the hearts of the plants in winter. In
-summer a fine rose should be employed to syringe them, which operation
-should be done about three o'clock in the afternoon, when the house is
-closed.
-
-They should be always kept free from insects. Scale, thrips, and many
-other insects are to be reckoned amongst their enemies, and cockroaches,
-if allowed to attack them, will often eat away their young roots and
-flower-spikes.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 22.
- CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCIANUM.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCEANUM.
- [Plate 22.]
- Native of Borneo.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ almost none, the leaves springing from the crown of
- stout roots. _Leaves_ radical, distichous, coriaceous, broadly oblong,
- acute, channelled, a foot long, the upper surface marbled with a dark
- green mosaic pattern on a whitish-green ground colour. _Scapes_
- solitary in the leaf-axils, stout, pubescent, with an oblong-ovate
- acute sheathing bract near the top, from which the flower or flowers
- emerge. _Flowers_ very large, in the way of those of _C. barbatum
- majus_; _dorsal sepal_ sub-rotund or very broadly-ovate, acute, white,
- with numerous (about thirteen) shining curved purplish veins which run
- out nearly or quite to the edge, and usually alternate with others
- which are short and less boldly marked; _lateral sepals_ connate,
- small, oblong, greenish white, with five dark purplish veins; _petals_
- fully half an inch wide, divaricate, linear-oblong ciliate, green in
- the upper half, with purple margin, stained with dull purple towards
- the tip, and with several dark fleshy warts along each margin, the
- lower half flushed with pale wine red; _lip_ very large, pouch-shaped,
- the lateral horns much developed, purplish brown above, yellowish
- green below, with numerous warts on the inside. _Staminode_ of a
- wax-like yellowish white, the posterior exterior border split in the
- centre, and having five anterior teeth, the middle one much larger
- than the rest.
-
- Cypripedium Lawrenceanum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners'
- Chronicle_, N.S., x., 748; _Veitch and Sons_, _Catalogue of New
- Plants_, 1879, p. 9, 23, with figure; _Florist and Pomologist_, 1880,
- 112, with figure.
-
-
-The introduction of this splendid species of Lady's Slipper is one of
-the results of Mr. F. W. Burbidge's visit to Borneo, in the service of
-Messrs. Veitch & Sons, of Chelsea. It is a very robust grower, and
-flowered for the first time in the autumn of 1878, when it was named by
-Professor Reichenbach, in the place above quoted, in honour of Sir
-Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., an ardent orchidophilist, and the
-possessor of a collection of Orchids of unequalled richness and beauty.
-
-The Cypripediums now form a large family group, and rank amongst the
-most useful of Orchids that can be cultivated, since the lasting quality
-of their flowers, especially for exhibition and decorative purposes, is
-something extraordinary. Many of them in addition possess beautifully
-variegated foliage, as in the species we now figure, which has the
-leaves most distinctly marked with light and dark green. Our drawing was
-taken from a very fine plant in the select collection of H. M. Pollett,
-Esq., Fernside, Bickley, a gentleman who is a great lover of Orchids,
-and who has the wisdom to secure healthy young plants at the outset, in
-order that he may see them grow on into good specimens, such as the one
-now before us has done. It gives one great pleasure to see plants so
-well cultivated.
-
-_Cypripedium Lawrenceanum_ has, as we have already said, beautifully
-marked foliage, so that even when not in blossom, it is found to be an
-object of attraction. The upper or dorsal sepals of the flowers were in
-this case three inches across, white, striped with plum-purple, which
-runs in curved lines from the base nearly to the margin. The petals are
-green along the upper edge, suffused with purple towards the end, and
-having black wart-like spots, and a fringe of purple hairs along the
-margin. The pouch or lip is large, of a reddish brown colour in front,
-the under and hinder part yellowish green.
-
-These plants are best grown in pots with peat, and a little charcoal, or
-sometimes a little good fibrous loam mixed with the peat. It is a
-free-rooting species, and likes to be well elevated above the pot rim,
-so that its roots can penetrate readily and work freely in the rough
-material. The pot should be half filled with drainage, so that a good
-supply of moisture may be given to the roots during the growing season.
-The Cattleya or the East India-house seems to suit the plants well, as
-in these structures they grow and flower freely.
-
-The flowers are very useful for cutting, as they will keep a long time
-in vases if the water is kept sweet and pure.
-
-
-Baron Schrder's Orchids.--On the occasion of a recent visit to The
-Dell, Staines, the seat of Baron Schrder, we had the good fortune to
-inspect the fine collection of Orchids which has been got together. The
-houses are well built, after the plans of Mr. Ballantyne, the gardener,
-and are placed in good positions; not only have the ventilation and
-heating power been well considered, but cleanliness also; indeed the
-arrangement of the houses leaves nothing to be desired. The Orchids
-were, at the time, looking remarkably well. Entering the Phalnopsis
-house we noticed a fine plant in flower of the rare and beautiful
-_Phalnopsis intermedia Portei_, a treat which seldom falls to one's
-lot, for it is a matter of regret that this splendid Phalnopsis is so
-rare in collections: it must be very scarce in its native habitat or
-collectors would surely find it oftener. _Cypripedium Spicerianum_ was
-also flowering here. Several different species of _Nepenthes_ were in
-fine character, growing above a tank, with their pitchers gracefully
-drooping over the water, in which position they seemed to be quite at
-home. In this house were also some grand plants of different species of
-_Saccolabium_, _Cypripedium_, &c., all doing well. Leaving the
-Phalnopsis house the Cattleya house, which runs at right angles to it,
-is next entered. Here we noticed a gigantic specimen of _Cattleya
-exoniensis_, carrying several spikes of flower; _Llia autumnalis
-atrorubens_, with grand spikes, and flowers of unusual size and fine
-colour; and _Dendrobium Wardianum_ in full beauty, suspended from the
-roof. The Cattleyas, &c., in this house were in grand condition, and bid
-fair to produce some fine spikes next season. In the Odontoglossum house
-_Zygopetalum Gautieri_ was flowering well, also _Miltonia candida_ and
-_Sophronitis grandiflora_. The East Indian Orchids were in an especially
-healthy condition, the collection containing some grand specimens of
-_Vanda_, _Arides_, and _Saccolabium_.
-
-This collection, which has been lately formed, bids fair to become one
-of the finest in the country, Baron Schrder being an enthusiastic lover
-of this handsome class of plants, and being also careful to obtain only
-the best varieties.--H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 23.
- LLIA XANTHINA.]
-
-
-
-
- LLIA XANTHINA.
- [Plate 23.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ clavate fusiform, the narrowed base closely
- invested by imbricating bracts, monophyllous. _Leaves_ oblong-lorate,
- bluntish, coriaceous, longer than the pseudobulbs, and with them
- reaching to about a foot in height. _Scape_ four to six flowered,
- issuing from a terminal linear-oblong acute compressed bract or
- spathe, three-fourths of an inch wide and about four inches long, and
- of a pale green colour. _Flowers_ leathery in texture, three to four
- inches across, very distinct in aspect; _sepals_ and _petals_
- oblong-ligulate obtuse, undulated, the sides rolled back so that they
- appear convex, the petals most so, both of a deep golden yellow, more
- or less stained or flushed with olive-green; _lip_ cucullate,
- subquadrate, obtusely three-lobed at the apex, yolk of egg colour,
- paler at the edge, the front border white, and marked on the disc by a
- few crimson-purple veins, which are not raised like crests above the
- surface, as in the allied _L. flava_. _Column_ semiterete, clavate,
- lobulate at the apex, projected forwards, about as long as the entire
- edges of the lip and convergent therewith.
-
- Llia xanthina, _Lindley_, in _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5144;
- _Bateman_, _Second Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 180; _Rand_,
- _Orchids_, 303.
-
- Bletia xanthina, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices
- Systematic_, vi. 425; _Id._ _Xenia Orchidace_, ii. 54.
-
-
-This interesting and distinct-looking _Llia_ was introduced from Brazil
-many years ago by Messrs. Backhouse & Son, of York, but from the limited
-quantity then obtained it has always remained a scarce plant. It appears
-to have been imported about 1858, as it was figured in 1859 in the
-_Botanical Magazine_, as above quoted. It is, indeed, with great
-pleasure that we are enabled to introduce to our readers a figure of so
-rare and so distinct a species, for it is seldom seen in collections,
-having always been a rare plant. The colour of the flowers is of a
-nankeen-yellow, consequently they strongly contrast with those of the
-generality of Orchids of this affinity, the usual colours of which are
-purple, or rose colour in various tints, or white.
-
-Our plate was prepared from a drawing which was made in September last
-from a plant which flowered in our own collection. It will be seen from
-the representation, which is a very faithful one, that _Llia xanthina_
-is really a very pretty species, and one that our collectors ought to be
-looking after, so that Orchid growers may have it supplied to them at a
-more reasonable price than at present.
-
-The plant grows about a foot in height, and is somewhat like _Llia
-purpurata_ in its habit of growth, only it is very much smaller and more
-compact and free-blooming. The flowers continue about three weeks in
-perfection. It requires the same kind of treatment as other species of
-_Llia_ and _Cattleya_, and thrives best when cultivated in a pot or
-basket, with fibrous peat, and good drainage. Like the rest of its class
-it requires to be kept as fully exposed to the light as possible, in
-order that the pseudobulbs may be thoroughly ripened; and the growth
-being thus more completely matured, it will be found to become more
-vigorous in character, and enabled to throw up its flower-spikes more
-freely. There is a grand specimen of this species, over two feet in
-diameter, in the collection of H. Shaw, Esq., Corbar, Buxton.
-
-
-Llia autumnalis atrorubens.--It is highly gratifying to find that this
-splendid variety of _Llia autumnalis_, is becoming more plentiful, and
-that it keeps up its original character. Many growers were of opinion
-when it was first introduced, that the large size of its flowers and the
-rich colour of the sepals and petals were due mainly to superior
-cultivation and a pure atmosphere, but such is not the case. We have
-flowered some plants of it this season in our own establishment at
-Holloway, which have been as good, both in regard to the size and colour
-of the flowers, as those of any of the plants grown in a purer
-atmosphere, away from the smoke of this great City. We have received
-from the Right Honorable J. Chamberlain, Esq., M.P., of Birmingham, a
-splendidly developed spike of a grand form of this beautiful variety,
-which had been grown under the care of his gardener, Mr. Cooper.--B. S.
-W.
-
-Odontoglossum vexillarium (Autumn-flowering variety)--A short time back
-Mr. W. Bull exhibited at South Kensington a recently imported form of
-_Odontoglossum vexillarium_, which had all the appearance of being a
-distinct variety, flowering during the autumn months of the year. It is,
-however, we think, somewhat premature to regard this autumn-flowering
-character as thoroughly established, though there is no doubt the
-variety is a distinct one, and remarkably fine in colour. This being the
-first time of its flowering, the particular growth shown may have been
-influenced by the time at which the plants were started. However, in due
-time, and with good cultivation we shall see whether this peculiarity of
-flowering towards the end of the year is really a constant character, or
-whether it may have resulted from the circumstances above referred
-to.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 23.
- MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA COERULESCENS.]
-
-
-
-
- MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA COERULESCENS.
- [Plate 24.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ slender, tufted. _Leaves_ evergreen, coriaceous,
- ten to twelve inches long, with a nerveless elongate oblong-spathulate
- blade, obtuse or somewhat acute at the apex, channelled at the base,
- keeled behind, of a very dark green colour, narrowed downwards into
- the stout petiole, which is three to four inches long, deeply grooved
- in front, and invested at the base by long membranous brownish
- sheaths. _Scape_ a foot long or more, brown, covered below with three
- or four bluntish sheaths, the upper of which is distant from the
- flower and closely appressed. _Flowers_ large, peculiar in form,
- richly coloured, the colour varying in different forms, typically of a
- brilliant magenta-crimson; _dorsal sepal_ elongate linear from a
- triangular base, sub-erect or reflexed; _lateral sepals_ broadly
- semiovate, apiculate, connate to below the middle, deflexed, the tips
- approximate, all united below into a decurved _tube_, which is yellow
- (in the allied _M. Lindeni_ the tube is white); petals small, hidden
- within the tube, linear-oblong emarginate, the base auriculate on one
- side; _lip_ also small, enclosed, clawed, tongue-shaped, cordate at
- the base. _Column_ rather longer than the lip, entire, not winged.
-
- Masdevallia Harryana, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- 1871, 1421; _Florist & Pomologist_, 1873, 169, with coloured figure;
- _Belgique Horticole_, 1873, t. 21; _Flore des Serres_, t. 2250.
-
- Masdevallia Lindeni, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, _t._ 5990--_fide_
- Reichenbach.
-
- Masdevallia Lindeni, _var._ Harryana, _Andr_, _Illustration
- Horticole_, 3 ser., t. 142.
-
- _Var._ COERULESCENS: flowers of a rich magenta-crimson, with a
- bluish-purple flush or bloom; otherwise as in the type.
-
- Masdevallia Harryana coerulescens, _Hort._ _plurim._; _Bull_,
- _Catalogue of New Plants_, 1877, p. 83.
-
-
-We ought to be cordially grateful to our plant collectors for
-introducing to European gardens so brilliant, varied, and charming a set
-of epiphytal plants, as the several showy ornamental, and pleasingly
-grotesque species of the genus _Masdevallia_. There are indeed but few
-Orchids that possess such bright colours as are found therein. A few
-years since we had but two species that were really worth growing,
-namely, _M. coccinea_, of an orange-scarlet colour, and _M. tovarensis_,
-pure white. Then came _M. Lindeni_, a charming plant with flowers of a
-rich magenta-purple colour. _M. Veitchiana_, of which there are some
-very fine forms, made a fine contrast with its glowing orange-scarlet
-and bright yellow, the scarlet flushed with purple. The most beautiful,
-however, of all the Masdevallias are the varieties of _M. Harryana_, the
-colours of which--shades of magenta-crimson--are most intense and
-brilliant, many of the forms being also distinct in shape.
-
-_Masdevallia Harryana coerulescens_, our present subject, was forwarded
-to us by R. P. Percival, Esq., of Southport, who is forming what will in
-time doubtless become one of the best collections of these plants in the
-North of England. Whatever Mr. Percival takes in hand he carries out
-thoroughly, and this has led him to build separate houses to suit the
-different classes of Orchids. Now as Masdevallias prefer cool treatment
-they are best kept in a house by themselves: they require but a small
-one, as they take up very little room; indeed they will thrive well
-enough in the Odontoglossum house, for if their few wants are attended
-to, there are no freer growing plants in cultivation. They increase very
-fast under good treatment, and soon repay all the care which is bestowed
-upon them. They last a long time in beauty and make grand exhibition
-plants, producing also, when in bloom, a charming effect in the houses
-if intermixed with the various Odontoglots and other cool Orchids. There
-are so many varieties that some of them will always be in flower, but
-the best time to see them is from May to July. They are so accommodating
-to the grower that many wonderful specimens have been produced and
-exhibited during the last few years. When a plant is found to be too
-large it may be divided, and the divided portions will go on increasing.
-
-We have found good fibrous peat and sphagnum moss to suit well as
-material for the potting of these plants. They thrive best in small
-pots. The roots should not be disturbed too often; when, however, they
-require fresh material to root in, it must be given them, as they are
-free rooting plants and prefer to have sweet wholesome soil about them.
-They must also have good drainage, for they need an abundant supply of
-water, and by giving them efficient drainage the water passes off
-quickly without doing any harm, which it would do if allowed to become
-stagnant about them. The plants should be placed near the light but so
-as to avoid the sun's rays. A north house suits them best, as it shields
-them in summer from the heat of the day, which they do not like, in
-fact, they should be kept as cool as possible at all times, very little
-fire-heat being required in winter, and none during the summer. They
-like fresh air, but in winter cold draughts must be avoided. We find
-that they will thrive in a heat of from 45 to 50: even somewhat less
-would suffice, but the temperature here named is the most suitable.
-Anyone, therefore, who possesses a small low house could grow them at a
-trifling expense.
-
-They are easily propagated by dividing the tufts, leaving about three
-old stems and a leading growth associated. The best time for the
-division to be effected is just as they are beginning to grow. They
-should be placed in small pots until they are established, when they
-should be removed to larger ones.
-
-Insects should be annihilated as soon as they put in an appearance. The
-thrips is their greatest pest. Cool Orchids, as a rule, are also subject
-to the attack of a small kind of snail, that increases very rapidly, if
-not kept under by constant watching night and morning. A few lettuce
-leaves placed in different parts of the house, or potatos or turnips cut
-in half and scooped out in the centre, form good traps for them, and by
-looking these over frequently many of them may be caught, as also by
-moving the plants, as they are apt to harbour about the pots.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 25.
- CYMBIDIUM PARISHII.]
-
-
-
-
- CYMBIDIUM PARISHII.
- [Plate 25.]
- Native of Moulmein.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ fusiform, three to four inches long, annulately
- marked with the remains of the leaf-bases. _Leaves_ evergreen,
- distichous, ligulate-linear, keeled behind, bifid with acute lobes,
- from one to two feet long, of a rich green colour. _Racemes_ springing
- from the axils of the outer leaves, three to seven-flowered, the
- scapes furnished with lanceolate, falcate, acuminate, scariose
- sheaths. _Flowers_ large, sweet-scented, ivory-white, with an orange
- disk and crimson-purple spots on the lip; _sepals_ and _petals_
- oblong-ligulate, acute, of a creamy white colour, the lateral sepals
- largest; _lip_ white with an orange coloured central band,
- flabellately dilated from a narrowed base, three-cleft in front, the
- side lobes oblong directed forwards, white, with numerous
- violet-purple spots, the middle or front lobe cuneate-ovate,
- undulated, with an orange-coloured silky or velvety disk, spotted with
- purplish crimson; disk having near the base a callus which terminates
- abruptly in front, and is furnished on the outer side with velvety
- hairs. _Column_ white behind, yellow at the edges, and in front having
- brownish purple spots at the base; caudicle provided in front, on both
- sides, with an awl-shaped extrorse process.
-
- Cymbidium Parishii, _Reichenbach fil._, _MS. Herb. Kew_; _Id._
- _Gardeners' Chronicle_, N.S. I., 338, 566; x., 74; _Id._ _Transactions
- of the Linnean Society_, xxx., 144.
-
-
-The genus _Cymbidium_ forms a small group of Orchids of which there are
-but few species worthy of cultivation for ornamental purposes. That
-which we now figure is one of the best of them, and is a very rare and
-very beautiful plant, which has but seldom bloomed in this country. In
-the summer of 1878 Mr. Swan, gardener to W. Leach, Esq., of Oakley
-Fallowfield, Manchester, flowered it for the first time in Europe, and
-about the same time another specimen blossomed with John Day, Esq., of
-Tottenham, which was subsequently purchased by us for 100 guineas. This
-latter plant has again flowered, and our sketch was taken from it.
-
-Though a near relative of _Cymbidium eburneum_, this plant is considered
-by Reichenbach to be a distinct species, the points of difference
-being--the broader leaves with more prominent nerves on the upper
-surface; the somewhat smaller flowers with shorter sepals and petals;
-and the different form of the segments of the lip, together with some
-peculiarities in its callus and pubescence. It is one of the treasures
-of India, having been originally discovered so long since as 1859, in
-Moulmein, by the Rev. C. Parish, who found _Dendrobium crassinode_ at
-the same time. The plants of both these fine Orchids, then collected,
-were lost in the Ganges, and the _Cymbidium_ was not seen again for many
-years. It appears to have been actually introduced shortly prior to
-1874, since at that date living plants are recorded as being rarities in
-the collection of Mr. J. Day, of Tottenham, and Mr. R. Warner, of
-Broomfield, though it had not then flowered in Europe. It is a most
-chaste and lovely plant, its graceful green foliage, and creamy white
-blossoms in which the lip is spotted with crimson, producing a beautiful
-effect. The flowers have also a pleasant perfume, and last for three or
-four weeks in perfection. The flowering season is July and August, and
-several flowers are produced upon a spike, in which respect it has a
-decided advantage on the score of beauty over _C. eburneum_, which
-produces but one flower on a spike. The latter, however, is a charming
-Orchid for winter and spring flowering, its ivory-white blossoms being
-then especially acceptable. There is also another fine species, _C.
-Mastersii_, which produces its white flowers during the dull months of
-autumn, when Orchid as well as other white flowers, are scarce. These
-are all worth growing for the purpose of cutting, as they keep for a
-long time in water.
-
-_Cymbidium Parishii_ is very much like _C. eburneum_ and _C. Mastersii_
-in its manner of growth, and also in its general appearance; in fact, it
-is somewhat difficult, when the plants are not in bloom, to distinguish
-the one from the other. An inspection of our figure will, however, show
-that the foliage of _C. Parishii_ is broader and that it is of a lighter
-green colour.
-
-It requires the same treatment as _C. eburneum_. We grow the plants in
-pots, in the Cattleya house, on the side tables, near the glass. The
-material we use for potting is rough fibrous peat and loam, with
-thoroughly good drainage, the plants being also elevated above the rim
-of the pot. Their roots are thick and fleshy, and they therefore require
-a good supply of water during the growing season, but when at rest, the
-soil must be kept only just moist. They must be shielded from bright
-sunshine, by blinds or some other means, otherwise their foliage will
-become spotted. In winter they do not like to have their leaves damped,
-although in summer, on warm days, it will not injure them.
-
-They are propagated by dividing the tufts just as they are starting to
-make fresh growth, leaving some of the established portion at the back
-of the new growth. They must be kept free from insects. The white scale,
-which sometimes endeavours to make its way on the foliage, is that
-chiefly to be guarded against.
-
-
-Vanda tricolor.--In November last, we saw in the collection of J.
-Broome, Esq., of Didsbury, a very finely grown plant of _V. tricolor_,
-with two spikes of exceedingly richly coloured flowers--one of the best
-we have ever seen. It is in the way of the Dalkeith variety, but the
-flowers are large and of a remarkably bright colour. Mr. Broome sent us
-a spike to figure but it was spoilt in the transit; we hope, however, to
-be able to procure another when the plant again blooms, so that our
-subscribers may see what a well-grown specimen it is. It stands two feet
-six inches in height, and has beautifully healthy foliage down to the
-pot.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 26.
- CATTLEYA VELUTINA.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA VELUTINA.
- [Plate 26.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ slender, terete, from twelve to eighteen inches
- high, supporting the evergreen foliage, and furnished at intervals
- with short ovate appressed bracts. _Leaves_ in pairs, oblong, acute,
- widest near the base, leathery, about eight inches long, and an inch
- and a half broad, of a dark green colour. _Scape_ two-flowered,
- issuing from a terminal compressed sheath or bract. _Flowers_ of
- medium size, stout in texture, tawny orange, the lip white marked with
- purplish spots arranged in radiating lines, very fragrant; _sepals_
- ligulate-oblong, acute, recurved, rich tawny orange, spotted with
- purple; _petals_ of the same colour, cuneate-oblong, acute, somewhat
- lobulate or wavy; _lip_ three-lobed, the side lobes very short
- semi-ovate, partially enclosing the column, the front lobe large,
- roundish-ovate, apiculate, wavy and toothletted, the disk between the
- side lobes yellow with purplish streaks, the radiating veins purplish,
- the front or middle lobe white with dark purple veins, everywhere
- clothed with velvety pubescence. _Column_ free at the back, marked
- with many purple spots, and having a purplish border to the
- anther-bed.
-
- Cattleya velutina, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- 1870, 140, 1373; _Id._ 1872, 1259, figs. 288, 289; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Grower's Manual_, 5 ed. 135.
-
-
-This fine Orchid first flowered in 1870, under the care of Mr. A.
-Williams, in the collection of Joseph Broome, Esq., of Didsbury,
-Manchester, and subsequently in that of E. G. Wrigley, Esq., of Bury.
-What is described as a still finer variety of the same plant appeared
-shortly after in the collection of Consul Schiller, of Hamburgh. One of
-the most remarkable and special peculiarities of the species is the
-powerful fragrance of its flowers, which is so strongly developed as to
-scent the whole house in which a blooming plant is placed.
-
-It is a very rare as well as a very distinct species. We have,
-ourselves, only met with one example in bloom, besides that from what
-our illustration was taken, and that was the specimen in the collection
-of Mr. J. Broome, above referred to, as being the first which bloomed in
-this country. Our figure was taken from a plant which flowered recently
-in the grand collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., who was
-good enough to send it for our artist to sketch, and he has succeeded in
-securing a very faithful likeness of it. We have no doubt our collectors
-will meet with it in their journeyings in its native country, but it
-must be rare there, or we should have obtained more of it; most
-probably, like others of its genus, it is difficult to secure. It
-resembles _Cattleya bicolor_ in its habit of growth, the stems bearing
-two leaves, which grow about twelve to eighteen inches in length. The
-sepals and petals are of a rich tawny orange colour, irregularly spotted
-with purple, and the lip has the side lobes yellow, and is white in
-front, and distinctly striped with violet. Mr. Spyers says it blooms in
-September and October, when its fragrance, combined with its distinct
-colour, renders it a very acceptable inmate of the Orchid house; it also
-flowers at a time when few other Cattleyas are in bloom.
-
-_Cattleya velutina_ requires the same treatment as the other Cattleyas,
-that is, to be potted in peat soil with good drainage; it does not need
-so much water at the roots as some kinds, but it should be borne in
-mind, on the other hand, that it must not be allowed to shrivel, and
-therefore a little moisture should always be supplied to the roots. If
-the plant once gets into an unhealthy condition its recovery will be
-very doubtful. Those of the Cattleyas, such as _C. bicolor_ and _C.
-velutina_, which have very slender bulbs are more liable to go wrong
-than those that form thick fleshy bulbs, the latter having more
-substance from which to draw their support. They require to be kept near
-the light, with very little shade, excepting just sufficient to keep
-them from the burning sun.
-
-Like other Cattleyas, this species is subject to the inroads of the
-scale insect, which should be frequently sought for, and, if found,
-promptly removed. The foliage should be kept in a plump condition and
-not allowed to shrivel. In cleansing the leaves injury is often caused
-by too hard rubbing, by which they become bruised; rather should they be
-handled delicately, as, if once damaged, they cannot be restored to a
-sound healthy appearance. A damaged leaf is not only a disfigurement,
-but is of great injury to the health of the plant, by interfering with
-the action of its pores. Cleanliness is one of the great secrets of
-success in plant cultivation, but the operation of cleansing should be
-taken in hand before the insects get a-head, or they will assuredly eat
-into the leaves, which will thus become permanently injured at the
-points of attack.
-
-
-Dr. Ainsworth's Orchids.--When in Manchester we had the pleasure of
-visiting the collection of R. F. Ainsworth, Esq., M.D., in whose fine
-and varied collection the plant that most especially attracted our
-attention was _Masdevallia Chimra_, the blossoms of which were very
-large, each flower measuring seventeen inches across. The effect of
-these beautiful and curiously spotted flowers hanging around the basket
-was very striking. We have had it sent to us to figure, but the flowers
-do not travel well; we hope, however, some day, when it is in bloom, to
-be able to figure it. We also noticed, in the same house, a wonderfully
-fine form of _Odontoglossum Alexandr_, with broad sepals and petals of
-beautiful white, while the centre of the petals is marked with a
-pleasing rose colour, which gives it a very pretty appearance; the lip
-is large, white, beautifully crisped round the edge, the upper part
-bright orange-yellow. It was, altogether, a very showy flower. Mr.
-Mitchell, the gardener, said it had been in bloom for several weeks, and
-it was still fresh and fine when we saw it.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 27.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM.
- [Plate 27.]
- Native of the Cordillera of Peru.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate-oblong, compressed, monophyllous.
- _Leaves_ short, oblong, two inches broad, and sometimes not much
- exceeding that in length, spreading. _Scape_ simple, radical, bearing
- at the apex a many-flowered erect raceme, the membranaceous bracts of
- which are oblong acute, and as long as the pedicels. _Flowers_ nearly
- or quite two inches in diameter, of a rich chestnut brown on the
- inner, and olive-green on the outer surface; _sepals_ roundish-ovate,
- somewhat undulated, narrowed at the base, of a bright chestnut-brown,
- narrowly bordered with yellow; _petals_ similar in size and colour,
- oblong-ovate; _lip_ clawed, auriculate, wedge-shaped, emarginate,
- shorter than the sepals, bright yellow, bearing at the base five warty
- tubercles, with a three-toothed appendage in front of them. _Column_
- small, the edges of the anther-bed serrated, and decurrent in the form
- of membranous wings.
-
- Odontoglossum brevifolium, _Lindley_ in _Bentham's Plant
- Hartwegian_, 152; _Id._ _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Odontoglossum_ no.
- 61; _Andr_ in _Illustration Horticole_, 3 ser. t. 170; _Reichenbach,
- fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_. vi. 846.
-
-
-This very distinct species was first found by Hartweg, on the Peruvian
-Andes, near Loxa, and was described by Lindley, in Mr. Bentham's account
-of the plants collected by that traveller. It appears to have been
-introduced by M. Linden, and to have been first flowered in his
-establishment, the figure published in _L'Illustration Horticole_ having
-been derived from this source. The small compressed pseudobulbs are
-formed at the end of a sucker or offshoot, which is invested by large
-membranous bracts or scales, the upper of which covering the base of the
-flower-scape is somewhat broader and leaf-like.
-
-This Odontoglot ranks among the most distinct species of its genus, as
-may indeed be seen by a glance at our illustration. It produces dense
-spikes of its beautiful flowers, which are more in the way of those of
-_Odontoglossum coronarium_ than of any other cultivated species; it,
-however, blooms more freely. The spike of flowers we have here
-represented was sent to us by Mons. F. Massange, of Lige, in whose
-collection the gardener--Mr. Kramer--induces it to flower freely every
-year. M. Massange is a great _connoisseur_ of Orchids, and in his
-collection are to be found many rare and valuable specimens, which have
-been frequently exhibited during the past few years, including the Lige
-Exhibition of 1881.
-
-_Odontoglossum brevifolium_ is a dwarf growing plant, and produces its
-erect spikes of flowers from the side of the pseudobulbs. There were
-seventeen blossoms on that which is here represented. The sepals and
-petals are of a bright chestnut-brown, margined and slightly marked near
-the base with yellow, the lip is rich yellow with two light brown
-patches at its base. It is altogether a strikingly showy plant, and one
-that should be always cultivated amongst Odontoglots for its
-distinctness of colouring.
-
-The treatment which we find to suit the plant, is to grow it in a basket
-suspended from the roof, as it requires and enjoys all the light that
-can be given to it; but, of course, it needs to be shaded from the
-burning sun. The most suitable material in which to grow the plant is
-sphagnum moss and fibrous peat. It requires also a good supply of water
-in the growing season, so that it must be thoroughly drained. It thrives
-best in a cool house in which the same temperature is maintained as is
-found congenial to _Odontoglossum Alexandr_, and others of that class.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Londesboroughianum.--We have been under the impression
-that this species was not so good as it was first reported to be, but we
-are now of a different opinion. There are no doubt many varieties of the
-plant, as is the case with nearly all Orchids. In their native countries
-they are produced freely from seeds, all of the variations not being
-equally good. If our collectors could only pick out the best, when in
-bloom, we should be saved many disappointments, but of course they
-cannot spend their time in doing this. We were agreeably surprised when
-we paid a visit to the collection of G. W. Law-Scholefield, Esq.,
-New-Hall-Hey, Rawtenstall, near Manchester, to see a fine spike of the
-_O. Londesboroughianum_ with twenty-five of its large blossoms, much
-finer than any we had ever seen before. The sepals and petals are
-yellow, barred with brown; the lip is large, of a bright golden yellow,
-and very showy, and, as the long spikes hung drooping among the white
-and coloured flowers of the other Orchids the effect was very good. No
-one could complain of having such a species as this, for it is a most
-showy flower.
-
-
-Cypripedium insigne.--When calling at Mrs. Haywood's, Norris Green,
-Liverpool, a few weeks ago, we were pleased to see a fine specimen of
-this old Orchid, which was two feet in diameter; on nearly all the
-numerous scapes there were two flowers, and very fine ones they were.
-Mr. Bardney, the gardener, informed us that they come so every year,
-which makes this plant the more interesting, as the character of the
-species is merely to produce one flower on a stalk. This plant was grown
-in the grand conservatory, in which there was a most wonderful display
-of blossom, in fact, the grandest lot of greenhouse flowers we ever
-remember to have seen in winter, consisting of Pelargoniumns, Primulas,
-Camellias, Cyclamens, and the _Luculia gratissima_, with 40 or 50 heads
-of bloom. There are not many Orchids at this place, but, what there are,
-are doing well, and are well looked after.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 28.
- ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI.]
-
-
-
-
- ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI.
- [Plate 28.]
- Native of St. Catherine's, Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong, deeply furrowed, the younger ones
- ancipitous, attached to a branched creeping rhizome. _Leaves_
- fascicled, distichous, the outer ones shorter, the central ones
- narrowly elongate-oblong, plicate with a strongly developed costa, ten
- to twelve inches long, bright green. _Scape_ issuing from the centre
- of the leaf-tufts, and terminating in a drooping raceme of three to
- six flowers, furnished with elongate-oblong amplexicaul bracts, those
- subtending the flowers being nearly as long as the pedicels. _Flowers_
- large, showy, green blotched with brown, the lip purple with darker
- purple ruff in front of the column; _sepals_ and _petals_ oblong,
- acute, nearly equal, the petals directed upwards, all pale green
- transversely barred and blotched with purplish brown; _lip_ broad,
- three-lobed, furnished with an obtuse spur, the lateral lobes erect,
- rich deep purple, forming a crenated unguliform ruff or frill around
- the column, the middle lobe very large, two inches across, roundish,
- broader than long, apiculate, deep bluish purple, lighter at the edge.
- _Column_ short, half surrounded by the purple ruff, arcuate, the
- anther case yellow, with a projecting point at the apex.
-
- Zygopetalum Gautieri, _Lemaire_, _Illustration Horticole_, t. 535;
- _Williams_, _Orchid Grower's Manual_, 5 ed., 311.
-
-
-This genus of Orchids does not comprise so many species as many others,
-but among those which are known and introduced, are some which make very
-useful autumn and winter flowering subjects, and which are well adapted
-for decorating our stoves and Orchid houses. Amongst them occur some of
-the oldest of cultivated Orchids, such as are generally to be met with
-in good old-fashioned places. We remember to have seen plants of
-_Zygopetalum Mackayi_ and _Z. crinitum_ some thirty years ago, also of
-_Z. maxillare_--grand specimens with from seventy to a hundred flowers
-upon them, and a magnificent sight they were, with their numerous spikes
-hanging around the foliage, as represented in the plate, and being
-similar in colour.
-
-The species which we now desire to bring to the notice of our readers,
-is a very lovely one, which has been sometimes considered as a variety
-of _Zygopetalum maxillare_, but the flowers are larger, and it not only
-blooms much earlier, but continues in blossom for several weeks. In
-addition to this, it is a much freer grower than _Z. maxillare_. We have
-had different plants in flower for several months, and then they seemed
-as though they would continue blooming much longer; in fact this species
-seems to flower whenever it makes its young growth--a peculiar feature
-which renders it the most useful of its class.
-
-Our plate was prepared from a plant which bloomed in the fine collection
-of Mons. D. Massange, of Marche, in Belgium, under the care of Mr.
-Wilcke, who is one of the most successful continental growers of
-Orchids. We had the pleasure of seeing specimens from M. Massange's
-grand collection, exhibited at the great show held at Brussels in July,
-1880.
-
-_Zygopetalum Gautieri_ is a dwarf growing kind, attaining a height of
-about twelve inches, and is provided with distinct plaited green
-foliage. The flowers are large, and borne several together on the
-spikes; the sepals and petals are green, blotched with purplish brown,
-while the lip is of purplish blue, edged with a lighter tint of the same
-colour.
-
-There are several varieties of this species, varying from very pale
-violet to a rich purplish blue, the variety here figured being one of
-the darkest-coloured forms we have yet met with. The flowers are
-particularly showy, and last a long time in perfection.
-
-It is of easy cultivation, and not only free-growing but also
-free-blooming. It does well in the Cattleya house, planted in peat and
-moss, with good drainage, and it may be grown either in a pot or a
-basket, or on a block of wood, or on the stem of a tree fern, on which
-latter it is frequently imported from its native country. In its wild
-state, it appears naturally to creep up these fern stems, and it must
-look very beautiful growing in this way, since its drooping spikes
-cannot fail to have a good effect when thus seen hanging among the green
-foliage. It requires a good supply of water during the growing season,
-but, when at rest, less will suffice. The plant needs plenty of light,
-but it must be shaded from the fierce sun-rays during the summer months.
-
-
-Llia anceps Dawsoni.--One of the best specimens we have had the
-pleasure of seeing of _L. anceps Dawsoni_ is in the collection of R. S.
-Dodgson, Esq., Blackburn; it had four spikes of buds when we saw it in
-November last; since then we have received a spike of three flowers, and
-a very fine variety it is. Mr. Osman informs us that the plant has ten
-expanded blossoms. It is one of the best plants and as good a variety as
-we have met with; the sepals and petals are large, pure white, and of
-great substance; the lip is bright rosy purple edged with white, the
-throat orange, veined with purple. No doubt there are different
-varieties in cultivation which were imported along with this some years
-ago. Mr. Dodgson's plant is grown suspended from the roof, and from its
-appearance this seems to be the best method of growing it to perfection.
-It likes plenty of light all the year round, and should be just kept
-shaded from the burning sun.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 29.
- COELOGYNE MASSANGEANA.]
-
-
-
-
- COELOGYNE MASSANGEANA.
- [Plate 29.]
- Native of Assam.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ pyriform, three to four inches in height,
- smooth, bearing two leaves at the apex. _Leaves_ persistent,
- cuneate-oblong, acute, stalked, somewhat plicate, a foot and a half
- high including the stalk, and four inches broad. _Peduncle_ pendulous,
- produced from the base of the pseudobulbs, one and a half to two feet
- long, nigro-asperate; _bracts_ cuneate-oblong obtuse, much shorter
- than the pedicels. _Flowers_ showy, in loose racemes of two dozen or
- more, yellow with a brown lip; _sepals_ ligulate obtuse, somewhat
- keeled outside, light ochre-yellow; _petals_ linear-ligulate, of the
- same colour as the sepals; _lip_ three-lobed, concave, the side lobes
- semi-ovate, acute in front, of a beautiful maroon-brown with
- ochre-coloured veins, the middle lobe creamy white at the edge, with a
- large brown disk, short, transversely oval with an apiculus, and
- having three light yellow rather prominent toothletted keels extending
- from the base to the anterior lobe, and "six confluent rows of green
- retuse many-angled cells, reminding one of human molar teeth" in front
- of them. _Column_ light ochre-yellow, streaked with brown, winged in
- front, the anther-bed with a retuse membranous border.
-
- Coelogyne Massangeana, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- N.S., x., 684; _Floral Magazine_, 2 ser., t. 373.
-
-
-The plant which we now bring under the notice of our readers belongs to
-a rather extensive genus of Orchids, some of the species of which are
-very beautiful, while others are not worth cultivating as decorative
-plants. That which is now before us, is, however, an exceedingly
-handsome and very remarkable species, which was imported from Assam, by
-MM. Jacob-Makoy & Cie., of Lige, Belgium. Our illustration was taken
-from a very fine plant, which produced no fewer than eight of its long
-pendulous racemes of flowers, some of these having as many as
-twenty-seven blossoms on them. This grand specimen was grown in the
-notable collection of Mons. D. Massange, at the Chteau de Baillonville,
-near Marche, in Belgium, in whose honour the species was named by
-Professor Reichenbach. We had the pleasure of seeing this
-extraordinarily fine plant, growing under pot-culture, in M. Massange's
-Cattleya house, and since then we have received the materials from which
-our artist has made the capital representation which accompanies these
-remarks. In regard to its botanical affinities it stands near to the
-Bornean _Coelogyne asperata_, which is sometimes called _C. Lowii_.
-
-One remarkable feature of this _Coelogyne Massangeana_ is the
-extraordinary shortness of time which it takes to develope its rather
-ample spikes of flowers; these are often pushed up from the pseudobulbs
-in their corkscrew-like fashion, and become extended to their full
-length in a very few days, the buds swelling off at once, and the
-flowers very soon appearing in full beauty, in which state they continue
-for four or five weeks.
-
-We have seen a wonderfully fine example of this plant in the grand
-collection of R. Smith, Esq., Brentham Park, Stirling; this was
-suspended from the roof, and bore several fine flower-spikes. Mr. Smith
-regards this as one of the most beautiful Coelogynes in cultivation.
-When we saw the plant, it was overhanging a wonderful specimen of
-_Cattleya exoniensis_, a grand variety, and there were also many other
-fine Cattleyas in the same house.
-
-_Coelogyne Massangeana_ is a free-growing evergreen plant, with stout
-pseudobulbs from three to four inches in height, each supporting a pair
-of light green plicate leaves, which are about eighteen inches high, and
-about four inches broad. The flower-spikes are produced from the base of
-the pseudobulbs, and, when the plants are in vigorous health, they
-frequently attain the length of eighteen inches, or sometimes two feet.
-The sepals and petals are of a light yellow-ochre colour; the lip rich
-brown, its upper part or side lobes creamy yellow, lined with brown. The
-plant flowers at various times of the year. We have more than once had
-it in bloom twice in one year, and it continues for several weeks in a
-state of freshness and beauty.
-
-In its native country, Assam, this species is found growing on the
-branches and stems of trees. Here, provided it receives proper
-treatment, it is a very free-growing Orchid, and is also easy of
-increase, as it often produces two growths from one bulb. It will thrive
-either in a basket or in a pot, but, when in bloom, it should be
-suspended from the roof in order that it may be seen to the best
-advantage, to accomplish which, if it be grown in a pot, some wire may
-be fixed around the rim by which to hook it up. When growing it may
-occupy any part of the Cattleya house, but it should be placed so that
-it can obtain plenty of light. When hung up near the glass it must be
-shaded from the burning sun. With us it thrives well in good fibrous
-peat, and we have found it to be a free-rooting plant, requiring to be
-kept moist during the growing season; indeed, we never allow the plants
-to become too dry, but just supply them with sufficient moisture to
-prevent them from shrivelling. Every effort must be made to keep the
-foliage clean, and free from insects, in respect to which the cultivator
-should adopt and act up to the golden maxim--"Prevention is better than
-cure."
-
-
-Cymbidium eburneum.--In our remarks on this plant, under Plate 25, we
-have inadvertently referred to it as producing but one flower on a
-scape. This, however, is not quite correct; as, although the scapes each
-usually bear but a solitary blossom, we have known them to produce two,
-or sometimes even three flowers.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 30.
- LLIA ELEGANS ALBA.]
-
-
-
-
- LLIA ELEGANS ALBA.
- [Plate 30.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ terete, somewhat club-shaped, about eighteen inches
- in height, the weaker ones bearing one, the stronger two, leaves at
- the apex. _Leaves_ solitary or in pairs, ligulate-oblong, from six
- inches to a foot in length, very thick and leathery in texture, of a
- bright green colour. _Scape_ two to three-flowered, issuing from a
- terminal oblong compressed bract, about three inches in length.
- _Flowers_ white and crimson-purple, large and very handsome, about six
- inches in expansion; _sepals_ oblong lanceolate, acute, plane, pure
- white; _petals_ rather shorter than the sepals, broadly-lanceolate,
- undulated at the margins, pure white; _lip_ three inches long,
- three-lobed, the lateral lobes rolled over the column, the front
- portion spreading, undulated, and marked within the edge with a blotch
- of crimson-purple, the middle lobe roundish, flabellately expanded,
- crispato-undulate, of a rich crimson-purple, the colour breaking out
- near the tip into crimson veins on a purplish ground, and extended
- into a claw-like base through the pale yellowish disk. _Column_ about
- as long as the convolute base of the lip, enclosed.
-
- Llia elegans var. alba, _Williams_, _Catalogue_ 1881, 68.
-
-
-We have here one of the most beautiful of this charming class of
-Orchids, and one which no Orchid fancier can fail to admire. The showy
-blossoms of the forms of this species offer many shades of colour, those
-of the variety before us being exceedingly chaste and delicate. The
-accompanying figure is a good representation of this charming variety,
-and was prepared from a sketch of a well-grown specimen which bloomed in
-the fine collection of W. Lee, Esq., Downside, Leatherhead, under the
-care of Mr. Woolford, the gardener.
-
-This Llia grows about eighteen inches high; it is furnished with bold
-thick foliage of a pleasant green, and produces its blossoms in June and
-July, continuing for about three weeks in beauty. The sepals and petals
-are of a pure white, while the lip is of a rich magenta-crimson, the two
-colours making a well-marked and charming contrast. This delicately
-beautiful variety is extremely rare.
-
-_Llia elegans alba_ is like the Cattleyas in its growth, with the
-exception of the stems being more slender, most of them producing two
-short leaves about six inches in length. The plants require the same
-temperature and the same material in which to grow as the allied
-Cattleyas, and also about the same amount of water during the growing
-season. The rest required is also the same as for Cattleyas. There are
-some of the species, such as _L. albida_, _autumnalis_, _majalis_,
-_pumila_, and others, which will thrive better in a cooler temperature.
-They are all subject to insects, which should be diligently looked
-after. White scale is sometimes troublesome, and if allowed to remain on
-them will disfigure the foliage by causing yellow spots. Thrips will
-also attack them, and increase very fast if they are not kept under by
-adopting the usual remedies.
-
-
-Shading Orchids.--This is a subject of the greatest importance in Orchid
-culture, and one that is often overlooked until it is too late--the
-mischief being done. What is required is a strong durable material that
-will wear well, and, where rollers are used, stand the strain upon it.
-It must also be understood that shading does not consist of merely
-daubing upon the glass some opaque material, such as paint, summer
-cloud, whitening, or the like, which though all very well as palliatives
-in positions where rollers cannot be used, such as at the ends and sides
-of a house, are greatly to be deprecated as a shading for the roof, for
-this reason, that in our English climate we are so subject to sudden
-changes of the weather, that were such a permanent shading to be used,
-we should frequently, especially during dull weather, have our plants in
-comparative darkness when they should be getting all the light possible.
-This cannot fail to lead to bad results and produce a sickly growth.
-Some growers use thick canvas; indeed, we have done so ourselves many
-years ago, but, by experience, we have found out the ill effects of it,
-for when we employed this kind of shading, we found the plants under its
-influence became weak and sickly, producing small puny flower-spikes. A
-lighter shading was then employed, and the difference was marvellous;
-the plants assumed quite a different aspect. It was at this time that we
-were exhibiting at Chiswick the fine specimens of East Indian
-Orchids--Arides, Saccolabiums, Vandas, Dendrobiums, and many
-others--such as we seldom see equalled now. Since then we have used
-thinner shadings, with the best results. Our Vandas thus treated have
-always been strong and healthy, with broader foliage, producing their
-flower-spikes as often as three times a year, with the flowers of a good
-colour, lasting a long time in perfection; in fact we are never without
-flower, always having a good display. We refer more particularly to the
-suavis and tricolor section of the genus. Some people imagine Vandas do
-not flower till they attain a large size, but such is not the case if
-they are properly grown, and thin shading is used. Our experience leads
-us to the belief that all Orchids, with a few exceptions, require a thin
-shading, that is to say, one that, while warding off the direct rays of
-the sun, will allow the light to enter through it. To arrive at this
-result we use a strong, durable, cotton netting, woven in small squares,
-close enough to exclude the rays of the sun, while the light penetrates
-it with but little interruption. This netting stands exposure to the
-weather much longer than canvas, and on that account is cheaper in the
-long run. We have used this material for some years; in the case of Cool
-Orchids, Mexican, and East Indian kinds, with the best results, the
-netting being attached to rollers with appropriate gear. For the cool
-Orchid houses we employ raised blinds, upon which we hope to speak
-further shortly. The blinds can be managed with but little trouble. In
-the winter we take them off the house and put them in a dry place until
-they are required again in the ensuing spring.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 31.
- CALANTHE VEITCHII.]
-
-
-
-
- CALANTHE VEITCHII.
- [Plate 31.]
- A Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Terrestrial. _Pseudobulbs_ fleshy, conical, bluntly angular, four to
- six inches in height. _Leaves_ deciduous, about two from the apex of
- each pseudobulb, lanceolate, narrowed both towards the base and apex,
- plicate or plaited, of a bright green, produced before the flowers.
- _Scapes_ radical, downy, invested in the lower part with sheathing
- bracts, and each supporting a tall showy raceme of flowers, sometimes
- reaching three to four feet long. _Flowers_ abundant, each subtended
- by an ovate bract, of a very attractive and pleasing tint of rich deep
- rosy pink, darker in some varieties; _sepals_ oblong lanceolate, the
- dorsal one erect, the lateral ones spreading, deep rose-pink; _petals_
- of the same form and colour, patent, directed upwards; _lip_ adherent
- to the column, round which it is rolled at the base, front part
- clawed, and expanded into a squarish four-lobed limb, rich rose-pink,
- deepening almost to crimson around the creamy white eye or centre, the
- spur straight, downy. _Column_ small, terete, downy at the back.
-
- Calanthe Veitchii, _Lindley_, _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1859, 1016;
- _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5375; _Bateman_, _Second Century of
- Orchids_, t. 106; _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t. 48; _Floral Magazine_, t.
- 280; _Williams_, _Orchid Growers' Manual_, 5 ed., 109.
-
-
-This Hybrid is one of the most distinct and charming of Orchids, as well
-as one of the most useful for winter decoration. Our illustration was
-prepared from some admirably grown materials which were kindly sent to
-us from the rich collection of William Leach, Esq., of Oakley,
-Fallowfield, near Manchester, where we have seen as many as one hundred
-flower spikes of one of the most highly coloured forms of this somewhat
-variable plant in full beauty; and, intermixed as they were with the
-white _Calanthe vestita_, the effect produced was exceedingly pleasing
-and attractive. Mr. Swan seems to have hit upon the most successful
-method of cultivating these very charming plants, for some of the spikes
-bore as many as forty flowers. He evidently knows also how to arrange
-the plants to advantage, namely, by placing them in rows among the
-foliage of the East Indian Orchids, so that the Calanthes, blooming as
-they do without their leaves, have their beauty enhanced by the foliage
-of the associated plants, especially that of the Arides and Vandas.
-
-_Calanthe Veitchii_ is of deciduous habit, losing its foliage just as it
-comes into flower. We have, however, occasionally seen it with leaves
-accompanying its flowers, though its natural habit is to lose them. It
-produces flower spikes from three to four feet or more in length, and
-sometimes bears as many as fifty flowers on one spike. The plants are
-free-blooming and continue in flower for two months. The sepals and
-petals, as well as the lip, are of a rich rosy pink colour. A gay
-appearance may be kept up throughout the dull months of winter by having
-a sufficient number of plants and starting them successively into
-blossom.
-
-These Calanthes are very accommodating, since they will thrive well in
-baskets suspended from the roof, as well as in pots suspended by wire in
-the same way as the baskets; they will also thrive in pots standing on
-the tables, where room is not an object. If grown in baskets, they will
-require more water in their growing season. We prefer them grown in this
-manner where there is room, as they look so pleasing with their spikes
-hanging gracefully from the roof. Where hundreds of spikes have to be
-produced, as for instance is the case with Mr. C. Penny, of Sandringham
-Gardens, for decorating the Prince of Wales' table, the effect produced
-is charming, and even for filling large vases they form a most elegant
-adornment.
-
-They are of easy cultivation when they get the treatment they require.
-Like all other deciduous and bulbous plants their blooming season
-follows that of the completion of the growth of the bulbs, and their
-growing season commences when they have finished blooming, after which
-they will soon begin to throw up their young growths. When this is
-observed, let them be fresh potted. We have found it best to do this
-every year, as they lose all their old roots annually. We shake the soil
-away and cut off all the roots, and repot them, when, as soon as they
-begin to grow, they will send out their new roots into fresh soil. The
-material we use for potting is good rough fibrous loam and leaf mould,
-with a little rotten manure, mixing them well together, and giving good
-drainage with a layer of rough peat and moss on the top of it. In
-potting, fill the pot up with the soil and place the bulb on the top,
-just making it firm; it will soon root and support itself. If planted in
-baskets, it is necessary to place some rough fibrous peat round the
-sides and at the bottom to keep the soil from washing out; fill the
-basket up with the same kind of compost as that recommended for the
-pots, with drainage at the bottom; place the bulbs upright in the
-basket, about three in number, on the top of the soil, and finish by
-giving a little water. After the plants get into growth and are making
-roots freely, they should always be kept moist until they have finished
-their growth, when a less copious supply will suffice; and after they
-have bloomed they may be kept dry for a time until they are ready for
-potting. When the plants are in vigorous growth a little manure water
-may, with advantage, be applied to their roots once or twice a week, but
-it must be well diluted before being used, as, if given too strong, it
-might destroy the roots.
-
-We find the East India house to suit these Calanthes best, or they will
-thrive well in a house where stove plants are grown. They are propagated
-by separating the pseudobulbs at the time they are potted, and as they
-generally make two growths from one bulb the increase is comparatively
-rapid. Like other orchidaceous plants, they must be kept free from
-insects.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 32.
- ONCIDIUM HMATOCHILUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ONCIDIUM HMATOCHILUM.
- [Plate 32.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ none or obsolete, the leaves and
- flower-scapes springing directly from the axils of the scaly bracts
- which surround the crown. _Leaves_ solitary, flat, oblong, acute,
- leathery in texture, dull green spotted with reddish brown, nine to
- twelve inches long. _Scape_ radical, deep red, supporting a dense
- panicle of green spotted crimson-lipped flowers. _Flowers_ about an
- inch and a half across, showy on account of their rich colouring and
- markings; _sepals_ oval-oblong, yellowish green, thickly marked with
- irregular transverse bands of rich reddish brown; _petals_ oblong,
- spathulate, wavy, similar in colour to the sepals, but less heavily
- marked; _lip_ clawed, with a pair of auricles at the base, the claw
- and auricles deep magenta-rose colour, the front expanded portion
- roundish or transversely reniform, of a deep sanguineous crimson, and
- having the margin yellow, closely mottled with deep rose-crimson, the
- disk furnished with a flexuose crest shaped like the letter W, and
- thence raised into an eminence with a toothlet on each side. _Column_
- short, with rounded wings curved downwards and somewhat lobed.
-
- Oncidium hmatochilum, _Lindley_, in _Paxton's Flower Garden_, i., t.
- 6; _Id._, re-issue, t. 26; _Id._, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Oncidium_,
- No. 132; _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices
- Systematic_, vi., 783.
-
- Oncidium luridum purpuratum, _Loddiges_, _List_--_fide_ Lindley.
-
-
-This is undoubtedly one of our oldest Orchids--one that we recollect to
-have seen in bloom with the Messrs. Loddiges, in their noble collection
-of Orchids, about thirty years ago. We have always been under the
-impression that it was one of the prettiest of the spotted Oncidiums,
-but, although we have occasionally bloomed it, since then we have seen
-it in very few collections. We were accordingly very greatly pleased to
-meet with a remarkably fine example of it in the collection of G. W. L.
-Schofield, Esq., of Rawtenstall, near Manchester, from which our
-illustration was taken. The plant bore two flower-spikes, one of which
-was three feet six inches in length, bearing forty fine blossoms, and
-was a most beautiful example of the species; the other was shorter, and
-from this our drawing was made, as our page would not afford space for
-the representation of the larger spike. Our readers will, however, be
-enabled from the description and figure to form a good idea of the
-beauty of this rare species when well grown. Mr. Schofield is a great
-lover of good Orchids, and apparently intends having a fine collection
-of them, as he has had houses built for the different classes; his
-gardener also takes great interest in the plants, and consequently they
-are closely looked after and well cared for.
-
-The _Oncidium hmatochilum_ is a very compact-growing plant, with leaves
-from nine to twelve inches in height, and two and a half inches broad,
-of a dark green colour, spotted with brown. The sepals and petals are of
-a greenish yellow, mottled with crimson; the lip is of a rich crimson,
-edged with yellow, and spotted round the margin with magenta-rose
-colour. It flowers in November, the blossoms continuing for several
-weeks in perfection, and is a plant that will no doubt become popular,
-as it blooms at a time when flowers are in request. The specimen we are
-describing was grown in a basket in the Cattleya house, in peat and
-moss, which form an unexceptionable compost for it, with good drainage,
-and a moderate supply of water in the growing season. It is best
-suspended from the roof where it may obtain plenty of light, but it does
-not like bright sunshine, and consequently must be shaded in sunny
-weather.
-
-The Oncidiums are a class of Orchids among which occur some most showy
-and beautiful species; while almost every colour we could mention is to
-be found represented among them. They come from different regions, and
-in consequence their treatment must vary. Some of them rank among our
-finest exhibition plants, as well as amongst the best for the decoration
-of our stoves and Orchid houses. We often see fine specimens of
-Oncidiums in our grand old collections of plants where there is no
-pretence at growing a collection of Orchids, but where they are merely
-cultivated for cutting purposes. What is more airy and elegant for vases
-than the inflorescence of _Oncidium flexuosum_, or even _O.
-sphacelatum_, or that of many others we could mention if space would
-allow? What more brilliant than such species as _O. varicosum_ and its
-variety _O. Rogersii_, _O. ampliatum majus_, _O. tigrinum_, _O.
-Marshallianum_, or _O. macranthum_?
-
-
-Dendrobium Findleyanum.--This plant is now (January, 1882) finely in
-flower in the collection of J. C. Bowring, Esq., Windsor Forest. It must
-be a grand specimen, as Mr. Clinkaberry, the gardener, informs us that
-it has one hundred and ninety-two expanded blossoms. We have never
-before heard of such a well-flowered specimen as this; indeed, large
-plants of this species are somewhat rare. It is a most curious grower,
-and very remarkable for its long tapering compressed and deeply nodose
-stem-like pseudobulbs. The flowers are large, white, tipped with rosy
-pink, in the same way as those of _D. Wardianum_, and they are produced
-in great profusion. It is a plant that takes but little room, and should
-be in every collection.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 33.
- CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS.
- [Plate 33.]
- Native of Brazil in the region of the Rio Negro.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ slender, subterete, furrowed, with distant nodes,
- nearly a foot in height. _Leaves_ in pairs, ovate or ovate-oblong,
- obtuse, barely four inches in length, of a deep bluish green colour
- and stout coriaceous texture. _Scape_ four to five-flowered, issuing
- from a terminal oblong obtuse compressed sheathing bract, of a pale
- brown colour, which is about two inches long and three-quarters of an
- inch broad. _Flowers_ richly coloured, nearly six inches in breadth;
- _sepals_ elliptic-lanceolate, plane, about two and a half inches long,
- of a deep rich purplish rose colour; _petals_ of the same colour
- somewhat broader and longer, rhomboid, more or less undulated at the
- margin in the upper half; _lip_ about two inches long, three-lobed,
- the basal lobes elongately connivent into a tube acute in front, of a
- rich magenta-crimson, white at the base, middle lobe transversely
- rounded, broader than long, emarginate, narrowed into a claw, the
- front portion of the same rich crimson colour, the disk and interior
- of the tube yellow, the former traversed by five elevated golden
- yellow lines. _Column_ enclosed.
-
- Cattleya superba splendens, _Lemaire_, _Illustration Horticole_ xvi.,
- t. 605; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower's Manual_, 4 ed., 127; 5 ed., 132.
-
-
-The plant we are now about to describe is one of the most magnificent
-members of its genus, so far as regards the brilliant colouring of its
-flowers. This may be seen by a reference to the accompanying
-illustration, which was taken from a fine plant that flowered at the
-Victoria Nursery, and was subsequently purchased by William Lee, Esq. of
-Downside, Leatherhead. The plant was seen to great advantage when
-suspended in a basket from the roof of the Orchid-house, and in this
-position was greatly admired, by _connoisseurs_ on account of its rich
-and brilliant colours. The plants of _Cattleya superba_ vary
-considerably in the colour of their flowers, those of the original or
-type form being well represented in the first series of _Warner's Select
-Orchidaceous Plants_ (t. 24), where a most beautiful spike with six of
-its really superb flowers is shown.
-
-The variety which we now introduce to the notice of our
-readers--_Cattleya superba splendens_--is one of distinct character, and
-of unparalleled beauty. It comes from a different country, viz., the Rio
-Negro region of Para instead of Guiana. The plant is of compact growth
-like _C. superba_, and generally flowers during July and August; the
-stems (pseudobulbs) are ten to twelve inches in height; the leaves are
-produced in pairs, and are longer and more pointed, and its splendidly
-coloured flowers are produced four or five together in the spike from
-the top of the stem when it is making its growth. The individual
-blossoms are as much as five inches across, and are well expanded, the
-sepals and petals being of a bright but delicate rose colour, and the
-lip white at the base, the front and side lobes rich magenta-crimson,
-the disk and interior of the tube being of a bright golden yellow. The
-plant continues in blossom for three or four weeks if the flowers are
-kept from damp; indeed, all Cattleya blooms retain their freshness for a
-longer period if kept dry, especially the large light-flowered forms of
-_C. Mossi_, _C. Trian_, _C. Mendelii_, &c., which soon become spotted
-if the atmosphere surrounding them is much charged with moisture.
-
-_Cattleya superba_ is not in general well cultivated, but we have seen
-some specimens which were grown with extraordinary skill and success in
-the select collection of O. Schneider, Esq., of Cromwell Grange,
-Fallowfield, near Manchester. These specimens, as many as nine in
-number, were suspended in baskets from the roof of the warm house. They
-were grown from imported plants, and we have noticed them in the same
-position growing and blooming freely for the past three years, and, as
-they succeed so well, we should certainly recommend their being retained
-in the same situation. It is a golden rule for cultivators that when a
-particular kind of plant is found to thrive in a certain position, it
-should be kept there, so long at least as the conditions are suitable.
-In the instance just referred to the plants were suspended close to the
-glass, where they enjoyed a great abundance of light, and this was
-possibly the secret of their success. Other important considerations are
-that the plants do not like to be disturbed and will not bear cutting
-up.
-
-It is necessary at all times to keep sweet healthy material about the
-roots by removing the old effete soil and replacing it by that which is
-fresh and sound. We find rough fibrous peat and charcoal to suit it, but
-this must be accompanied by good drainage. We have seen them thrive well
-on blocks of wood, but when grown in this way they require more water.
-If cultivated in baskets they also need a good supply during the season
-of growth. In winter less will suffice, merely enough being given to
-keep the bulbs in a plump condition. As soon as they show signs of
-growth, more water should be given, but it is necessary to avoid wetting
-the young growths, as this often causes them to damp off, and when this
-is the case the succeeding growth will be weakly and unable to develop
-blossoms.
-
-The plants should be kept free from insects; sometimes thrips will
-attack the young growths, but it should be speedily removed, as, if
-allowed to remain, it will soon make great havoc.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 34.
- PAPHINIA CRISTATA.]
-
-
-
-
- PAPHINIA CRISTATA.
- [Plate 34.]
- Native of Trinidad and Guiana.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ small, clustered, oblong-ovate, compressed,
- somewhat furrowed, bearing one to three leaves at the apex, and
- leaf-like scales at the base. _Leaves_ oblong-lanceolate, plicate,
- submembranaceous, spreading, about eight inches in height. _Scapes_
- proceeding from the base of the pseudobulbs, pendent, two or
- three-flowered, clothed with loose brown membranaceous bracts.
- _Flowers_ smooth, spreading, whitish on the outside, beautifully
- marked with purple lines within, about three and a half inches across;
- _sepals_ lanceolate acute, fleshy, pale straw colour, almost entirely
- covered by thin transverse lines of chocolate-purple; _petals_ similar
- in form and colour, but somewhat narrower; _lip_ much smaller than the
- foregoing, fleshy, tripartite, almost entirely of a rich purplish
- black, ovate in outline, shortly unguiculate, with four stalked glands
- on the reddish orange purple-spotted claw, the lateral lobes
- sickle-shaped, the middle lobe rhomboidal, terminated by a tuft of
- club-shaped fimbri; disk crested, bidentate, with a few deep yellow
- spots down the centre. _Column_ club-shaped, semiterete, greenish at
- the base, the upper portion auriculate, with a projecting tooth on
- each side, deep yellow.
-
- Paphinia cristata, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, 1843, misc. 14;
- _Lyons_, _Treatise on Orchidaceous Plants_, 203; _Van Houtte_, _Flore
- des Serres_, iv., t. 335; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4836;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi.,
- 614; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower's Manual_, 5 ed., 265; _Bateman_, _2nd
- Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 117.
-
- Maxillaria cristata, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, t. 1811.
-
-
-_Paphinia_ is a genus of very limited extent, and of which but few
-species are at present known. That now before us is a very old and
-familiar species, one of the best known amongst them, and a singularly
-handsome little plant. It was the _Maxillaria cristata_ of early Orchid
-days, and considerable quantities of it were formerly imported, but it
-has now become very rare. We have flowered several plants during the
-past year at the Victoria Nursery, where they were greatly admired by
-those who saw them. It is a plant which comparatively few persons
-interested in Orchids have met with in blossom, and of which our plate
-gives a very correct representation. The flowers are remarkably curious,
-not only for their structure, but also for their colouring, as will be
-seen by reference to our illustration. The plant has, moreover, a very
-peculiar mode of throwing out its flower-spikes.
-
-We have also flowered _Paphinia rugosa_, another very singular and
-pretty plant, after the same style, but differing in colour, and well
-worth cultivation. They occupy but little space in the Orchid-houses,
-and are best grown in small pans suspended near the glass where they
-have the full benefit of the light, but must be shaded from the sun
-since their thin-textured leaves would suffer injury from too complete
-an exposure.
-
-_Paphinia cristata_, is a low-growing plant, with small shiny
-pseudobulbs, and light green plicate foliage about eight inches in
-height. It is a free-blooming species, generally producing three flowers
-on a scape which proceeds from the base of the pseudobulb after that has
-completed its growth. The flowers last in beauty for about a fortnight,
-and are produced at different periods of the year. The sepals and petals
-are nearly covered with transverse parallel lines of dark
-chocolate-purple on a creamy yellow ground; the lip is coloured in a
-similar manner, and furnished with some curious tufted fringes.
-
-These plants are not so easy to cultivate as some other Orchids; but, by
-bestowing on them a little extra care and attention, they may be kept in
-a thriving and healthy condition. We find them to grow best in small
-pans, nearly filled with drainage, and a lump of charcoal on the top of
-it; place the plant on the top of this with but little rough fibrous
-peat or live sphagnum moss about the roots, and so that it is elevated a
-little above the rim, as it has the peculiarity of throwing its
-flower-spike downwards.
-
-This species is a native of Guiana, and of the adjacent island of
-Trinidad. In the latter it is found growing on decayed branches of trees
-in the neighbourhood of the mud lake. In the former it occurs in the
-warmer parts of Demerara, and, consequently, must be cultivated in the
-warm house, and kept in a moist atmosphere during the season of its
-growth; when at rest, however, a smaller quantity of water will suffice,
-but it should never be allowed to shrivel, as, when once its condition
-becomes bad, it is very difficult to restore its health.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Alexandr flaveolum.--Whoever expected ten years ago to
-see a yellow-flowered _Odontoglossum Alexandr_ (?) No one, we should
-think, unless it were by a great stretch of the imagination. However,
-here is one from the fine collection of G. Hardy, Esq., of Timperley,
-Manchester. The flowers in every respect resemble those of _O.
-Alexandr_, except in their colour, which is a bright canary-yellow. The
-spike before us bears fifteen expanded flowers, and is one of the
-greatest surprises we have had the good fortune to meet with for a long
-time. It is true that distinct varieties of this "the Queen of Orchids"
-are turning up almost every day, but one seldom has a chance of seeing
-an entirely new break of colour of this sort. We believe that a variety
-with yellow flowers bloomed some time ago in the Broomfield collection,
-but the colour was not so decided in Mr. Warner's plant as it is in the
-case now before us.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 35.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM.
- [Plate 35.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ligulate-pyriform, costate, two or three
- inches high. _Leaves_ broadly linear, acute, about a foot long, of a
- light green colour, two from the top of each pseudobulb, with
- occasionally another from its base. _Scape_ radical, spreading, more
- or less drooping, supporting a branching raceme about two feet long.
- _Flowers_ resembling those of _Odontoglossum Alexandr_, but smaller,
- prettily spotted; _sepals_ ovate-oblong, acute, slightly crispy,
- creamy white, heavily and irregularly blotched on the lower half with
- bright chestnut-brown, the attenuated upper half unspotted; _petals_
- similar in form and colour, the blotches which are also on the lower
- half smaller, and more thickly placed; _lip_ from a cuneate base,
- pandurate, narrow in front, apiculate, distinctly wavy and toothed,
- creamy white, yellow at the base, with fewer and smaller brown spots;
- disk deep yellow, with a prominent crest dividing in front into two
- divergent horns. _Column_ greenish towards the base, brown in front,
- the wings and anther-case white.
-
- Odontoglossum Andersonianum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners'
- Chronicle_, 1868, 599; _Id._ 1872, 41; _Floral Magazine_, 2 ser., t.
- 45.
-
-
-The charming _Odontoglossum Andersonianum_, supposed to be a wild mule
-between _O. Alexandr_ (_crispum_) and _O. prstans_ or _O. gloriosum_,
-is one of the many prettily spotted Odontoglots which have been
-introduced into our collections during the past few years, and among
-which new varieties are continually appearing. One of the best forms of
-this plant which has come under our notice is that represented in the
-accompanying plate, prepared from a very beautiful specimen which
-bloomed last year among many other fine Odontoglots, well cultivated in
-the collection of Messrs. William Thomson & Sons, of Clovenfords near
-Galashiels.
-
-The _Odontoglossum Andersonianum_ is a compact-growing plant, with
-pyriform pseudobulbs two to three inches high, pale green leaves, and
-gracefully drooping branched flower-spikes about two feet in length. The
-sepals and petals are at first creamy white, spotted with purplish
-brown, the lip being also white, but less heavily spotted. The plant is
-of free-blooming habit, the flowers continuing fresh and perfect for a
-period of five or six weeks. It is exceedingly difficult to recognize
-this form until it produces its blossoms, as its growth is remarkably
-similar to that of _O. Alexandr_. Indeed there are many forms and
-varieties of this particular group which it is impossible to recognize
-until their flowers are seen; and, though cultivators may sometimes feel
-assured of the identity of individual plants, the production of flowers
-not unfrequently proves them to be mistaken.
-
-_Odontoglossum Andersonianum_ requires the same treatment as _O.
-Alexandr_ and other cool Orchids, also the same amount of water. The
-plants must have good fibrous peat to grow in, and plenty of drainage,
-as they need to be freely supplied with water all the year round, and
-this, if allowed to become stagnant, would prove very injurious to them.
-The material in which they are grown must also be clean and sweet; and
-though they must never be over-potted, sufficient space should be
-allowed for their roots. We have sometimes seen Odontoglots in pots far
-too large for them, and though this may tend to make the plants more
-important-looking, yet it will eventually spoil them, as the larger
-amount of soil becomes soddened with water, and this produces rotting of
-the roots.
-
-
-Raised Blinds for Orchid Houses.--During the summer months we have found
-Raised Blinds very beneficial to the growth of Orchids, especially to
-those requiring cool-house culture. When the hot summer's sun is shining
-upon the glass, it is very difficult, where Raised Blinds are not
-employed, to keep the temperature sufficiently low. The glass roof of
-the structure upon which the sun is shining becomes very hot, even when
-shaded with ordinary blinds; but if Raised Blinds are used a current of
-air is allowed to pass over the entire surface of the roof, and the
-glass is kept comparatively cool. The effect of this is to decrease very
-appreciably the internal temperature of the house; and the moisture,
-which would otherwise be dried up by the burning heat of the sun,
-produces a nice humid genial atmosphere in which Orchids delight. Having
-thus far referred to the advantages to be derived from the use of this
-method of shading, we may now explain briefly the mode of construction.
-Supposing that the house to be furnished with Raised Blinds is an
-ordinary span-roofed structure, it is necessary in the first place to
-provide a second ridge elevated about six inches above the top of the
-existing one. This should not consist of a solid plank, but of a strip
-of timber sufficiently strong to bear the weight and strain of the
-blinds and roller, and should be supported on blocks of wood placed at
-intervals in order to allow the current of air from below to find an
-outlet, which would not be the case if a solid ridge-board were adopted.
-Having arranged for the ridge, the next thing is to provide supports for
-the rollers; either wood or iron may be used for this purpose, but we
-have found iron to be the lightest looking and the most durable. Where
-the length of the rafters does not exceed say eight feet, half-inch rod
-iron will be found to be strong enough, and this should be cut into
-proper lengths, with the lower end turned up in a semi-circular form, so
-as to catch the roller when it descends, and prevent it from running off
-the supports. These supporting rods should be fixed to the bars or
-rafters of the house, about six inches above the woodwork, by being
-welded to vertical iron stays, which latter should be flattened out at
-the base, and provided with holes so that they can be screwed to the
-rafters or bars of the roof. In this way a strong support for the blinds
-to roll upon will be formed; the blinds themselves can be attached to
-the elevated ridge in the ordinary way, and the gearing usually employed
-for the purpose will be found to answer well for pulling them up or
-down. Many Orchid growers have already adopted these Raised Blinds with
-very beneficial results.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 36.
- CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM.
- [Plate 36.]
- Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Epiphytal. Acaulescent. _Leaves_ radical, distichous, coriaceous,
- oblong, acute, palish green thickly chequered with dark bottle-green
- markings, the under side dull reddish purple. _Scapes_ solitary in the
- leaf axils, pubescent, purplish, terminating in a lanceolate sharply
- keeled bract, from which the solitary blossom emerges. _Flowers_
- medium-sized, peculiar in form, rather showy; _dorsal sepals_
- ovate-acute, ciliate, the inner surface polished, suffused with
- reddish purple in the lower part, whitish towards the tip, traversed
- by numerous green veins of which the alternate ones are longer and
- stouter than the rest, all of them distinctly marked on the outer
- surface; _lateral connate sepals_ smaller, ciliate, greenish white
- with green veins, rather shorter than the lip; _petals_ linear-oblong,
- about two and a half inches in length, glossy, deflexed (more so than
- in the figure), ciliate with a fringe of unequal black hairs, bright
- wine-red, greenish towards the base, where it is marked with several
- Indian-purple warts most abundant near the upper edge, exterior
- surface green; _lip_ narrowly pouch-shaped, nearly as long as the
- petals, suffused in front with the same purplish red tint, and marked
- thickly with green veins at the sides and back, the basal auricles
- erect, obtuse, interior surface green, dotted with wine-red, the
- incurved margins of the claw greenish yellow, with reddish spots.
- _Staminode_ transverse, yellowish green, with two large exterior teeth
- in front and a small inner tooth, light brown with green markings.
-
- Cypripedium politum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- N.S. xiv., 525.
-
-
-This new Lady's Slipper is one of a batch raised some few years since by
-Robert Warner, Esq., of Broomfield, near Chelmsford, who has been
-successful in producing several very good forms by the process of
-hybridisation. The plants are of dwarf habit, free-growing, and
-free-blooming, each small growth bringing forth its flower. This
-_Cypripedium politum_ has been flowered for several years past by Mr.
-Warner, and thus its characteristic features and its constancy are well
-ascertained. There are also some other distinct kinds obtained through
-the same cross, some of which we hope to figure on a future occasion. We
-should expect that the cross was made between _C. barbatum superbum_ and
-_C. venustum_.
-
-_Cypripedium politum_ is a plant of compact habit and of free growth.
-The leaves are of a distinct and well-marked character, as will be seen
-in the very accurate portrait furnished by our artist. They are oblong,
-acute, about five inches long, and somewhat over an inch broad, of a
-beautiful light green, barred and chequered with a very deep or
-bottle-green, which gives it a very pleasing appearance; the
-under-surface is stained with a deep reddish wine-purple. The downy
-flower-scapes are also purple, some six to eight inches in height, each
-supporting a solitary flower, in which the dorsal sepal is ovate,
-polished, flushed in the lower part with purplish red and spotted with
-purple at the base, the upper part white, and the whole traversed by
-bright green veins which are alternately long and short. The petals are
-oblong, broadest at the apex, of a bright wine-red, polished, with black
-hairs along the margin, and Indian-purple warts near the upper edge,
-greenish towards the base and along the lower edge. The pouch-shaped lip
-is nearly as long as the petals, purplish red with a coppery tinge,
-glossy, veined with green at the sides and back. The flowers are
-produced during January and February, a season when they are much in
-request for decorative purposes. The Cypripediums are very useful for
-furnishing a supply of cut flowers, as they will keep fresh for several
-weeks in water, and will last for at least six weeks on the plant.
-
-These interesting plants are of easy cultivation, and occupy but little
-space, hence they may be accommodated in every small collection, and may
-be grown without much expense. The species and varieties forming the
-_barbatum_ group, to which this plant belongs, all require similar
-treatment. They may be grown either in the Cattleya or East India house,
-and are best cultivated in pots. Some of our Orchid-growers prefer to
-plant them in sphagnum moss, others in peat; for ourselves, we prefer to
-use good fibrous peat, ample drainage being provided. We have seen them
-thrive well in fibrous loam. The plants must be kept above the rim of
-the pot, as they root freely over the surface of the rough material.
-Since they have no fleshy bulbs to support them, and their growth is
-continuous almost throughout the year, they require to be liberally
-supplied with water at the roots; for this reason the pots must be well
-drained.
-
-Insects require to be constantly searched for. The scale sometimes
-appears upon the plants, but may easily be subjugated by sponging the
-surface with clean water. Their greatest enemy, however, is the red
-thrips, which must be hunted up and destroyed if the health of the
-plants is to be maintained, but it may be easily kept under if promptly,
-perseveringly, and vigorously attacked.
-
-
-Dendrobium macrophyllum.--We have received two splendid spikes of this
-magnificent Dendrobe, with flowers of an unusually fine colour, from a
-well grown specimen, such as we might expect from so experienced a
-grower as Mr. Penny, of the Royal Gardens, Sandringham, who has been one
-of the most successful exhibitors of specimen Orchids at our London
-shows, where he has, with the large collections staged by him, carried
-off nearly all the leading prizes. We hope at some future period to be
-able to figure this fine Dendrobium, the sepals and petals of which are
-of a rose-magenta colour, and the lip of the same colour, with a
-purplish crimson throat. We received with the Dendrobe a fine spike of
-the white-lipped form of _Odontoglossum Hallii_ in grand condition, the
-sepals and petals being of a very bright golden yellow with rich
-markings of a brownish crimson colour. This variety forms a splendid
-contrast with the white-flowered _O. Alexandr_ and _O. Pescatorei_, of
-which kinds there is a fine collection at Sandringham. The Prince of
-Wales is a great admirer of these as well as of other good Orchids.--B.
-S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 37.
- CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM.]
-
-
-
-
- CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM.
- [Plate 37.]
- Garden Hybrid.
-
-
- Epiphytal. Acaulescent. _Leaves_ radical, distichous, coriaceous,
- oblong acute, closely tessellated with dark hieroglyphic markings on a
- light green ground, the under surface reddish purple. _Scapes_
- solitary in the central leaf-axils, pubescent, reddish purple,
- one-flowered, with a very short ovate bract. _Flowers_ large, with
- expanded petals, rather attractive in colour; _dorsal sepal_ broadly
- ovate, bright yellow-green with white margin, and a narrow purple
- central stripe, on each side of which are about four strongly marked
- dark green longitudinal veins, connected by finer transverse veins;
- _lateral (connate) sepals_ small; _petals_ oblong, broader upwards,
- two and a half inches long, and three-fourths of an inch wide, with
- green longitudinal veins, and a dark purple central line, on one side
- of which (the upper half) they are washed with wine-purple, and have a
- yellowish buff margin, and a few black warts near the base, where they
- are ciliated; on the other (lower) half very slightly tinted with
- purple, the cross veins more apparent, and the margin green; _lip_
- rather large, shortly pouch-shaped, heavily stained with wine-purple,
- and freely marked with bold reticulations of a darker purple, the
- upper angles yellowish at the margins. _Staminode_ transversely
- reniform, pale green, with dark green feathery markings in front.
-
- Cypripedium chloroneurum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners'
- Chronicle_, N.S., xiv., 525.
-
-
-This is one of the most distinct of the new hybrid Lady's Slippers that
-have been recently introduced to the notice of Orchid-growers; it will
-also be appreciated as one of the most useful, being of a neat
-free-growing and abundant-blooming habit of growth. The Cypripediums are
-everybody's plants, that is to say, any one who has a place adapted for
-their cultivation can manage them without difficulty. Many growers make
-them their especial care and study, procuring every species and variety
-that can be obtained, and thus forming a very interesting and diverse
-group.
-
-Our present subject was raised by Robert Warner, Esq., in whose
-collection at Broomfield it has been blooming very abundantly, and it
-was from Mr. Warner's plant that our drawing was taken. The variety
-resembles the one figured on plate 36 in being of free-blooming habit,
-and also in being very attractive in regard to its foliage as well as
-its flowers. Many hybrid Cypripediums have been raised in this country
-of late years by the Messrs. Veitch and Sons, and also by other growers.
-Some of these have proved to be very beautiful and effective subjects,
-and no doubt there are others coming forward that have not yet bloomed.
-Many splendid novelties may yet be gained by crossing those kinds that
-have flowers of distinct forms and colours, and, as many of the
-varieties bloom simultaneously, the hybridiser will find abundant
-opportunities for carrying out his plans.
-
-These plants appear to be easily raised from seeds, and to reach the
-flowering stage sooner than most other seedling Orchids.
-
-Some of the Cypripediums thrive well in a cool house, and by fertilising
-these with the best of the stove species, a new set of cool-house forms
-would probably be obtained. Such a result would be one of considerable
-importance to Orchidists, as no doubt, if varieties of a different
-character to those we already possess could be obtained, some of our
-enthusiastic growers would take up their cultivation in good earnest. At
-present the majority of the Lady's Slippers require a warm house.
-
-_Cypripedium chloroneurum_ is a dwarf compact-habited plant, with
-evergreen foliage about six inches in length, beautifully variegated
-with closely chequered markings of dark and light green. The flowers are
-produced in January and February, and continue on for several weeks. The
-colours are distinct and attractive, the broad flat dorsal sepal being
-of a bright lively pale green striped with darker green nerves and
-bordered with white, the petals suffused with purple on the upper half
-and marked with black marginal warts, and the purplish lip freely
-ornamented with bold dark purple reticulations, altogether presenting a
-remarkably effective appearance.
-
-This novel hybrid grows freely when potted in rough fibrous peat with
-good drainage. When in vigorous growth it requires a liberal supply of
-water at the roots. Propagation is accomplished by dividing the plants
-after they have finished blooming and are ready to start into fresh
-growth; they can then be divided with safety by cutting off a back
-growth with a leading shoot in front of it, but care must be taken in
-cutting that the remaining portion of the plant is provided with an eye
-so placed as to break and form a new growth. When this young growth has
-been made, the divided plant may be shaken out from the old soil and
-potted. The offshoots should be placed in small pots until the following
-year, when, if they have made good growth, they may require to be
-repotted. They must be kept moist and in a plump condition, as they have
-only slender resources of their own to rely upon, but they root freely.
-As the plants get established they will require larger supplies of
-water, for which reason good drainage must be secured.
-
-
-Arides Leeanum.--This novelty has bloomed in the collection of G. W. L.
-Schofield, Esq., of New Hall, Hey, Rawtenstall, near Manchester,
-producing four flower-spikes. It is a beautiful object, its spikes of
-richly-coloured rosy pink blossoms hanging gracefully from the plant. It
-is very distinct from any other species of _Arides_, and will doubtless
-become a great favourite. One of its great recommendations is that it
-blooms in the winter, which is not the case with the generality of these
-plants, their usual flowering season being during the spring and summer
-months. _A. Leeanum_ is a small growing plant, but produces its spikes
-of blossoms very freely; and requiring, as it does, but a limited space
-for its accommodation, it will be a most useful introduction for amateur
-cultivators.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 38.
- DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM.]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM.
- [Plate 38.]
- Native of Tropical North-east Australia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ long, slender, erect, fusiform, one to two
- feet in length, closely invested between the nodes with dry light
- brown sheaths, the older ones swollen at the very base. _Leaves_
- oblong-lanceolate, sub-acuminate, five ribbed, of a deep green colour,
- and a somewhat coriaceous texture, a few only (five or six) being
- developed towards the extremities of the stems. _Racemes_ erect or
- curving, six to twelve flowered, nearly a foot in length, usually
- produced from the upper nodes of the old leafless stems, but sometimes
- from the apex of the younger leafy stems. _Flowers_ large, showy, rich
- rosy purple; _sepals_ oblong acute, flat, of a rich purplish magenta,
- the lateral ones united at the base into a short blunt spur below the
- setting on of the lip, above which spur is a gibbosity, occasioned by
- a similar swelling at the base of the lip (whence comes the specific
- name _bigibbum_); _petals_ large, roundish, spreading, recurved, of
- the same colour as the sepals; _lip_ three-lobed, the lateral lobes
- incurved, the retuse middle lobe somewhat reflexed, rich
- crimson-purple veined with darker purple, the base decurrent and
- gibbose, and the disk with three white papillose crests. _Columns_
- compressed, grooved, the back united with the sepal.
-
- Dendrobium bigibbum, _Lindley_, in _Paxton's Flower Garden_, iii, 25,
- fig. 245; _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4898; _Walpers' Annales
- Botanices Systematic_, vi., 302; _Warner_, _Select Orchidaceous
- Plants_, 2 ser. t. 8; _Van Houtte_, _Flore des Serres_, xi., t. 1143;
- _Bateman_, _Second Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t. 169;
- _Williams_, _Orchid Growers' Manual_, 5 ed., 165.
-
-
-This plant belongs to one of the most noble and popular, one of the most
-showy and beautiful genera of the whole family of Orchids, and one among
-the flowers of which nearly every colour occurs--bright yellow, pure
-white, rich crimson, bright purple, soft mauve, rich orange, nankeen,
-and many others being found among the many and various habited species
-of Dendrobes.
-
-_Dendrobium bigibbum_, the subject of our plate, is a species of a
-remarkably beautiful and showy character, which, until within the last
-few years, has been somewhat rare. In 1876, however, we received a large
-consignment from our collector, Mr. Goldie, who was then on his way to
-New Guinea, and who met with it growing on an island in Torres Straits,
-it having hitherto, we believe, been found only on the mainland of
-Australia. These plants were very fine, some of the specimens being of
-enormous dimensions, with stems quite two feet long, and from one and
-a-half to two inches in circumference. The specimens from which our
-figure of one of the most charming forms of this species which we have
-yet seen, was prepared, were kindly sent to us from the fine collection
-of the Marquess of Lothian, at Newbattle Abbey. Dalkeith, where it
-bloomed in September last in full beauty, amongst many other notable
-Orchids which are well cultivated by the intelligent gardener, Mr.
-Priest, who takes great delight in the careful management of his plants.
-
-This species of _Dendrobium_ is partially deciduous, the fully ripened
-stems sometimes losing the whole of their foliage, while the young
-growths retain their leaves until the following year. It grows from one
-to two feet in height, and produces its racemes of flowers sometimes
-from the top of the young growths, and sometimes from the old stems, in
-the latter case often bearing many spikes on the same stem. The flowers
-are of a rich rosy purple, and last in perfection for a considerable
-period. It is a most useful subject for associating with a button-hole
-bouquet, single flowers being shown off to great advantage by placing a
-light-looking fern frond behind them. The racemes of flowers last a long
-time after being cut if placed in water, and are most useful in all
-floral decorations. By growing several plants, successional blooms may
-be had at different periods.
-
-This Tropical Australian species is best grown in a warm house, as the
-plants require a good amount of heat--70 to 80 while growing--and
-plenty of light, but the burning rays of the sun must be kept from them.
-They thrive best when planted in pans or baskets amongst rough fibrous
-peat and sphagnum moss, and suspended from the roof of the Orchid house.
-During the summer season they require a liberal supply of water, but in
-winter should have only sufficient to keep the stems plump. The plant
-will also succeed on blocks of wood, but, if grown in this way, it will
-in hot weather need watering twice a day, and once a day at other times.
-Some cultivators have been unsuccessful with this species, but we have
-found it to thrive well in a house where Crotons, Dipladenias,
-Stephanotis, etc., are grown; the Dendrobes seem to enjoy the moisture
-transmitted to them by the stove plants which are generally syringed in
-warm weather, and the dew arising from this operation appears to suit
-the Orchid. The syringe is also useful in subduing the red spider, which
-will sometimes attack the young growth. Insects often infest those kinds
-of _Dendrobium_ that are grown in strong heat, but they must by this and
-other means be kept under.
-
-Such treatment suits almost all the popular Dendrobes, namely, _D.
-Devonianum_, _D. Wardianum superbum_, _D. chrysanthum_, _D. superbum
-(macrophyllum)_, _D. crassinode_, etc.; and the plants are found to be
-much stronger by reason of hanging near the glass well exposed to light,
-in which position they can be syringed on warm days--this moistening not
-only invigorating their growth, but being also a means of keeping
-insects under control.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 39.
- PHALNOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS.]
-
-
-
-
- PHALNOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS.
- [Plate 39.]
- Native of the East.
-
-
- Epiphytal. Acaulescent, the plants clinging to their supports by stout
- flattened roots. _Leaves_ coriaceous, distichous, ligulate-oblong,
- acute, channelled, equitant at the base, the upper surface marbled
- with transverse grey blotches which disappear with age, the under
- surface purplish red, similar in size to those of _Phalnopsis
- Schilleriana_. _Scape_ radical, bearing a many-flowered (120 or more)
- branching panicle of very handsomely and peculiarly spotted blossoms.
- _Flowers_ nearly three inches across, expanded, cream-coloured at
- first, becoming white; _sepals_ oblong, or ovate-oblong, about an inch
- in length, the dorsal one white, the lateral ones white along the
- upper side, the lower side being yellow thickly spotted with
- cinnamon-red; _petals_ much broader, narrowed near the base, white;
- _lip_ three-lobed, with a four-horned yellow callosity at its base,
- the lateral lobes oblong, rounded, the middle lobe oval, with an
- anchor-like extremity, the apex terminating in a pair of narrow
- recurved lacini, all the lobes yellow at the base, white upwards and
- handsomely spotted with rich cinnamon-red. _Column_ clavate, white.
-
- Phalnopsis Stuartiana, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- N.S. xvi., 748, 753, fig. 149; Moore, _Florist and Pomologist_, 1882,
- 49, t. 559.
-
- _Var._ NOBILIS; flowers larger in all their parts, marked with fewer
- and larger spots; front lobe of the lip rhombic.
-
- Phalnopsis Stuartiana _var._ NOBILIS, _Reichenbach fil._, in
- _Gardeners' Chronicle_, N.S. xvi., 748.
-
-
-There can be no doubt that the species of _Phalnopsis_ rank amongst our
-finest Orchids, on account of the purity and soft tinting of their
-blossoms and the profusion in which they are produced. Unfortunately, at
-present, we only possess a limited number of them. During the last few
-years, indeed, many new kinds, which are giving a fresh interest to the
-genus, have been introduced by our collectors; and, although it is
-barely possible that any new introduction should surpass the old
-species, yet it is gratifying to know that there are yet to be found
-distinct and novel kinds of great beauty. _P. Stuartiana_, which we now
-bring under the notice of our readers, is a very fine and well-marked
-species, recently imported from the East by Messrs. Low & Co., of Upper
-Clapton, and named by Professor Reichenbach in honour of Mr. Stuart Low,
-who is one of the largest importers of this class of Orchids. Our plate,
-which represents the variety called _P. Stuartiana nobilis_, was
-sketched from a plant now in the fine collection of William Lee, Esq.,
-of Downside, Leatherhead, who purchased it when in full beauty from the
-Messrs. Low, and we have to thank Mr. Lee for his kindness in allowing
-the drawing to be made. It is to be hoped that collectors may find more
-of it in its native country, although we believe it to be very rare,
-and, like many other recent discoveries to be probably a natural hybrid
-produced by insect fertilisation. We have no doubt that there are yet
-many fine forms of _Phalnopsis_; and if we could but obtain the scarlet
-one, which some years ago was reported to have been seen by a collector
-who was not able to bring it home, what a grand acquisition that would
-be!
-
-_Phalnopsis Stuartiana nobilis_ resembles _P. Schilleriana_ in the
-young growth, its newly developed leaves being of the same shape and
-colour and similarly spotted, but the older leaves assume more of the
-character of _P. amabilis_; while the flowers, instead of being
-mauve-coloured, are pure white, with the inferior halves of the lateral
-sepals yellow and boldly spotted with cinnamon-red, as also is a portion
-of the lip, the side lobes of which bear smaller and more closely set
-spots. We have little doubt that this plant is a wild hybrid between _P.
-Schilleriana_ and _P. amabilis_, as though the young leaves come
-spotted, they afterwards change to the colour of those of _P. amabilis_,
-as already described.
-
-This plant requires the same treatment as _P. Schilleriana_, and is best
-grown among sphagnum moss in baskets suspended from the roof, care being
-taken to give it a good supply of water during the growing season. It
-should have the heat of the East India house, and should at all times be
-kept moist at the roots, for if allowed to become dry, it will loose its
-lower leaves. If the plants are in a healthy and free-growing condition,
-flowering does not injure them; but, if at all sickly, they should not
-be allowed to blossom until they regain strength and vigour, as they are
-naturally free-flowering plants, and under such circumstances might
-bloom themselves to death. The moss about their roots must be sweet and
-in a living state; when it becomes decayed it should be removed, the
-roots washed, and the plant replaced in clean live moss with fresh free
-drainage, so that the water, of which a considerable quantity is
-required, may never become stagnant. Shading is an important element in
-the successful cultivation of these plants; therefore the sun, when at
-its full power in summer, must never be allowed to shine upon them, but
-in winter a little sun-heat is beneficial, and they then require all the
-light which it is possible to give them. Neither drip, nor water in any
-other form, must be suffered to reach the hearts of the plants, as it
-causes them to rot.
-
-Insects are troublesome at times. The thrips, if allowed to multiply,
-will greatly disfigure the plants, causing damage by depriving them of
-the juices which should go to sustain their vigour. When free from such
-pests, and in a healthy condition, the leaves of the Phalnopsids have a
-pleasing appearance; and, if they are well looked after, it will not be
-difficult to keep them clean, the more especially as being of large
-size, they can be readily operated upon.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 40.
- ODONTGLOSSUM KRAMERII.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM KRAMERI.
- [Plate 40.]
- Native of Costa Rica.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ nearly orbicular, much compressed, ancipitous
- or sharply two-edged, one and a-half inch in diameter, pale green.
- _Leaves_ solitary, oblong-lanceolate, acute, keeled, six to eight
- inches long, one and a-half to two inches broad, light green, with a
- smooth even surface. _Scapes_ radical, four to six inches long,
- shorter than the leaves, three to five flowered, drooping or
- ascending, flexuous, pale green, with small appressed bracts and
- longish peduncles. _Flowers_ one and a-half inch or more across, and
- delicately coloured; _sepals_ oblong acute, rosy lilac with a white
- margin; _petals_ about equalling the sepals in size, and similar to
- them in form and colour; _lip_ with a short stout neck, deeply
- hollowed in front, with two erect calli, the lateral lobes semi-ovate,
- narrow, deflexed, the much larger middle lobe three-fourths of an inch
- broad, roundish reniform, emarginate, bearing at the base a pair of
- erect lamell, the unguis or neck yellow spotted with red, the front
- lobe deep rosy lilac, marked near its base with two semi-circular
- bands of white and purplish rose. _Column_ short, thick, white in
- front.
-
- Odontoglossum Krameri, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_,
- 1868, 98, with woodcut; _Hooker fil._, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5778;
- _Bateman_, _Monograph of Odontoglossum_, t. 24; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Growers' Manual_, 5 ed., 236; _Floral Magazine_, t. 406 (as O.
- Kremeri.)
-
-
-This is a most charming small-growing Orchid, with remarkably pretty
-delicately coloured flowers. It is at the present time very rare in
-collections, and, in fact, had become almost lost to cultivation, but
-fortunately during the last year a small number of plants was imported
-into this country and distributed. Our drawing was made from a plant
-which formed part of this importation, and which produced its chastely
-coloured blossoms in the Victoria Nursery. Many years ago we remember to
-have seen a fine lot imported by the late George Ure Skinner, Esq., but
-since then it has until last year disappeared from our notice. We are,
-however, glad to see it again making its appearance in our
-Orchid-houses; for, as will be seen by reference to our illustration, it
-is a plant of a most distinct and pleasing character, and will be a real
-acquisition to the group of Odontoglots, of which numerous highly
-popular species are at present in cultivation.
-
-_Odontoglossum Krameri_ is a plant of compact-growing habit, with small
-flattened light green pseudobulbs, each producing from the top a
-solitary leaf of a pale green colour. The plant generally attains about
-ten inches in height. The flower spikes or peduncles are freely produced
-from the base of the pseudobulbs after they have completed their growth,
-several flowers being produced on each peduncle. The sepals and petals
-are of a rosy lilac colour, margined with white; the lip is also rosy
-lilac, but of a darker shade, flushed with yellow and marked and spotted
-with purple at the neck, and having two semi-circular bands of dark
-purplish rose and white near the base. The plants continue in bloom for
-several weeks.
-
-We have found this species to thrive well in the Cattleya house, planted
-in small pans or pots with good peat and sphagnum moss. It might
-possibly do in a cooler structure, but we have as yet only cultivated it
-in the Cattleya house, and this treatment has been found to suit it. It
-requires to be kept moist during the growing season, but when at rest
-should have only just sufficient water to keep it in a plump condition.
-The plant possesses one great advantage--that of blooming during the
-autumn months, when such flowers are so much in request. It has also
-another good quality--that of occupying but a small space, so that any
-cultivator who has a spare niche in his Orchid house can grow it without
-any inconvenience.
-
-
-Cattleya Trian.--R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn, has kindly sent us
-a wonderfully fine series of flowers of the different varieties of _C.
-Trian_, including some of the grandest that have yet come under our
-notice. Of two or three of these our Artist is preparing plates, which
-will be issued in due course in the _Orchid Album_. The variety named
-_C. Trian Dodgsoni_ bears most beautiful flowers, which are quite
-distinct from all that we have previously seen, the sepals and petals
-being large, and of a pure white, while the lip is of a rich magenta
-colour, with the throat rich orange, white in the upper part. _C. Trian
-Osmani_ is also a very fine variety, the flowers being rich in colour,
-the sepals and petals rosy pink, and the lip large, of a bright magenta
-colour; it is in fact altogether a wonderfully fine flower. There were
-several other varieties sent, including one which we have selected as
-the original _C. Trian_; this we shall first bring under the notice of
-our readers, and the other two will follow.--B. S. W.
-
-
-Mr. Dorman's Orchids.--When visiting this grand collection last month
-(March) we noticed the rare _Epidendrum Wallisii_ in flower. Mr.
-Coningsby, the gardener, informed us that the flowers on this plant had
-been open since November, and they still looked fresh. _Llia flava_ was
-also good. _Galeandra Devoniana_, a plant one seldom sees in bloom, was
-quite at home here, flowering and growing luxuriantly. _Lycaste Skinneri
-alba_, with its pure white flowers looked very charming; this was an
-extra fine variety, with flowers as large as any we remember to have
-seen. In addition to these there were many fine things in flower, which
-space will not permit us to mention. Mr. Dorman's Orchids are looking
-remarkably well, and are well cared for, both employer and gardener
-being enthusiastically fond of them.--H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 41.
- ANGRCUM EBURNEUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ANGRCUM EBURNEUM.
- [Plate 41.]
- Native of Madagascar and Bourbon.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ erect, leafy, producing roots from the lower part
- and from between the bases of the lower leaves. _Leaves_ distichous,
- ligulate, very oblique at the apex, coriaceous, of a shining green
- colour, striated, about two inches broad, carinate below and
- overlapping each other at the base. _Peduncles_ axillary, furnished
- with dark sheathing scales, and bearing an erect spike of numerous
- large flowers of peculiar form and appearance, all pointing in one
- direction and placed alternately back to back in a distichous or
- two-ranked manner. _Flowers_ of a thick fleshy texture, green, with a
- broad conspicuous white lip; _sepals_ and _petals_ lanceolate, pale
- green, the dorsal sepal and the petals reflexed, the lateral sepals
- patent; _lip_ large, broadly cordate, cuspidate, ivory white, the
- centre concave, and bearing a cleft acuminated ridge; _spur_ tapering,
- considerably longer than and parallel with the dorsal sepal, dark
- green. _Column_ short, thick, greenish white.
-
- Angrcum eburneum, _Du Petit-Thouars_, _Orchides des Iles Australes
- d'Afrique_, t. 65; _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, t. 1522; _Hooker_,
- _Botanical Magazine_, t. 4761; _Paxton's Magazine of Botany_, xvi.,
- 90, with woodcut; _Bateman_, _2nd Century of Orchidaceous Plants_, t.
- 111; _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1873, 216, fig. 46; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Grower's Manual_, 5 ed., 88, with woodcut.
-
- Angrcum superbum, _Du Petit-Thouars_, _Orchides_, tt. 62-4.
-
- Limodorum eburneum, _Bory_, _Voyage_, i., 359; t. 19.
-
-
-A grand Orchid which was first introduced to this country from
-Madagascar by the Horticultural Society of London, through their
-collector, Mr. Forbes, in the third decade of the present century, that
-is, more than fifty years since. It is, without doubt, one of the finest
-of the species, and when well grown forms a noble plant, its long spikes
-of attractive flowers, in company with its bold and characteristic
-foliage and its majestic habit of growth, imparting to it an aspect of
-dignity which no one can fail to recognise. Indeed, the magnificent
-appearance it has when placed on the central stage of the East India
-house is quite sufficient to win for it the favour of Orchid fanciers.
-
-Wherever space can be given to it, it should always be grown, as it
-blooms during the winter months and continues in perfection for many
-weeks longer than any other of its family that has come under our
-notice. Our drawing was taken from a very fine specimen, producing three
-well developed spikes, in the collection of D. B. Crawshay, Esq.,
-Rosefield, Sevenoaks, Kent, who is a great lover of Orchids, and is
-forming a nice collection of them.
-
-_Angrcum eburneum_ is, as we have before noted, from Madagascar, and
-consequently requires the heat of the East India house. It is of
-comparatively easy cultivation. The strap-shaped leaves grow to about
-eighteen inches in length, and are of a pleasant glossy, light green
-colour; the flower spikes are produced from the leaf axils on each side
-of the stem, and extend to the length of eighteen inches, bearing many
-flowers of which the broad cordate lip is of a conspicuous ivory white.
-The plants will sometimes produce as many as four spikes at one time.
-The blooming period is in December, January, and February.
-
-There is in cultivation another variety of _Angrcum eburneum_, called
-_virens_, but is not nearly so handsome and effective a plant as the
-type, its flowers being of a greenish white, but the spike has a
-somewhat more graceful contour, and the foliage is of a dark green
-colour, so that it also is worth cultivating where room can be found for
-its accommodation.
-
-The Angrcums form a very interesting genus in the great Orchid family;
-and although amongst those that have bloomed in this country there are
-not many that we consider to be worth growing as ornamental plants, yet
-some, on the other hand, are very beautiful, and these we hope to be
-able to figure in due course. There have been several new introductions
-of late, and no doubt there are many yet to be acquired. We are glad to
-notice that Sir Trevor Lawrence is getting up a collection of all the
-best kinds, but it is found that some of them are difficult to obtain,
-and they are none of them so readily imported alive as many other
-Orchids are. They are mostly found growing on trees in their native
-country, different species being met with on the same trees. It was very
-interesting to hear the late Rev. W. Ellis talk of these plants, of
-which many years ago he brought home living specimens of some of the
-most beautiful of the species, such as _Angrcum sesquipedale_, _A.
-Ellisii_, and others.
-
-_Angrcum eburneum_ is best cultivated in a pot as it is a large growing
-plant, and produces thick fleshy roots. We find sphagnum moss to suit it
-well, but it must have good drainage as it requires a liberal supply of
-water during the summer months, for if it be allowed to shrivel the
-bottom leaves wither and decay; in the winter, on the other hand, it
-should have merely sufficient to keep the moss damp and the plant in a
-plump condition. It requires the same general treatment as the large
-growing Vandas, such as _Vanda suavis_, _V. tricolor_, and others. The
-plants are not subject to the attacks of insects, their thick fleshy
-leaves appearing to have no attraction for these pests.
-
-
-Cattleya Trian.--We have received from E. Wright, Esq., Gravelly Hill,
-Birmingham, a very fine form of this splendid _Cattleya_; the flowers
-were six inches in diameter, the sepals and petals broad and of a rosy
-pink colour, the lip of a rich magenta and beautifully fringed, having
-the throat bright orange colour and the upper part rose-pink. It is
-altogether a desirable and charming flower. The varieties of this
-species are very useful, as they bloom in winter, when there are but few
-other Cattleyas in flower.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 42.
- DENDROBIUM MACROPHYLLUM.]
-
-
-
-
- DENDROBIUM SUPERBUM [MACROPHYLLUM].
- [Plate 42.]
- Native of the Philippine Islands.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ (pseudobulbs) stout, cylindrical, striated, the
- nodes of the flowering ones marked by the persistent scarious
- sheathing bases of the fallen leaves, drooping, and often attaining
- considerable length. _Leaves_ alternate elliptic-oblong, acute or
- obtuse, subcordate at the base, nervose, thin in texture, two-ribbed.
- _Flowers_ very numerous, usually in pairs from the joints of the
- stems, which form long floral wreaths; _sepals_ lanceolate, plane, the
- lateral ones produced at the base, of a deep rich purplish magenta,
- varying in intensity in different forms; _petals_ broadly
- oblong-ovate, somewhat undulated, of the same colour as the sepals;
- _lip_ pubescent, cordate-ovate, acuminate, convolute at the base, so
- that with the extended front lobe it assumes something of the shape of
- an oblique-mouthed funnel, the margin denticulate, the basal portion
- of an intense sanguineous purple, appearing like two deep blotches;
- the front lobe purplish magenta, marked with longitudinal ribs,
- connected with finer transverse veins of a deeper purple, and having a
- transverse three-lobed callosity. _Column_ short, included.
-
- Dendrobium superbum, _Reichenbach fil._ _MSS._; _Id._, _Walpers'
- Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi., 282; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower's
- Manual_, 5 ed., 180.
-
- Dendrobium macrophyllum, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, 1839, misc.
- 46; 1844, misc. 62; _Id._ _Sertum Orchidaceum_, t. 35; _Pescatorea_,
- t. 40; _Paxton's Magazine of Botany_, viii., 97.
-
- Dendrobium macranthum, _Hooker_, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 3970;
- _Planchon_ in _Flore des Serres_, viii, t. 757.
-
-
-This is a magnificent Orchid, especially in the case of its finer
-varieties, whether superior on the score of size or colouration. It was
-first bloomed by the Messrs. Loddiges in 1839, in their wonderful plant
-emporium at Hackney, having been introduced by them from the Philippine
-Islands. A grand variety called _giganteum_, having flowers of immense
-size, is figured in Mr. R. Warner's _Select Orchidaceous Plants_ (1
-ser., t. 26); and in respect to colour, the form of which we now give an
-illustration, is one of the richest and most effective we have yet seen.
-The materials from which our figure was prepared were obligingly sent to
-us by Mr. C. Penny, gardener to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, at
-Sandringham. It will be at once seen that the specimen in question was a
-well-grown example, and we understand that the plant yielded two
-similarly well furnished wreaths, bearing as many as forty blossoms.
-Besides this there are many other Orchids of superior merit to be seen
-in the collection at Sandringham gardens, these plants, the magnates of
-the vegetable world, being highly appreciated both by the Prince and the
-Princess of Wales.
-
-The Dendrobiums are among the most beautiful and charming of our Indian
-Orchids, many of the species being of a most graceful habit of growth,
-and by their brightly coloured flowers imparting a remarkably
-picturesque character to our Orchid houses. Some of them, moreover, have
-delicately fragrant blossoms. In very many cases they bloom most
-profusely, and with their long pendent stems look well suspended from
-the roof of the house. Our present subject belongs to this latter class,
-and is one of the most showy and beautiful of the species.
-
-_Dendrobium superbum_, which is more commonly known in gardens as
-_Dendrobium macrophyllum_, is a deciduous plant, losing its foliage just
-as it begins to blossom. It is a noble object when growing, producing
-stems from two to three feet long, furnished along each side with
-flowers growing in pairs; these flowers are four inches across, with
-sepals and petals of a lively magenta-rose, and a lip similar in colour,
-but with a purplish crimson throat. It blooms during February and March,
-the individual blossoms lasting about a fortnight in beauty. It thrives
-best when grown in a basket, and suspended from the roof. If hung up
-when in blossom, amongst the foliage of the other plants, the flowers
-are shown off to greater advantage, as it naturally blooms without
-foliage. It grows well in the East India Orchid house, and requires a
-good amount of heat and moisture during its growing season. After growth
-is completed it will do well in the Cattleya house during the dormant
-period, and when it begins to show its flower buds a little water may be
-given to induce the buds to swell and develop fine flowers. When the
-flowering season is over it may, if required, be placed in fresh
-sphagnum moss. It is a free growing plant, and thrives best suspended
-near the glass in the full light, but shaded from the burning sun. It
-is, indeed, absolutely necessary to give it all the light possible; and,
-in summer, a slight syringing when the house is closed will tend to keep
-the red spider and thrips in check.
-
-
-Dendrobium Hillii.--There is in the collection of R. Wyatt, Esq., Lake
-House, Cheltenham, a very fine specimen of this cool Orchid, which has
-been bearing numerous spikes of blossom, some of the spikes being as
-much as twenty inches in length. The specimen was a most beautiful
-object, with its long racemes of creamy white blossoms, which proceed
-from the apices of its thick fleshy pseudobulbs; it has, moreover, dark
-green foliage. This plant was growing in the conservatory, and had
-continued in bloom for about two months, so that it is a most useful
-subject for winter decoration. It is a very old Orchid, but is worth
-cultivating, especially as it will grow in a conservatory or in any cool
-house. There was also in the same collection a very fine variety of
-_Cypripedium villosum_, one of the best we have seen, the flowers being
-wonderfully bright in colour, and of large size. Of _Lycaste Skinneri_
-there was a well-grown plant, with very fine flowers, the sepals and
-petals being broad and pure white, and the front portion of the lip
-bright magenta, with the throat white.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 43.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR FLAVEOLUM.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR FLAVEOLUM.
- [Plate 43.]
- Native of New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate, compressed, one or two leaved.
- _Leaves_ elongate, oblong-lanceolate, acute, of a bright green colour.
- _Scape_ radical, supporting a many-flowered raceme (or panicle) of
- showy flowers, each subtended by a small ovate-oblong acute bract.
- _Flowers_ large, differing from other known forms of the species by
- their yellow colour, about three inches across; _sepals_
- ovate-lanceolate, acute, slightly wavy at the edges, pale
- sulphur-yellow; _petals_ ovate, much undulated at the margins and
- irregularly toothed, of the same pale yellow as the sepals; _lip_
- oblong, the apex truncately rounded and cuspidate, the margins
- undulated and fimbriated, and the basal angles rounded and produced,
- all of a bright yellow colour, marked near the centre with about three
- conspicuous round reddish brown spots, and at the base with fine
- radiating lines of the same colour, in front of which are two
- divergent bars or crests. _Column_ arcuate, club-shaped, pale yellow
- behind, dull brown on the inner face, and furnished with the usual
- toothed wings at the edge.
-
- Odontoglossum Alexandr flaveolum, _supra_.
-
- Odontoglossum crispum flaveolum, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners'
- Chronicle_, N.S. xiii., 41, 232.
-
-
-This very distinct variety is one which will become very useful in the
-decoration of our cool Orchid houses, for as the white-flowered
-varieties of _Odontoglossum Alexandr_ and other species are now so
-numerous, that now before us, being yellow, will produce a good
-contrast, which we must have in order to make a pleasing display. Our
-drawing was taken from a fine example in the collection of G. Hardy,
-Esq., Pickering Lodge, Timperley, near Manchester. We may add that Mr.
-Hardy's is one of the largest and best collections in the North of
-England, since he spares neither trouble nor expense in procuring the
-best varieties that can be obtained. As a proof of this we may refer to
-the recent Manchester Whitsuntide flower shows, where Orchids are one of
-the prominent features, and where Mr. Hardy's collection has frequently
-taken high honours.
-
-_Odontoglossum Alexandr flaveolum_ is a compact free-growing plant,
-like _O. Alexandr_ itself, and produces fine drooping flower spikes
-which we have seen bearing fifteen expanded bright creamy yellow
-flowers, these continuing in beauty for several weeks. This variety is
-all the more useful because of its blooming in the winter months when so
-many of our white Odontoglots are also in flower. The plant requires the
-same treatment as others of its class. It was found growing on the
-branches of trees intermixed with _Odontoglossum Alexandr_, and no
-doubt, as is probably the case with others of the so-called new
-varieties, it has originated by intercrossing with some allied species,
-which may have been growing near to it, and has been flowering at the
-same time. We hope shortly to give an illustration of the original or
-typical form of _O. Alexandr_.
-
-The best material in which to grow the Odontoglots is fibrous peat; they
-must have good drainage because they want plenty of water during the
-growing season, in fact the material should always be kept moist. The
-plants must never be over-potted, but just sufficient root room must be
-permitted them to secure healthy progression; over-potting, indeed,
-often becomes dangerous. We find that live sphagnum moss placed on the
-top of the peat is a great help in their cultivation, as it holds water,
-and there is always some degree of moisture arising from it; moreover,
-when it is kept in a healthy growing state it has a very neat and
-pleasing appearance.
-
-
-Odontoglossums at Trentham.--The _rgime_ adopted at Trentham for
-growing Cool Orchids, such as Odontoglots, is to give them water most
-profusely, the cold rain-water which falls from the roof being used
-summer and winter, and to allow fresh air to circulate freely amongst
-them at all times, night and day, except in very severe weather. The
-natural water at Trentham, as does any other water containing lime,
-will, after a time, kill the Sphagnum used for potting purposes, and
-this is most inimical to the plants, which never thrive so well as when
-the Sphagnum keeps fresh and in a growing state. In respect to the
-Sphagnum Moss used for Orchid growing, it does not appear to be
-generally known that amongst the different species the best for potting
-Odontoglots and similar plants is a dense-growing compact kind, whose
-very compactness gives it a sponge-like consistency, and enables it to
-suck up and retain water freely. This is what the Odontoglots like.--T.
-M.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Roezlii.--A fine example of this showy Orchid has reached
-us from D. Todd, Esq., Eastwood Park, near Glasgow. The spike was a
-particularly fine one, bearing well-developed flowers, of which the
-sepals and petals were white, the lower part of the latter being of a
-dark magenta, and the lip white, coloured with lines of crimson on the
-disk. Mr. Todd grows these plants remarkably well, and deserves great
-credit for his felicitous treatment of them, as few persons are so
-successful in their cultivation. There is a very good collection of
-Orchids forming at this place, Mr. Todd being an admirer of good kinds.
-At the Glasgow exhibitions his fine collection forms one of the greatest
-attractions of the show.--B. S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 44.
- LLIA ANCEPS DAWSONII.]
-
-
-
-
- LLIA ANCEPS DAWSONI.
- [Plate 44.]
- Native of Juquila in Mexico.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong-ovate, four to five inches long,
- compressed and two-edged, with prominent angles on the flattened sides
- so as to render them tetraquetrous, clothed with large membranaceous
- scales. _Leaves_ one or two from each pseudobulb, oblong-lanceolate
- acute, coriaceous, smooth and glossy on the surface, of a rich deep
- green colour. _Scape_ rising from between the leaves at the apex of
- the pseudobulb, two to three feet long, ancipitous, clothed with
- carinate bracts, and bearing about three large and charmingly
- beautiful blossoms. _Flowers_ large, measuring about four and a-half
- inches across; _sepals_ lanceolate, acuminate, white; _petals_ ovate,
- acuminate, white; _lip_ prominent, three-lobed: the lateral lobes
- convolute over the column, white at the margin, stained with rosy
- purple exteriorly, and marked with numerous bright purple branched
- lines within the closed portion, where there is also a yellow ridge
- lined with purple which passes out into the base of the front lobe in
- the form of three yellow crests; the front lobe oblong acute, recurved
- at the tip, the base white, the rest of the lobe (about three-fourths
- of its surface) of a deep rich magenta-purple, evenly but narrowly
- bordered with white. _Column_ enclosed.
-
- Llia anceps Dawsoni, _Anderson_, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1868, 27;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1873, 254; _Warner_,
- _Select Orchidaceous Plants_, 2 ser., t. 34; _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t.
- 6; _Floral Magazine_, t. 530; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower's Manual_, 5
- ed., 202.
-
- Llia anceps Dawsoniana, _Rand_, _Orchids_, 296.
-
-
-This is one of the most chaste and beautiful Orchids of its class. The
-type, _Llia anceps_, has flowers of a rosy lilac and deep purple
-colour, while the one before us is pure white with the exception of the
-lip, which is of a rich sparkling purple, and makes a splendid contrast.
-
-This variety was imported many years ago by the Messrs. Low & Co., of
-Clapton. There have been several other white forms flowered lately, but
-none to equal the one represented in our plate, the drawing of which was
-taken from a very fine specimen bearing four spikes, growing in the rich
-collection of R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn; it was the finest plant
-we have seen in bloom, and the production of so grand a specimen
-reflects great credit on Mr. Osman, the Gardener, for his skill in
-cultivation.
-
-_Llia anceps Dawsoni_ is, like the type form, of compact-growing habit.
-The pseudobulbs are from four to six inches in height, and the foliage
-of a light green colour. The flower spike is developed at the tip of the
-pseudobulb after it has completed its growth, and attains to about two
-feet in length, generally bearing two or three blossoms at the end; the
-sepals and petals are pure white, of good form and substance, and the
-lip is of a dark rosy purple edged with white, the disk orange coloured,
-the lower part of the throat pale orange veined with crimson, and the
-upper part white. It generally blooms in January and February, and
-continues in perfection for two and three weeks.
-
-This variety must be very rare in its native habitat, as we have
-received importations on several occasions purporting to be this white
-form, but after the plants have been grown on and flowered, they have
-invariably proved to be the type with rosy-coloured flowers. This is
-also the experience of other importers of Orchids.
-
-The plant is best grown in a pot or basket suspended from the roof,
-where it can obtain all the light possible, which induces it to grow
-with greater vigour and to flower more freely. It thrives well in the
-Cattleya house with a moderate supply of water in the growing season,
-but when at rest less water will suffice. We have found good rough
-fibrous peat to be the most advantageous material in which to grow it,
-allowing ample drainage; and when fresh potting material is required the
-operation of supplying it should be performed just as the plant begins
-to grow, which is after the blooming season. Always bear in mind that
-the plants must be kept free from insects.
-
-Propagation is effected by dividing the plant just as it begins to break
-into growth. In performing the operation two or three pseudobulbs should
-be detached from the plant, having a leading bulb; when taken off at
-this stage the plants soon become established.
-
-
-Dendrobium Wardianum.--A fine variety of this grand Dendrobe comes from
-D. Alroy Salamon, Esq., Clapham Park. The specimen has very large
-flowers, four and a-half inches in diameter, and of great substance. The
-sepals and petals are one and a-quarter inch broad, of a pure white,
-heavily tipped with rich magenta; the lip is very large, and also
-heavily blotched with magenta, the throat being rich orange with two
-dark brown eye-like spots. These flowers were from an imported plant,
-and we are curious to see whether it will produce equally fine flowers
-from the home made growths. If so we shall hope to figure it at some
-future time, as in the state in which it has just bloomed, it is
-certainly one of the finest and best forms of this splendid species
-which we have met with. It is also a free grower.--B. S. W.
-
-
-Dendrobium Falconeri.--Mr. Priest, Gardener to the Marquis of Lothian,
-has sent us some fine flowers of this favourite Dendrobe. He informs us
-that the plant from which the flowers were taken has 150 blossoms upon
-it. This must be a remarkably fine specimen, and well cultivated, to
-produce flowers in such profusion.--H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 45.
- CATTLEYA TRIAN.]
-
-
-
-
- CATTLEYA TRIAN.
- [Plate 45.]
- Native of Colombia.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stems_ oblong, club-shaped, furrowed, about a foot in
- height, clothed with whitish membranaceous sheaths. _Leaves_ solitary,
- coriaceous, ligulate-oblong, recurved at the tip, of a deep green
- colour, six to eight inches long. _Scape_ two or three-flowered,
- proceeding from a terminal oblong compressed brownish bract or sheath,
- about two inches long. _Flowers_ large, variable in colour, from white
- to a dilute delicate tint of rosy purple in the typical form, the lip
- being of a rich magenta; _sepals_ three inches or more in length,
- oblong-lanceolate, plane, of a delicate blush or pallid tint of rosy
- purple; _petals_ of the same colour, rhombeo-ovate, retuse, crispulate
- at the anterior edge; _lip_ convolute at the base, where it is of a
- pale purplish mauve, the front lobe obovate, rounded and crimped in
- the anterior part, where it is bilobed, wholly covered with
- crimson-magenta, exceedingly rich and brilliant, the disk marked with
- a broad rich orange-yellow bilobed blotch. _Column_ club-shaped,
- bearing at the tip a pair of sickle-shaped wings.
-
- Cattleya Trian, _Linden and Reichenbach fil._, in _Mohl and
- Schlechtendal's Botanische Zeitung_, xviii., 74 (1860); _Reichenbach
- fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi., 315.
-
- Cattleya labiata Lindigiana, _Karsten_--fide _Reichenbach fil._
-
- Cattleya labiata Trian, _Duchartre_, _Journal de la Socit Impriale
- d'Horticulture_, 1860, 369--fide _Reichenbach fil._
-
- Epidendrum labiatum, _var._ Trian, _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers'
- Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi., 315.
-
-
-This very charming species of _Cattleya_ was first obtained from
-Colombia for European gardens, in 1856, by Mr. Linden, to whom we are
-indebted for so many choice introductions amongst exotic plants. It is
-one of the best and most useful of the species, especially for winter
-decoration, and though very variable as regards the tinting of the
-flowers in the many distinct forms which have been imported, it is
-always of a brilliant and strikingly beautiful appearance, owing to the
-rich colouring displayed on the lip. The shades of colour in the several
-kinds varies from pure White through blush white and pale pinkish rose
-to a pale shade of deep rose, the upper lobe of the lip being of a rich
-magenta-crimson.
-
-There are, as we have just said, many forms of _Cattleya Trian_. That
-which we now figure we consider to be a very good representative of the
-typical form of the species. Our drawing was taken from a very fine
-specimen grown in the beautiful collection of R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of
-Beardwood, Blackburn, in which many forms of this lovely species occur,
-as we have already intimated under Plate 40. We have also mentioned Mr.
-Osman as being a most successful cultivator of Orchidaceous plants.
-
-_Cattleya Trian_ is a free-growing as well as a free-blooming species.
-It has dark green foliage, and attains the height of about fifteen
-inches, producing its blossoms during the winter months, after the
-growths are completed. The sepals and petals are of a pale pink or
-delicate tint of rosy purple; the lip is of a bright magenta, margined
-with delicate rose-pink, the edge being fringed, and the disk marked
-with a rich orange-coloured two-lobed blotch. The flowers are produced
-in February and March, and continue for several weeks in perfection,
-provided they are kept free from moisture, which if it lodges upon them
-will cause them to become spotted, and destroy their beauty. It is an
-excellent plan to place the plants when in bloom in a drier house than
-that in which they are grown, and to bestow all possible care upon their
-preservation. Of themselves they form a fine group of Cattleyas, there
-being so many distinct varieties, of colours such as to make them
-thoroughly useful for decorative purposes. By their agency our Orchid
-houses may be kept gay for several months in the most dreary time of the
-year, for when there is a number of plants they may be flowered in
-succession. The plants can now be bought at a reasonable price, as, in
-consequence of the large importations of them, they have become
-plentiful.
-
-_Cattleya Trian_ requires the same treatment as _C. labiata_, _C.
-Mossi_, and others of the same class, all these plants being, indeed,
-regarded by some botanists as varieties of one species. For their
-successful growth the use of good fibrous peat and sphagnum moss, with
-ample drainage, are requisite, and they should be kept well elevated
-above the pot rim. They will also thrive well suspended from the roof in
-baskets, and also on blocks of wood, but in these cases they require
-more attention as to watering, in order to keep them moist at the roots.
-
-Cattleyas thrive best when placed under the influence of strong light,
-but they must be shaded from bright sunshine. This _rgime_ induces them
-to blossom more freely, indeed, if the bulbs are not well ripened good
-results cannot be anticipated. The plants require a plentiful supply of
-water during the growing season, by which we mean that they should be
-kept constantly moist about the roots. When their growth is completed
-less may be applied, merely enough to keep them in a plump state. When
-the flower spikes begin to appear more water should again be given, as
-it will induce the buds to swell more freely, in consequence of which
-the flowers will be finer.
-
-
-Orchids from Dr. Paterson.--This gentleman has been kind enough to send
-us a grand spike of his _Vanda tricolor Patersoni_. It is a fine form of
-this noble Orchid, the flowers being of large size, and well marked, the
-lip beautifully coloured with rich magenta. A nice spike of the
-beautiful _Arides nobile_ came in the same parcel, and a curious _Eria_
-with white flowers, named _stellata_ (the true _stellata_ has dull pale
-yellow flowers) on account of the star-shaped form of its blossoms.--B.
-S. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 46.
- MILTONIA CUNEATA.]
-
-
-
-
- MILTONIA CUNEATA.
- [Plate 46.]
- Native of Brazil.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ ovate-oblong, compressed, light green,
- diphyllous. _Leaves_ ligulate-oblong, striate, somewhat carinate
- beneath, of a cheerful green colour. _Scape_ radical, erect, bearing a
- five to eight flowered raceme, each of the pedicels having at its base
- a whitish glumaceous triangular bract about half as long as the ovary.
- _Flowers_ large and showy, with a broad flat white lip; _sepals_
- oblong-lanceolate, narrowed to the base, of a deep chocolate-purple
- with a yellowish green tip on which is a dark spot, the margins
- undulated, the lateral ones connate at the base; _petals_ similar in
- form, size, and colour; _lip_ white, with a pink tinge, and one or two
- chocolate spots near the base, wedge-shaped, with a narrow claw-like
- base and a broad flat anterior expanded portion, somewhat repand on
- the margin, and furnished on the disk with two raised plates or
- lamell. _Column_ short, creamy white, bidentate on the middle
- portion, the anther-bed cucullate, membranaceous, denticulate, retuse.
-
- Miltonia cuneata, _Lindley_, _Botanical Register_, 1844, misc. 28;
- 1845, t. 8; _Id._, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Miltonia_, No. 8;
- _Reichenbach fil._, _Xenia Orchidacea_, i. 131; _Moore_,
- _Illustrations of Orchidaceous Plants_, art. _Miltonia_, 7 t. 2;
- _Lemaire_, _L'Illustration Horticole_, t. 237; _Williams_, _Orchid
- Grower's Manual_, 5 ed., 223.
-
- Miltonia speciosa, _Klotzsch_, in _Otto and Dietrich's Allgemeine
- Gartenzeitung_, xvii. 129.
-
- Oncidium speciosum, _Reichenbach fil._, _MSS._; _Id._, _Walpers'
- Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi. 761.
-
-
-This genus of Orchids is not a very extensive one, but among the species
-which are known there are some beautiful plants of distinct and striking
-character. The species which we now represent is a very pretty one,
-which we are pleased to have the opportunity of introducing to the
-notice of our readers. The specimen figured was grown in the fine
-collection of W. Cobb, Esq., of Sydenham, who is a great lover of
-Orchids, and makes it a study to procure the best kinds and cultivate
-them in the best possible manner.
-
-_Miltonia cuneata_ was introduced by the Messrs. Rollisson, of Tooting,
-about the year 1843, and first flowered with them in the spring of 1844.
-It is a free-growing plant, with light green foliage, which grows about
-a foot in height, and produces its flowers in erect racemes, seven or
-often more together. The sepals and petals are chestnut-brown, tipped
-with greenish yellow, and the lip is broad and of a creamy white colour.
-The flowers are produced in February and March, and last for several
-weeks in beauty.
-
-This _Miltonia_ requires the heat of the Cattleya house, and thrives in
-good fibrous peat; it must be well drained in order that the superfluous
-moisture may pass off, as the plant dislikes stagnant water about the
-roots. In the growing season a moderate supply of water may be given at
-the roots, but less will suffice when the growth is completed. We find
-the Miltonias to require more shade than most Orchids. Their leaves are
-thin in texture, and consequently are soon injured, which makes it
-necessary to pay strict attention to the requirements of the plants, as
-while too much sun would dry up the foliage, too much moisture about it
-would cause it to go spotted.
-
-They are propagated by dividing the bulbs, leaving two old ones and a
-growth in front. These divided portions should be potted in small pots
-until they get well established, and always at all times be kept free
-from insects. The white scale will sometimes attack them, and do much
-injury if not promptly removed.
-
-
-Llia elegans prasiata.--From E. Harvey, Esq., Aigburth, Liverpool,
-comes a spike of a grand form of this fine _Llia_. The flowers are six
-inches across, the sepals and petals purplish rose, the lip rich
-magenta. This is quite a distinct form, and worthy of a place in every
-collection. Accompanying this was a spike of _Scuticaria Hadweni_, var.
-_pardalina_, described some time ago in the _Gardeners' Chronicle_.--B.
-S. W.
-
-
-Dendrobium nobile (three-lipped).--Mr. Knight, Gardener to the Right
-Hon. W. H. Smith, M.P., Greenlands, Henley-on-Thames, sends us a curious
-form of this grand old Orchid, with three lips, two of the lips taking
-the place of the petals of the normal flowers, and being marked and
-coloured in a similar manner to the ordinary lip. In addition, the
-flower was deliciously scented. We do not suppose that this variation
-will be constant, being more probably a malformation.--B. S. W.
-
-
-Bollea coelestis as a block plant.--When visiting the establishment of
-Messrs. Vervaet et Cie., of Gand, Belgium, in April last, we were
-surprised to see this lovely Orchid quite at home on a block, growing
-luxuriantly, and rooting in all directions; the growths were very
-strong, and as healthy as any we have seen. Is it possible that this may
-be the secret of success with this Orchid? Being an epiphyte, found
-growing on the limbs of trees, we should imagine this treatment would be
-the most natural for it. It is evident that pot culture does not suit
-it, as it frequently dies off after two or three years.--H. W.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 47.
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR.]
-
-
-
-
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR.
- [Plate 47.]
- Native of Bogota, New Grenada.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Pseudobulbs_ oblong-ovate, compressed, often stained
- brownish purple, two-leaved. _Leaves_ ligulate-oblong, acute,
- channelled toward the base, of a pleasing light green colour. _Scape_
- radical, supporting a many-flowered raceme, or in the more vigorous
- plants a panicle equalling or exceeding the leaves, and having small
- acute bracts at the base of the pedicels. _Flowers_ exquisitely chaste
- and beautiful, white, tinted with rose, and variously spotted, fully
- three inches across; _sepals_ ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, entire or
- toothed, white, suffused more or less with a delicate tint of
- rose-pink; _petals_ in the best forms, broadly ovate and much
- undulated, entire or toothed, white, rather less deeply tinted with
- pink; _lip_ shorter than the petals, oblong-ovate, the margin much
- crisped and the shortly acuminate apex recurved, white, with a rich
- yellow stain down the centre, and marked with reddish brown radiating
- lines on the disk, and with one or two (or in some forms many) rich
- red-brown spots or blotches half-way down, the disk also bearing a
- bilamellate crest. _Column_ arcuate, club-shaped, chestnut-red.
-
- Odontoglossum Alexandr, _Bateman_, in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1864,
- 1083; _Id._, _Proceedings of the Royal Horticultural Society_, iv.,
- 186; _Id._, _Monograph of Odontoglossum_, t.t. 14, 19; _Hooker_,
- _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5691 (var. _Trian_), t. 5697 (var.
- _guttatum_); _Jennings_, _Orchids_, t. 26; _Warner_, _Select
- Orchidaceous Plants_, 2 ser., t. 23 (var. _Warneri_); _Floral
- Magazine_, t. 343; _Williams_, _Orchid Grower's Manual_, 5 ed., 228.
-
- Odontoglossum Bluntii, _Reichenbach, fil._, in _Mohl and
- Schlechtendal's Botanische Zeitung_, "n. 53, Dec. 64;" _Van Houtte_,
- _Flore des Serres_, t. 1652.
-
- Odontoglossum crispum, _Lindley_, in _Annals of Natural History_, xv.,
- 256; _Id._, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Odontoglossum_, No. 57;
- _Reichenbach fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi.,
- 845.
-
-
-The Princess of Wales' Odontoglossum, one of the most beautiful and one
-of the most useful of Orchids, was found in the province of Bogota, in
-New Grenada, at an altitude of from 7,000 to 8,000 feet, growing in
-great profusion on the branches of trees in the forests of that elevated
-region. It was introduced to this country in 1864 by Mr. Weir, when
-collecting for the Royal Horticultural Society, and was described in
-that year by Mr. Bateman as above quoted. There cannot be two opinions
-respecting its beauty, as it is one of the best Orchids in cultivation;
-and though there are amongst the imported plants great diversities in
-the form and colour of the flowers, yet all are beautiful. Some have the
-flowers of a pure white, in others they are variously suffused with a
-delicate rosy hue; some are spotted with crimson, and there are those
-with yellow flowers, but the most chaste and beautiful of them all are
-the pure white varieties, tinted with rose colour, which are mostly
-sought after by cultivators, though the many beautifully spotted forms
-produce a fine contrast when intermixed with the others.
-
-The figure we now publish was taken from a well-grown specimen in the
-collection of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, at Sandringham, and, as this
-species is named in honour of the Princess of Wales, who is a great
-lover of flowers, and especially of the Orchidace, we are proud to be
-able to announce that our artist has been permitted to prepare an
-illustration of this charming plant from such a source. There is a very
-fine collection of these plants at Sandringham, and among them are some
-very fine specimens, the accomplished gardener, Mr. C. Penny, being most
-successful in flowering them with grand spikes of bloom. There are also
-numerous varieties in the collection, but the one we have figured is a
-good example of the typical form.
-
-_Odontoglossum Alexandr_ is a compact-growing plant, attaining about a
-foot in height; it is furnished with lively green foliage, and produces
-its blossoms after the growth is completed on a drooping spike which, as
-it overhangs the green foliage, has a most graceful appearance. The
-sepals are white, slightly tinged with pale rose colour, the petals are
-pure white, and the lip is white, with reddish-brown spots upon it, and
-a patch of bright orange-yellow at the base. The plants bloom at
-different times of the year, according to the period of the completion
-of their growth, and, therefore, by having a good quantity of plants, a
-succession may be kept flowering all the year round. We are never
-without a good show of these plants in bloom, and it is the same in all
-collections where they are grown in considerable numbers. The individual
-flowers will last many weeks in beauty. They are extremely useful for
-cutting, as they keep for a long time in water.
-
-As this species requires what is called cool treatment very little
-expense need be incurred in its cultivation. Indeed, any one having a
-small house where a temperature can be kept up in winter of from 45 to
-50, with as little fire-heat as possible, can grow a great quantity of
-them, since they occupy but little space. In summer no fire-heat is
-required, unless the nights are cold, which is seldom the case at that
-season, but no draughts should be allowed to reach them, as draughts are
-as deleterious to them as to all other plants grown in glass houses.
-They require shading from the scorching rays of the sun, but like to
-have all the light that can be given them. Under this treatment they
-will grow stronger and stronger, and flower more and more freely.
-
-The potting material which we find most suitable for them is good
-fibrous peat, with the finer earthy particles shaken out; they must have
-good drainage, in fact the pots must be three-parts filled with drainage
-material, and the plants well elevated above the pot rim. They are
-naturally free-rooting plants, but we find a little live sphagnum moss
-on the top of the peat causes them to root more freely, and as they
-require a good deal of moisture at the roots during their period of
-growth, the moss, if kept in a growing condition, will help to supply
-their wants.
-
- [Illustration: PL. 48.
- VANDA COERULESCENS.]
-
-
-
-
- VANDA COERULESCENS.
- [Plate 48.]
- Native of Burmah.
-
-
- Epiphytal. _Stem_ one to two feet high or more, producing long stout
- flexuous roots from the leaf bases. _Leaves_ close set, distichous,
- linear-ligulate, truncately-bilobed, coriaceous, channelled, five to
- seven inches long, of a deep green colour, carinate, the keel forming
- an angular projection at the tip. _Scapes_ or _Peduncles_ slender,
- distantly vaginate, with small appressed sheaths, axillary, erect,
- bearing a ten to twenty flowered raceme longer than the leaves.
- _Flowers_ neat and very pleasing, pale mauve-blue; _sepals_ incurved,
- cuneate-ovate, obtuse, clawed, of a pale greyish blue; _petals_
- similar in size, form, and colour, twisted at the base, with the two
- lateral lobes tawny-yellow, and adnate to the column, the middle or
- front lobe obcuneate dilated and emarginate at the apex, the margins
- deflexed, of a rich violet-blue, with a pair of keel-shaped deep
- violet calli and a short intermediate one on the disk, the spur
- straight or incurved, conical, tipped with green. _Column_ small,
- blue.
-
- Vanda coerulescens, _Griffith_, _Notul_, 352; _Id._, _Icones_, t.
- 331; _Lindley_, _Folia Orchidacea_, art. _Vanda_, No. 19; _Reichenbach
- fil._, in _Walpers' Annales Botanices Systematic_, vi., 868; _Id._,
- in _Gardeners' Chronicle_, 1869, 498; 1870, 529, fig. 97; _Hooker
- fil._, _Botanical Magazine_, t. 5834 (colour faulty); _Williams_,
- _Orchid Grower's Manual_, ed. 5, 305.
-
-
-The Vandas are a most noble family of Orchids, including amongst them
-many beautiful species, such as _V. suavis_, _V. tricolor_, _V.
-Batemanni_, and others. They are well furnished with leaves, and make
-splendid specimens, requiring considerable space in which to grow them,
-but they are plants of great beauty, and when not in bloom make grand
-objects of attraction. No collection should be without them, as they
-flower at all times of the year. Where a number of these Orchids are
-grown, as at Chatsworth, we have seen as many as 193 spikes in blossom
-at one time, presenting a most glorious sight.
-
-The Vandas are of easy cultivation. The species which we now figure is a
-small, elegant-growing, free-blooming plant, and also very distinct in
-character, as will be seen from the plate, which gives a good
-representation of it. Our drawing was taken from a beautiful specimen
-growing in the splendid collection of C. Dorman, Esq., The Firs, Laurie
-Park, Sydenham, who has one of the best grown collections of Orchids we
-have seen, and one which does great credit to Mr. Coningsby, the
-gardener.
-
-_Vanda coerulescens_ is a compact growing species, as may be seen from
-our plate. In this instance it produced a flower spike of a drooping
-habit fifteen inches long, which is quite an exception, as the flower
-spikes are generally more or less erect or ascending. The sepals and
-petals are of a bluish-mauve, the lip of a deep blue. It is altogether
-most distinct in colour, and a plant that is greatly required in a
-collection of Orchids for the sake of the charming contrasts it yields.
-It blooms at different times of the year, and continues for several
-weeks in beauty. We find the heat of the East India house is congenial
-to it. It grows well in sphagnum moss, and must have good drainage,
-because it must be kept moist during the growing season; when at rest
-less moisture is required. The plant thrives either in a pot or in a
-basket suspended from the roof, so that it may get plenty of light, but
-must be shaded from the sun.
-
-
-Odontoglossum Alexandr regin.--F. A. Philbrick, Esq., Oldfield,
-Bickley, has sent us two fine spikes of this grand variety, the white
-flowers of which are of good form and profusely blotched, both on the
-sepals and petals, with reddish crimson. It is one of the finest spotted
-forms of this valuable species.--B. S. W.
-
-
-Orchids from Perth, N.B.--We have received from W. Macdonald, Esq.,
-Woodlands, Perth, a nice spike of _Scuticaria Steelii_, with three
-flowers. This is a curious growing Orchid, and one seldom sees it in
-blossom. The flowers are produced from the base of the reed-like leaves,
-and are yellow, distinctly spotted with crimson. The plant makes a fine
-specimen for a block, and when suspended from the roof shows off its
-leaves and flowers to advantage. Accompanying this was a spike of a fine
-variety of _Odontoglossum Pescatorei_, with flowers measuring three and
-a half inches across. Mr. Macdonald informs us that this spike was
-produced from a plant with small bulbs, and he expects, as the plant
-gets stronger, that it will produce larger flowers. There was also in
-flower at The Woodlands a grand specimen of _Camarotis purpurea_, with
-about 100 spikes of its pretty rosy pink flowers fully open.--B. S. W.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---Silently corrected a few palpable typos.
-
---Added arabic page numbers to non-plate pages.
-
---In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Orchid Album, Volume 1, by
-Robert Warner and Benjamin Samuel Williams and Thomas Moore
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Orchid Album, Volume 1, by
-Robert Warner and Benjamin Samuel Williams and Thomas Moore
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Orchid Album, Volume 1
- Comprising coloured figures and descriptions of new, rare,
- and beautiful Orchidaceous Plants
-
-Author: Robert Warner
- Benjamin Samuel Williams
- Thomas Moore
-
-Illustrator: John Nugent Fitch
-
-Release Date: July 18, 2017 [EBook #55145]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORCHID ALBUM, VOLUME 1 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Carol Spears and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="The Orchid Album, Volume I" width="600" height="800" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1><span class="smallest">THE</span>
-<br />ORCHID ALBUM,</h1>
-<p class="center"><span class="smallest">COMPRISING</span>
-<br />COLOURED FIGURES AND DESCRIPTIONS
-<br /><span class="smallest">OF</span>
-<br /><span class="smaller">NEW, RARE, AND BEAUTIFUL</span>
-<br /><span class="large">ORCHIDACEOUS PLANTS.</span></p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="smaller">CONDUCTED BY</span>
-<br />ROBERT WARNER, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
-<br /><span class="small"><span class="sc">Author of SELECT ORCHIDACEOUS PLANTS</span>,</span>
-<br /><span class="smallest">AND</span>
-<br />BENJAMIN SAMUEL WILLIAMS, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
-<br /><span class="small"><span class="sc">Author of the ORCHID-GROWERS&rsquo; MANUAL, etc.</span></span></p>
-<p class="center"><span class="sc">The Botanical Descriptions by</span> THOMAS MOORE, F.L.S., F.R.H.S.,
-<br /><span class="small"><span class="sc">CURATOR of the CHELSEA BOTANIC GARDENS</span>.</span></p>
-<p class="center"><i>THE COLOURED FIGURES BY JOHN NUGENT FITCH, F.L.S.</i></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center"><span class="large"><b>VOLUME I.</b></span></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">LONDON:</span>
-<br /><span class="sc">Published by B. S. Williams</span>,
-<br /><span class="smallest">AT THE</span>
-<br /><span class="small">VICTORIA AND PARADISE NURSERIES, UPPER HOLLOWAY, N.</span>
-<br /><span class="smallest">MDCCCLXXXII.</span></p>
-</div>
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">DEDICATED</span>
-<br />BY SPECIAL PERMISSION
-<br /><span class="smallest">TO</span>
-<br /><span class="large"><b><i>H.R.H. The Princess of Wales,</i></b></span>
-<br /><span class="smallest">BY</span>
-<br /><span class="smaller">HER ROYAL HIGHNESS&rsquo;</span>
-<br /><span class="jr"><span class="smaller">Very obedient and humble Servants,</span></span>
-<br /><span class="jr"><span class="smaller">ROBERT WARNER,</span></span>
-<br /><span class="jr"><span class="smaller">BENJAMIN S. WILLIAMS.</span></span></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_i">i</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="h2line1">PREFACE.</span></h2>
-<p>The great advances which have been made within the last few years in the
-introduction and the cultivation of Exotic Orchids, have suggested the desirability
-of devoting a monthly publication to the illustration of the best forms of these
-singular and captivating aristocratic plants, and also to the explanation of the most
-successful methods of growing them, its object being to supply such information
-concerning them as the Orchid Grower may be likely to find useful in directing
-his purchases, and in suggesting the various points of discreet and masterly
-management. Moreover, we have found that figures of the better varieties of
-Orchids are much in request.</p>
-<p>These considerations have induced us to commence the publication of the
-<span class="sc">Orchid Album</span>, in the confident expectation that we shall meet with sufficient
-support and encouragement to enable us to continue it, and, so far as our experience
-goes, we have no reason to feel disappointed, for we find that Orchid growers, both
-amateur and professional, are taking a marked interest not only in the plates but
-also in the cultural notes.</p>
-<p>In regard to the subjects for illustration, we hope in due course to figure not
-only the typical form of all the more popular and interesting species, but also the
-leading varieties, when they prove sufficiently distinct and meritorious. It is for
-these that we anticipate our subscribers and readers will most anxiously look.</p>
-<p>Being of Royal Quarto size, the pages of the Album are sufficiently large to
-enable the artist to produce ample and intelligible portraits of the plants without
-their becoming cumbersome; and, as they will be drawn and coloured in the best
-style, we confidently hope they will prove to be acceptable to the lovers and
-growers of Orchids generally. Thus we trust we may be permitted to lay before
-our patrons an acceptable Annual Album of Floral Pictures, which will be, at once,
-welcomed both to the Drawing-room and the Library.</p>
-<p>The work has been commenced in deference to the urgent representations of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_ii">ii</span>
-many of the leading cultivators of these remarkable and fascinating plants, who
-have pointed out to us the want which we are now endeavouring to meet. The
-great advantage and pleasure which Orchid Growers have derived from the publication
-of such illustrated works as the <i>Select Orchidaceous Plants</i>, and such practical
-instructions as are given in the <i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, lead us to believe that
-there exists a desire and a taste for further Orchidic literature, which we trust
-the <span class="sc">Orchid Album</span> may in some considerable degree supply. Our chief aim will
-be to give authentic information as to the nomenclature of the plants, and to
-disseminate correct instructions in regard to their cultural requirements. The finer
-new Orchids, as well as the older meritorious species and varieties, will be figured
-with equal fidelity, and described with equal accuracy. We shall at all times feel
-grateful to those Amateurs or Trade growers who may give us information as to the
-flowering either of novelties or of remarkably fine forms of the older kinds, especially
-if they are such as will be suitable for figuring.</p>
-<p>The Annual Volumes will consist of the twelve Monthly Parts issued up to June
-in each year, when the volume will be completed by the publication of a Title Page
-and Index.</p>
-<p><span class="lr"><span class="small">B. S. WILLIAMS.</span></span></p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0"><span class="sc">Victoria and Paradise Nurseries,</span></p>
-<p class="t2"><span class="sc">Upper Holloway, London, N.,</span></p>
-<p class="t4"><i>June 1st, 1882</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_iii">iii</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="h2line1">INDEX TO PLATES.</span></h2>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt> <span class="small">PLATE</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">A&Euml;RIDES LOBBII, <i>Hort. Veitch</i></span><a href="#fig21">21</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ANGR&AElig;CUM EBURNEUM, <i>Du Pet.-Th.</i></span><a href="#fig41">41</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig19">19</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig18">18</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CALANTHE VEITCHII, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig31">31</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CATTLEYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII, <i>Lind. et Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig16">16</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA, <i>Williams et Moore</i></span><a href="#fig3">3</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CATTLEYA MORGAN&AElig;, <i>Williams et Moore</i></span><a href="#fig6">6</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS, <i>Lem.</i></span><a href="#fig33">33</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CATTLEYA TRIAN&AElig;, <i>Lind. et Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig45">45</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CATTLEYA VELUTINA, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig26">26</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">C&OElig;LOGYNE MASSANGEANA, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig29">29</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CYMBIDIUM PARISHII, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig25">25</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig37">37</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCEANUM, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig22">22</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig36">36</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI, <i>Low</i></span><a href="#fig8">8</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM, <i>Moore</i></span><a href="#fig20">20</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig38">38</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig13">13</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">DENDROBIUM SUPERBUM, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig42">42</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS, <i>Hort.</i></span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&AElig;LIA ANCEPS DAWSONI, <i>Anders.</i></span><a href="#fig44">44</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&AElig;LIA ELEGANS ALBA, <i>Williams et Moore</i></span><a href="#fig30">30</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&AElig;LIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII, <i>Hort.</i></span><a href="#fig9">9</a>-10</dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&AElig;LIA SCHR&Ouml;DERII, <i>Williams et Moore</i></span><a href="#fig2">2</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&AElig;LIA XANTHINA, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig23">23</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA C&OElig;RULESCENS, <i>Hort.</i></span><a href="#fig24">24</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig5">5</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">MILTONIA CUNEATA, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig46">46</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR&AElig;, <i>Batem.</i></span><a href="#fig47">47</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR&AElig; FLAVEOLUM, <i>Williams et Moore</i></span><a href="#fig43">43</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig35">35</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig27">27</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ODONTOGLOSSUM KRAMERI, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig40">40</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR, <i>Hook.</i></span><a href="#fig1">1</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ONCIDIUM GARDNERI, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig12">12</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ONCIDIUM H&AElig;MATOCHILUM, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig32">32</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">PAPHINIA CRISTATA, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig34">34</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig17">17</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">PHAL&AElig;NOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA, <i>Hort.</i></span><a href="#fig11">11</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">PHAL&AElig;NOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig39">39</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">PROMEN&AElig;A CITRINA, <i>Don.</i></span><a href="#fig7">7</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA, <i>Hort.</i></span><a href="#fig14">14</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">VANDA C&OElig;RULESCENS, <i>Griff.</i></span><a href="#fig48">48</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">VANDA PARISHII, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig15">15</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI, <i>Lem.</i></span><a href="#fig28">28</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_iv">iv</div>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="h2line1">INDEX TO NOTES AND SYNONYMS.</span></h2>
-<dl class="index">
-<dt> <span class="small">UNDER PLATE</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">A&euml;rides Fieldingii, Dr. Ainsworth&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">A&euml;rides Leeanum, Mr. Law-Schofield&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig37">37</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">A&euml;rides odoratum majus, Mrs. Arbuthnot&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig14">14</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">A&euml;rides Schr&ouml;derii, Dr. Ainsworth&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">A&euml;rides suavissimum, Mr. Coates&rsquo;</span><a href="#fig18">18</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Angr&aelig;cum eburneum virens</span><a href="#fig41">41</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Angr&aelig;cum sesquipedale, Mr. Coates&rsquo;</span><a href="#fig18">18</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Angr&aelig;cum superbum, <i>Du Pet.-Th.</i></span><a href="#fig41">41</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Bletia xanthina, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig23">23</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Bollea c&oelig;lestis, as a block plant</span><a href="#fig40">40</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Bolleas, Mr. Gair&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig17">17</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya Dowiana, Mr. Dodgson&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig19">19</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya Dowiana, Mr. Lee&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig2">2</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya gigas, Mr. Bockett&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig6">6</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya gigas, Mr. Lee&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig2">2</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya labiata Lindigiana, <i>Karst.</i></span><a href="#fig45">45</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya labiata Trian&aelig;, <i>Duch.</i></span><a href="#fig45">45</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya Leopoldii, <i>Hort. Versch.</i></span><a href="#fig16">16</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya superba, Sir T. Lawrence&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig3">3</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya Trian&aelig;, Mr. Wright&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig41">41</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya Trian&aelig; Dodgsoni</span><a href="#fig40">40</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cattleya Trian&aelig; Osmani</span><a href="#fig40">40</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cymbidium eburneum, correction</span><a href="#fig29">29</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cypripedium barbatum superbum, Mr. Dodgson&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cypripedium insigne, Mrs Haywood&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig27">27</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cypripedium Spicerianum, Mr. Bockett&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig19">19</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cypripedium villosum, Mr. Wyatt&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig42">42</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Cyrtochilum citrinum, <i>Hook.</i></span><a href="#fig1">1</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium Ainsworthii, <i>Moore</i></span><a href="#fig20">20</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium Falconeri, Marquis of Lothian&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig44">44</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium Findleyanum, Mr. Bowring&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig32">32</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium Hillii, Mr. Wyatt&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig42">42</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium macranthum, <i>Hook.</i></span><a href="#fig42">42</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium macrophyllum, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig42">42</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium nobile, a three-lipped</span><a href="#fig48">48</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium superbum (macrophyllum), Prince of Wales&rsquo;</span><a href="#fig36">36</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrobium Wardianum, Mr. Salamon&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig44">44</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Dendrochilum filiforme, Mr. Hill&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig15">15</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Epidendrum elatius, var., <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig45">45</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Epidendrum labiatum Trian&aelig;, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig45">45</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Epidendrum nemorale, Sir T. Lawrence&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig3">3</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&aelig;lia anceps Dawsoni, Mr. Dodgson&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig28">28</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&aelig;lia autumnalis atrorubens, Mr. Chamberlain&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig28">28</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&aelig;lia Dominiana rosea, <i>Hort. Veitch</i></span><a href="#fig12">12</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&aelig;lia elegans prasiata</span><a href="#fig40">40</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">L&aelig;lia Philbrickiana, <i>Hort. Veitch</i></span><a href="#fig5">5</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Limodorum eburneum, <i>Bory.</i></span><a href="#fig41">41</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Masdevallia chim&aelig;ra, Dr. Ainsworth&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig26">26</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Masdevallia Harryana, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig24">24</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Masdevallia Lindeni, <i>Hook.</i></span><a href="#fig24">24</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Masdevallia Lindeni Harryana, <i>Andr&eacute;</i></span><a href="#fig24">24</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Maxillaria citrina, <i>Lyons</i></span><a href="#fig7">7</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Maxillaria cristata, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig34">34</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Miltonia speciosa, <i>Kl.</i></span><a href="#fig46">46</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;, Dr. Ainsworth&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig26">26</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig; flaveolum, Mr. Hardy&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig34">34</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig; regin&aelig;</span><a href="#fig48">48</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum Bluntii, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig47">47</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum crispum, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig47">47</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum crispum flaveolum, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig43">43</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum Londesboroughianum, Mr. Law-Schofield&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig27">27</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum Roezlii, Mr. Todd&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig43">43</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossum vexillarium, Mr. Bull&rsquo;s autumn-flowering variety</span><a href="#fig23">23</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Odontoglossums at Trentham</span><a href="#fig43">43</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Oncidium luridum purpuratum, <i>Lodd.</i></span><a href="#fig32">32</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Oncidium speciosum, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig46">46</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, Dr. Ainsworth&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig26">26</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, Mr. Dodgson&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, Mr. Dorman&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig40">40</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, Mr. Hardy&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, Baron Schr&ouml;der&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig22">22</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids at Arnot Hill</span><a href="#fig15">15</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids at Ferguslie</span><a href="#fig18">18</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids at Manchester, 1881</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids in Belgium, Dr. Boddaert&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig1">1</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids in Belgium, M. D. Massange&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig16">16</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids from Dr. Paterson</span><a href="#fig45">45</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, from Perth, N.B.</span><a href="#fig48">48</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, raised blinds for</span><a href="#fig35">35</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Orchids, shading</span><a href="#fig30">30</a>, <a href="#fig35">35</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Pescatoreas, Mr. Gair&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig17">17</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Phal&aelig;nopsids, Mr. Bockett&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig11">11</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Phal&aelig;nopsis intermedia Portei, Baron Schr&ouml;der&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig22">22</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Phal&aelig;nopsis Stuartiana, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig39">39</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Restrepia antennifera, M. D. Massange&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig16">16</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Rodriquezia candida, <i>Batem.</i></span><a href="#fig18">18</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Sphagnum, best kind for Odontoglots</span><a href="#fig43">43</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Trichopilia suavis, <i>Lindl.</i></span><a href="#fig14">14</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Vanda Cathcartii, M. D. Massange&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig16">16</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Vanda c&oelig;rulea, Marquis of Lothian&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig17">17</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Vanda Lowii, Sir T. Lawrence&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig3">3</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Vanda suavis, Dr. Ainsworth&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Vanda suavis, Mr. Dodgson&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig4">4</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Vanda tricolor, Mr. Broome&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig25">25</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Vanda tricolor planilabris, M. Massange&rsquo;s</span><a href="#fig16">16</a></dt>
-<dt><span class="lr">Zygopetalum Klabochorum, <i>Rchb. f.</i></span><a href="#fig17">17</a></dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/p_0008.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1207" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 1.</span>
- ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="h2line1">ONCIDIUM CONCOLOR.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig1">Plate 1</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the Organ Mountains of Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> small, tufted, ovate or ovate-oblong, compressed, somewhat
-furrowed, two-leaved. <i>Leaves</i> subcoriaceous, oblong-linear or ligulate, acute, bright green.
-<i>Scape</i> radical, springing from the base of the young pseudobulbs, drooping, furnished
-with small bracts. <i>Flowers</i> yellow, racemose; <i>sepals</i> (dorsal) ovate-lanceolate or obovate,
-acute, the lateral ones smaller, lance-shaped, and united behind the lip for about half
-their length; <i>petals</i> obovate, acute, somewhat undulated, about as long as the sepals;
-<i>lip</i> (labellum) large and prominent, roundish subpanduriform, emarginate, somewhat
-clawed, furnished with a pair of plates or lamell&aelig; (bilamellate) at the base, of a clear
-yellow colour, as are the sepals and petals. <i>Column</i> about half as long as the petals,
-with a projecting tooth on each side.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Oncidium concolor</span>, <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 3752; <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Folia Orchidacea</i>,
-Art. <i>Oncidium</i>, No. 65 (excl. syn. Klotzsch); <i>Reichenbach fil.</i> in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales
-Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi. 731.; <i>Carri&egrave;re</i>, in <i>Revue Horticole</i>, 1881, 30, with tab.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cyrtochilum citrinum</span>, <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 4454.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The brilliant little plant here figured&mdash;a representation in the tribe <i>Vande&aelig;</i>, of
-the great genus <i>Oncidium</i>&mdash;belongs to the group of Oncids which Lindley named
-<i>Tetrapetala micropetala</i>, in which two of the sepals are united so that the petaloid
-organs, as distinguished from the lip, are reduced to four in number (<i>tetrapetala</i>),
-and at the same time the petals, which are about equal in size to the sepals, are
-comparatively small by comparison with the remaining organ.</p>
-<p>This species, although not new, was until recently extremely rare, and was, indeed,
-seldom met with in collections; now, however, the little gem is very plentiful,
-thanks to the indefatigable zeal of our collectors, so that growers who do not possess
-it may obtain it at a very small cost. The species is one of the most compact-growing
-and beautiful of the <i>Oncidiums</i>, producing, as it does, from the base of the
-new bulbs, many-flowered drooping spikes of rich yellow blossoms. It is an excellent
-subject for planting in a pan or basket to be suspended from the roof of the
-house, where the brightly-coloured flowers produce a charming effect; indeed, we do
-not know of any Orchid which has a better appearance when grown in this way.</p>
-<p><i>Oncidium concolor</i> succeeds best in a compost of peat with a little sphagnum
-moss added, and with plenty of good drainage. We have grown it most successfully
-in small pans, but it can be cultivated either in a basket or on a block. It would
-<span class="pb" id="Page_3">3</span>
-succeed equally well in a pot, but the drooping character of the flower-spikes renders
-it a most fitting subject for growing in either of the above-named receptacles, and
-for suspension from the roof. As to temperature, we find it succeeds best in the
-Odontoglossum-house during the summer months. After it has flowered, and while
-it is making its growth, a copious supply of water should be given to it, always
-keeping the soil moist until the growth of the bulbs is completed. When it has
-finished its growth, it should be removed to the Cattleya-house, where it should be
-kept moderately dry until it produces its spikes about March or April.</p>
-<p>For exhibition purposes this is a most valuable little plant, being easy of
-cultivation, distinct in colour, and flowering during the principal exhibition months,
-May and June; its long lasting quality is also a great point in its favour. In
-order to preserve the flowers for a considerable time, they should be kept free from
-damp, for if allowed to get wet they soon become spotted, and fade, but when kept
-in this way, they will last at least six or seven weeks. The plant is altogether a
-most valuable Orchid, and as it takes up but little room, we recommend growers to
-procure a good stock of it, as its effect when suspended among other flowering
-Orchids is charming.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Orchids in Belgium.</span>&mdash;When in Ghent a few days ago, I had the good fortune
-to receive an invitation to view the celebrated collection of Dr. Boddaert of that
-city. The collection is a very extensive one, and the plants are exceedingly well
-grown and healthy. There was a good show of flowering Orchids, among which
-may be mentioned:&mdash;<i>Trichopilia crispa marginata</i> with forty-two expanded flowers,
-a marvel of cultivation; <i>Odontoglossum Phal&aelig;nopsis</i> with twenty-six flowers, a fine
-well-grown plant; <i>Cypripedium Argus</i> with six flower spikes; the new <i>Trichopilia
-suavis alba</i>, of which we hope to give a plate later on; <i>Anguloa Ruckerii sanguinea</i>
-with several flowers; also the rare <i>Nanodes Medus&aelig;</i>, with <i>Odontoglossums</i>, <i>Vandas</i>,
-<i>Masdevallias</i>, &amp;c., in great variety.</p>
-<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">H. Williams.</span></span></p>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/p_0011.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1168" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 2.</span>
- L&AElig;LIA SCHR&Ouml;DERII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="h2line1">L&AElig;LIA SCHR&Ouml;DERII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig2">Plate 2</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Bahia.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> (or pseudobulbs) club-shaped, about a foot and a half high,
-monophyllous, furrowed when mature. <i>Leaves</i> coriaceous, oblong, acute, broad to the
-base, light green. <i>Scape</i> three to four-flowered, issuing from a terminal oblong
-compressed bract, an inch wide and five inches long. <i>Flowers</i> large, subhorizontal,
-about seven inches across, delicately coloured, with a prettily veined lip; <i>sepals</i>
-lanceolate, reflexed, three-fourths of an inch wide, white; <i>petals</i> convex, ovate,
-narrowed to the base, somewhat crispy at the edge, pure white, scarcely as long as
-the lip; <i>lip</i> (labellum) membranaceous, three-lobed, the lateral lobes convolute around
-the column, yellow outside, striped with deeper yellow veins, the middle lobe ovate,
-obtuse, undulated, the anterior portion and margin white, the mouth veined with
-magenta-rose, the disk naked, and the tubulose basal portion deep yellow, veined
-with magenta. <i>Column</i> much shorter than the lateral lobes of the lip.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia Schr&ouml;derii</span>, <i>supra</i>.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This plant belongs to that tribe of the Orchid family which is called <i>Epidendre&aelig;</i>,
-and of which the genus <i>Epidendrum</i> is regarded as the type. This group
-is known by its waxy pollen-masses, which are attached to a distinct caudicle, but
-bear no separable stigmatic gland as occurs in the tribe <i>Vande&aelig;</i>. The genus is
-closely related to <i>Cattleya</i>, and contains some of the finest ornaments of our
-Orchid-houses.</p>
-<p>The subject of our present illustration is a new and most beautiful Orchid,
-now figured and described for the first time. It is closely allied to <i>L&aelig;lia grandis</i>,
-but is distinct from that species, inasmuch as the sepals and petals are white,
-whereas those of <i>L. grandis</i> are of a nankeen yellow. It is named in honour of
-Baron Henry Schr&ouml;der, an enthusiastic admirer of this handsome class of plants. The
-species flowered for the first time this year, in the Victoria and Paradise Nurseries.</p>
-<p>The flowers are produced in May and June, three or four together, on spikes
-which are produced from the apex of the new bulbs; they have a delicate and
-pleasing appearance, the sepals and petals being pure white, while the lip is white,
-striped with rose, throat deep yellow, veined with magenta. It should be kept
-free from damp when in flower, as the blossoms being of a delicate nature, soon
-spot and go off; but kept in this way free from moisture they will last about four
-weeks in a fresh and perfect state.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<p>In growth the plant somewhat resembles <i>L. purpurata</i>, the bulbs and foliage
-being about eighteen inches in height, and of a light green colour. It succeeds
-well grown in the Cattleya-house in pots filled with peat and a little sphagnum
-moss, over plenty of drainage. It should receive a moderate supply of water at
-the root during the growing season, and should never be allowed to get thoroughly
-dry. When it has made its growth it should be allowed to rest, and at that time
-should be kept rather dry, only giving it sufficient water to prevent it from
-shrivelling.</p>
-<p><i>L&aelig;lias</i> are subject to the attacks of white scale, but this can easily be got rid
-of by sponging with clean water. Thrips sometimes attack the young growths, and
-if allowed to increase, soon disfigure the leaves.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cattleya gigas and C. Dowiana.</span>&mdash;These <i>Cattleyas</i> have been considered to be
-shy-flowering species, and we have sometimes found them to be so in our own
-experience, but we are beginning to change our opinion on this subject. No doubt
-there are some plants that grow and flower more freely than others, but a great deal
-depends on the conditions in which they are placed and the treatment they receive. I
-recently had the pleasure of visiting the collection of W. Lee, Esq., of Leatherhead,
-which in time will be one of the finest to be seen in this country. The Estate
-is situated in an open part of the country, and the Orchid-houses are built on the
-side of a hill where they get the full light and sun, while they are sheltered from
-the driving winds; these houses are, indeed, all that can be desired, the requisitions
-of the various classes of plants having been well studied. Every accommodation is
-provided for those kinds, such as <i>Cattleya gigas</i> and <i>C. Dowiana</i>, that are difficult to
-bloom. These two were splendidly in flower, and are most lovely and distinct kinds;
-the flowers of <i>C. gigas</i> were nearly nine inches in diameter, the sepals and petals of
-the purest dark rosy colour, and the lip a fine rich dark crimson magenta. <i>C.
-Dowiana</i> was also very fine and attractive in colour, the sepals and petals being of
-a nankeen yellow, and the lip of a rich dark purple, elegantly pencilled and striped
-with lines of gold. We hope at some future time to give our readers a plate of
-the fine variety of <i>C. gigas</i> above referred to. Both these species are here grown
-as near the light as possible, and the treatment they receive is, first to induce a
-vigorous growth, and then to give them a good rest after the growth is completed,
-at the same time keeping them well exposed to the light, and giving them merely
-sufficient water to prevent them from shrivelling, a more ample supply of water being
-given as soon as they show signs of flowering. There was also in this collection
-another species that is generally considered difficult to grow, namely, <i>Vanda teres</i>, of
-which there were three plants which had been blooming very finely. When cultivated
-as these are, they well repay all the trouble taken with them. These are grown at
-one end of the house, without any shade.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/p_0014.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1144" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 3.</span>
- CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="h2line1">CATTLEYA MENDELII GRANDIFLORA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig3">Plate 3</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the United States of Columbia.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> oblong, club-shaped, furrowed when mature, twelve to eighteen
-inches high. <i>Leaves</i> solitary coriaceous, ligulate-oblong, acute, dark green above,
-paler beneath. <i>Scape</i> three to four-flowered, issuing from a terminal oblong compressed
-bract, which is three to four inches long, and an inch broad. <i>Flowers</i> very
-large and exceedingly handsome, measuring eight inches across; <i>sepals</i> an inch
-wide, lanceolate, recurved, white; <i>petals</i> spreading, clawed, broadly ovate, measuring
-nearly three inches across, plane towards the base prettily frilled in the anterior
-portion, the apex recurved, white, with a scarcely perceptible tint of blush near
-the edge; <i>lip</i> obovate emarginate, three and a quarter inches long, the basal half
-entire, rolled over the column, the anterior portion expanded and beautifully fringed,
-about two inches in breadth and rather more in depth, the apical half occupied
-with a solid blotch of rich magenta rose, passing to white at the frilled edge, the
-side portions white, the disk and throat of a delicate tint of nankeen yellow, the
-extreme base white, with numerous divergent lines of magenta rose, a few of which
-(about two) run out to join the blotch at the tip of the anterior lobe. <i>Column</i>
-about half as long as the convolute base of the lip, club-shaped, decurved, semiterete,
-with a rounded keel at the back.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya Mendelii grandiflora</span>, <i>supra.</i></p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>When <i>Cattleya Mendelii</i> was first flowered by S. Mendel, Esq., some few years
-ago, many botanists were of opinion that it was not sufficiently dissimilar from, but
-only a variety of, <i>C. Trian&aelig;</i>. Since that time it has been flowered in many different
-collections with but little variation of character, and, as we think, has fully vindicated
-its right, whether as a species or race, to be regarded as a distinct Orchid
-of first-rate merit.</p>
-<p>The subject of our plate is a gigantic variety of the <i>Cattleya Mendelii</i>, which
-has just flowered in our own collection. It proves to be in every way larger, and
-altogether superior, to the old type, the flowers having much more substance, and
-being of better form, which results from the greater width of the lip and petals.
-The sepals and petals are white, the latter being very broad and of good substance,
-while the lip is broad and well fringed, pure white in its upper part, with a
-large bright magenta patch at the front part, and the throat is orange, with
-reddish crimson veins, which stand out in fine contrast against the pure white of
-the remaining portions of the flower. It produces as many as four flowers on a
-spike, each flower measuring over eight inches across, and the flowers are thrown
-<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span>
-well up above the foliage, and thus produce the grandest appearance we have as yet
-seen in any <i>Cattleya</i>.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya Mendelii</i> succeeds well in a compost of peat, with the addition of a
-little sphagnum moss, and requires good drainage. We have found it to do best
-in pots, with the plant well elevated above the rim, but it can be grown with
-success either on a block or in a basket suspended from the roof of the house.
-The temperature of the Cattleya-house suits it best.</p>
-<p>This is a grand plant for exhibition or decorative purposes, as the pure white
-and magenta of its flowers are exceedingly effective amongst the other species of
-<i>Cattleya</i> which flower at the same time of year. The flowering season is May and
-June, after which time <i>C. Mendelii</i> begins to make its growth. It should then
-receive a moderate supply of water&mdash;not too much, as an over bountiful supply is
-apt to cause the young growths to rot. After the annual growths are completed
-the plants should be gradually dried off, only giving them sufficient water to keep
-them from shrivelling.</p>
-<p>The species of <i>Cattleya</i> are all subject to white scale and thrips. These insect
-pests may, however, be easily removed by careful sponging, either with water or a
-little insecticide; they should be cleaned off as soon as discovered, as if allowed to
-establish themselves they disfigure the leaves and bulbs, and so spoil the appearance
-of the plants. Cleanliness and good cultivation are the chief points to be considered
-in the successful keeping of <i>Cattleyas</i>.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Vanda Lowii</span>, &amp;c.&mdash;One often hears that <i>Vanda Lowii</i> does not bloom until it
-attains a large size. This, however, is erroneous, for we have flowered it when not
-more than two feet high; and we have also seen a plant of about the same
-size in the collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., with a flower spike some four
-or five feet long, in full beauty, with its two bright orange-yellow flowers at the base,
-the rest of the blossoms being of a bright brownish-crimson colour. This was a most
-extraordinary spike for so small a plant. When the specimens attain a larger size
-they often produce six of these long spikes, which extend to seven feet in length.
-We have one now showing this number of spikes, but the plant is fully five feet
-high. We were glad to see in this collection a grand mass of <i>Epidendrum nemorale
-majus</i>, which is figured in the first series of Warner&rsquo;s <i>Select Orchidaceous Plants</i>,
-but we never expected to see such a specimen as that in the collection of Sir Trevor
-Lawrence, which must have been three or four feet across, and had eighteen spikes of
-its beautiful rosy and mauve-coloured flowers. This plant was well worth going to
-see, as were many others: indeed, the fame of this collection is so widely spread
-that it is almost needless to comment upon it; suffice it to say, that it is the
-finest and best kept collection we know of. At the time of our visit we were
-pleased to see some fine plants of <i>Cattleya superba</i> with their splendid deep rose
-and crimson flowers; this is one of the most distinct and beautiful of all <i>Cattleyas</i>,
-and had been grown in the East India House, suspended from the roof.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/p_0017.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1144" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 4.</span>
- EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="h2line1">EPIDENDRUM VITELLINUM MAJUS.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig4">Plate 4</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Mexico.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> ovate, clustered, two-leaved. <i>Leaves</i> oblong-ligulate, acute,
-sheathing at the base. <i>Scape</i> erect, six to nine inches high, racemose, many-flowered,
-longer than the leaves. <i>Flowers</i> brilliant orange-scarlet, nearly two inches across,
-much larger than the typical form; <i>sepals</i> spreading; <i>petals</i> flat, elliptic, somewhat
-broader than the sepals, spreading, lanceolate, acute; <i>lip</i> clawed, linear, abruptly
-acute, with a bifoveate (two-holed) callosity below the middle, deep yellow passing
-to orange-scarlet at the tip. <i>Column</i> parallel with and nearly half the length of
-the lip, to which it is adnate towards the base, the anther-bed marginate in front.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Epidendrum vitellinum majus</span>, <i>of gardens</i>.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The original form of <i>Epidendrum vitellinum</i>, of which a good though pale-coloured
-figure will be found in the <i>Botanical Register</i> for 1840 (t. 35), is one of
-the most brilliant of the <i>Epidendre&aelig;</i>, on account of its remarkable fiery colour,
-which makes it invaluable for contrasting with other subjects, both in the Orchid-house,
-in the jardini&egrave;re, or in the bouquet. The same colour, or something near it, occurs in
-a few other Orchids, which are equally valuable from a decorative point of view,
-as for example in <i>L&aelig;lia cinnabarina</i>, <i>L&aelig;lia harpophylla</i>, and <i>Ada aurantiaca</i>, all
-of them being plants, which, under favourable conditions, yield a brilliant effect. The
-subject of our plate has the advantage of producing larger and more showy flowers
-than its type, and to this extent is the more desirable of the two for the house-stage,
-or exhibition table.</p>
-<p>Until within the last few years this plant was very rare, but having been
-imported in large quantities it is now to be found in every collection, however
-limited its pretensions. The bright colour of its orange-scarlet flowers, produced in
-considerable numbers on upright spikes, renders it a most striking and distinct species.
-We have known the flowers to last as long as twelve weeks in perfection; in fact,
-we have on several occasions exhibited a plant of it at as many as six different
-successive exhibitions. Mixed with other Orchids it has a most telling effect; and a
-well-flowered specimen once seen by a novice is likely to produce a lasting impression.
-In the Broomfield collection it is used very largely in association with Odontoglossums,
-and the effect of the orange-scarlet flowers amongst the numerous spikes
-of <i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</i>, and other species, is charming.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<p>We have found this <i>Epidendrum</i> to do well in the Odontoglossum-house in
-a compost of peat and sphagnum moss. It does equally well in a pot or in a
-basket, and should receive a fair supply of water while growing. The plant seems
-to revel in a good amount of sunlight, but it must be kept from the burning rays
-of the sun by a slight shading, too much sunshine being apt to make the foliage
-become blotched and sickly-looking.</p>
-<p>The variety <i>majus</i> blooms at a different time of the year from the original
-species, which has the flowers much smaller, and which blooms in August and
-September from the young growths; whereas the variety <i>majus</i> flowers from the tips
-of the bulbs of the previous year&rsquo;s growth. There are several forms of the plant,
-some with flowers much larger and brighter than others; indeed, the one here
-figured is not so large as some that were flowered years ago, which may be due to
-the fact that they were old-established plants. We remember the late Mrs. Lawrence,
-of Ealing Park, exhibiting a remarkably strong specimen at one of the Chiswick shows,
-thirty-five years since, a perfect blaze of flower. S. Brunton, Esq., also exhibited a
-grand plant of a good variety a few years back; and C. W. Lea, Esq., Parkfield,
-Worcester, had a wonderful example in bloom, last year. These several plants were
-all part of the early importations.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">The Manchester Show of Orchids, June, 1881.</span>&mdash;The display of Orchids at
-the Manchester Exhibition was a very fine one, and no Orchid grower should have
-missed the sight. The specimens were truly marvellous, especially the sixteen plants
-shown by R. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn, amongst which were a <i>Vanda suavis</i> with
-about a dozen flower-spikes; <i>L&aelig;lia purpurata</i> and <i>Cattleya Warneri</i>, both wonderful
-specimens, as also was <i>Masdevallia Harryana</i>; <i>Cypripedium barbatum superbum</i>
-which had a hundred blooms upon it, and was not made up for the occasion, but
-had been grown on from a single plant; and <i>Dendrobium Wardianum</i> which was
-a magnificent plant. Great credit is due to Mr. Osman for his talent, in successfully
-cultivating so fine a collection. G. Hardy, Esq., of Timperley, exhibited some
-wonderful plants, especially of <i>Cattleyas</i>, <i>L&aelig;lias</i>, <i>Dendrobium thyrsiflorum</i>, <i>Oncidium
-Marshallianum</i>, <i>Odontoglossum vexillarium</i>, &amp;c. R. F. Ainsworth, Esq., M.D., also
-exhibited some fine specimens, especially <i>Vanda suavis</i>, <i>A&euml;rides Fieldingii</i>, and <i>A.
-Schr&ouml;derii</i>; these three are most extraordinary plants, and have been grown in the
-collection for eighteen years, which is a sufficient proof of what can be done by
-perseverance, and, moreover, gives one an idea how well Orchids can be grown and
-exhibited for many successive years. We have known these three specimens to be
-shown at the Manchester exhibitions and elsewhere for the past ten or fifteen years,
-and they are now in the finest possible condition, as they have always been, under
-the successful management of Mr. Mitchell. There were besides, other exhibitors
-whose specimens were well worthy of note.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig5">
-<img src="images/p_0020.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1043" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 5.</span>
- MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="h2line1">MASDEVALLIA SHUTTLEWORTHII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig5">Plate 5</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the United States of Colombia.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Rhizome</i> slender, slowly creeping. <i>Leaves</i> crowded, petiolate, the
-petiole with a sheathing scale at the base, the blade about equalling the petiole,
-two to three inches long, elliptic-oblong, acute, pale green, obscurely three to five-nerved.
-<i>Scapes</i> numerous, slender, as long as or longer than the petioles, green,
-with an ovate acuminate appressed bract at the top. <i>Flowers</i> yellowish, tinted with
-rose, rather large for the size of the plant; the perianth tube very short and
-swollen at the base; <i>dorsal sepal</i> of a pale yellowish red, indistinctly dotted with
-pale rosy red spots, and marked with from five to seven (or nine according to
-Reichenbach) longitudinal wine-coloured nerves, fully an inch long, sub-erect, concave
-or somewhat hooded, obovate, suddenly contracted into a tail two or three times
-its own length, the tail green below and becoming orange-yellow towards the tip;
-<i>lateral sepals</i> obliquely ovate, spreading, and decurved, thickly studded with deep
-red spots, and tapering off into a tail similar to that of the dorsal sepal; <i>petals</i>
-small, linear-oblong or ligulate, bilobed at the apex; <i>lip</i> very small, broadly oblong,
-recurved at the tip, with two keels or ridges running down the centre. <i>Column</i>
-short, three-toothed at the apex.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Masdevallia Shuttleworthii</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i> in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span> iii., 170;
-<i>Hooker fil.</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 6372.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>Of this interesting plant, one of a popular genus inhabiting the cool temperate
-humid regions of Northern and Western South America, Professor Reichenbach, by
-whom it was dedicated to Mr. Shuttleworth, one of Mr. W. Bull&rsquo;s collectors, remarks
-that it is &ldquo;rather a nice thing amongst <i>Masdevallias</i> of the second order of beauty.&rdquo;
-It was first flowered in 1878 by W. H. Punchard, Esq., of Poulett Lodge, Twickenham.
-Our figure was prepared from a plant which has bloomed in our own collection
-recently. We find it to be a very free-blooming species.</p>
-<p>The <i>Masdevallias</i> comprise many interesting species and varieties, some of very
-remarkable structure, and others with colours of extraordinary richness and brilliancy.
-Our present subject is not one of the most showy, but it may be ranked with the
-more curious of the species, and is certainly of a distinct and pleasing character,
-as is well represented in our Plate. The plant was discovered by Mr. Shuttleworth,
-when travelling for Mr. Bull, and by him it was first transmitted to Europe. Since
-then we have received it from the same country through our own collector, Mr.
-Carder. The <i>Masdevallias</i> are plentiful in their native habitats, but the difficulty of
-obtaining them in this country lies in the risks attending importation, which are
-mainly attributable to the fact that they have no thick fleshy bulbs to support them
-<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
-during their journey. We have heard of thousands of plants of this particular species
-having been sent off, but of these comparatively few have been received alive, so that
-unless some more successful means of introducing them into England can be found,
-it will always remain a rare plant.</p>
-<p><i>Masdevallia Shuttleworthii</i> is of free-blooming habit, and the flowers last a long
-time in perfection. It generally blossoms during the spring and summer months.
-The plants require but little room, as the foliage is of neat growth, and the whole
-height of the plant does not exceed from six to eight inches. The leaves are of a
-dark green colour and firm texture. The flower-scapes proceed from the young growth,
-and attain the height of about eight inches, the more conspicuous spreading long-tailed
-sepals being of a pleasing yellowish rose colour thickly marked with wine-red
-spots, while the petals and lip are small and inconspicuous.</p>
-<p>We find the plants grow well when potted in small pots or pans suspended from
-the roof, and filled with peat and sphagnum moss; but they require thorough drainage,
-since they need a liberal supply of water during summer. In the autumn and
-winter months they do not require so full a supply, but they must have sufficient
-to keep them moist. They thrive best in the same house with the <i>Odontoglots</i>,
-where they obtain shade, and are kept cool. None of the <i>Masdevallias</i> like heat,
-and most of them require the same kind of treatment. The house in which they
-are grown should have a north aspect, so that they may not get too much sun-heat,
-as this causes the leaves to become spotted, to the great disfigurement of the plant.</p>
-<p>Insects become a nuisance if allowed to accumulate on the plants. The thrips,
-which is one of their greatest insect enemies, constantly attacks them, and must be
-subdued by cleansing them frequently and thoroughly with a sponge and warm
-soft water.</p>
-<p>The propagation of <i>Masdevallias</i> is effected by dividing the plants, leaving a few
-old bulbs with a leading one in front. They are the easiest of all Orchids to
-increase, and are best divided up occasionally, as when the plants get too large
-they do not flower so freely. The most suitable time to perform this operation is
-just as they commence to make their growth. They should at first be put into
-small pots, and shifted into larger ones as they increase in size, and develope abundance
-of roots.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia Philbrickiana.</span>&mdash;This new Hybrid was exhibited at the Royal Horticultural
-Society, South Kensington, by the Messrs. Veitch and Sons. It was raised
-between <i>Cattleya Aclandi&aelig;</i> and <i>L&aelig;lia elegans</i>, partaking of the dwarf habit of
-<i>C. Aclandi&aelig;</i>. The plant grows about eight inches high, and produces its leaves in
-pairs, of a dark green colour, about four inches in length; from between these the
-flower-sheaths proceed. The sepals and petals are of a glossy purplish crimson-brown,
-spotted with darker spots; the lip is of a bright crimson, the basal part
-purple and white. It blooms in June and July, and will be a very useful addition
-to our collections.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig6">
-<img src="images/p_0023.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1180" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 6.</span>
- CATTLEYA MORGAN&AElig;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="h2line1">CATTLEYA MORGAN&AElig;.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig6">Plate 6</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the United States of Colombia.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> short, oblong or somewhat clavate, furrowed when mature,
-attaining with the leaves about eighteen inches in height. <i>Leaves</i> solitary, coriaceous,
-ligulate-oblong, acute, of a light green colour. <i>Scape</i> three to four-flowered, issuing
-from a terminal oblong compressed bract, which is about two and a half inches long.
-<i>Flowers</i> large and pleasing on account of their delicate colouring, about six inches
-across when expanded; <i>sepals</i> lanceolate, entire, three-fourths of an inch broad and
-about three inches long, recurved at the tip, white; <i>petals</i> spreading, clawed, broadly
-ovate, fully two inches across, the margin entire at the base and much undulated
-in the anterior portion, white; <i>lip</i> obovate, emarginate, about three inches long, the
-basal portion entire and rolled over the column, the anterior portion moderately
-expanded and beautifully frilled, white, like the rest of the flower, with a small
-blotch of pale magenta near the apex, but not quite extending to the margin,
-and stained on the disk with an obcordate blotch of clear yellow, passing into orange-yellow
-in the throat, the deeper portion being veined with yellow lines. <i>Column</i>
-concealed by the convolute base of the lip.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya Morgan&aelig;</span>, <i>supra</i>.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>One of the most chaste and charming of the summer-flowering <i>Cattleyas</i>, and
-quite distinct in aspect from all others in cultivation. We have great pleasure in
-dedicating it to Mrs. M. Morgan, of New York, who is a great admirer of this noble
-class of Orchidaceous plants, and, moreover, has a fine and valuable collection of
-them. The first specimen we bloomed produced ten flower spikes, and was exhibited
-at the Manchester Botanical and Horticultural Society&rsquo;s Show in June, 1879; the
-plant was the admiration of all who saw it, and was on that occasion awarded a
-First Class Certificate on account of its distinct and pleasing character.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya Morgan&aelig;</i> belongs to the same section of the genus as <i>C. Mendelii</i>,
-of which section there are many races or varieties, all of which are beautiful and
-rich in the colouring of the lip, some having the sepals and petals white, while
-in others they are of a rosy hue, more or less intense. The plant now before us
-grows about eighteen inches in height, and has light green foliage with a somewhat
-drooping habit. It produces its flowers freely, as many as four together on the
-spike. The sepals and petals are pure white; and the lip is white with a light
-magenta blotch near the apex, its throat orange colour, the incurved base white,
-and the edge beautifully fringed. The flowers are produced in May and June,
-and last from five to six weeks in perfection. It makes a fine subject for decorative
-purposes, since its pure white flowers form a charming contrast with the high-coloured
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-varieties of other species of <i>Cattleya</i>, of which there are many that come
-into bloom at about the same time.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya Morgan&aelig;</i> requires the same treatment as <i>C. Mendelii</i> and <i>C. Mossi&aelig;</i>,
-and will thrive well, grown either in a pot or basket, planted in good fibrous peat
-and sphagnum moss. It will also succeed on a block suspended from the roof. As
-in the case of the other <i>Cattleyas</i>, it prefers to have all the light possible, but to be
-just sufficiently shaded to keep off the direct rays of the sun. It must be borne
-in mind that the plants are found growing naturally on the branches and stems of
-trees in the forests, where they get some shade, and a free circulation of air,
-which it is of great benefit to secure, and which should be made a point of
-the utmost importance in the artificial cultivation of all Orchids, as of most other
-plants. It would be a great boon to cultivators if our collectors would note down
-and supply fuller and more precise information on these points, for although of course
-the natural conditions could not in all cases be carried out to the full extent, yet
-we should then be better able to imitate them, and thus supply the natural wants
-of the plants. In giving as much air and light as possible, however, cold draughts
-must be avoided, which may be effected by fixing the ventilators near the hot-water
-pipes, and should a cold wind prevail by giving air on the opposite side,
-always closing the house in good time. In summer water should be freely
-sprinkled about the tables and paths twice a day, namely, in the morning, and
-about three or four o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon. During the dull dark days of winter,
-very little moisture is required, but on warm days some water may be given to
-the plants, especially in springtime when the days begin to lengthen. Syringing
-should be avoided during the winter, except in the case of those on blocks, for
-a little dewing with the syringe during the day, will not hurt these, as the moisture
-quickly dries off. The water should always be used in a tepid state.</p>
-<p>One of the most important items in Orchid culture is cleanliness. Every plant
-should be cleansed as soon as any indications of insect life are perceived upon it,
-since there are Insecticides and other remedies sold to destroy all such pests.
-Cockroaches, Snails, and Woodlice are very troublesome, and should be well looked
-after at night when they come out to feed on the young shoots and flowers.
-Woodlice may be caught by laying down here and there traps, consisting of some
-moss, at night, or half potatos or turnips scooped out in the centre, and placed
-about in quiet nooks and corners, or on the pots; the woodlice will harbour under
-them, and may be caught and destroyed in the morning.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cattleya gigas.</span>&mdash;See note under Plate 2. We have since received a wonderfully
-grand flower of <i>Cattleya gigas</i> from the fine collection of J. S. Bockett, Esq.,
-of Stamford Hill; it is eight and a half inches in diameter; the sepals and petals
-are of a light rose colour, the lip three inches across, and three in length, of the
-richest crimson-magenta, margined with a lighter colour, and the throat partly
-magenta and partly orange. The spike bore four of these flowers.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig7">
-<img src="images/p_0026.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="994" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 7.</span>
- PROMEN&AElig;A CITRINA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="h2line1">PROMEN&AElig;A CITRINA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig7">Plate 7</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> small, ovate, tetragonal. <i>Leaves</i> three to four inches in
-length, oblong-ligulate, acute, tapering below into a narrow petiole, growing two
-together at the apex of the pseudobulb, of a pale green colour. <i>Scapes</i> two to
-three inches long, bearing largish ovate bracts in the upper part, and smaller bracts
-below, and terminated by a solitary deep yellow showy flower, measuring about an
-inch and a half across; <i>sepals</i> obovate, acute, concave or curving forwards at the
-tip, bright yellow; <i>petals</i> yellow, also converging, similar to the sepals in size,
-form, and colouring; <i>lip</i> larger and broader than the sepals and petals, spreading,
-three-lobed, the two lateral lobes erect, oblong obtuse, rising up on each side of the
-column, yellow spotted with red on the inner face, the front lobe plane, obovate,
-apiculate, unspotted yellow, with a prominent crest at its base. <i>Column</i> erect, semi-terete,
-incurved, stained in the front with brownish red.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Promen&aelig;a citrina</span>, <i>Don</i>, <i>Hortus Cantabrigiensis</i>, ed. 13, 720 (1845); <i>London</i>, <i>Hortus
-Britannicus Supp.</i> 618 (1850); <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Growers&rsquo; Manual</i>, ed. 4, 253,
-ed. 5, 281; <i>Rand</i>, <i>Orchids</i>, 377.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Maxillaria citrina</span>, <i>Lyons</i>, <i>Treatise on Orchidaceous Plants</i>, 176.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p><i>Promen&aelig;a</i> is a small genus of Orchids which was separated from <i>Maxillaria</i>
-about forty years ago (1843) by Lindley, who at the same time also dissociated
-from it the plants respectively referred to <i>Warrea</i>, <i>Paphinia</i>, <i>Lycaste</i>, and <i>Scuticaria</i>.
-Later on Reichenbach classed <i>Promen&aelig;a</i> as a section of <i>Zygopetalum</i>. Dr. Lindley
-distinguished the group of species which he referred to <i>Promen&aelig;a</i>, and which he
-regarded as fully entitled to generic rank, by the following peculiar features,
-namely, their spreading sepals, their three-lobed lip, crested or tuberculate at the
-base, their short semi-terete column, and their ovate glandule with four, that is
-two double, sessile pollen masses. The species then proposed were <i>P. stapelioides</i>,
-<i>P. xanthina</i>, <i>P. lentiginosa</i>, <i>P. Rollissonii</i>, and <i>P. graminea</i>. To these Reichenbach
-added <i>P. guttata</i> in 1856, and <i>P. microptera</i> in 1881. Neither of these
-authorities, so far as we can trace, refer to <i>P. citrina</i>; but, according to Don and
-Loudon, the plant was introduced to our gardens in 1840, though they attribute
-to it the erroneous habitat of Mexico. Our good friend, Professor Reichenbach,
-suggests that it is a garden name, sometimes applied to <i>P. Rollissonii</i> and sometimes
-to <i>P. guttata</i>; but it has long been recognised as a distinct plant by English and
-Continental Orchid growers, and is certainly different from the <i>P. Rollissonii</i> figured
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-by Dr. Lindley; nor does it correspond with the description of <i>P. guttata</i>, so far
-as the materials at hand enable us to judge.</p>
-<p>This, it will be seen, is a very neat-growing plant, the small tetragonal pseudobulbs
-slowly creeping over the surface of the blocks on which the plants are grown.
-It is, moreover, of small stature, the leaves, which grow in pairs from the top of
-the pseudobulbs, rarely exceeding three or four inches in height, and the flower-scapes
-attaining even less elevation. The flowers, which are rather large for so small
-a plant, being of a rich and brilliant colour, become rather effective; and though,
-of course, they do not compare at all in gorgeous beauty with those of many of
-the larger-flowered Orchids, they are by no means to be despised even from the
-decorative point of View; indeed, when grown on a block, as represented in the
-accompanying Plate, and suspended from the roof of the house, the plant forms a
-very pretty and distinct object, occupying, as it does, but a small space in which
-it displays much beauty and attractiveness. The bright orange-yellow flowers are,
-moreover, very freely produced, and if kept dry, continue for a long time in a fresh
-and pleasing condition.</p>
-<p>There is another species of the same habit, <i>Promen&aelig;a stapelioides</i>, which comes
-into bloom about the same time as this, and in which the flowers are spotted with
-dark purple, so that they appear to be nearly black. The contrast of these two
-when grown and flowered on the same block is very effective. In the noble collection
-of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., we saw a large pan-full of <i>P. citrina</i> growing
-freely, which had a very beautiful appearance, but we prefer to see the plant grown
-on a block, as in this manner the flowers hang downwards, and are shown off to
-much greater advantage. There are certain varieties to be occasionally met with,
-in which the flowers are without spots on the lip, but those which have this
-latter peculiarity are to be preferred, as the two colours afford a pleasant relief.</p>
-<p>Fibrous peat and sphagnum moss seem to suit the plant well when it is grown
-in either pots or pans; but when cultivated on blocks of wood, a little sphagnum
-moss only about its roots will be quite sufficient, though if grown in this latter
-way it requires a more liberal and more frequent supply of water, in order to
-keep the roots moist. We find the Cattleya-house to suit it best, and we grow
-it suspended against a wall at the end of the house, where it gets syringed in warm
-weather. The manner in which its blooms are produced may be seen from our
-Illustration, which is an excellent representation of the habit of the plant, not only
-as regards its general manner of growth, but also of its mode of flowering.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig8">
-<img src="images/p_0029.jpg" alt="" width="941" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 8.</span>
- CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="h2line1">CYPRIPEDIUM STONEI.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig8">Plate 8</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Borneo.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Terrestrial. <i>Stem</i> wanting, the short erect crowns each furnished with numerous
-radical evergreen leaves, and emitting stout fleshy roots. <i>Leaves</i> distichous (two-ranked),
-a foot or more in length, leathery or somewhat fleshy, oblong, obtuse, with
-a short recurved mucro, dark green above, of a paler green beneath. <i>Scape</i> dark
-purple, issuing from the centre of the leaves and furnished with a sheathing bract
-at its base, about two feet in height, three to four-flowered, the pedicels subtended
-by green lanceolate acuminate bracts. <i>Flowers</i> large, richly-coloured, measuring when
-spread out four inches in the direction of the sepals, and nine to ten inches in
-that of the petals; <i>dorsal sepal</i> broadly cordate, acuminate, nearly two inches broad,
-white, marked in front with a bold central, and on each side with two or three
-curved lateral stripes of deep purple-brown, keeled behind, and there stained with
-purple-brown; <i>lateral sepals</i> (united) ovate-acuminate, with a central and on each
-side three lateral stripes extending nearly to the base, greenish-white, edged with
-purple-brown; <i>petals</i> set at a right angle to the sepals, one-fourth of an inch broad,
-five inches long, tapering gradually to the apex, decurved, greenish-white with dark
-purple-brown veins and spots, becoming wholly purple at the tip, and having near
-the base a purple margin, and a few scattered marginal purple hairs; <i>lip</i> large,
-prominent, calceoliform, the basal portion unguiculate from the introflexion of the
-margin, greenish, the apex large, pouch-shaped, like the front of a shoe or slipper,
-dull purplish-red reticulately veined with darker purple. <i>Column</i> white, with a ring
-of yellow hairs at the base, two-branched, the lower branch three-lobed, the later
-lobes bearing each a small orbicular sessile yellow anther, the terminal lobe forming
-a large white ovate fleshy disk (abortive third stamen) the upper or stigmatic
-branch cordate-obovate, convex, whitish, tinged with purple, and fringed at the back
-and sides with yellow hairs.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cypripedium Stonei</span>, <i>Low</i>; <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 5349; <i>Van Houtte</i>,
-<i>Flore des Serres</i>, xvii., t. 1792-3; <i>Lemaire</i>, <i>Illustration Horticole</i>, ix., p. 107; x. t. 355;
-<i>Bateman</i>, <i>2nd Century of Orchidaceous Plants</i>, t. 141; <i>Jennings</i>, <i>Orchids</i>, t. 12.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This magnificent plant is one of the most beautiful species of the genus
-<i>Cypripedium</i>. Several varieties of it are known, and though they are all good and
-well worth growing, that which we have selected for illustration is the best and
-darkest that has come under our notice. The plant from which our figure was
-taken, bloomed in the Victoria Nursery, and had five flower-spikes, two of which
-have been in bloom for the past six weeks, and are now as fresh as ever.</p>
-<p><i>Cypripedium Stonei</i> was first flowered by Mr. Stone, gardener to John Day, Esq.,
-of High Cross, Tottenham, after whom it has been named. It was for a long
-period a very rare species, and, indeed now, though small plants may be purchased
-for a moderate sum, yet large specimens are scarce and valuable. It makes a fine
-<span class="pb" id="Page_17">17</span>
-show plant, its lasting qualities being a great recommendation to it, both from an
-exhibition and decorative point of view.</p>
-<p>The plant is a native of Borneo, and was introduced to this country by the
-Messrs. Low, of Clapton. It produces dark green foliage of about twelve or in some
-of the varieties we have seen as much as fifteen inches in length. From the
-centre of this tuft of leaves the flower-spikes are produced and rise to a height of
-about two feet, each bearing three or four of its large slipper-shaped blossoms,
-which are the most exact representations of a shoe or slipper of those of any of
-the species, and most completely justify the trivial name of the genus, Lady&rsquo;s
-Slipper. The sepals are large, white, striped on the veins or nerves, with dark
-purple, and tinged with yellow; the petals are five inches in length, and are yellowish,
-streaked and blotched with purple; and the lip is large and of a dull reddish-purple,
-veined with deeper purple-red. It is of free-blooming habit, and when the
-growths are strong it produces a flower-spike from each crown, but it takes some
-considerable time to complete its growth before it sends forth its spikes; indeed, it
-begins to grow soon after its blossoms have faded. The plant having no thick
-fleshy bulbs from which to derive support, requires a more continuous supply of moisture
-than many other Orchids. The roots are coarse and fleshy, and should in consequence
-be supplied with a stronger soil than is required by some of the other kinds. We
-find it to thrive best in good fibrous loam, with a small quantity of charcoal, and
-a little leaf-mould or peat, all being well mixed together, giving the pots good
-drainage, but not so much as is required in the case of <i>Cattleyas</i>, for example.
-As it is a strong rooting plant, it is best grown in a pot, and should be a little
-elevated above the rim. We have found the East India house to supply the most
-suitable atmospheric conditions in which to cultivate it; here it should be placed on
-the side-tables near the light, but out of the sun. The finest specimen we have seen
-exhibited was staged by Mr. Child, gardener to Mrs. Torr, Garbrand Hall, Ewell,
-Surrey, at the South Kensington Show, in 1878.</p>
-<p>There is a very distinct variety of this plant called <i>Cypripedium Stonei
-platyt&aelig;nium</i>, of which a figure has been lately published in Mr. Warner&rsquo;s <i>Select
-Orchidaceous Plants</i>, 3 ser., t. 16. Of this form, living plants were till recently only
-to be found in the collection of John Day, Esq., but they were distributed when that
-collection was recently dispersed by auction sales, and were purchased at high prices
-by Baron Schr&ouml;der and Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., in whose collections they
-may now be seen. This variety is just like <i>C. Stonei</i> in its growth, and the
-flowers are closely similar, the chief difference being, that the petals are shorter and
-broader, and resemble those of <i>C. superbiens</i>.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig9">
-<img src="images/p_0032.jpg" alt="" width="825" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 9-10.</span>
- L&AElig;LIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<h2 id="c12"><span class="h2line1">L&AElig;LIA PURPURATA WILLIAMSII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[Plates <a href="#fig9">9</a>-10.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of St. Catherine&rsquo;s, Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> (or pseudobulbs) clavate-oblong, monophyllous, two feet or more
-in height, somewhat furrowed when mature. <i>Leaves</i> coriaceous, evergreen, narrowly
-oblong, emarginate, dark green. <i>Scape</i> three to four-flowered, issuing from a stout
-sheathing oblong bract or spathe, four to five inches long. <i>Flowers</i> large, and very
-handsome; measuring eight inches across, of a delicate rose colour, with a purple-crimson
-lip; <i>sepals</i> linear-lanceolate, acute, of a pale rosy tint, pencilled with simple
-rosy-purple longitudinal lines; <i>petals</i> oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, of a beautiful delicate
-rose colour, pencilled with divergent forked lines of deeper purple; <i>lip</i> (labellum)
-three-lobed, the lateral lobes obsolete, convolute around the column, the front lobe
-large, broad, and roundish, of a rich dark crimson-magenta, the tip paler and reticulately
-veined, and the throat yellow, beautifully veined with crimson-magenta. <i>Column</i>
-scarcely reaching to the middle of the convolute base of the lip.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia purpurata Williamsii</span>, <i>Hort.</i>; <i>Williams&rsquo; Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, ed. 4,
-196; ed. 5, 208.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The species, of which this is one of the finest known varieties, and the genus
-<i>L&aelig;lia</i> to which it belongs, together with the neighbouring genus <i>Cattleya</i>, are placed
-by the great Orchidist, Reichenbach, in his amplified genus <i>Bletia</i>, so that the <i>L&aelig;lia
-purpurata</i> of Lindley, in <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Flower Garden</i>, becomes the <i>Bletia purpurata</i> of
-Reichenbach in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales</i>, vi. 423. The name of <i>L&aelig;lia</i> is, however, that
-which is adopted amongst cultivators of Orchids.</p>
-<p>The <i>L&aelig;lia</i> which we have now to describe, was named many years ago in the
-<i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, when it was exhibited at the Crystal Palace and received
-its present appellation. The plant now represented was flowered at the Victoria and
-Paradise Nurseries, but has now passed into the select collection of Baron Schr&ouml;der,
-of The Dell, near Staines. It was a wonderfully strong plant, and produced two
-spikes of its highly coloured blossoms, which led all those who saw it in its beauty,
-to pronounce it to be the finest <i>L&aelig;lia</i> they had ever witnessed. Our artist has
-given a good representation of the plant and its blossoms. The club-shaped stems
-and foliage stood thirty inches in height, and were provided with very strong
-sheathing bracts whence the flower-spikes issued, each bearing four flowers, which
-were individually eight inches in diameter. It has bloomed with us in the same
-style for two successive years. The plant that we flowered some years ago was
-not so large as that now figured, the reason being that it was not so strong a
-specimen, and, therefore, not able to produce such fine flowers. This is sufficient
-<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
-evidence of the advance the plants make before they get to their full strength and
-vigour. In the variety before us the sepals and petals are of a delicate rose,
-veined with a beautiful dark tint of the same colour, while the lip is very broad,
-large, and splendidly coloured, the prominent parts of a rich dark crimson-magenta,
-paler and veiny at the tip, and beautifully veined with crimson on the yellow
-ground-colour of the throat. The blooming season is in May and June, the flowers
-continuing in perfection for three or four weeks, if kept free from damp and in a
-dry place. We have a house set aside specially for Orchids when in flower, and
-in it very little moisture is used, by which means we seldom get the flowers
-spotted or prematurely decayed.</p>
-<p>There is another fine form of <i>L&aelig;lia purpurata</i> with white sepals and petals
-that are quite flat, not at all recurved; this variety has a rich dark crimson-magenta
-lip. We exhibited this form with nine flower spikes at the Regent&rsquo;s Park
-Exhibition, and it produced a grand effect. There are many other fine varieties.</p>
-<p><i>L&aelig;lia purpurata</i> when well cultivated is a good looking plant, and even when
-not in bloom it is an object of attraction, on account of its stately evergreen foliage.
-It is a native of Brazil, and is found growing on the branches of trees on the outskirts
-of the forests where the plants get light, and are yet shaded from the burning
-sun. They are best grown in the Cattleya-house, and will thrive either in pots or
-baskets, but we find the pot system the best, as they are strong growing plants,
-and require ample space to bring them to perfection. They are the better for being
-moved about, especially if they are required for exhibition. There are no more
-showy Orchids for exhibition purposes, and this is especially true of such varieties
-as that now before us.</p>
-<p>We find that they thrive best in good fibrous peat, and some live sphagnum
-moss on a part of the surface; when in a growing state the moss keeps them moist
-without too much water being given whilst they are making their growth. In
-watering them be careful not to wet the young shoots. The pots should be three
-parts filled with drainage, which must be formed of broken pots and lumps of charcoal
-intermixed. The plants must be elevated about two inches above the rim of the
-pot. The best time to pot them is after they have done blooming just as they
-begin to make new growths, and before the roots start, when they will soon commence
-to work into the clean sweet peat. If the plant is in a sufficiently large pot, and
-the soil about it is sweet and clean, it will not require re-potting, but it will
-benefit the plants greatly to give them some fresh fibrous peat just before they
-begin to root, as the old soil is apt to become hard and inert through constant
-watering. They require to be kept moist during the growing season, but must not
-even then be soddened with water. In winter only just sufficient must be given
-them to keep them moist, and to prevent their stems and leaves from shriveling.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig11">
-<img src="images/p_0035.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1196" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 11.</span>
- PHAL&AElig;NOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<h2 id="c13"><span class="h2line1">PHAL&AElig;NOPSIS AMABILIS DAYANA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig11">Plate 11</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the Eastern Archipelago.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stem</i> none, or consisting of a short crown furnished with rigid
-fleshy leaves, and emitting succulent roots, which latter are flattened, and cling to any
-congenial object with which they come in contact. <i>Leaves</i> large, thick and
-coriaceous, distichous, oblong, obliquely retuse, dark green above, purple beneath.
-<i>Scape</i> long, drooping, issuing from the base of the plant, or the leaf axils, and
-bearing the large moth-like flowers in a two-ranked raceme. <i>Flowers</i> large, pure
-opaque white, spreading, the lip beautifully coloured; <i>sepals</i> oblong-obtuse, white, the
-lower ones prettily dotted with carmine; <i>petals</i> larger and broader, sub-rhomboid,
-narrowed towards the base, pure white; <i>lip</i> furnished with a callus at the base,
-smaller than the petals, three-lobed, the lateral lobes ovate obtuse, ascending or
-incurved, yellowish along the antical margin and dotted with carmine-crimson near
-the base, the central lobe trowel-shaped, carmine-crimson across the base and at
-the edge, and marked with a central crimson stripe; the lip is concave, bearing
-at the narrowed apex two incurved twisted white cirrhi. <i>Column</i> semi-terete,
-recumbent on the ovary.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Phal&aelig;nopsis amabilis Dayana</span>, <i>Hort.</i></p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The genus <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis</i> belongs to the tribe <i>Vande&aelig;</i>, which is distinguished
-amongst those with waxy pollen-masses, by having these attached to a distinct
-caudicle, united to a deciduous stigmatic gland. It no doubt comprises several of
-our finest Orchids, which are prized no less on account of the graceful development
-of their inflorescence than for the attractive white blossoms of the more familiar
-species. Our drawing of the charming <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis amabilis Dayana</i> here figured, was
-taken from a fine specimen in the collection of W. Lee, Esq., of Downside, Leatherhead,
-who was kind enough to allow us to publish an illustration of it. The variety
-is very rare; indeed, we believe this is the only specimen known to be in cultivation
-in this country. It was named in compliment to John Day, Esq., of Tottenham,
-from whose collection it was obtained by Mr. Lee. From the markings about the
-base of the lip it will be seen to be very distinct, though it is no doubt a form
-of <i>P. amabilis</i>, with which it agrees in foliage and in the general character of the
-flowers, but differs in the distinct markings just referred to. The plant grows to
-about the same size as <i>P. amabilis</i>.</p>
-<p>There is at Downside a grand collection of <i>Phal&aelig;nopsids</i>, which are especially
-well managed by Mr. Woolford, the gardener. They are great favourites with Mr.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_21">21</span>
-Lee, and he has built a house to meet their special wants. This is undoubtedly a
-good plan to adopt where there is such a fine and comprehensive set of plants as
-are to be found in this establishment, since they require different treatment to most
-other Orchids. They have thick fleshy leaves, and the stems of the plant are also
-fleshy, while, unlike many Orchids, they have no thick pseudobulbs from which to
-derive support; hence it follows that they require more moisture than many others.
-We do not, however, agree with giving them so much as we often see supplied.
-One great advantage of having a separate house for them is that their individual
-treatment and wants can be more carefully studied and more exactly met.</p>
-<p>We have seen <i>Phal&aelig;nopsids</i> grown well amongst other East Indian Orchids. For
-instance, we exhibited a plant so grown of <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis grandiflora</i> for ten successive
-years at the Chiswick and Regent&rsquo;s Park Exhibitions, and at several shows during
-each year, and it generally bore from sixty to seventy blossoms. This was the
-variety imported from Java, which we consider the best, as it produces more flowers
-than the variety from Borneo. We see that growers now-a-days are obliged to put
-several plants together in order to make a specimen fit for exhibition. There were
-others who about that time also exhibited these large plants, and, amongst them
-Mr. Kinghorn showed at Chiswick a wonderful specimen, bearing the best flower-spike
-we have ever seen.</p>
-<p><i>Phal&aelig;nopsis amabilis Dayana</i> requires the same treatment as <i>P. grandiflora</i> and
-<i>P. amabilis</i>, and will do either in a pot, basket, or pan, suspended from the roof.
-It will also thrive on the side stages, but in this case requires to be elevated
-so that the roots can hang free, for they are abundant rooting plants. If
-suspended from the roof the plants have more room to throw out their thick fleshy
-roots, and in this way they approach nearer to the manner in which they grow
-in their native habitats, for they are found on the branches and stems of trees,
-where they obtain a free circulation of air. When thus suspended they get without
-restraint the fresh air that circulates through the house. They can also be cultivated
-on blocks, but under these circumstances they will require to be more freely supplied
-with moisture. These are plants that like plenty of light, but they must be shielded
-from the sun by shading. The best material to grow them in is sphagnum moss,
-with good drainage, and they require to be kept moist all the year round. In warm
-weather they of course require more than in winter, when just a sufficient quantity
-to keep the moss in a moist condition will be all that they will need. It is
-imperative never to allow water to reach the heart of the plant, for that will
-sometimes induce it to rot, and will often cause the leaves to go spotted.</p>
-<p>The plants must, of necessity, be kept free from insects. Sometimes the thrips
-will attack them, but this should be cleaned off. To be thoroughly successful with
-Orchids they require constant watching. Cockroaches are a great pest to all those
-that throw out thick fleshy roots, which they injure by gnawing them off, thereby
-weakening the constitution of the plant. J. S. Bockett, Esq., of Stamford Hill, has
-one of the finest grown collections of <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis</i> we have ever seen, but this, of
-course, has been in process of formation for years, and the plants have become
-large established specimens.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig12">
-<img src="images/p_0038.jpg" alt="" width="887" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 12.</span>
- ONCIDIUM GARDNERI.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<h2 id="c14"><span class="h2line1">ONCIDIUM GARDNERI.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig12">Plate 12</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the Organ Mountains of Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> oblong-ovate, furrowed, about two inches in height, dark
-green, purplish beneath. <i>Leaves</i> oblong-lanceolate, acute, coriaceous, about six inches
-long, growing two together from the apex of the pseudobulbs. <i>Scape</i> one and a
-half foot high, including the panicle of handsome flowers, lateral, that is, springing
-from the base of the pseudobulbs. <i>Flowers</i> showy, of medium size, deliciously
-fragrant; <i>sepals</i> oblong, acute, the lateral ones semi-connate; <i>petals</i> twice as large as
-the sepals, roundish in outline, clawed at the base, the edges undulated, and as well
-as the bars across the sepals of a light chestnut or bronzy brown colour with a
-narrow margin of pale yellow; <i>lip</i> large, three-lobed, the middle lobe large, transversely
-emarginate, bright yellow, with a belt of confluent parallel oblong chestnut brown
-blotches just within the margin, the lateral lobes auricul&aelig;form, obsolete, yellow; the
-crests of the lip consist of two pairs of tubercles with the intermediate space
-warted. <i>Column</i> furnished with dwarf roundish wings.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Oncidium Gardneri</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, <i>London Journal of Botany</i>, ii., 662; <i>Id.</i> <i>Folia
-Orchidacea</i>, art. <i>Oncidium</i>, 19; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi. 728.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This charming Orchid is very nearly related to <i>Oncidium curtum</i>, <i>O. pr&aelig;textum</i>,
-and <i>O. amictum</i>. It belongs to an extensive genus of Vandeous Orchids, many of
-the species of which are exceedingly beautiful on account of the brilliancy of their
-flowers, which are mostly of a bright yellow colour, often prettily spotted, and
-generally produced in graceful spikes or panicles. No collection should be without
-some of the best and most ornamental of them. The figure which we now publish
-represents a very charming Brazilian species, one of the best forms of the plant we
-have seen. Our drawing was made from a specimen in the select and varied
-collection of W. Vanner, Esq., of Chislehurst, who was kind enough to permit our
-artist to avail himself of it. This collection occupies several houses which are
-respectively filled with species belonging to the different groups or classes, and
-among which are some very rare specimens, all well cultivated by Mr. Milford,
-the gardener, who, for many years has been a successful grower of Orchids.</p>
-<p><i>Oncidium Gardneri</i> is a compact growing plant, furnished with dark green
-pseudobulbs, which are from two to three inches in height. The foliage is also dark
-green in colour, and about six inches in length. The flowers are very freely produced
-in branching spikes or panicles, and are generally developed in June and July,
-lasting for several weeks in perfection. The sepals and petals are brown, narrowly
-<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
-margined with pale yellow. The lip is large, of a bright golden-yellow colour,
-margined with bright brown oblong parallel blotches. The flowers, moreover, are
-deliciously scented. There are many varieties of this plant, all of which are worth
-growing, since they take up but little space, and when grown in quantity, produce
-a good effect. We saw about fifty spikes of the different varieties, some in bloom,
-and others showing, in the collection of C. G. Hill, Esq., of Arnot Hill, near
-Nottingham, and we shall not soon forget the effect produced, as the group of plants
-appeared to be one mass of bloom. By cultivating plants of this character space may
-be economised, since they grow as freely on blocks as in baskets. We also find
-them to thrive well in small pans suspended from the roof of the Cattleya-house or in
-any situation affording them the same temperature, with very slight shading from the
-sun. They are best grown near the glass, so that they may get all the light possible.
-As a root medium, a mixture of good sphagnum moss and fibrous peat suits them best,
-but the plants must have good drainage, since they must be kept moist during the
-growing season, though when at rest a more limited supply will suffice&mdash;just sufficient
-being given to keep the bulbs plump, for on the other hand, it is not a plant that
-likes to be dried up. The bulbs sometimes shrivel when they flower too freely;
-if this is observed do not allow the blossoms to remain too long on the plants,
-as they will keep a good time in water when cut from the plant. Being of a
-graceful character they are well adapted for the decoration of drawing-room stands,
-in which, if intermixed with foliage and other flowers, they help to produce a very
-charming effect. Indeed no flowers are so useful as Orchids for decorative purposes,
-as they last so long when cut.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia Dominiana rosea.</span>&mdash;This is the finest hybrid <i>L&aelig;lia</i> that has come under
-our notice. It is the result of a cross between <i>Cattleya Dowiana</i>, and <i>C. exoniensis</i>,
-and the parentage is very evident in the novel form thus obtained. The lip is
-like that of <i>C. Dowiana</i>, of a rich purple-crimson, crisped at the margin; the
-sepals and petals are of a pale lilac colour. It is a most beautiful <i>L&aelig;lia</i>, and is
-named in honour of Mr. Dominy, who has been most successful in raising seedling
-Orchids. There have been many wonderful hybrids brought out by the Messrs.
-Veitch and Sons, through the indefatigable exertions of Mr. Dominy, who has long
-been known as one of the oldest and most successful of Orchid growers, and whose
-name will be kept in remembrance as long as Orchids are cultivated.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig13">
-<img src="images/p_0041.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1210" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 13.</span>
- DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<h2 id="c15"><span class="h2line1">DENDROBIUM SUAVISSIMUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig13">Plate 13</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Burmah.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> (or pseudobulbs) about a foot long, cuneately-fusiform, tapering
-below into a longish stalk-like base, bluntly angulate, bearing one or two pairs of
-leaves at the top, and invested below with close ovate membranaceous bracts. <i>Leaves</i>
-somewhat coriaceous, oblong-ligulate, cuneate at the base and acute at the apex.
-<i>Flower-spikes</i> ten to twelve inches long, bracteate at the base, terminal or nearly
-terminal, produced freely on the two-year-old stems. <i>Flowers</i> large, showy, numerous,
-of a brilliant yellow; <i>sepals</i> ligulate acute, bright golden yellow; <i>petals</i> broader,
-cuneately-oblong, obtusely-acute, of the same colour as the sepals; <i>lip</i> (labellum)
-deep bright yellow, marked on the disk with a broad curved band of rich dark
-sanguineous purple, almost black, cucullate, cuneate-oblong at the base, where it is
-folded over the column, roundish and emarginate in front, undulate and ciliolate at
-the margin, densely asperulous with erect acute papill&aelig; forming a close crispy
-covering over the surface.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Dendrobium suavissimum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span>, i. 406; v. 756.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This fine Dendrobe, of which Reichenbach remarks:&mdash;&ldquo;I believe it is one of the
-best <i>Dendrobia</i> ever imported,&rdquo; was introduced in 1873 by Mr. Low, of Clapton,
-as recorded in the <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i> for 1874 (<span class="small">N.S.</span>, i. 406), where it was first
-described. It is again referred to in the same publication in 1876 (<span class="small">N.S.</span>, v. 756),
-where the German Professor remarks:&mdash;&ldquo;The species stands indeed, as has been
-stated before, close to <i>Dendrobium chrysotoxum</i>. The flowers are smaller, the fringe
-is made by much shorter papill&aelig;, the chin is shorter, the petals are narrower, the
-lip does not expand to an open mass, but its lateral parts keep bent over the base,
-thus forming a cucullate body so as to allow the beautiful dark blackish spot to be
-seen, and which contrasts so well with the deep yellow of the flower. There are
-also a few blackish streaks on each side of the base of the lip.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><i>Dendrobium suavissimum</i> is one of the most beautiful species of the yellow-flowered
-section of this vast genus, and one that is much admired and sought after
-by Orchid growers. The accompanying plate is a good representation of the plant,
-and from this it will be seen that it is one of the most attractive of summer-flowering
-Orchids. Our sketch was taken from a specimen exhibited by us during
-the present year, at the Royal Botanic Society&rsquo;s Garden in the Regent&rsquo;s Park.</p>
-<p>Formerly this was a very rare plant, but within the last few years it has been
-sent home in considerable quantities by collectors, and it has in consequence become
-<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
-comparatively cheap. In growth it resembles <i>Dendrobium chrysotoxum</i>, but the flowers
-are much more showy; in <i>D. chrysotoxum</i> they are wholly yellow, whereas in this
-species there is a large sanguineous purple blotch on the lip, forming a striking
-contrast to the rich golden yellow of the sepals and petals; in addition to this
-they are sweet-scented. The plant is of free-flowering habit, and when well-grown
-produces finely-developed flower-spikes. We have seen as many as three spikes
-proceeding from a single stem.</p>
-<p>In habit of growth <i>Dendrobium suavissimum</i> is very compact. The stems or
-pseudobulbs are about a foot in height, and furnished with one or two pairs of
-dark green leaves at the apex. The flower-spikes proceed from the tops of the two-year-old
-bulbs, and average from ten to twelve inches in length. The stems will
-sometimes produce spikes for several years in succession. The flowers last from two
-to three weeks in perfection if kept from damp.</p>
-<p>Like other Dendrobiums, this species is found growing on the trunks and branches
-of trees in positions where it gets plenty of light and air. With us it thrives well
-grown in a basket suspended near the roof, so as to obtain all the light and air
-possible; the bulbs thus become well matured. The best material for growing it in
-is sound sweet fibrous peat, with a good supply of drainage. The plants should be
-watered liberally at the roots during the period of growth, which is after they have
-done blooming. The temperature that suits them best is that of the East India-house
-while they are making their growth; but when the growth is completed very
-little water should be given them until they begin to show their spikes in spring,
-when it may be increased, as it will assist them to produce stronger spikes. The
-plant is propagated by division; two or more old bulbs should be taken off with
-a young growth in front. Insects should be well looked after, and when found be
-speedily removed.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig14">
-<img src="images/p_0044.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1148" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 14.</span>
- TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<h2 id="c16"><span class="h2line1">TRICHOPILIA SUAVIS ALBA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig14">Plate 14</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Central America.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal, <i>Pseudobulbs</i> roundish-oblong or obcordate, thin, <i>i.e.</i>, very much compressed,
-clustered, monophyllous. <i>Leaves</i> broadly oblong, acute, leathery in texture,
-almost sessile, of a pale green colour. <i>Scapes</i> radical, two to four-flowered, pendent.
-<i>Flowers</i> large, showy, and fragrant, each emerging from the axil of a thin ovate
-bract. <i>Sepals</i> linear-lanceolate, acute, somewhat undulated, spreading, and, as well as
-the similarly-formed <i>petals</i>, of a pure white colour; <i>lip</i> large, rolled up closely at
-the base, suddenly expanded upwards so as to become funnel-shaped, and then spread
-out into a large oblique limb, which is three-lobed, with the edges wavy and crisped,
-the middle lobe larger, slightly deflexed and emarginate or bilobed: <i>Column</i> elongate,
-terete, bearing at the back of the anther a hood of three fimbriated lobes.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Trichopilia suavis</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, in <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Flower Garden</i>, i. 44; 53, t. 11; <i>Hooker</i>,
-<i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 4654; <i>Van Houtte</i>, <i>Flore des Serres</i>, viii. 761; <i>Lemaire</i>,
-<i>Jardin Fleuriste</i>, iii. 277; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, iii. 553, et vi. 681.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><i>Var.</i> <span class="small">ALBA</span>: flowers pure white, the lip with a yellow blotch in the throat.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Trichopilia suavis alba</span>, <i>Hort.</i></p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This plant belongs to a small genus of Vandeous Orchids, some of the species
-of which are exceedingly pretty, and well worthy of a place in every collection.
-Dr. Lindley calls <i>Trichopilia suavis</i> &ldquo;a delicious Orchid,&rdquo; and says that &ldquo;the flowers
-emit the most delicate odour of hawthorn.&rdquo; The fragrant and richly spotted flowers
-make it a great favourite amongst growers, and no doubt it is one of the best
-and most showy of the species yet known. The variety <i>alba</i>, of which we have
-now the pleasure of publishing an authentic figure, the first which has appeared, is
-new to cultivation, and is also extremely rare. Our plate was prepared from a
-specimen which flowered in the fine collection of Dr. G. Boddaert, of Ghent, Belgium,
-who kindly allowed us to have a drawing made from it.</p>
-<p><i>Trichopilia suavis alba</i> was imported, with the typical <i>T. suavis</i>, and is a
-compact evergreen plant, with foliage attaining from six to ten inches in height, and
-three inches in width, and of a light green colour. The pendent flower-scapes are
-produced from the base of the bulbs, and bear two or three, or sometimes four,
-flowers, which thus hang over the sides of the pan or basket in which the plant
-is cultivated. When suspended from the roof of the house they thus have a very
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-charming appearance. The sepals and petals are pure white; the lip is white, with
-a pale yellow stain in the throat. The plant blossoms during May and June, and
-lasts about two weeks in perfection. We have flowered this variety during the
-present year, and it was very much admired by every one who saw it.</p>
-<p><i>Trichopilia suavis alba</i> was exhibited by J. S. Bockett, Esq., of Stamford Hill,
-at one of the meetings of the Royal Horticultural Society, and was awarded a
-First Class Certificate of Merit.</p>
-<p>The Cattleya house is the best position for the plant, but it should be placed
-at the coolest end. It will flourish either in a basket or pot, in a compost of
-fibrous peat, with good drainage, but it must be well elevated above the rim, so
-that the flowers may hang down according to their natural habit. Propagation is
-effected by division of the plant after blooming; two or three bulbs should be
-severed from the original plant, or more if a larger specimen is desired.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">A&euml;rides odoratum majus.</span>&mdash;This fine old Orchid was shown by Mrs. Arbuthnot
-at the Chislehurst Exhibition, on the 16th of July, and in this case it was a most
-wonderful example of good cultivation. The plant was one mass of its beautiful
-racemes of flowers, about fifty in number, many of them measuring fifteen inches
-in length. The flowers are white, tipped with pink, and are produced in long
-graceful spikes which overhang the foliage and produce a most charming effect.
-The perfume given off by this variety is very delightful, and was in this case
-most refreshing to those who passed by, many of whom wondered where the pleasant
-odour came from, as it was shown among the stove and greenhouse plants. This
-plant was two and a half feet in diameter, and three feet in height. Great credit is
-due to Mr. Mitchell, the gardener, for his skill in cultivating so fine a specimen.
-We often wonder why this plant is not more popular at our exhibitions, especially
-as it is easy to grow, taking very few years to make a good specimen, and being
-purchasable in small sizes for a few shillings. When not in bloom, it is, moreover,
-an attractive plant.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig15">
-<img src="images/p_0047.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1075" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 15.</span>
- VANDA PARISHII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<h2 id="c17"><span class="h2line1">VANDA PARISHII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig15">Plate 15</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Moulmein.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Plant</i> evergreen, dwarf. <i>Stem</i> a span high, stout-growing, densely
-leafy. <i>Leaves</i> distichous, broadly ligulate-obtuse, with an unequal bilobed apex, very
-stout and fleshy in texture. <i>Scape</i> stiff, erect, bearing a spike of several showy
-blossoms. <i>Flowers</i> large, distinct in character, prettily spotted; <i>sepals</i> and <i>petals</i>
-cuneate-oblong, acute, somewhat undulated, of a greenish-yellow colour, decorated with
-numerous round reddish-brown spots, white inside at the base; <i>lip</i> furnished with
-linear-ligulate auricles at the base, and produced into a short gibbous spur, white, with
-a pair of orange-coloured stripes, the larger anterior part violaceous, rhomboid, gibbous
-below the apex, with a keel along the median line, and a violet-coloured conical
-callus at the base. <i>Column</i> white, the caudicle ligulate, the glandule triangular.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Vanda Parishii</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1870, 890.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This glorious thing, as Professor Reichenbach calls it, was first discovered by
-the Rev. C. Parish in 1862, and then lost sight of, but was rediscovered in 1870,
-from which discovery, we presume, the first plants were obtained by Mr. S. Low, of
-the Clapton Nursery; since then we have received living plants of it on several
-occasions, and the plant now figured was from one of these importations. It is a
-small and distinct growing <i>Vanda</i>, and is well worthy of a place in every collection
-on account of its compact habit of growth, which resembles that of a <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis</i>.
-The Vandas are for the most part large growers, but, as will be seen from the
-accompanying figure, <i>Vanda Parishii</i> is an exception to the general rule. Our
-plate was prepared from a plant which bloomed in the collection of the Right Hon.
-J. Chamberlain, M.P., of Birmingham&mdash;a gentleman who is making a grand collection
-of Orchids, and is a great admirer of them. The plant above referred to was a
-well-grown specimen, bearing a good spike of flowers.</p>
-<p>The leaves are about eight inches in length by four inches in breadth, and of
-a lively green colour; and the flower-spike reaches from ten to twelve inches in
-length, the flowers being as large as those of <i>Vanda gigantea</i> and <i>V. lissochiloides</i>.
-The sepals and petals are greenish-yellow, freely spotted with reddish-brown; the
-base of the lip, which is keeled, is white, the front lobe violet-mauve, faintly
-margined with white. Altogether it is a very distinct species, and is very strongly
-scented, with a peculiar odour; it lasts for several weeks in bloom.</p>
-<p><i>Vanda Parishii</i> requires about the same treatment as other Vandas, and should
-be grown in the East India-house, in sphagnum moss, with plenty of drainage. It
-<span class="pb" id="Page_29">29</span>
-would appear never to attain more than about a foot in height, being unusually
-short and stout in growth. It is best grown in a basket or pot suspended from
-the roof, and should be well shaded from the sun. It revels in a good supply of
-water during the growing period, which extends over summer and autumn; but in
-winter only just sufficient water should be given to keep the moss damp, for if
-allowed to become over-dry it will shrivel, having no pseudobulbs to support it.
-Thrips and scale are sometimes found on this plant; these should be diligently
-searched for and destroyed, as the leaves, being of a fleshy nature, would otherwise
-soon become disfigured by the onslaught of these pests.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Orchids at Arnot Hill.</span>&mdash;We append a few notes on the Orchids at Arnot
-Hill, near Nottingham, the residence of C. G. Hill, Esq., a gentleman who is forming
-a fine collection of these plants, and one which we have no doubt will in time
-take a foremost rank, as Mr. Hill is specially fond of good Orchids, and intends to
-grow only those which are most worthy of cultivation. There is a fine range of
-houses built to suit the cool, the intermediate, and the East Indian kinds, and the
-arrangements are all that can be desired, having been made the chief study. Of the
-genus <i>Odontoglossum</i>, we found at the time of our visit, some few months since, there
-was a large collection, including some hundreds of plants of <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i> and
-<i>O. Pescatorei</i>, amongst which were many fine specimens. There was also a fine lot of
-Masdevallias; the Bull&rsquo;s-blood variety of <i>M. Harryana</i> was in splendid condition,
-and there were many other fine varieties. We noticed a house full of <i>Oncidium
-Gardneri</i> mixed with <i>O. pr&aelig;textum</i> and <i>O. curtum</i>, the plants bearing about fifty
-spikes, the greater part of which were in bloom, the flowers deliciously fragrant, and
-presenting a beautiful picture, as the bright yellow lip with its definite margin of
-brown shows off the flowers to great advantage. In the Cattleya house there were
-many fine plants which were rooting and growing well. We noticed a good specimen
-plant of the new <i>Cattleya Trian&aelig; Russelliana</i>, also of the rare <i>C. exoniensis</i>, of
-the beautiful <i>C. Reineckiana</i>, of the best variety of <i>C. labiata</i> showing flower-sheaths,
-and many others. <i>Oncidium incurvum</i> was beautifully in bloom, and with its snow-white
-lip had a very pretty appearance.</p>
-<p>In the next house we noticed three good plants of <i>Dendrochilum filiforme</i> finely
-in flower; one plant had fifty of its graceful spikes of yellow blossoms hanging among
-the foliage, and the other two plants were equally good.</p>
-<p>In the adjoining house there were many fine East Indian Orchids. We noticed
-four plants of the rare <i>A&euml;rides Schr&ouml;deri</i>, and a wonderful variety of <i>A. Lobbii</i> in
-full bloom, with a fine branching spike&mdash;one of the best we have seen, and one
-of which we hope at some future time to furnish our readers with a figure.
-There was a good collection of East Indian Orchids being got together, and from
-the appearance and health of the young stock they seemed likely to thrive well.
-We were glad to see this class of Orchids so well appreciated, as there can be no
-doubt that the East Indian kinds are among the richest and finest of the family,
-and they will flourish in a lower temperature than most people imagine.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig16">
-<img src="images/p_0050.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1209" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 16.</span>
- CATTELYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<h2 id="c18"><span class="h2line1">CATTLEYA GUTTATA LEOPOLDII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig16">Plate 16</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the Island of St. Catherine, Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> (or pseudobulbs) elongate, fusiform, many-jointed, two to two
-and a half feet in height, bearing a pair of leaves at the apex. <i>Leaves</i> broadly-oblong
-obtuse, dark green, coriaceous. <i>Scape</i> terminal, issuing from a short ovate
-acute ancipitous spathe developed between the leaves on the more vigorous stems,
-and bearing a many-flowered raceme, with small lance-shaped bracts. <i>Flowers</i> fleshy,
-in dense racemes, &ldquo;sometimes as large as a man&rsquo;s head;&rdquo; <i>sepals</i> cuneate-oblong
-acute, the lateral ones subfalcate, of a light cinnamon or orange-tinted brown, spotted
-thickly with crimson; <i>petals</i> similar in form and colour, but rather broader and
-wavy; <i>lip</i> three-lobed, the lateral lobes semi-ovate, acute in front, rolled over the
-column, the middle lobe cuneate-flabellate and bilobed, of a bright magenta colour,
-the disk tuberculate with lines of elevated papillae.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya guttata Leopoldii</span>, <i>Linden and Reichenbach fil.</i>, <i>Pescatorea</i>, t. 43.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya Leopoldii</span>, <i>Hort. Verschaffelt</i>; <i>Lemaire</i>, <i>Illustration Horticole</i>, ii. 69.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Epidendrum elatius, var.</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, <i>MSS.</i>; <i>Id.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi. 319.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This noble plant is remarkable for the large mass of richly-coloured flagrant
-blossoms which terminates the flower-scape, and is very much superior to the old
-<i>Cattleya guttata</i>, which was introduced to our collections some fifty years ago, and
-of which a fine figure was published in the <i>Transactions of the Horticultural Society</i>,
-ix. t. 8. The variety <i>Leopoldii</i> differs from the type, in its much larger flowers,
-and in the rich olive or reddish-brown colour of its sepals and petals, which are
-freely spotted with dark crimson. <i>C. guttata Leopoldii</i> is, moreover, of much more
-recent introduction than the type, having been imported to the gardens of Belgium
-by M. Ambroise Verschaffelt, through his collector, M. Devos, in 1850. It was by
-him dedicated to his Majesty the late King of the Belgians. As will be seen from
-our illustration, it is a very great improvement on the typical form. We are indebted
-to H. Shaw, Esq., of Buxton, for the opportunity of securing our figure, the plant
-having flowered in his choice and valuable collection during the month of August
-in the present year, producing a spike of eleven fine flowers, each measuring three
-inches in diameter. This must be regarded as a very valuable Orchid, since it
-blossoms during the late summer months, when flowers are comparatively scarce in
-our Orchid houses; while for exhibition purposes, again, it is of great value.</p>
-<p>The plant now before us is a strong grower, like <i>Cattleya guttata</i>, and sometimes
-produces as many as thirty flowers in a spike. A plant bearing a spike of this
-noble character was exhibited some years ago by Mr. Page, then gardener to the late
-<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
-W. Leaf, Esq., of Streatham, and was a most wonderful object. The stems grow
-from twenty to thirty inches in height, and are furnished at the apex with a pair
-of broad leathery leaves of a dark green colour. It produces its flowers from the
-top of the bulb after it has finished its growth. The sepals and petals are of a
-lively cinnamon-brown, spotted with rich deep crimson; while the lip is of a bright
-magenta, with the basal lobes of a paler rose colour. The blossoms last some two
-or three weeks in perfection.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya guttata Leopoldii</i> requires the same treatment as that recommended for
-other Cattleyas under Plates 3 and 6. Being a tall-growing plant, pot culture will
-be found to suit it best.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">M. Massange&rsquo;s Orchids.</span>&mdash;Ch&acirc;teau de Baillonville, the country seat of Mons. D.
-Massange de Louvrex, is situated in the Ardennes, about 6 miles from Marche, and
-some 80 miles from Brussels. The collection of Orchids at the Ch&acirc;teau is very
-large, one of the finest in Belgium. In the house devoted to East Indian Orchids
-there are some grand specimens of Vandas, A&euml;rides, and Saccolabiums. During a
-visit in July last, we noticed in bloom a very fine variety of <i>Vanda tricolor
-planilabris</i>, the flowers of which were very large, with fine broad sepals and petals,
-the markings being well defined and the colour bright. Here was also a grand
-plant of <i>V. Cathcartii</i>, about four feet high, in perfect health. Cypripediums are,
-moreover, treated with great success in this house; indeed, we noticed some plants
-of <i>C. caudatum</i> with extraordinary growths upon them, one plant having leaves as
-much as eighteen inches long, and quite distinct in the character of its growth,
-being almost erect. In the Cattleya house were some fine examples of <i>Cattleya labiata</i>,
-the true autumn-flowering variety; also <i>C. Warnerii</i> in abundance, and <i>C. Mendelii</i>.
-<i>Zygopetalum Gautieri</i>, the best variety, with dark blue flowers, was also open.
-<i>C&aelig;logyne Massangeana</i>, had a spike of twenty-three flowers; this species is a grand
-subject for treating as a basket plant, the spikes being of a drooping character;
-we have seen it bearing as many as twenty-seven flowers on a spike. There
-were, moreover, in the same house, some enormous plants of <i>Cattleya Trian&aelig;</i>, marvels
-of cultivation, with good specimens of <i>L&aelig;lia elegans</i>, <i>L. anceps</i>, <i>L. Perrinii alba</i>,
-<i>L. elegans prasiata</i>, <i>L. Stelzneriana</i>, <i>Cattleya Dowiana</i>, &amp;c., all in perfect health,
-and doing well. In the Odontoglossum houses there was not much in flower, but
-the plants were looking remarkably well and making enormous bulbs. Here we
-noticed the largest plant of <i>Restrepia antennifera</i> we have ever seen; the plant
-probably measured as much as eighteen inches across, and had some hundreds of
-leaves. Masdevallias were well represented, and there were some good varieties in
-flower: amongst others was a grand plant of <i>M. macrura</i>, as well as <i>M. Houtteana</i>
-and <i>M. trochilus</i>, forming good specimens. We saw a splendid specimen of
-<i>Odontoglossum citrosmum roseum</i> with nine flower-spikes, a marvel of good cultivation.
-Altogether, we believe, this is the most select collection of Orchids in Belgium, and
-great credit is due to Mr. Wilkie, the gardener, for the way in which he cultivates
-his plants; his employer, however, spares no expense in providing the appurtenances
-necessary to good cultivation.&mdash;<span class="sc">H. Williams.</span></p>
-<div class="img" id="fig17">
-<img src="images/p_0053.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1224" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 17.</span>
- PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
-<h2 id="c19"><span class="h2line1">PESCATOREA KLABOCHORUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig17">Plate 17</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Ecuador.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> none or consisting of a short crown or growing point from which
-the leaves and stout fibrous roots proceed. <i>Leaves</i> tufted, numerous, imbricated at the
-base, erect or spreading, lanceolate, acute, twelve to fifteen inches long, and about
-two inches wide, deep green above, paler beneath, thin but firm in texture. <i>Flowers</i>
-large and showy, measuring about three inches in diameter, the peduncles springing
-from the axils of the lower leaves; <i>dorsal sepal</i> obovate-oblong, acute, about an
-inch and a half long, white in the lower half, and of a velvety chocolate purple
-in the upper portion; <i>lateral sepals</i> more distinctly oblong, being less narrowed at
-the base, acute, and attached obliquely to the chin of the flower; <i>petals</i> obovate-oblong,
-like the dorsal sepal, acute, white, deeply tipped with chocolate purple; <i>lip</i>
-distinctly stalked, with a sharply incurved claw, normally trowel-shaped when spread
-out, three-lobed, the lateral lobes prolonged, acute, and incurved so as to meet the
-base of the column, the middle lobe obtusely cordate, sulcate, with the edge
-recurved so as to bring it to a narrow triangular outline; it is white, with the
-whole surface, except the margin, covered with short purple-tipped papill&aelig;, or &lsquo;styliform
-processes,&rsquo; ranged in combined lines; on the <i>disk</i> is a large semicircular
-lamellate ruff or frill, extending to the base, and consisting of numerous (about 20)
-erect folds or lamell&aelig;, which are white below and of a deep rich purple along the
-edge of the folds, forming a series of stripes extending inwards to the base of
-the lip. <i>Column</i> stoutish, angulate on both sides at the base, semiterete, dark
-purple, three-fourths of an inch long, projected over the basal ruff.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Pecatorea Klabochorum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span> xi., 684;
-xii., 167; <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Flower Garden</i>, re-issue, t. 21.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Zygopetalum Klabochorum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span> xi., 684.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>Until quite recently but few species of <i>Pescatorea</i> were known in cultivation.
-Latterly, however, several new ones have been introduced into this country, and
-Orchid cultivators have now more numerous opportunities of admiring the beautiful
-plants which are referred to this genus.</p>
-<p><i>Pescatorea Klabochorum</i> was introduced from Ecuador, by Franz Klaboch, a
-nephew of Herr Roezl, one of the most successful plant collectors of our time, and
-is named in commemoration of him and his surviving brother, also a traveller and
-collector, The first plants, brought home some four or five years since, were
-purchased by Messrs. James Veitch and Sons, of Chelsea, and were distributed by
-them; but since then it has been several times re-introduced, and is now to be
-found in numerous collections. Several varieties have been already noticed. It appears
-to have been first flowered in 1878 in England, by John Day, Esq., and in Scotland
-<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
-by J. Gair, Esq., and again in 1879 in the noble collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence
-Bart., M.P. The drawing reproduced in our plate was prepared from a plant which
-flowered last August in our own collection, and represents a very fair variety. A
-fine variety, which bloomed with W. Cobb, Esq., of Silverdale Lodge, Sydenham, is
-figured in the revised edition of <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Flower Garden</i>.</p>
-<p>The treatment which we find to suit this plant the best is to place it in the
-Cattleya-house at the cool end. It should be potted in a compost of peat and
-sphagnum moss, with a few lumps of charcoal added; and a liberal supply of water
-should be given during the growing season, this being gradually decreased as the
-winter approaches. The plants should be well elevated above the rim of the pot,
-so as to allow any superfluous water to drain away from the crown.</p>
-<p>We do not find that noxious insects attack the species of <i>Pescatorea</i> in any
-great degree. The scale will sometimes take up its abode on the young growths,
-but when found this can easily be removed by the use of a brush or sponge and
-water.</p>
-<p>We saw a fine lot of Pescatoreas and Bolleas in splendid condition at Falkirk
-in September last, in the collection of J. Gair, Esq. These plants are not so easy
-of cultivation as many Orchids, their treatment not being generally so well understood;
-but this was not the case in this instance, for they were perfect plants, well
-cultivated, and blooming freely. We noticed more especially a fine species named
-in honour of Mr. Gair, which bears the richest coloured flowers we have ever seen;
-of this we hope to give our readers an illustration when it flowers next year. These
-plants were grown at the end of a house where a mixed collection of Orchids, such
-as Cattleyas, Dendrobiums, A&euml;rides, and Saccolabiums, were doing well. Being a
-large house, the plants could be treated according to their several requirements,
-whereas in a small house the varied collection would not be found to do so well.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Vanda c&oelig;rulea.</span>&mdash;This <i>Vanda</i>, whose flowers are of such a distinct and beautiful
-colour, is no doubt one of the finest Orchids in cultivation. We have had the
-pleasure of seeing the plant we are about to mention for two successive years
-blooming in great perfection in the collection of the Marquis of Lothian, at Newbattle,
-Dalkeith. The plant, which stands one foot in height, and is well furnished
-with good foliage, produced two spikes of its charming flowers, fourteen on each
-spike. The sepals and petals are of a delicate lavender blue colour, barred and veined
-with a deeper tint of the same; the lip is small, and of a dark violet colour. It
-was a most showy object, and the amount of bloom upon it was extraordinary,
-considering the small size of the plant. We have seen larger specimens, but never
-one that has pleased us so well. Great credit is due to Mr. Priest for producing
-such a plant, which is increasing in size, and in the number of its flowers every
-year. There Is a good collection of Orchids being formed at this place, where the
-houses are suitable for their cultivation, and the plants are well looked after and
-cared for.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig18">
-<img src="images/p_0056.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1142" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 18.</span>
- BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
-<h2 id="c20"><span class="h2line1">BURLINGTONIA CANDIDA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig18">Plate 18</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Demerara.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> elliptic-oblong, compressed, monophyllous. <i>Leaves</i> evergreen,
-broadish oblong, acute, somewhat channelled. <i>Racemes</i> pendulous, issuing from
-the base of the pseudobulbs, three to five-flowered. <i>Flowers</i> two and a half inches
-long, white, semitransparent, with a delightful violet-like fragrance; <i>sepals</i> projected
-forwards in the plane of the lip, the <i>dorsal</i> one obovate-oblong, emarginate, the
-<i>anterior</i> one bifid, linear-oblong, about half the length of the lip, curved sharply
-forwards, and channelled so as to closely invest the spur of the lip; <i>petals</i> parallel
-with the sepals and lip, obovate, oblique, the base encircling the column, spreading
-at the apex; <i>lip</i> parallel with the column, with a channelled claw, dilated and
-bilobed in front, cuneate below, decorated in the centre with a yellow bar, the disk
-furnished with four or five yellowish lamell&aelig; on each side, of which the anterior
-ones are longer, the spur short, enclosed in the anterior sepal. <i>Column</i> smooth,
-slender, clavate, with two fleshy teeth at the apex.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Burlingtonia candida</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Botanical Register</i>, t. 1927; <i>Id.</i> <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Flower
-Garden</i>, i. 158; <i>Rand&rsquo;s Orchids</i>, 179; <i>Floral Magazine</i>, t. 548.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Rodriquezia candida</span>, <i>Bateman in litteris</i>; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales
-Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 695.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The genus <i>Burlingtonia</i> was dedicated to the amiable and accomplished Countess
-of Burlington, and contains a few small-growing but very beautiful species, which
-come mostly from Brazil. The plant now under notice, which was the earliest
-introduction, and the type of the genus, was imported from Demerara, in British
-Guiana, so long since as 1834, by James Bateman, Esq., now a veteran in the study
-and cultivation of Orchids. It is consequently well-known to the growers and collectors
-of this class of plants.</p>
-<p>As a subject for growing in a basket suspended from the roof, this species has
-few, if any, equals. When grown in this way, the pendent spikes of white flowers
-hanging over the sides of the basket produce a charming and distinct appearance.</p>
-<p>The plant is compact-growing, and, like all the species of <i>Burlingtonia</i>, is
-evergreen. The pendent flower-spikes are produced from the sides of the pseudobulbs,
-and each bear from four to six flowers, which are white, marked with yellow in
-the throat, and have a slight but pleasant odour of violets.</p>
-<p><i>Burlingtonia candida</i> should be grown in the Cattleya-house, in a basket or pan,
-suspended from the roof. Sphagnum moss, with a good drainage composed of crocks,
-is the best material for its roots, and the bulbs should be well elevated above the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
-rim of the pan or basket. This plant delights in a plentiful supply of water at
-the roots&mdash;in fact, it should never be allowed to get dry, as it requires but little
-rest. It is propagated by division of the pseudobulbs.</p>
-<p>Few insects attack this plant. The scale is the most frequent intruder, and this
-is easily removed by the use of a sponge and clean water.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Ferguslie House, Paisley.</span>&mdash;We have been in the habit of visiting the gardens
-of <span class="sc">T. Coates</span>, Esq., for many years past, and have always been surprised to see
-the Orchids grown by Mr. Thompson, the gardener who has charge of them. There
-is no house specially devoted to the cultivation of this class of plants, but they are
-grown in different houses intermixed with stove-flowering plants, foliage plants, and
-ferns, and in no instance have we seen East Indian Orchids grown to greater
-perfection. We have from time to time witnessed the progress of the specimens we
-are about to enumerate&mdash;in fact, we have seen them grown on from quite small plants
-purchased some ten or twelve years ago, and the size to which they have attained
-during this time, viz., up to the first week in September, 1881, will no doubt astonish
-some of our readers, and convince them it is not true that Orchids cannot be
-cultivated unless they have houses set apart for their especial benefit. In order to
-show the error of this conclusion, we will name a few of the Specimens that we
-saw growing on one side of a span-roofed house, with stove plants on the centre
-stage. <i>A&euml;rides suavissimum</i>, grown from a small plant, is now a fine specimen
-three feet high, having four stems, and in perfect health, the foliage reaching down
-to the pot; it bore twenty spikes of its long racemes of flowers, many of them having
-thirty-seven flowers on a spike, and was one of the most beautiful objects that have
-come under our notice. There is also another plant produced from the same specimen,
-bearing twelve spikes of its lovely blossoms, which were in full beauty. <i>A. Warnerii</i>
-is a well-grown specimen, having several stems two to three feet in height, and this
-blooms freely every year. <i>A. virens</i>, is also a fine plant, with three stems three feet
-in height. <i>A. affine</i> is a wonderful specimen of good cultivation; it is generally of
-slow growth, but in this case it has not proved so. <i>A. crispum</i> again, is well
-cultivated, having two stems nearly three feet high, and perfect, and there is also
-a second plant of the same, three feet in height. <i>A. Fieldingii</i> is a fine specimen.
-<i>Vanda tricolor</i>, a well-furnished plant, and <i>V. suavis</i> four feet high, with three
-stems, are both beautifully grown. A plant of the curious long-tailed <i>Angr&aelig;cum
-sesquipedale</i>, from eighteen inches to two feet in height, has four stems, and is
-undoubtedly the best grown specimen we have seen. <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis Schilleriana</i>, a good
-specimen, with seven of its beautifully-marked leaves, is growing suspended over the
-centre table. There are other choice Orchids, such as <i>Cypripediums</i>, <i>C&oelig;logynes</i>,
-&amp;c. We also noticed, grown in two other houses, intermixed with various plants,
-beautiful specimens of <i>L&aelig;lia Turnerii</i>, <i>L. elegans</i>, <i>L. anceps</i>, <i>Cattleya Trian&aelig;</i>, and
-others. There are also well-grown examples of <i>Calanthe Masuca</i>, of <i>Dendrobium</i>, and
-other good Orchids; but space will not admit of these being here enumerated.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig19">
-<img src="images/p_0059.jpg" alt="" width="912" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 19.</span>
- ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<h2 id="c21"><span class="h2line1">ANGULOA RUCKERII SANGUINEA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig19">Plate 19</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Colombia.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> large, ovate-oblong, four to six inches high, furrowed when
-mature. <i>Leaves</i> several, growing from the apex of the younger pseudobulbs, broadly
-lanceolate, acute, two to two and a half feet long and four to six inches broad,
-strongly ribbed and plaited. <i>Flower-scapes</i> radical, one-flowered, shorter than the
-leaves, clothed below with imbricated sheathing bracts. <i>Flowers</i> large, fleshy, nearly
-erect; <i>sepals</i> roundish with an apiculus, strongly convex, conniving into a semi-globular
-shape, which with their nearly erect position gives them a somewhat tulip-like
-appearance, creamy yellow outside, and of a deep sanguineous red on the inner
-surface; <i>petals</i> similar in form and colour to the sepals; <i>lip</i> clawed, subconvolute,
-three-lobed, the lateral lobes broadish and obtuse, the middle portion hairy, funnel-shaped
-and two-lipped, the front lobe tridentate, and with the middle part crimson
-blotched and barred with white. <i>Column</i> entire, creamy white, spotted with crimson.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Anguloa Ruckerii sanguinea</span>, <i>Lindley</i> in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1852, 271; <i>Hooker</i>,
-<i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 5384; <i>Williams&rsquo; Orchid Growers&rsquo; Manual</i>, ed. iv., 90;
-ed. v., 92.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The subject of our present illustration is an exceedingly rare plant, and is met
-with in only a few collections. In its habit of growth and general appearance it
-resembles the type <i>Anguloa Ruckerii</i>, but it is very distinct in colour, and is
-altogether a more desirable plant, the flowers being of a much richer colour&mdash;a deep
-rich blood-red spotted with a darker tint of the same&mdash;whereas in the original
-<i>A. Ruckerii</i> they are of a fine orange colour spotted with dark brown.</p>
-<p>The growth of this plant is very majestic, producing as it does bulbs four to
-six inches high, and leaves from eighteen to thirty inches long, by four to six
-inches broad. The flowers, which proceed from the base of the pseudobulb, are erect,
-tulip-shaped, and of great substance and size, lasting as long as four weeks in
-perfection. <i>A. Ruckerii sanguinea</i> is a very suitable plant for exhibition purposes
-on account of the distinct appearance produced by its massive flowers when intermixed
-with other Orchids.</p>
-<p>The temperature best suited for this plant is that of the cool Orchid-house.
-We have found it succeed well in pots in a compost of good fibrous peat, with
-plenty of drainage. It requires a good season of rest, during which period the plant
-should be kept rather dry until it begins to show renewed signs of growth, when
-the supply of water may be increased. It is propagated by division of the pseudobulbs
-just before they start into growth. We are indebted for the opportunity of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_37">37</span>
-figuring this plant to Dr. Boddaert, of Ghent, Belgium, in whose collection it
-flowered last July.</p>
-<p>A fine figure of the original <i>Anguloa Ruckerii</i> will be found in <i>Warner&rsquo;s Select
-Orchidaceous Plants</i>, 2nd series, t. 10; and it is also figured in the <i>Botanical
-Register</i>, 1846, t. 41; and in <i>Moore&rsquo;s Illustrations of Orchidaceous Plants</i>, art.
-Auguloa, plate 3.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cattleya Dowiana.</span>&mdash;We have received a very beautiful flower of this grand
-Cattleya, by post, from R. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn, in whose fine collection the
-plant has been grown. Mr. Osman, the gardener, says, &ldquo;we had three imported
-plants last year, and two of them are now in bloom.&rdquo; We were pleased to hear
-this, as <i>Cattleya Dowiana</i> is considered a difficult plant to flower, though we have seen
-many plants blooming this season. There is no doubt that its cultivation is becoming
-better understood. The variety above referred to has a large lip of a most intense
-dark purple, striped and reticulated with golden yellow, in a very prominent manner.
-The sepals and petals are large, of good substance, of a bright nankeen colour,
-and produce a very pleasing and altogether distinct appearance. This is, undoubtedly,
-one of the most distinct and beautiful of all Cattleyas. There is a grand figure of
-this species in the 2nd series of <i>Warner&rsquo;s Select Orchidaceous Plants</i>, t. 27.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cypripedium Spicerianum.</span>&mdash;We were pleased to receive last month a splendid
-bloom of this fine variety from J. S. Bockett, Esq., of Stamford Hill. There is
-no doubt that it is one of the most distinct species of the whole genus. The
-dorsal sepal is erect, curiously curved, pure white, of a wax-like texture, having a
-purple streak extending from the base to the apex; the linear-oblong petals are
-much crisped on the edge, and, like the other parts of the flower, are of a bronzy-green
-colour, the lip being darker, of a reddish-brown and glossy. It has been
-named in honour of H. Spicer, Esq., and was introduced from India some few years
-ago. We also received at the same time a fine form of <i>Odontoglossum Chestertoni</i>,
-and a most distinctly spotted variety of <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i>, the sepals and petals of
-which are white, spotted with reddish-crimson, and the lip white, with a large
-reddish-brown blotch on the lower portion.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig20">
-<img src="images/p_0062.jpg" alt="" width="936" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 20.</span>
- DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM.[</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<h2 id="c22"><span class="h2line1">DENDROBIUM AINSWORTHII ROSEUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig20">Plate 20</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">A Garden Hybrid.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> (pseudobulbs) clustered, elongate, spreading, terete, stoutish
-above, tapering to the base, jointed, the surface furrowed between the joints. <i>Leaves</i>
-distichous, linear-oblong, acute, three-fourths of an inch broad, sheathing the stems
-at the base, the sheaths remaining as a membranous investment. <i>Peduncles</i> proceeding
-from the joints of the stem, slender, two to three-flowered, the pedicels with small
-ovate bracts at their base. <i>Flowers</i> showy, white, with rich amaranth-crimson blotch,
-measuring about three inches across; <i>sepals</i> lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, spreading,
-white, tinged with rose colour, as are the larger and broader oblong-ovate <i>petals</i>;
-<i>lip</i> (labellum) broadly obovate, cucullate, the basal portion rolled in over the column,
-the anterior portion spread out into a broad concave heart-shaped front lobe, which
-is undulated at the margin, and nearly covered by a large rich amaranth-crimson
-blotch, feathered at the edge, and traversed by deeper crimson veins, the extreme
-margin being paler. <i>Column</i> short, enclosed by the basal portion of the lip.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Dendrobium Ainsworthii</span>, <i>Moore</i> in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i> (1874), <span class="small">N.S.</span> i. 443, figs.
-93, 94; <i>Id.</i> <span class="small">N.S.</span> viii., 166, figs. 30, 31, 32; <i>Anderson</i> in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>,
-<span class="small">N.S.</span> vii., 751; <i>Floral Magazine</i>, 2 s. t. 196; <i>Rand&rsquo;s Orchids</i>, 242; <i>Williams&rsquo;
-Orchid Growers&rsquo; Manual</i>, ed. v., 163.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><i>Var.</i> <span class="small">ROSEUM</span>; sepals and petals tinted with magenta rose; lip almost wholly covered
-by the large mulberry-crimson feathered blotch.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Dendrobium Ainsworthii</span> <i>var.</i> <span class="small">ROSEUM</span>, <i>Moore</i> in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i> (1877), <span class="small">N.S.</span>
-vii., 655; <i>Id.</i> <span class="small">N.S.</span> viii., 166; <i>Anderson</i> in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span> vii., 750.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The beautiful <i>Dendrobium Ainsworthii</i> is the result of a cross between <i>D. nobile</i>
-and <i>D. heterocarpum</i>, and was raised by Mr. Mitchell, gardener to R. F. Ainsworth, Esq.,
-M.D., Of Higher Broughton, Manchester, after whom it is named. In habit of growth
-and in general appearance the plant partakes mostly of the character of <i>D. nobile</i>,
-while the flowers more closely resemble those of <i>D. heterocarpum</i> in form, and have
-in a slight degree the delicious fragrance of those produced by that species. In
-<i>D. Ainsworthii</i> the flowers have white sepals and petals, while the lip is marked
-by a dense blotch of a rich amaranth or mulberry-crimson. In the <i>D. Ainsworthii
-roseum</i> now figured, the sepals and petals are of a bright rosy-magenta, and the lip
-is more fully covered with a richer coloured deep crimson blotch. This variety is
-extremely rare, and forms a charming contrast to the white blossoms of its sister
-hybrid. The flowers will be found very useful for cutting, as they last for a
-considerable time in water.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p><i>Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum</i> requires treatment similar to that given to
-<i>D. nobile</i>. We have found it to do well in a compost of peat and sphagnum moss,
-planted in pans suspended from the roof of the East India house, in a position
-where it can get plenty of light and air. During the growing season this plant
-enjoys a liberal supply of water, which after the bulbs have completed their development
-may be gradually withheld, and the plant cooled down by placing it in the
-Cattleya-house, where it should remain until the time of flowering, which extends
-from February to June. Mr. Stevens, of Trentham, grows it very successfully,
-suspended in a well-appointed plant stove, where it has abundance of light.</p>
-<p>We remember seeing a splendid plant of <i>Dendrobium Ainsworthii roseum</i> exhibited
-by Mr. Mitchell, at the Whitsuntide Manchester Show, in May, 1877, in the form
-of a well furnished specimen two and a half feet in height and two feet in breadth,
-the stems being literally smothered with some hundreds of its beautiful crimson-lipped
-rosy-tinted flowers.</p>
-<p>Referring to this same Manchester Show of 1877, Mr. Anderson, of Meadow
-Bank, a well-known Orchid grower, writes of this plant, as follows (<i>Gardeners&rsquo;
-Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span> vii., 750):&mdash;&ldquo;Possibly the gem of the Exhibition was <i>Dendrobium
-Ainsworthii roseum</i>. This is a most remarkable seedling partaking of the character
-of both its parents (<i>D. nobile</i> and <i>D. heterocarpum</i>), and in some respects superior
-to either. In point of floriferousness none of its parents can lay claim to such a
-quantity of nodes on the deciduous stems, each bearing, or rather emitting, its quota
-of flowers. I counted on one stem sixteen short racemes, each two and three-flowered.
-The flower itself has the sepals and petals of <i>moniliforme</i> rather than of <i>nobile</i>, white
-shaded with an almost imperceptible tint of rose, and tipped distinctly with that
-soft pleasing colour. The labellum is flat, like an expanded <i>heterocarpum</i>, reflexing
-a little towards the centre, with a blotch covering three-quarters of its surface with
-deep veined purplish or rather mulberry-crimson, edged very distinctly with white,
-and the extremity slightly tipped with crimson. This I look upon as one of the
-greatest gains in hybridization, whether we regard the colour of the flower, or the
-general floriferousness of the plant, or its free although not awkward habit of growth.
-As an Orchid enthusiast of the last five and twenty years, I would pronounce it one
-of the greatest gains that may be counted up in the whole known Orchid family.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Altogether this is a most desirable plant, and being easy of cultivation, and of
-remarkably free-flowering habit, it should find a place in every collection.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig21">
-<img src="images/p_0065.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1210" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 21.</span>
- AERIDES LOBBII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
-<h2 id="c23"><span class="h2line1">A&Euml;RIDES LOBBII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig21">Plate 21</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Moulmein.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> erect, densely foliose, producing the stout a&euml;rial roots from
-between the leaf bases. <i>Leaves</i> evergreen, close set, distichous, leathery in texture,
-loriform, channelled, obliquely bilobed at the apex, of a deep green colour, obsoletely
-spotted with purple, paler on the under surface. <i>Racemes</i> axillary, many-flowered,
-long, branched, cylindrical, pendulous. <i>Flowers</i> very numerous, medium-sized, fragrant,
-the sepals and petals white, flushed with rosy purple and spotted with deeper rose-purple,
-the broader lip with a bar of rosy purple, darkest in the centre, from base
-to apex, and bordered with white; <i>sepals</i> and <i>petals</i> elliptic-oblong, nearly equal,
-incurved; <i>lip</i> much larger, clawed, the claw hollowed out and coadunate with the
-base of the column, the limb ovate or somewhat lozenge-shaped, wavy at the margin;
-<i>spur</i> arcuate, somewhat compressed laterally. <i>Column</i> short, in form resembling the
-neck and beak of a bird, with the front edge produced and folded over the
-stigmatic cavity.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">A&euml;rides Lobbii</span>, <i>Hort. Veitch</i>; <i>Lemaire</i>, <i>Illustration Horticole</i>, xv., t. 559;
-<i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Growers&rsquo; Manual</i>, ed. 5, 67; <i>Rand</i>, <i>Orchids</i>, 149; <i>Britten &amp;
-Gower</i>, <i>Orchids for Amateurs</i>, 177.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This very beautiful brightly-coloured plant was discovered in Moulmein by Mr.
-Thomas Lobb, who sent it to the Messrs. Veitch &amp; Sons, of Chelsea, about the year
-1856. It is of remarkably free-flowering and decorative character, and is no doubt
-one of the most beautiful species of this fine genus of Orchids, being valuable alike
-on account of its compact-growing habit, and the strikingly ornamental nature of
-its inflorescence. There appear to be several varieties of this plant distributed
-through our Orchid collections, all of them handsome and deserving of cultivation,
-but that which we now illustrate, from a finely grown, elegantly branching spike,
-kindly sent to us by C. J. Hill, Esq., of Nottingham, and referred to in the note
-published under Plate 15, is the finest form, and the most freely bloomed specimen
-we have met with. We were, in truth, charmed with the size and colour of the
-flowers of this plant, when recently inspecting Mr. Hill&rsquo;s collection, the long spikes
-of blossom which were produced by so small a plant being quite extraordinary.</p>
-<p>There is no genus of Orchids that surpasses <i>A&euml;rides</i> in having handsome evergreen
-foliage, so that, even when not in blossom, they are exceedingly pretty objects;
-while to this it must be added, that their flower-spikes are beautiful, and their
-<span class="pb" id="Page_41">41</span>
-flowers deliciously fragrant; some, of course, are more handsome than others, but
-all are worth growing: in fact, we have never seen an indifferent <i>A&euml;rides</i>. They
-have every good quality that a plant of this character can possess, and they are of
-easy cultivation, so that anyone who has a stove may manage them successfully.
-They do not require so much heat as some persons imagine; the temperature need
-not be above 65&deg; in the winter; more is, indeed, required in summer, but even
-then sun-heat should be fully utilised, and very little fire-heat should be used.</p>
-<p><i>A&euml;rides Lobbii</i> blooms in June and July, and lasts for three or four weeks
-in beauty. The plant, from which our illustration was taken, was but a foot in
-height, and the magnificent flowering racemes we saw upon it were fully two feet
-six inches in length, with two branches each a foot in length. The sepals and
-petals are white, spotted with bright rose colour; the lip is also of a bright rose
-colour, slightly veined and margined with white. The flowers are deliciously fragrant.</p>
-<p>The plant being very compact in growth, occupies but little space, so that
-anyone having a small vacant place in the Orchid-house or plant stove, might readily
-grow it. It will thrive either in a basket suspended from the roof of the house,
-or in a pot planted in sphagnum moss, with good drainage, and a moderate supply
-of water during the summer season, while in winter only just sufficient should be
-given to keep the moss damp. The plants do not, however, like to be dried up,
-as this often causes them to loose their bottom leaves, which is a great disfigurement.
-They require plenty of light, but do not like to be exposed to the burning
-sunshine. Canvas should therefore be used as a shading during all the bright sunny
-portion of the day, but when the sun has, in some degree, lost its burning heat the
-blinds may be raised. Never allow water to get into the hearts of the plants in
-winter. In summer a fine rose should be employed to syringe them, which operation
-should be done about three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon, when the house is closed.</p>
-<p>They should be always kept free from insects. Scale, thrips, and many other
-insects are to be reckoned amongst their enemies, and cockroaches, if allowed to
-attack them, will often eat away their young roots and flower-spikes.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig22">
-<img src="images/p_0068.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1205" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 22.</span>
- CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCIANUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<h2 id="c24"><span class="h2line1">CYPRIPEDIUM LAWRENCEANUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig22">Plate 22</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Borneo.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stem</i> almost none, the leaves springing from the crown of stout
-roots. <i>Leaves</i> radical, distichous, coriaceous, broadly oblong, acute, channelled, a foot
-long, the upper surface marbled with a dark green mosaic pattern on a whitish-green
-ground colour. <i>Scapes</i> solitary in the leaf-axils, stout, pubescent, with an oblong-ovate
-acute sheathing bract near the top, from which the flower or flowers emerge.
-<i>Flowers</i> very large, in the way of those of <i>C. barbatum majus</i>; <i>dorsal sepal</i> sub-rotund
-or very broadly-ovate, acute, white, with numerous (about thirteen) shining
-curved purplish veins which run out nearly or quite to the edge, and usually alternate
-with others which are short and less boldly marked; <i>lateral sepals</i> connate, small,
-oblong, greenish white, with five dark purplish veins; <i>petals</i> fully half an inch wide,
-divaricate, linear-oblong ciliate, green in the upper half, with purple margin, stained
-with dull purple towards the tip, and with several dark fleshy warts along each
-margin, the lower half flushed with pale wine red; <i>lip</i> very large, pouch-shaped,
-the lateral horns much developed, purplish brown above, yellowish green below, with
-numerous warts on the inside. <i>Staminode</i> of a wax-like yellowish white, the posterior
-exterior border split in the centre, and having five anterior teeth, the middle one
-much larger than the rest.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cypripedium Lawrenceanum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span>, x.,
-748; <i>Veitch and Sons</i>, <i>Catalogue of New Plants</i>, 1879, p. 9, 23, with figure;
-<i>Florist and Pomologist</i>, 1880, 112, with figure.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The introduction of this splendid species of Lady&rsquo;s Slipper is one of the results
-of Mr. F. W. Burbidge&rsquo;s visit to Borneo, in the service of Messrs. Veitch &amp; Sons,
-of Chelsea. It is a very robust grower, and flowered for the first time in the
-autumn of 1878, when it was named by Professor Reichenbach, in the place above
-quoted, in honour of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P., an ardent orchidophilist, and
-the possessor of a collection of Orchids of unequalled richness and beauty.</p>
-<p>The Cypripediums now form a large family group, and rank amongst the most
-useful of Orchids that can be cultivated, since the lasting quality of their flowers,
-especially for exhibition and decorative purposes, is something extraordinary. Many
-of them in addition possess beautifully variegated foliage, as in the species we now
-figure, which has the leaves most distinctly marked with light and dark green.
-Our drawing was taken from a very fine plant in the select collection of H. M.
-Pollett, Esq., Fernside, Bickley, a gentleman who is a great lover of Orchids, and
-who has the wisdom to secure healthy young plants at the outset, in order that he
-may see them grow on into good specimens, such as the one now before us has
-done. It gives one great pleasure to see plants so well cultivated.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<p><i>Cypripedium Lawrenceanum</i> has, as we have already said, beautifully marked
-foliage, so that even when not in blossom, it is found to be an object of attraction.
-The upper or dorsal sepals of the flowers were in this case three inches across,
-white, striped with plum-purple, which runs in curved lines from the base nearly to
-the margin. The petals are green along the upper edge, suffused with purple
-towards the end, and having black wart-like spots, and a fringe of purple hairs
-along the margin. The pouch or lip is large, of a reddish brown colour in front,
-the under and hinder part yellowish green.</p>
-<p>These plants are best grown in pots with peat, and a little charcoal, or sometimes
-a little good fibrous loam mixed with the peat. It is a free-rooting species,
-and likes to be well elevated above the pot rim, so that its roots can penetrate
-readily and work freely in the rough material. The pot should be half filled with
-drainage, so that a good supply of moisture may be given to the roots during the
-growing season. The Cattleya or the East India-house seems to suit the plants well,
-as in these structures they grow and flower freely.</p>
-<p>The flowers are very useful for cutting, as they will keep a long time in
-vases if the water is kept sweet and pure.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Baron Schr&ouml;der&rsquo;s Orchids.</span>&mdash;On the occasion of a recent visit to The Dell,
-Staines, the seat of Baron Schr&ouml;der, we had the good fortune to inspect the fine
-collection of Orchids which has been got together. The houses are well built, after
-the plans of Mr. Ballantyne, the gardener, and are placed in good positions; not
-only have the ventilation and heating power been well considered, but cleanliness
-also; indeed the arrangement of the houses leaves nothing to be desired. The
-Orchids were, at the time, looking remarkably well. Entering the Phal&aelig;nopsis house we
-noticed a fine plant in flower of the rare and beautiful <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis intermedia Portei</i>,
-a treat which seldom falls to one&rsquo;s lot, for it is a matter of regret that this splendid
-Phal&aelig;nopsis is so rare in collections: it must be very scarce in its native habitat
-or collectors would surely find it oftener. <i>Cypripedium Spicerianum</i> was also flowering
-here. Several different species of <i>Nepenthes</i> were in fine character, growing above
-a tank, with their pitchers gracefully drooping over the water, in which position
-they seemed to be quite at home. In this house were also some grand plants of
-different species of <i>Saccolabium</i>, <i>Cypripedium</i>, &amp;c., all doing well. Leaving the
-Phal&aelig;nopsis house the Cattleya house, which runs at right angles to it, is next
-entered. Here we noticed a gigantic specimen of <i>Cattleya exoniensis</i>, carrying several
-spikes of flower; <i>L&aelig;lia autumnalis atrorubens</i>, with grand spikes, and flowers of
-unusual size and fine colour; and <i>Dendrobium Wardianum</i> in full beauty, suspended
-from the roof. The Cattleyas, &amp;c., in this house were in grand condition, and bid
-fair to produce some fine spikes next season. In the Odontoglossum house <i>Zygopetalum
-Gautieri</i> was flowering well, also <i>Miltonia candida</i> and <i>Sophronitis grandiflora</i>.
-The East Indian Orchids were in an especially healthy condition, the
-collection containing some grand specimens of <i>Vanda</i>, <i>A&euml;rides</i>, and <i>Saccolabium</i>.</p>
-<p>This collection, which has been lately formed, bids fair to become one of the
-finest in the country, Baron Schr&ouml;der being an enthusiastic lover of this handsome
-class of plants, and being also careful to obtain only the best varieties.&mdash;H. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig23">
-<img src="images/p_0071.jpg" alt="" width="868" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 23.</span>
- L&AElig;LIA XANTHINA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<h2 id="c25"><span class="h2line1">L&AElig;LIA XANTHINA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig23">Plate 23</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> clavate fusiform, the narrowed base closely invested by
-imbricating bracts, monophyllous. <i>Leaves</i> oblong-lorate, bluntish, coriaceous, longer
-than the pseudobulbs, and with them reaching to about a foot in height. <i>Scape</i>
-four to six flowered, issuing from a terminal linear-oblong acute compressed bract or
-spathe, three-fourths of an inch wide and about four inches long, and of a pale
-green colour. <i>Flowers</i> leathery in texture, three to four inches across, very distinct
-in aspect; <i>sepals</i> and <i>petals</i> oblong-ligulate obtuse, undulated, the sides rolled back
-so that they appear convex, the petals most so, both of a deep golden yellow, more
-or less stained or flushed with olive-green; <i>lip</i> cucullate, subquadrate, obtusely three-lobed
-at the apex, yolk of egg colour, paler at the edge, the front border white,
-and marked on the disc by a few crimson-purple veins, which are not raised like
-crests above the surface, as in the allied <i>L. flava</i>. <i>Column</i> semiterete, clavate,
-lobulate at the apex, projected forwards, about as long as the entire edges of the
-lip and convergent therewith.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia xanthina</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, in <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 5144; <i>Bateman</i>, <i>Second
-Century of Orchidaceous Plants</i>, t. 180; <i>Rand</i>, <i>Orchids</i>, 303.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Bletia xanthina</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>,
-vi. 425; <i>Id.</i> <i>Xenia Orchidace&aelig;</i>, ii. 54.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This interesting and distinct-looking <i>L&aelig;lia</i> was introduced from Brazil many
-years ago by Messrs. Backhouse &amp; Son, of York, but from the limited quantity then
-obtained it has always remained a scarce plant. It appears to have been imported
-about 1858, as it was figured in 1859 in the <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, as above quoted.
-It is, indeed, with great pleasure that we are enabled to introduce to our readers
-a figure of so rare and so distinct a species, for it is seldom seen in collections,
-having always been a rare plant. The colour of the flowers is of a nankeen-yellow,
-consequently they strongly contrast with those of the generality of Orchids of this
-affinity, the usual colours of which are purple, or rose colour in various tints, or
-white.</p>
-<p>Our plate was prepared from a drawing which was made in September last
-from a plant which flowered in our own collection. It will be seen from the
-representation, which is a very faithful one, that <i>L&aelig;lia xanthina</i> is really a very
-pretty species, and one that our collectors ought to be looking after, so that Orchid
-growers may have it supplied to them at a more reasonable price than at present.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<p>The plant grows about a foot in height, and is somewhat like <i>L&aelig;lia purpurata</i>
-in its habit of growth, only it is very much smaller and more compact and free-blooming.
-The flowers continue about three weeks in perfection. It requires the
-same kind of treatment as other species of <i>L&aelig;lia</i> and <i>Cattleya</i>, and thrives best
-when cultivated in a pot or basket, with fibrous peat, and good drainage. Like the
-rest of its class it requires to be kept as fully exposed to the light as possible, in
-order that the pseudobulbs may be thoroughly ripened; and the growth being thus
-more completely matured, it will be found to become more vigorous in character,
-and enabled to throw up its flower-spikes more freely. There is a grand specimen
-of this species, over two feet in diameter, in the collection of H. Shaw, Esq.,
-Corbar, Buxton.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia autumnalis atrorubens.</span>&mdash;It is highly gratifying to find that this
-splendid variety of <i>L&aelig;lia autumnalis</i>, is becoming more plentiful, and that it keeps
-up its original character. Many growers were of opinion when it was first introduced,
-that the large size of its flowers and the rich colour of the sepals and petals
-were due mainly to superior cultivation and a pure atmosphere, but such is not the
-case. We have flowered some plants of it this season in our own establishment at
-Holloway, which have been as good, both in regard to the size and colour of the
-flowers, as those of any of the plants grown in a purer atmosphere, away from the
-smoke of this great City. We have received from the Right Honorable J.
-Chamberlain, Esq., M.P., of Birmingham, a splendidly developed spike of a grand
-form of this beautiful variety, which had been grown under the care of his gardener,
-Mr. Cooper.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Odontoglossum vexillarium</span> (Autumn-flowering variety)&mdash;A short time back
-Mr. W. Bull exhibited at South Kensington a recently imported form of <i>Odontoglossum
-vexillarium</i>, which had all the appearance of being a distinct variety, flowering
-during the autumn months of the year. It is, however, we think, somewhat premature
-to regard this autumn-flowering character as thoroughly established, though there is
-no doubt the variety is a distinct one, and remarkably fine in colour. This being
-the first time of its flowering, the particular growth shown may have been influenced
-by the time at which the plants were started. However, in due time, and with
-good cultivation we shall see whether this peculiarity of flowering towards the end
-of the year is really a constant character, or whether it may have resulted from
-the circumstances above referred to.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig24">
-<img src="images/p_0074.jpg" alt="" width="871" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 23.</span>
- MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA C&OElig;RULESCENS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<h2 id="c26"><span class="h2line1">MASDEVALLIA HARRYANA C&OElig;RULESCENS.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig24">Plate 24</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of New Grenada.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> slender, tufted. <i>Leaves</i> evergreen, coriaceous, ten to twelve
-inches long, with a nerveless elongate oblong-spathulate blade, obtuse or somewhat
-acute at the apex, channelled at the base, keeled behind, of a very dark green
-colour, narrowed downwards into the stout petiole, which is three to four inches
-long, deeply grooved in front, and invested at the base by long membranous brownish
-sheaths. <i>Scape</i> a foot long or more, brown, covered below with three or four
-bluntish sheaths, the upper of which is distant from the flower and closely appressed.
-<i>Flowers</i> large, peculiar in form, richly coloured, the colour varying in different forms,
-typically of a brilliant magenta-crimson; <i>dorsal sepal</i> elongate linear from a triangular
-base, sub-erect or reflexed; <i>lateral sepals</i> broadly semiovate, apiculate, connate to
-below the middle, deflexed, the tips approximate, all united below into a decurved
-<i>tube</i>, which is yellow (in the allied <i>M. Lindeni</i> the tube is white); petals small,
-hidden within the tube, linear-oblong emarginate, the base auriculate on one side;
-<i>lip</i> also small, enclosed, clawed, tongue-shaped, cordate at the base. <i>Column</i> rather
-longer than the lip, entire, not winged.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Masdevallia Harryana</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1871, 1421;
-<i>Florist &amp; Pomologist</i>, 1873, 169, with coloured figure; <i>Belgique Horticole</i>, 1873,
-t. 21; <i>Flore des Serres</i>, t. 2250.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Masdevallia Lindeni</span>, <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, <i>t.</i> 5990&mdash;<i>fide</i> Reichenbach.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Masdevallia Lindeni</span>, <i>var.</i> <span class="sc">Harryana</span>, <i>Andr&eacute;</i>, <i>Illustration Horticole</i>, 3 ser., t. 142.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><i>Var.</i> <span class="sc">C&OElig;RULESCENS</span>: flowers of a rich magenta-crimson, with a bluish-purple flush
-or bloom; otherwise as in the type.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Masdevallia Harryana c&oelig;rulescens</span>, <i>Hort.</i> <i>plurim.</i>; <i>Bull</i>, <i>Catalogue of New
-Plants</i>, 1877, p. 83.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>We ought to be cordially grateful to our plant collectors for introducing to
-European gardens so brilliant, varied, and charming a set of epiphytal plants, as the
-several showy ornamental, and pleasingly grotesque species of the genus <i>Masdevallia</i>.
-There are indeed but few Orchids that possess such bright colours as are found therein.
-A few years since we had but two species that were really worth growing, namely,
-<i>M. coccinea</i>, of an orange-scarlet colour, and <i>M. tovarensis</i>, pure white. Then
-came <i>M. Lindeni</i>, a charming plant with flowers of a rich magenta-purple colour.
-<i>M. Veitchiana</i>, of which there are some very fine forms, made a fine contrast with
-its glowing orange-scarlet and bright yellow, the scarlet flushed with purple. The most
-beautiful, however, of all the Masdevallias are the varieties of <i>M. Harryana</i>, the
-colours of which&mdash;shades of magenta-crimson&mdash;are most intense and brilliant, many of
-the forms being also distinct in shape.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<p><i>Masdevallia Harryana c&oelig;rulescens</i>, our present subject, was forwarded to us by
-R. P. Percival, Esq., of Southport, who is forming what will in time doubtless become
-one of the best collections of these plants in the North of England. Whatever
-Mr. Percival takes in hand he carries out thoroughly, and this has led him to
-build separate houses to suit the different classes of Orchids. Now as Masdevallias
-prefer cool treatment they are best kept in a house by themselves: they require
-but a small one, as they take up very little room; indeed they will thrive well
-enough in the Odontoglossum house, for if their few wants are attended to, there
-are no freer growing plants in cultivation. They increase very fast under good
-treatment, and soon repay all the care which is bestowed upon them. They last a
-long time in beauty and make grand exhibition plants, producing also, when in
-bloom, a charming effect in the houses if intermixed with the various Odontoglots
-and other cool Orchids. There are so many varieties that some of them will always
-be in flower, but the best time to see them is from May to July. They are so
-accommodating to the grower that many wonderful specimens have been produced
-and exhibited during the last few years. When a plant is found to be too large it
-may be divided, and the divided portions will go on increasing.</p>
-<p>We have found good fibrous peat and sphagnum moss to suit well as material
-for the potting of these plants. They thrive best in small pots. The roots should
-not be disturbed too often; when, however, they require fresh material to root in,
-it must be given them, as they are free rooting plants and prefer to have sweet
-wholesome soil about them. They must also have good drainage, for they need an
-abundant supply of water, and by giving them efficient drainage the water passes
-off quickly without doing any harm, which it would do if allowed to become stagnant
-about them. The plants should be placed near the light but so as to avoid the
-sun&rsquo;s rays. A north house suits them best, as it shields them in summer from the
-heat of the day, which they do not like, in fact, they should be kept as cool as
-possible at all times, very little fire-heat being required in winter, and none during
-the summer. They like fresh air, but in winter cold draughts must be avoided.
-We find that they will thrive in a heat of from 45&deg; to 50&deg;: even somewhat less
-would suffice, but the temperature here named is the most suitable. Anyone, therefore,
-who possesses a small low house could grow them at a trifling expense.</p>
-<p>They are easily propagated by dividing the tufts, leaving about three old stems
-and a leading growth associated. The best time for the division to be effected is
-just as they are beginning to grow. They should be placed in small pots until
-they are established, when they should be removed to larger ones.</p>
-<p>Insects should be annihilated as soon as they put in an appearance. The thrips
-is their greatest pest. Cool Orchids, as a rule, are also subject to the attack of a
-small kind of snail, that increases very rapidly, if not kept under by constant
-watching night and morning. A few lettuce leaves placed in different parts of the
-house, or potatos or turnips cut in half and scooped out in the centre, form good
-traps for them, and by looking these over frequently many of them may be caught,
-as also by moving the plants, as they are apt to harbour about the pots.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig25">
-<img src="images/p_0077.jpg" alt="" width="920" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 25.</span>
- CYMBIDIUM PARISHII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<h2 id="c27"><span class="h2line1">CYMBIDIUM PARISHII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig25">Plate 25</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Moulmein.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> fusiform, three to four inches long, annulately marked with
-the remains of the leaf-bases. <i>Leaves</i> evergreen, distichous, ligulate-linear, keeled
-behind, bifid with acute lobes, from one to two feet long, of a rich green colour.
-<i>Racemes</i> springing from the axils of the outer leaves, three to seven-flowered, the
-scapes furnished with lanceolate, falcate, acuminate, scariose sheaths. <i>Flowers</i> large,
-sweet-scented, ivory-white, with an orange disk and crimson-purple spots on the lip;
-<i>sepals</i> and <i>petals</i> oblong-ligulate, acute, of a creamy white colour, the lateral sepals
-largest; <i>lip</i> white with an orange coloured central band, flabellately dilated from
-a narrowed base, three-cleft in front, the side lobes oblong directed forwards, white,
-with numerous violet-purple spots, the middle or front lobe cuneate-ovate, undulated,
-with an orange-coloured silky or velvety disk, spotted with purplish crimson; disk
-having near the base a callus which terminates abruptly in front, and is furnished
-on the outer side with velvety hairs. <i>Column</i> white behind, yellow at the edges,
-and in front having brownish purple spots at the base; caudicle provided in front, on
-both sides, with an awl-shaped extrorse process.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cymbidium Parishii</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, <i>MS. Herb. Kew</i>; <i>Id.</i> <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>,
-<span class="small">N.S. I.</span>, 338, 566; x., 74; <i>Id.</i> <i>Transactions of the Linnean Society</i>, xxx., 144.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The genus <i>Cymbidium</i> forms a small group of Orchids of which there are but
-few species worthy of cultivation for ornamental purposes. That which we now figure
-is one of the best of them, and is a very rare and very beautiful plant,
-which has but seldom bloomed in this country. In the summer of 1878 Mr. Swan,
-gardener to W. Leach, Esq., of Oakley Fallowfield, Manchester, flowered it for the
-first time in Europe, and about the same time another specimen blossomed with
-John Day, Esq., of Tottenham, which was subsequently purchased by us for 100
-guineas. This latter plant has again flowered, and our sketch was taken from it.</p>
-<p>Though a near relative of <i>Cymbidium eburneum</i>, this plant is considered by
-Reichenbach to be a distinct species, the points of difference being&mdash;the broader
-leaves with more prominent nerves on the upper surface; the somewhat smaller
-flowers with shorter sepals and petals; and the different form of the segments of the
-lip, together with some peculiarities in its callus and pubescence. It is one of the
-treasures of India, having been originally discovered so long since as 1859, in
-Moulmein, by the Rev. C. Parish, who found <i>Dendrobium crassinode</i> at the same
-time. The plants of both these fine Orchids, then collected, were lost in the Ganges,
-and the <i>Cymbidium</i> was not seen again for many years. It appears to have been
-actually introduced shortly prior to 1874, since at that date living plants are
-<span class="pb" id="Page_49">49</span>
-recorded as being rarities in the collection of Mr. J. Day, of Tottenham, and Mr. R.
-Warner, of Broomfield, though it had not then flowered in Europe. It is a most
-chaste and lovely plant, its graceful green foliage, and creamy white blossoms in which
-the lip is spotted with crimson, producing a beautiful effect. The flowers have also a
-pleasant perfume, and last for three or four weeks in perfection. The flowering season
-is July and August, and several flowers are produced upon a spike, in which respect
-it has a decided advantage on the score of beauty over <i>C. eburneum</i>, which
-produces but one flower on a spike. The latter, however, is a charming Orchid for
-winter and spring flowering, its ivory-white blossoms being then especially acceptable.
-There is also another fine species, <i>C. Mastersii</i>, which produces its white flowers
-during the dull months of autumn, when Orchid as well as other white flowers,
-are scarce. These are all worth growing for the purpose of cutting, as they keep
-for a long time in water.</p>
-<p><i>Cymbidium Parishii</i> is very much like <i>C. eburneum</i> and <i>C. Mastersii</i> in its
-manner of growth, and also in its general appearance; in fact, it is somewhat
-difficult, when the plants are not in bloom, to distinguish the one from the other.
-An inspection of our figure will, however, show that the foliage of <i>C. Parishii</i> is
-broader and that it is of a lighter green colour.</p>
-<p>It requires the same treatment as <i>C. eburneum</i>. We grow the plants in pots,
-in the Cattleya house, on the side tables, near the glass. The material we use for
-potting is rough fibrous peat and loam, with thoroughly good drainage, the plants
-being also elevated above the rim of the pot. Their roots are thick and fleshy,
-and they therefore require a good supply of water during the growing season, but
-when at rest, the soil must be kept only just moist. They must be shielded from
-bright sunshine, by blinds or some other means, otherwise their foliage will become
-spotted. In winter they do not like to have their leaves damped, although in
-summer, on warm days, it will not injure them.</p>
-<p>They are propagated by dividing the tufts just as they are starting to make
-fresh growth, leaving some of the established portion at the back of the new growth.
-They must be kept free from insects. The white scale, which sometimes endeavours
-to make its way on the foliage, is that chiefly to be guarded against.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Vanda tricolor.</span>&mdash;In November last, we saw in the collection of J. Broome,
-Esq., of Didsbury, a very finely grown plant of <i>V. tricolor</i>, with two spikes of
-exceedingly richly coloured flowers&mdash;one of the best we have ever seen. It is in
-the way of the Dalkeith variety, but the flowers are large and of a remarkably
-bright colour. Mr. Broome sent us a spike to figure but it was spoilt in the
-transit; we hope, however, to be able to procure another when the plant again
-blooms, so that our subscribers may see what a well-grown specimen it is. It stands
-two feet six inches in height, and has beautifully healthy foliage down to the pot.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig26">
-<img src="images/p_0080.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1198" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 26.</span>
- CATTLEYA VELUTINA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<h2 id="c28"><span class="h2line1">CATTLEYA VELUTINA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig26">Plate 26</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> slender, terete, from twelve to eighteen inches high, supporting
-the evergreen foliage, and furnished at intervals with short ovate appressed
-bracts. <i>Leaves</i> in pairs, oblong, acute, widest near the base, leathery, about eight
-inches long, and an inch and a half broad, of a dark green colour. <i>Scape</i> two-flowered,
-issuing from a terminal compressed sheath or bract. <i>Flowers</i> of medium
-size, stout in texture, tawny orange, the lip white marked with purplish spots
-arranged in radiating lines, very fragrant; <i>sepals</i> ligulate-oblong, acute, recurved, rich
-tawny orange, spotted with purple; <i>petals</i> of the same colour, cuneate-oblong, acute,
-somewhat lobulate or wavy; <i>lip</i> three-lobed, the side lobes very short semi-ovate,
-partially enclosing the column, the front lobe large, roundish-ovate, apiculate, wavy and
-toothletted, the disk between the side lobes yellow with purplish streaks, the radiating
-veins purplish, the front or middle lobe white with dark purple veins, everywhere
-clothed with velvety pubescence. <i>Column</i> free at the back, marked with many purple
-spots, and having a purplish border to the anther-bed.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya velutina</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1870, 140, 1373;
-<i>Id.</i> 1872, 1259, figs. 288, 289; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed. 135.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This fine Orchid first flowered in 1870, under the care of Mr. A. Williams, in
-the collection of Joseph Broome, Esq., of Didsbury, Manchester, and subsequently in
-that of E. G. Wrigley, Esq., of Bury. What is described as a still finer variety of
-the same plant appeared shortly after in the collection of Consul Schiller, of Hamburgh.
-One of the most remarkable and special peculiarities of the species is the powerful
-fragrance of its flowers, which is so strongly developed as to scent the whole house
-in which a blooming plant is placed.</p>
-<p>It is a very rare as well as a very distinct species. We have, ourselves, only
-met with one example in bloom, besides that from what our illustration was taken,
-and that was the specimen in the collection of Mr. J. Broome, above referred to, as
-being the first which bloomed in this country. Our figure was taken from a plant
-which flowered recently in the grand collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., M.P.,
-who was good enough to send it for our artist to sketch, and he has succeeded
-in securing a very faithful likeness of it. We have no doubt our collectors will
-meet with it in their journeyings in its native country, but it must be rare there,
-or we should have obtained more of it; most probably, like others of its genus, it
-is difficult to secure. It resembles <i>Cattleya bicolor</i> in its habit of growth, the
-stems bearing two leaves, which grow about twelve to eighteen inches in length.
-The sepals and petals are of a rich tawny orange colour, irregularly spotted with
-<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
-purple, and the lip has the side lobes yellow, and is white in front, and distinctly
-striped with violet. Mr. Spyers says it blooms in September and October, when its
-fragrance, combined with its distinct colour, renders it a very acceptable inmate of
-the Orchid house; it also flowers at a time when few other Cattleyas are in bloom.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya velutina</i> requires the same treatment as the other Cattleyas, that is,
-to be potted in peat soil with good drainage; it does not need so much water
-at the roots as some kinds, but it should be borne in mind, on the other hand, that
-it must not be allowed to shrivel, and therefore a little moisture should always be
-supplied to the roots. If the plant once gets into an unhealthy condition its recovery
-will be very doubtful. Those of the Cattleyas, such as <i>C. bicolor</i> and <i>C.
-velutina</i>, which have very slender bulbs are more liable to go wrong than those that
-form thick fleshy bulbs, the latter having more substance from which to draw their
-support. They require to be kept near the light, with very little shade, excepting
-just sufficient to keep them from the burning sun.</p>
-<p>Like other Cattleyas, this species is subject to the inroads of the scale insect,
-which should be frequently sought for, and, if found, promptly removed. The foliage
-should be kept in a plump condition and not allowed to shrivel. In cleansing the
-leaves injury is often caused by too hard rubbing, by which they become bruised;
-rather should they be handled delicately, as, if once damaged, they cannot be
-restored to a sound healthy appearance. A damaged leaf is not only a disfigurement,
-but is of great injury to the health of the plant, by interfering with the
-action of its pores. Cleanliness is one of the great secrets of success in plant
-cultivation, but the operation of cleansing should be taken in hand before the insects
-get a-head, or they will assuredly eat into the leaves, which will thus become
-permanently injured at the points of attack.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dr. Ainsworth&rsquo;s Orchids.</span>&mdash;When in Manchester we had the pleasure of visiting
-the collection of R. F. Ainsworth, Esq., M.D., in whose fine and varied collection
-the plant that most especially attracted our attention was <i>Masdevallia Chim&aelig;ra</i>, the
-blossoms of which were very large, each flower measuring seventeen inches across.
-The effect of these beautiful and curiously spotted flowers hanging around the basket
-was very striking. We have had it sent to us to figure, but the flowers do not
-travel well; we hope, however, some day, when it is in bloom, to be able to
-figure it. We also noticed, in the same house, a wonderfully fine form of
-<i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</i>, with broad sepals and petals of beautiful white, while the
-centre of the petals is marked with a pleasing rose colour, which gives it a very
-pretty appearance; the lip is large, white, beautifully crisped round the edge, the
-upper part bright orange-yellow. It was, altogether, a very showy flower. Mr.
-Mitchell, the gardener, said it had been in bloom for several weeks, and it was
-still fresh and fine when we saw it.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig27">
-<img src="images/p_0083.jpg" alt="" width="932" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 27.</span>
- ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<h2 id="c29"><span class="h2line1">ODONTOGLOSSUM BREVIFOLIUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig27">Plate 27</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the Cordillera of Peru.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> ovate-oblong, compressed, monophyllous. <i>Leaves</i> short,
-oblong, two inches broad, and sometimes not much exceeding that in length, spreading.
-<i>Scape</i> simple, radical, bearing at the apex a many-flowered erect raceme, the
-membranaceous bracts of which are oblong acute, and as long as the pedicels. <i>Flowers</i>
-nearly or quite two inches in diameter, of a rich chestnut brown on the inner, and
-olive-green on the outer surface; <i>sepals</i> roundish-ovate, somewhat undulated, narrowed
-at the base, of a bright chestnut-brown, narrowly bordered with yellow; <i>petals</i>
-similar in size and colour, oblong-ovate; <i>lip</i> clawed, auriculate, wedge-shaped,
-emarginate, shorter than the sepals, bright yellow, bearing at the base five warty
-tubercles, with a three-toothed appendage in front of them. <i>Column</i> small, the
-edges of the anther-bed serrated, and decurrent in the form of membranous wings.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum brevifolium</span>, <i>Lindley</i> in <i>Bentham&rsquo;s Plant&aelig; Hartwegian&aelig;</i>, 152;
-<i>Id.</i> <i>Folia Orchidacea</i>, art. <i>Odontoglossum</i> no. 61; <i>Andr&eacute;</i> in <i>Illustration Horticole</i>,
-3 ser. t. 170; <i>Reichenbach, fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>. vi. 846.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This very distinct species was first found by Hartweg, on the Peruvian Andes,
-near Loxa, and was described by Lindley, in Mr. Bentham&rsquo;s account of the plants
-collected by that traveller. It appears to have been introduced by M. Linden, and
-to have been first flowered in his establishment, the figure published in <i>L&rsquo;Illustration
-Horticole</i> having been derived from this source. The small compressed
-pseudobulbs are formed at the end of a sucker or offshoot, which is invested by
-large membranous bracts or scales, the upper of which covering the base of the
-flower-scape is somewhat broader and leaf-like.</p>
-<p>This Odontoglot ranks among the most distinct species of its genus, as
-may indeed be seen by a glance at our illustration. It produces dense spikes of
-its beautiful flowers, which are more in the way of those of <i>Odontoglossum
-coronarium</i> than of any other cultivated species; it, however, blooms more freely.
-The spike of flowers we have here represented was sent to us by Mons. F. Massange,
-of Li&eacute;ge, in whose collection the gardener&mdash;Mr. Kramer&mdash;induces it to flower freely
-every year. M. Massange is a great <i>connoisseur</i> of Orchids, and in his collection
-are to be found many rare and valuable specimens, which have been frequently
-exhibited during the past few years, including the Li&eacute;ge Exhibition of 1881.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<p><i>Odontoglossum brevifolium</i> is a dwarf growing plant, and produces its erect
-spikes of flowers from the side of the pseudobulbs. There were seventeen blossoms
-on that which is here represented. The sepals and petals are of a bright chestnut-brown,
-margined and slightly marked near the base with yellow, the lip is rich
-yellow with two light brown patches at its base. It is altogether a strikingly
-showy plant, and one that should be always cultivated amongst Odontoglots for its
-distinctness of colouring.</p>
-<p>The treatment which we find to suit the plant, is to grow it in a basket
-suspended from the roof, as it requires and enjoys all the light that can be given
-to it; but, of course, it needs to be shaded from the burning sun. The most
-suitable material in which to grow the plant is sphagnum moss and fibrous peat.
-It requires also a good supply of water in the growing season, so that it must be
-thoroughly drained. It thrives best in a cool house in which the same temperature
-is maintained as is found congenial to <i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</i>, and others of that
-class.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Londesboroughianum.</span>&mdash;We have been under the impression that
-this species was not so good as it was first reported to be, but we are now of
-a different opinion. There are no doubt many varieties of the plant, as is the
-case with nearly all Orchids. In their native countries they are produced freely
-from seeds, all of the variations not being equally good. If our collectors could
-only pick out the best, when in bloom, we should be saved many disappointments,
-but of course they cannot spend their time in doing this. We were agreeably
-surprised when we paid a visit to the collection of G. W. Law-Scholefield, Esq.,
-New-Hall-Hey, Rawtenstall, near Manchester, to see a fine spike of the <i>O.
-Londesboroughianum</i> with twenty-five of its large blossoms, much finer than any we
-had ever seen before. The sepals and petals are yellow, barred with brown; the
-lip is large, of a bright golden yellow, and very showy, and, as the long spikes
-hung drooping among the white and coloured flowers of the other Orchids the
-effect was very good. No one could complain of having such a species as this, for
-it is a most showy flower.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cypripedium insigne.</span>&mdash;When calling at Mrs. Haywood&rsquo;s, Norris Green, Liverpool, a
-few weeks ago, we were pleased to see a fine specimen of this old Orchid, which
-was two feet in diameter; on nearly all the numerous scapes there were two
-flowers, and very fine ones they were. Mr. Bardney, the gardener, informed us
-that they come so every year, which makes this plant the more interesting, as the
-character of the species is merely to produce one flower on a stalk. This plant was
-grown in the grand conservatory, in which there was a most wonderful display of
-blossom, in fact, the grandest lot of greenhouse flowers we ever remember to have
-seen in winter, consisting of Pelargoniumns, Primulas, Camellias, Cyclamens, and the
-<i>Luculia gratissima</i>, with 40 or 50 heads of bloom. There are not many Orchids
-at this place, but, what there are, are doing well, and are well looked after.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig28">
-<img src="images/p_0086.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1157" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 28.</span>
- ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<h2 id="c30"><span class="h2line1">ZYGOPETALUM GAUTIERI.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig28">Plate 28</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of St. Catherine&rsquo;s, Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> oblong, deeply furrowed, the younger ones ancipitous,
-attached to a branched creeping rhizome. <i>Leaves</i> fascicled, distichous, the outer ones
-shorter, the central ones narrowly elongate-oblong, plicate with a strongly developed
-costa, ten to twelve inches long, bright green. <i>Scape</i> issuing from the centre of
-the leaf-tufts, and terminating in a drooping raceme of three to six flowers, furnished
-with elongate-oblong amplexicaul bracts, those subtending the flowers being nearly as
-long as the pedicels. <i>Flowers</i> large, showy, green blotched with brown, the lip
-purple with darker purple ruff in front of the column; <i>sepals</i> and <i>petals</i> oblong,
-acute, nearly equal, the petals directed upwards, all pale green transversely barred
-and blotched with purplish brown; <i>lip</i> broad, three-lobed, furnished with an obtuse
-spur, the lateral lobes erect, rich deep purple, forming a crenated unguliform ruff
-or frill around the column, the middle lobe very large, two inches across, roundish,
-broader than long, apiculate, deep bluish purple, lighter at the edge. <i>Column</i> short,
-half surrounded by the purple ruff, arcuate, the anther case yellow, with a projecting
-point at the apex.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Zygopetalum Gautieri</span>, <i>Lemaire</i>, <i>Illustration Horticole</i>, t. 535; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid
-Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed., 311.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This genus of Orchids does not comprise so many species as many others, but
-among those which are known and introduced, are some which make very useful
-autumn and winter flowering subjects, and which are well adapted for decorating our
-stoves and Orchid houses. Amongst them occur some of the oldest of cultivated
-Orchids, such as are generally to be met with in good old-fashioned places. We
-remember to have seen plants of <i>Zygopetalum Mackayi</i> and <i>Z. crinitum</i> some thirty
-years ago, also of <i>Z. maxillare</i>&mdash;grand specimens with from seventy to a hundred
-flowers upon them, and a magnificent sight they were, with their numerous spikes
-hanging around the foliage, as represented in the plate, and being similar in
-colour.</p>
-<p>The species which we now desire to bring to the notice of our readers, is a
-very lovely one, which has been sometimes considered as a variety of <i>Zygopetalum
-maxillare</i>, but the flowers are larger, and it not only blooms much earlier, but
-continues in blossom for several weeks. In addition to this, it is a much freer
-grower than <i>Z. maxillare</i>. We have had different plants in flower for several
-months, and then they seemed as though they would continue blooming much longer;
-in fact this species seems to flower whenever it makes its young growth&mdash;a peculiar
-feature which renders it the most useful of its class.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
-<p>Our plate was prepared from a plant which bloomed in the fine collection of
-Mons. D. Massange, of Marche, in Belgium, under the care of Mr. Wilcke, who is
-one of the most successful continental growers of Orchids. We had the pleasure
-of seeing specimens from M. Massange&rsquo;s grand collection, exhibited at the great
-show held at Brussels in July, 1880.</p>
-<p><i>Zygopetalum Gautieri</i> is a dwarf growing kind, attaining a height of about twelve
-inches, and is provided with distinct plaited green foliage. The flowers are large,
-and borne several together on the spikes; the sepals and petals are green, blotched
-with purplish brown, while the lip is of purplish blue, edged with a lighter tint of
-the same colour.</p>
-<p>There are several varieties of this species, varying from very pale violet to a rich
-purplish blue, the variety here figured being one of the darkest-coloured forms we
-have yet met with. The flowers are particularly showy, and last a long time in
-perfection.</p>
-<p>It is of easy cultivation, and not only free-growing but also free-blooming. It
-does well in the Cattleya house, planted in peat and moss, with good drainage, and
-it may be grown either in a pot or a basket, or on a block of wood, or on the
-stem of a tree fern, on which latter it is frequently imported from its native country.
-In its wild state, it appears naturally to creep up these fern stems, and it must look
-very beautiful growing in this way, since its drooping spikes cannot fail to have a good
-effect when thus seen hanging among the green foliage. It requires a good supply
-of water during the growing season, but, when at rest, less will suffice. The plant
-needs plenty of light, but it must be shaded from the fierce sun-rays during the
-summer months.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia anceps Dawsoni.</span>&mdash;One of the best specimens we have had the pleasure
-of seeing of <i>L. anceps Dawsoni</i> is in the collection of R. S. Dodgson, Esq.,
-Blackburn; it had four spikes of buds when we saw it in November last; since then
-we have received a spike of three flowers, and a very fine variety it is. Mr. Osman
-informs us that the plant has ten expanded blossoms. It is one of the best plants
-and as good a variety as we have met with; the sepals and petals are large, pure
-white, and of great substance; the lip is bright rosy purple edged with white, the
-throat orange, veined with purple. No doubt there are different varieties in
-cultivation which were imported along with this some years ago. Mr. Dodgson&rsquo;s
-plant is grown suspended from the roof, and from its appearance this seems to be
-the best method of growing it to perfection. It likes plenty of light all the year
-round, and should be just kept shaded from the burning sun.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig29">
-<img src="images/p_0089.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1084" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 29.</span>
- C&OElig;LOGYNE MASSANGEANA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<h2 id="c31"><span class="h2line1">C&OElig;LOGYNE MASSANGEANA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig29">Plate 29</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Assam.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> pyriform, three to four inches in height, smooth, bearing
-two leaves at the apex. <i>Leaves</i> persistent, cuneate-oblong, acute, stalked, somewhat
-plicate, a foot and a half high including the stalk, and four inches broad. <i>Peduncle</i>
-pendulous, produced from the base of the pseudobulbs, one and a half to two feet long,
-nigro-asperate; <i>bracts</i> cuneate-oblong obtuse, much shorter than the pedicels. <i>Flowers</i>
-showy, in loose racemes of two dozen or more, yellow with a brown lip; <i>sepals</i>
-ligulate obtuse, somewhat keeled outside, light ochre-yellow; <i>petals</i> linear-ligulate,
-of the same colour as the sepals; <i>lip</i> three-lobed, concave, the side lobes
-semi-ovate, acute in front, of a beautiful maroon-brown with ochre-coloured veins,
-the middle lobe creamy white at the edge, with a large brown disk, short, transversely
-oval with an apiculus, and having three light yellow rather prominent toothletted keels
-extending from the base to the anterior lobe, and &ldquo;six confluent rows of green
-retuse many-angled cells, reminding one of human molar teeth&rdquo; in front of them.
-<i>Column</i> light ochre-yellow, streaked with brown, winged in front, the anther-bed
-with a retuse membranous border.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">C&oelig;logyne Massangeana</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span>, x., 684;
-<i>Floral Magazine</i>, 2 ser., t. 373.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The plant which we now bring under the notice of our readers belongs to a
-rather extensive genus of Orchids, some of the species of which are very beautiful,
-while others are not worth cultivating as decorative plants. That which is now before
-us, is, however, an exceedingly handsome and very remarkable species, which was
-imported from Assam, by MM. Jacob-Makoy &amp; Cie., of Li&egrave;ge, Belgium. Our illustration
-was taken from a very fine plant, which produced no fewer than eight of its long
-pendulous racemes of flowers, some of these having as many as twenty-seven blossoms
-on them. This grand specimen was grown in the notable collection of Mons. D.
-Massange, at the Ch&acirc;teau de Baillonville, near Marche, in Belgium, in whose honour
-the species was named by Professor Reichenbach. We had the pleasure of seeing
-this extraordinarily fine plant, growing under pot-culture, in M. Massange&rsquo;s Cattleya
-house, and since then we have received the materials from which our artist has made
-the capital representation which accompanies these remarks. In regard to its botanical
-affinities it stands near to the Bornean <i>C&oelig;logyne asperata</i>, which is sometimes called
-<i>C. Lowii</i>.</p>
-<p>One remarkable feature of this <i>C&oelig;logyne Massangeana</i> is the extraordinary
-shortness of time which it takes to develope its rather ample spikes of flowers; these
-<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
-are often pushed up from the pseudobulbs in their corkscrew-like fashion, and become
-extended to their full length in a very few days, the buds swelling off at once,
-and the flowers very soon appearing in full beauty, in which state they continue
-for four or five weeks.</p>
-<p>We have seen a wonderfully fine example of this plant in the grand collection
-of R. Smith, Esq., Brentham Park, Stirling; this was suspended from the roof, and
-bore several fine flower-spikes. Mr. Smith regards this as one of the most beautiful
-C&oelig;logynes in cultivation. When we saw the plant, it was overhanging a wonderful
-specimen of <i>Cattleya exoniensis</i>, a grand variety, and there were also many other
-fine Cattleyas in the same house.</p>
-<p><i>C&oelig;logyne Massangeana</i> is a free-growing evergreen plant, with stout pseudobulbs
-from three to four inches in height, each supporting a pair of light green plicate
-leaves, which are about eighteen inches high, and about four inches broad. The flower-spikes
-are produced from the base of the pseudobulbs, and, when the plants are in
-vigorous health, they frequently attain the length of eighteen inches, or sometimes
-two feet. The sepals and petals are of a light yellow-ochre colour; the lip rich
-brown, its upper part or side lobes creamy yellow, lined with brown. The plant
-flowers at various times of the year. We have more than once had it in bloom
-twice in one year, and it continues for several weeks in a state of freshness and
-beauty.</p>
-<p>In its native country, Assam, this species is found growing on the branches and
-stems of trees. Here, provided it receives proper treatment, it is a very free-growing
-Orchid, and is also easy of increase, as it often produces two growths from one bulb.
-It will thrive either in a basket or in a pot, but, when in bloom, it should be
-suspended from the roof in order that it may be seen to the best advantage, to
-accomplish which, if it be grown in a pot, some wire may be fixed around the rim
-by which to hook it up. When growing it may occupy any part of the
-Cattleya house, but it should be placed so that it can obtain plenty of light. When
-hung up near the glass it must be shaded from the burning sun. With us it
-thrives well in good fibrous peat, and we have found it to be a free-rooting plant,
-requiring to be kept moist during the growing season; indeed, we never allow the
-plants to become too dry, but just supply them with sufficient moisture to prevent
-them from shrivelling. Every effort must be made to keep the foliage clean, and free
-from insects, in respect to which the cultivator should adopt and act up to the
-golden maxim&mdash;&ldquo;Prevention is better than cure.&rdquo;</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cymbidium eburneum.</span>&mdash;In our remarks on this plant, under <a href="#fig25">Plate 25</a>, we have
-inadvertently referred to it as producing but one flower on a scape. This, however,
-is not quite correct; as, although the scapes each usually bear but a solitary blossom,
-we have known them to produce two, or sometimes even three flowers.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig30">
-<img src="images/p_0092.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1190" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 30.</span>
- L&AElig;LIA ELEGANS ALBA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<h2 id="c32"><span class="h2line1">L&AElig;LIA ELEGANS ALBA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig30">Plate 30</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> terete, somewhat club-shaped, about eighteen inches in height,
-the weaker ones bearing one, the stronger two, leaves at the apex. <i>Leaves</i> solitary
-or in pairs, ligulate-oblong, from six inches to a foot in length, very thick and
-leathery in texture, of a bright green colour. <i>Scape</i> two to three-flowered, issuing
-from a terminal oblong compressed bract, about three inches in length. <i>Flowers</i>
-white and crimson-purple, large and very handsome, about six inches in expansion;
-<i>sepals</i> oblong lanceolate, acute, plane, pure white; <i>petals</i> rather shorter than the
-sepals, broadly-lanceolate, undulated at the margins, pure white; <i>lip</i> three inches
-long, three-lobed, the lateral lobes rolled over the column, the front portion spreading,
-undulated, and marked within the edge with a blotch of crimson-purple, the middle
-lobe roundish, flabellately expanded, crispato-undulate, of a rich crimson-purple, the colour
-breaking out near the tip into crimson veins on a purplish ground, and extended
-into a claw-like base through the pale yellowish disk. <i>Column</i> about as long as the
-convolute base of the lip, enclosed.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia elegans var. alba</span>, <i>Williams</i>, <i>Catalogue</i> 1881, 68.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>We have here one of the most beautiful of this charming class of Orchids, and
-one which no Orchid fancier can fail to admire. The showy blossoms of the forms
-of this species offer many shades of colour, those of the variety before us being
-exceedingly chaste and delicate. The accompanying figure is a good representation of
-this charming variety, and was prepared from a sketch of a well-grown specimen
-which bloomed in the fine collection of W. Lee, Esq., Downside, Leatherhead, under
-the care of Mr. Woolford, the gardener.</p>
-<p>This L&aelig;lia grows about eighteen inches high; it is furnished with bold thick
-foliage of a pleasant green, and produces its blossoms in June and July, continuing
-for about three weeks in beauty. The sepals and petals are of a pure white, while the
-lip is of a rich magenta-crimson, the two colours making a well-marked and charming
-contrast. This delicately beautiful variety is extremely rare.</p>
-<p><i>L&aelig;lia elegans alba</i> is like the Cattleyas in its growth, with the exception of the
-stems being more slender, most of them producing two short leaves about six inches
-in length. The plants require the same temperature and the same material in which
-to grow as the allied Cattleyas, and also about the same amount of water during
-the growing season. The rest required is also the same as for Cattleyas. There are
-some of the species, such as <i>L. albida</i>, <i>autumnalis</i>, <i>majalis</i>, <i>pumila</i>, and others,
-which will thrive better in a cooler temperature. They are all subject to insects,
-which should be diligently looked after. White scale is sometimes troublesome, and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
-if allowed to remain on them will disfigure the foliage by causing yellow spots.
-Thrips will also attack them, and increase very fast if they are not kept under by
-adopting the usual remedies.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Shading Orchids.</span>&mdash;This is a subject of the greatest importance in Orchid culture,
-and one that is often overlooked until it is too late&mdash;the mischief being done. What
-is required is a strong durable material that will wear well, and, where rollers are
-used, stand the strain upon it. It must also be understood that shading does not
-consist of merely daubing upon the glass some opaque material, such as paint, summer
-cloud, whitening, or the like, which though all very well as palliatives in positions
-where rollers cannot be used, such as at the ends and sides of a house, are greatly
-to be deprecated as a shading for the roof, for this reason, that in our English climate
-we are so subject to sudden changes of the weather, that were such a permanent
-shading to be used, we should frequently, especially during dull weather, have our
-plants in comparative darkness when they should be getting all the light possible.
-This cannot fail to lead to bad results and produce a sickly growth. Some growers
-use thick canvas; indeed, we have done so ourselves many years ago, but, by experience,
-we have found out the ill effects of it, for when we employed this kind of shading,
-we found the plants under its influence became weak and sickly, producing small puny
-flower-spikes. A lighter shading was then employed, and the difference was marvellous;
-the plants assumed quite a different aspect. It was at this time that we were
-exhibiting at Chiswick the fine specimens of East Indian Orchids&mdash;A&euml;rides, Saccolabiums,
-Vandas, Dendrobiums, and many others&mdash;such as we seldom see equalled now. Since
-then we have used thinner shadings, with the best results. Our Vandas thus treated
-have always been strong and healthy, with broader foliage, producing their flower-spikes
-as often as three times a year, with the flowers of a good colour, lasting a
-long time in perfection; in fact we are never without flower, always having a good
-display. We refer more particularly to the suavis and tricolor section of the genus.
-Some people imagine Vandas do not flower till they attain a large size, but such
-is not the case if they are properly grown, and thin shading is used. Our
-experience leads us to the belief that all Orchids, with a few exceptions, require
-a thin shading, that is to say, one that, while warding off the direct rays of the
-sun, will allow the light to enter through it. To arrive at this result we use a strong,
-durable, cotton netting, woven in small squares, close enough to exclude the rays
-of the sun, while the light penetrates it with but little interruption. This netting
-stands exposure to the weather much longer than canvas, and on that account is
-cheaper in the long run. We have used this material for some years; in the case
-of Cool Orchids, Mexican, and East Indian kinds, with the best results, the netting
-being attached to rollers with appropriate gear. For the cool Orchid houses we
-employ raised blinds, upon which we hope to speak further shortly. The blinds can be
-managed with but little trouble. In the winter we take them off the house and put
-them in a dry place until they are required again in the ensuing spring.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig31">
-<img src="images/p_0095.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1213" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 31.</span>
- CALANTHE VEITCHII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<h2 id="c33"><span class="h2line1">CALANTHE VEITCHII.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig31">Plate 31</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">A Garden Hybrid.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Terrestrial. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> fleshy, conical, bluntly angular, four to six inches in
-height. <i>Leaves</i> deciduous, about two from the apex of each pseudobulb, lanceolate,
-narrowed both towards the base and apex, plicate or plaited, of a bright green,
-produced before the flowers. <i>Scapes</i> radical, downy, invested in the lower part with
-sheathing bracts, and each supporting a tall showy raceme of flowers, sometimes reaching
-three to four feet long. <i>Flowers</i> abundant, each subtended by an ovate bract, of a
-very attractive and pleasing tint of rich deep rosy pink, darker in some varieties;
-<i>sepals</i> oblong lanceolate, the dorsal one erect, the lateral ones spreading, deep rose-pink;
-<i>petals</i> of the same form and colour, patent, directed upwards; <i>lip</i> adherent to
-the column, round which it is rolled at the base, front part clawed, and expanded into
-a squarish four-lobed limb, rich rose-pink, deepening almost to crimson around the
-creamy white eye or centre, the spur straight, downy. <i>Column</i> small, terete, downy
-at the back.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Calanthe Veitchii</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1859, 1016; <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical
-Magazine</i>, t. 5375; <i>Bateman</i>, <i>Second Century of Orchids</i>, t. 106; <i>Jennings</i>, <i>Orchids</i>,
-t. 48; <i>Floral Magazine</i>, t. 280; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Growers&rsquo; Manual</i>, 5 ed., 109.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This Hybrid is one of the most distinct and charming of Orchids, as well as
-one of the most useful for winter decoration. Our illustration was prepared from
-some admirably grown materials which were kindly sent to us from the rich
-collection of William Leach, Esq., of Oakley, Fallowfield, near Manchester, where we
-have seen as many as one hundred flower spikes of one of the most highly coloured
-forms of this somewhat variable plant in full beauty; and, intermixed as they were
-with the white <i>Calanthe vestita</i>, the effect produced was exceedingly pleasing and
-attractive. Mr. Swan seems to have hit upon the most successful method of cultivating
-these very charming plants, for some of the spikes bore as many as forty
-flowers. He evidently knows also how to arrange the plants to advantage, namely,
-by placing them in rows among the foliage of the East Indian Orchids, so that the
-Calanthes, blooming as they do without their leaves, have their beauty enhanced
-by the foliage of the associated plants, especially that of the A&euml;rides and Vandas.</p>
-<p><i>Calanthe Veitchii</i> is of deciduous habit, losing its foliage just as it comes into
-flower. We have, however, occasionally seen it with leaves accompanying its flowers,
-though its natural habit is to lose them. It produces flower spikes from three to four
-feet or more in length, and sometimes bears as many as fifty flowers on one spike. The
-plants are free-blooming and continue in flower for two months. The sepals and petals,
-as well as the lip, are of a rich rosy pink colour. A gay appearance may be kept
-<span class="pb" id="Page_61">61</span>
-up throughout the dull months of winter by having a sufficient number of plants and
-starting them successively into blossom.</p>
-<p>These Calanthes are very accommodating, since they will thrive well in baskets
-suspended from the roof, as well as in pots suspended by wire in the same way
-as the baskets; they will also thrive in pots standing on the tables, where room
-is not an object. If grown in baskets, they will require more water in their growing
-season. We prefer them grown in this manner where there is room, as they look
-so pleasing with their spikes hanging gracefully from the roof. Where hundreds of
-spikes have to be produced, as for instance is the case with Mr. C. Penny, of
-Sandringham Gardens, for decorating the Prince of Wales&rsquo; table, the effect produced is
-charming, and even for filling large vases they form a most elegant adornment.</p>
-<p>They are of easy cultivation when they get the treatment they require. Like
-all other deciduous and bulbous plants their blooming season follows that of the
-completion of the growth of the bulbs, and their growing season commences when they
-have finished blooming, after which they will soon begin to throw up their young
-growths. When this is observed, let them be fresh potted. We have found it best
-to do this every year, as they lose all their old roots annually. We shake the
-soil away and cut off all the roots, and repot them, when, as soon as they begin
-to grow, they will send out their new roots into fresh soil. The material we use for
-potting is good rough fibrous loam and leaf mould, with a little rotten manure,
-mixing them well together, and giving good drainage with a layer of rough peat and
-moss on the top of it. In potting, fill the pot up with the soil and place the
-bulb on the top, just making it firm; it will soon root and support itself. If
-planted in baskets, it is necessary to place some rough fibrous peat round the sides
-and at the bottom to keep the soil from washing out; fill the basket up with the
-same kind of compost as that recommended for the pots, with drainage at the
-bottom; place the bulbs upright in the basket, about three in number, on the top
-of the soil, and finish by giving a little water. After the plants get into growth
-and are making roots freely, they should always be kept moist until they have
-finished their growth, when a less copious supply will suffice; and after they have
-bloomed they may be kept dry for a time until they are ready for potting. When
-the plants are in vigorous growth a little manure water may, with advantage, be
-applied to their roots once or twice a week, but it must be well diluted before
-being used, as, if given too strong, it might destroy the roots.</p>
-<p>We find the East India house to suit these Calanthes best, or they will thrive
-well in a house where stove plants are grown. They are propagated by separating
-the pseudobulbs at the time they are potted, and as they generally make two
-growths from one bulb the increase is comparatively rapid. Like other orchidaceous
-plants, they must be kept free from insects.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig32">
-<img src="images/p_0098.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1244" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 32.</span>
- ONCIDIUM H&AElig;MATOCHILUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<h2 id="c34"><span class="h2line1">ONCIDIUM H&AElig;MATOCHILUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig32">Plate 32</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of New Grenada.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> none or obsolete, the leaves and flower-scapes springing
-directly from the axils of the scaly bracts which surround the crown. <i>Leaves</i> solitary,
-flat, oblong, acute, leathery in texture, dull green spotted with reddish brown, nine to
-twelve inches long. <i>Scape</i> radical, deep red, supporting a dense panicle of green spotted
-crimson-lipped flowers. <i>Flowers</i> about an inch and a half across, showy on account
-of their rich colouring and markings; <i>sepals</i> oval-oblong, yellowish green, thickly
-marked with irregular transverse bands of rich reddish brown; <i>petals</i> oblong, spathulate,
-wavy, similar in colour to the sepals, but less heavily marked; <i>lip</i> clawed, with a
-pair of auricles at the base, the claw and auricles deep magenta-rose colour, the front
-expanded portion roundish or transversely reniform, of a deep sanguineous crimson,
-and having the margin yellow, closely mottled with deep rose-crimson, the disk
-furnished with a flexuose crest shaped like the letter W, and thence raised into an
-eminence with a toothlet on each side. <i>Column</i> short, with rounded wings curved
-downwards and somewhat lobed.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Oncidium h&aelig;matochilum</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, in <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Flower Garden</i>, i., t. 6; <i>Id.</i>, re-issue,
-t. 26; <i>Id.</i>, <i>Folia Orchidacea</i>, art. <i>Oncidium</i>, No. 132; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in
-<i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 783.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Oncidium luridum purpuratum</span>, <i>Loddiges</i>, <i>List</i>&mdash;<i>fide</i> Lindley.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This is undoubtedly one of our oldest Orchids&mdash;one that we recollect to have seen
-in bloom with the Messrs. Loddiges, in their noble collection of Orchids, about thirty
-years ago. We have always been under the impression that it was one of the prettiest
-of the spotted Oncidiums, but, although we have occasionally bloomed it, since then we
-have seen it in very few collections. We were accordingly very greatly pleased to meet
-with a remarkably fine example of it in the collection of G. W. L. Schofield, Esq., of
-Rawtenstall, near Manchester, from which our illustration was taken. The plant bore
-two flower-spikes, one of which was three feet six inches in length, bearing forty fine
-blossoms, and was a most beautiful example of the species; the other was shorter,
-and from this our drawing was made, as our page would not afford space for the
-representation of the larger spike. Our readers will, however, be enabled from the
-description and figure to form a good idea of the beauty of this rare species when
-well grown. Mr. Schofield is a great lover of good Orchids, and apparently intends
-having a fine collection of them, as he has had houses built for the different classes;
-his gardener also takes great interest in the plants, and consequently they are closely
-looked after and well cared for.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<p>The <i>Oncidium h&aelig;matochilum</i> is a very compact-growing plant, with leaves from nine
-to twelve inches in height, and two and a half inches broad, of a dark green colour,
-spotted with brown. The sepals and petals are of a greenish yellow, mottled with
-crimson; the lip is of a rich crimson, edged with yellow, and spotted round the margin
-with magenta-rose colour. It flowers in November, the blossoms continuing for several
-weeks in perfection, and is a plant that will no doubt become popular, as it blooms at
-a time when flowers are in request. The specimen we are describing was grown in a
-basket in the Cattleya house, in peat and moss, which form an unexceptionable
-compost for it, with good drainage, and a moderate supply of water in the growing
-season. It is best suspended from the roof where it may obtain plenty of light,
-but it does not like bright sunshine, and consequently must be shaded in sunny
-weather.</p>
-<p>The Oncidiums are a class of Orchids among which occur some most showy and
-beautiful species; while almost every colour we could mention is to be found
-represented among them. They come from different regions, and in consequence their
-treatment must vary. Some of them rank among our finest exhibition plants, as well
-as amongst the best for the decoration of our stoves and Orchid houses. We often see
-fine specimens of Oncidiums in our grand old collections of plants where there is no
-pretence at growing a collection of Orchids, but where they are merely cultivated
-for cutting purposes. What is more airy and elegant for vases than the
-inflorescence of <i>Oncidium flexuosum</i>, or even <i>O. sphacelatum</i>, or that of many
-others we could mention if space would allow? What more brilliant than such species
-as <i>O. varicosum</i> and its variety <i>O. Rogersii</i>, <i>O. ampliatum majus</i>, <i>O. tigrinum</i>,
-<i>O. Marshallianum</i>, or <i>O. macranthum</i>?</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dendrobium Findleyanum.</span>&mdash;This plant is now (January, 1882) finely in flower
-in the collection of J. C. Bowring, Esq., Windsor Forest. It must be a grand
-specimen, as Mr. Clinkaberry, the gardener, informs us that it has one hundred and
-ninety-two expanded blossoms. We have never before heard of such a well-flowered
-specimen as this; indeed, large plants of this species are somewhat rare. It is a
-most curious grower, and very remarkable for its long tapering compressed and deeply
-nodose stem-like pseudobulbs. The flowers are large, white, tipped with rosy pink,
-in the same way as those of <i>D. Wardianum</i>, and they are produced in great
-profusion. It is a plant that takes but little room, and should be in every
-collection.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig33">
-<img src="images/p_0101.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1194" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 33.</span>
- CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<h2 id="c35"><span class="h2line1">CATTLEYA SUPERBA SPLENDENS.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig33">Plate 33</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Brazil in the region of the Rio Negro.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> slender, subterete, furrowed, with distant nodes, nearly a foot
-in height. <i>Leaves</i> in pairs, ovate or ovate-oblong, obtuse, barely four inches in
-length, of a deep bluish green colour and stout coriaceous texture. <i>Scape</i> four to
-five-flowered, issuing from a terminal oblong obtuse compressed sheathing bract, of
-a pale brown colour, which is about two inches long and three-quarters of an inch
-broad. <i>Flowers</i> richly coloured, nearly six inches in breadth; <i>sepals</i> elliptic-lanceolate,
-plane, about two and a half inches long, of a deep rich purplish rose colour; <i>petals</i>
-of the same colour somewhat broader and longer, rhomboid, more or less undulated
-at the margin in the upper half; <i>lip</i> about two inches long, three-lobed, the basal
-lobes elongately connivent into a tube acute in front, of a rich magenta-crimson,
-white at the base, middle lobe transversely rounded, broader than long, emarginate,
-narrowed into a claw, the front portion of the same rich crimson colour, the disk
-and interior of the tube yellow, the former traversed by five elevated golden yellow
-lines. <i>Column</i> enclosed.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya superba splendens</span>, <i>Lemaire</i>, <i>Illustration Horticole</i> xvi., t. 605;
-<i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 4 ed., 127; 5 ed., 132.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The plant we are now about to describe is one of the most magnificent members
-of its genus, so far as regards the brilliant colouring of its flowers. This may be
-seen by a reference to the accompanying illustration, which was taken from a fine
-plant that flowered at the Victoria Nursery, and was subsequently purchased by
-William Lee, Esq. of Downside, Leatherhead. The plant was seen to great advantage
-when suspended in a basket from the roof of the Orchid-house, and in this position
-was greatly admired, by <i>connoisseurs</i> on account of its rich and brilliant colours.
-The plants of <i>Cattleya superba</i> vary considerably in the colour of their flowers,
-those of the original or type form being well represented in the first series of
-<i>Warner&rsquo;s Select Orchidaceous Plants</i> (t. 24), where a most beautiful spike with
-six of its really superb flowers is shown.</p>
-<p>The variety which we now introduce to the notice of our readers&mdash;<i>Cattleya
-superba splendens</i>&mdash;is one of distinct character, and of unparalleled beauty. It comes
-from a different country, viz., the Rio Negro region of Para instead of Guiana. The
-plant is of compact growth like <i>C. superba</i>, and generally flowers during July and
-August; the stems (pseudobulbs) are ten to twelve inches in height; the leaves
-are produced in pairs, and are longer and more pointed, and its splendidly
-coloured flowers are produced four or five together in the spike from the top of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
-the stem when it is making its growth. The individual blossoms are as much as
-five inches across, and are well expanded, the sepals and petals being of a bright
-but delicate rose colour, and the lip white at the base, the front and side lobes
-rich magenta-crimson, the disk and interior of the tube being of a bright golden
-yellow. The plant continues in blossom for three or four weeks if the flowers are
-kept from damp; indeed, all Cattleya blooms retain their freshness for a longer
-period if kept dry, especially the large light-flowered forms of <i>C. Mossi&aelig;</i>, <i>C. Trian&aelig;</i>,
-<i>C. Mendelii</i>, &amp;c., which soon become spotted if the atmosphere surrounding them
-is much charged with moisture.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya superba</i> is not in general well cultivated, but we have seen some
-specimens which were grown with extraordinary skill and success in the select
-collection of O. Schneider, Esq., of Cromwell Grange, Fallowfield, near Manchester.
-These specimens, as many as nine in number, were suspended in baskets from the
-roof of the warm house. They were grown from imported plants, and we have
-noticed them in the same position growing and blooming freely for the past three
-years, and, as they succeed so well, we should certainly recommend their being
-retained in the same situation. It is a golden rule for cultivators that when a
-particular kind of plant is found to thrive in a certain position, it should be kept
-there, so long at least as the conditions are suitable. In the instance just referred
-to the plants were suspended close to the glass, where they enjoyed a great
-abundance of light, and this was possibly the secret of their success. Other
-important considerations are that the plants do not like to be disturbed and will not
-bear cutting up.</p>
-<p>It is necessary at all times to keep sweet healthy material about the roots by
-removing the old effete soil and replacing it by that which is fresh and sound.
-We find rough fibrous peat and charcoal to suit it, but this must be accompanied by
-good drainage. We have seen them thrive well on blocks of wood, but when grown
-in this way they require more water. If cultivated in baskets they also need a
-good supply during the season of growth. In winter less will suffice, merely enough
-being given to keep the bulbs in a plump condition. As soon as they show signs
-of growth, more water should be given, but it is necessary to avoid wetting the
-young growths, as this often causes them to damp off, and when this is the case
-the succeeding growth will be weakly and unable to develop blossoms.</p>
-<p>The plants should be kept free from insects; sometimes thrips will attack the
-young growths, but it should be speedily removed, as, if allowed to remain, it will
-soon make great havoc.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig34">
-<img src="images/p_0104.jpg" alt="" width="868" height="1171" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 34.</span>
- PAPHINIA CRISTATA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<h2 id="c36"><span class="h2line1">PAPHINIA CRISTATA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig34">Plate 34</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Trinidad and Guiana.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> small, clustered, oblong-ovate, compressed, somewhat
-furrowed, bearing one to three leaves at the apex, and leaf-like scales at the base.
-<i>Leaves</i> oblong-lanceolate, plicate, submembranaceous, spreading, about eight inches in
-height. <i>Scapes</i> proceeding from the base of the pseudobulbs, pendent, two or three-flowered,
-clothed with loose brown membranaceous bracts. <i>Flowers</i> smooth, spreading,
-whitish on the outside, beautifully marked with purple lines within, about three and
-a half inches across; <i>sepals</i> lanceolate acute, fleshy, pale straw colour, almost entirely
-covered by thin transverse lines of chocolate-purple; <i>petals</i> similar in form and colour,
-but somewhat narrower; <i>lip</i> much smaller than the foregoing, fleshy, tripartite, almost
-entirely of a rich purplish black, ovate in outline, shortly unguiculate, with four stalked
-glands on the reddish orange purple-spotted claw, the lateral lobes sickle-shaped, the
-middle lobe rhomboidal, terminated by a tuft of club-shaped fimbri&aelig;; disk crested,
-bidentate, with a few deep yellow spots down the centre. <i>Column</i> club-shaped,
-semiterete, greenish at the base, the upper portion auriculate, with a projecting tooth
-on each side, deep yellow.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Paphinia cristata</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Botanical Register</i>, 1843, misc. 14; <i>Lyons</i>, <i>Treatise
-on Orchidaceous Plants</i>, 203; <i>Van Houtte</i>, <i>Flore des Serres</i>, iv., t. 335; <i>Hooker</i>,
-<i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 4836; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 614; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed., 265; <i>Bateman</i>,
-<i>2nd Century of Orchidaceous Plants</i>, t. 117.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Maxillaria cristata</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Botanical Register</i>, t. 1811.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p><i>Paphinia</i> is a genus of very limited extent, and of which but few species are
-at present known. That now before us is a very old and familiar species, one of
-the best known amongst them, and a singularly handsome little plant. It was the
-<i>Maxillaria cristata</i> of early Orchid days, and considerable quantities of it were
-formerly imported, but it has now become very rare. We have flowered several plants
-during the past year at the Victoria Nursery, where they were greatly admired by
-those who saw them. It is a plant which comparatively few persons interested in
-Orchids have met with in blossom, and of which our plate gives a very correct
-representation. The flowers are remarkably curious, not only for their structure, but
-also for their colouring, as will be seen by reference to our illustration. The plant
-has, moreover, a very peculiar mode of throwing out its flower-spikes.</p>
-<p>We have also flowered <i>Paphinia rugosa</i>, another very singular and pretty plant,
-after the same style, but differing in colour, and well worth cultivation. They occupy
-<span class="pb" id="Page_67">67</span>
-but little space in the Orchid-houses, and are best grown in small pans suspended
-near the glass where they have the full benefit of the light, but must be shaded from
-the sun since their thin-textured leaves would suffer injury from too complete an
-exposure.</p>
-<p><i>Paphinia cristata</i>, is a low-growing plant, with small shiny pseudobulbs, and light
-green plicate foliage about eight inches in height. It is a free-blooming species,
-generally producing three flowers on a scape which proceeds from the base of the
-pseudobulb after that has completed its growth. The flowers last in beauty for about
-a fortnight, and are produced at different periods of the year. The sepals and petals
-are nearly covered with transverse parallel lines of dark chocolate-purple on a creamy
-yellow ground; the lip is coloured in a similar manner, and furnished with some
-curious tufted fringes.</p>
-<p>These plants are not so easy to cultivate as some other Orchids; but, by bestowing
-on them a little extra care and attention, they may be kept in a thriving and healthy
-condition. We find them to grow best in small pans, nearly filled with drainage, and
-a lump of charcoal on the top of it; place the plant on the top of this with but little
-rough fibrous peat or live sphagnum moss about the roots, and so that it is elevated a
-little above the rim, as it has the peculiarity of throwing its flower-spike downwards.</p>
-<p>This species is a native of Guiana, and of the adjacent island of Trinidad. In
-the latter it is found growing on decayed branches of trees in the neighbourhood of the
-mud lake. In the former it occurs in the warmer parts of Demerara, and, consequently,
-must be cultivated in the warm house, and kept in a moist atmosphere during the
-season of its growth; when at rest, however, a smaller quantity of water will suffice,
-but it should never be allowed to shrivel, as, when once its condition becomes bad, it
-is very difficult to restore its health.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig; flaveolum.</span>&mdash;Whoever expected ten years ago to
-see a yellow-flowered <i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</i> (?) No one, we should think, unless
-it were by a great stretch of the imagination. However, here is one from the fine
-collection of G. Hardy, Esq., of Timperley, Manchester. The flowers in every respect
-resemble those of <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i>, except in their colour, which is a bright canary-yellow.
-The spike before us bears fifteen expanded flowers, and is one of the
-greatest surprises we have had the good fortune to meet with for a long time. It
-is true that distinct varieties of this &ldquo;the Queen of Orchids&rdquo; are turning up almost
-every day, but one seldom has a chance of seeing an entirely new break of colour
-of this sort. We believe that a variety with yellow flowers bloomed some time ago
-in the Broomfield collection, but the colour was not so decided in Mr. Warner&rsquo;s plant
-as it is in the case now before us.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig35">
-<img src="images/p_0107.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="713" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 35.</span>
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<h2 id="c37"><span class="h2line1">ODONTOGLOSSUM ANDERSONIANUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig35">Plate 35</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of New Grenada.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> ligulate-pyriform, costate, two or three inches high.
-<i>Leaves</i> broadly linear, acute, about a foot long, of a light green colour, two from
-the top of each pseudobulb, with occasionally another from its base. <i>Scape</i> radical,
-spreading, more or less drooping, supporting a branching raceme about two feet long.
-<i>Flowers</i> resembling those of <i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</i>, but smaller, prettily spotted;
-<i>sepals</i> ovate-oblong, acute, slightly crispy, creamy white, heavily and irregularly
-blotched on the lower half with bright chestnut-brown, the attenuated upper half
-unspotted; <i>petals</i> similar in form and colour, the blotches which are also on the
-lower half smaller, and more thickly placed; <i>lip</i> from a cuneate base, pandurate,
-narrow in front, apiculate, distinctly wavy and toothed, creamy white, yellow at the
-base, with fewer and smaller brown spots; disk deep yellow, with a prominent crest
-dividing in front into two divergent horns. <i>Column</i> greenish towards the base, brown
-in front, the wings and anther-case white.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Andersonianum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1868,
-599; <i>Id.</i> 1872, 41; <i>Floral Magazine</i>, 2 ser., t. 45.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The charming <i>Odontoglossum Andersonianum</i>, supposed to be a wild mule
-between <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i> (<i>crispum</i>) and <i>O. pr&aelig;stans</i> or <i>O. gloriosum</i>, is one of the
-many prettily spotted Odontoglots which have been introduced into our collections
-during the past few years, and among which new varieties are continually appearing.
-One of the best forms of this plant which has come under our notice is that
-represented in the accompanying plate, prepared from a very beautiful specimen
-which bloomed last year among many other fine Odontoglots, well cultivated in the
-collection of Messrs. William Thomson &amp; Sons, of Clovenfords near Galashiels.</p>
-<p>The <i>Odontoglossum Andersonianum</i> is a compact-growing plant, with pyriform
-pseudobulbs two to three inches high, pale green leaves, and gracefully drooping
-branched flower-spikes about two feet in length. The sepals and petals are at first
-creamy white, spotted with purplish brown, the lip being also white, but less heavily
-spotted. The plant is of free-blooming habit, the flowers continuing fresh and perfect
-for a period of five or six weeks. It is exceedingly difficult to recognize this
-form until it produces its blossoms, as its growth is remarkably similar to that
-of <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i>. Indeed there are many forms and varieties of this particular
-group which it is impossible to recognize until their flowers are seen; and, though
-cultivators may sometimes feel assured of the identity of individual plants, the
-production of flowers not unfrequently proves them to be mistaken.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_69">69</div>
-<p><i>Odontoglossum Andersonianum</i> requires the same treatment as <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i>
-and other cool Orchids, also the same amount of water. The plants must have
-good fibrous peat to grow in, and plenty of drainage, as they need to be freely
-supplied with water all the year round, and this, if allowed to become stagnant,
-would prove very injurious to them. The material in which they are grown must
-also be clean and sweet; and though they must never be over-potted, sufficient
-space should be allowed for their roots. We have sometimes seen Odontoglots in
-pots far too large for them, and though this may tend to make the plants more
-important-looking, yet it will eventually spoil them, as the larger amount of soil
-becomes soddened with water, and this produces rotting of the roots.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Raised Blinds for Orchid Houses.</span>&mdash;During the summer months we have found
-Raised Blinds very beneficial to the growth of Orchids, especially to those requiring
-cool-house culture. When the hot summer&rsquo;s sun is shining upon the glass, it is very
-difficult, where Raised Blinds are not employed, to keep the temperature sufficiently
-low. The glass roof of the structure upon which the sun is shining becomes very
-hot, even when shaded with ordinary blinds; but if Raised Blinds are used a current
-of air is allowed to pass over the entire surface of the roof, and the glass is kept
-comparatively cool. The effect of this is to decrease very appreciably the internal
-temperature of the house; and the moisture, which would otherwise be dried up
-by the burning heat of the sun, produces a nice humid genial atmosphere in which
-Orchids delight. Having thus far referred to the advantages to be derived from
-the use of this method of shading, we may now explain briefly the mode of construction.
-Supposing that the house to be furnished with Raised Blinds is an ordinary span-roofed
-structure, it is necessary in the first place to provide a second ridge elevated about
-six inches above the top of the existing one. This should not consist of a solid
-plank, but of a strip of timber sufficiently strong to bear the weight and strain of
-the blinds and roller, and should be supported on blocks of wood placed at intervals
-in order to allow the current of air from below to find an outlet, which would not
-be the case if a solid ridge-board were adopted. Having arranged for the ridge,
-the next thing is to provide supports for the rollers; either wood or iron may be used
-for this purpose, but we have found iron to be the lightest looking and the most
-durable. Where the length of the rafters does not exceed say eight feet, half-inch
-rod iron will be found to be strong enough, and this should be cut into proper
-lengths, with the lower end turned up in a semi-circular form, so as to catch the
-roller when it descends, and prevent it from running off the supports. These
-supporting rods should be fixed to the bars or rafters of the house, about six inches
-above the woodwork, by being welded to vertical iron stays, which latter should be
-flattened out at the base, and provided with holes so that they can be screwed to
-the rafters or bars of the roof. In this way a strong support for the blinds to roll
-upon will be formed; the blinds themselves can be attached to the elevated ridge in
-the ordinary way, and the gearing usually employed for the purpose will be found to
-answer well for pulling them up or down. Many Orchid growers have already
-adopted these Raised Blinds with very beneficial results.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig36">
-<img src="images/p_0110.jpg" alt="" width="827" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 36.</span>
- CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_70">70</div>
-<h2 id="c38"><span class="h2line1">CYPRIPEDIUM POLITUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig36">Plate 36</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Garden Hybrid.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. Acaulescent. <i>Leaves</i> radical, distichous, coriaceous, oblong, acute,
-palish green thickly chequered with dark bottle-green markings, the under side dull
-reddish purple. <i>Scapes</i> solitary in the leaf axils, pubescent, purplish, terminating in
-a lanceolate sharply keeled bract, from which the solitary blossom emerges. <i>Flowers</i>
-medium-sized, peculiar in form, rather showy; <i>dorsal sepals</i> ovate-acute, ciliate, the
-inner surface polished, suffused with reddish purple in the lower part, whitish towards
-the tip, traversed by numerous green veins of which the alternate ones are longer
-and stouter than the rest, all of them distinctly marked on the outer surface;
-<i>lateral connate sepals</i> smaller, ciliate, greenish white with green veins, rather shorter
-than the lip; <i>petals</i> linear-oblong, about two and a half inches in length, glossy,
-deflexed (more so than in the figure), ciliate with a fringe of unequal black hairs,
-bright wine-red, greenish towards the base, where it is marked with several Indian-purple
-warts most abundant near the upper edge, exterior surface green; <i>lip</i>
-narrowly pouch-shaped, nearly as long as the petals, suffused in front with the same
-purplish red tint, and marked thickly with green veins at the sides and back, the
-basal auricles erect, obtuse, interior surface green, dotted with wine-red, the incurved
-margins of the claw greenish yellow, with reddish spots. <i>Staminode</i> transverse,
-yellowish green, with two large exterior teeth in front and a small inner tooth,
-light brown with green markings.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cypripedium politum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span> xiv., 525.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This new Lady&rsquo;s Slipper is one of a batch raised some few years since by
-Robert Warner, Esq., of Broomfield, near Chelmsford, who has been successful in
-producing several very good forms by the process of hybridisation. The plants are
-of dwarf habit, free-growing, and free-blooming, each small growth bringing forth its
-flower. This <i>Cypripedium politum</i> has been flowered for several years past by Mr.
-Warner, and thus its characteristic features and its constancy are well ascertained.
-There are also some other distinct kinds obtained through the same cross, some
-of which we hope to figure on a future occasion. We should expect that the cross
-was made between <i>C. barbatum superbum</i> and <i>C. venustum</i>.</p>
-<p><i>Cypripedium politum</i> is a plant of compact habit and of free growth. The
-leaves are of a distinct and well-marked character, as will be seen in the very
-accurate portrait furnished by our artist. They are oblong, acute, about five inches
-long, and somewhat over an inch broad, of a beautiful light green, barred and
-chequered with a very deep or bottle-green, which gives it a very pleasing
-appearance; the under-surface is stained with a deep reddish wine-purple. The
-downy flower-scapes are also purple, some six to eight inches in height, each
-<span class="pb" id="Page_71">71</span>
-supporting a solitary flower, in which the dorsal sepal is ovate, polished, flushed in
-the lower part with purplish red and spotted with purple at the base, the upper
-part white, and the whole traversed by bright green veins which are alternately
-long and short. The petals are oblong, broadest at the apex, of a bright wine-red,
-polished, with black hairs along the margin, and Indian-purple warts near the
-upper edge, greenish towards the base and along the lower edge. The pouch-shaped
-lip is nearly as long as the petals, purplish red with a coppery tinge, glossy, veined
-with green at the sides and back. The flowers are produced during January and
-February, a season when they are much in request for decorative purposes. The
-Cypripediums are very useful for furnishing a supply of cut flowers, as they will
-keep fresh for several weeks in water, and will last for at least six weeks on the
-plant.</p>
-<p>These interesting plants are of easy cultivation, and occupy but little space,
-hence they may be accommodated in every small collection, and may be grown
-without much expense. The species and varieties forming the <i>barbatum</i> group, to
-which this plant belongs, all require similar treatment. They may be grown either
-in the Cattleya or East India house, and are best cultivated in pots. Some of
-our Orchid-growers prefer to plant them in sphagnum moss, others in peat; for
-ourselves, we prefer to use good fibrous peat, ample drainage being provided. We
-have seen them thrive well in fibrous loam. The plants must be kept above the
-rim of the pot, as they root freely over the surface of the rough material. Since
-they have no fleshy bulbs to support them, and their growth is continuous almost
-throughout the year, they require to be liberally supplied with water at the roots;
-for this reason the pots must be well drained.</p>
-<p>Insects require to be constantly searched for. The scale sometimes appears upon
-the plants, but may easily be subjugated by sponging the surface with clean water.
-Their greatest enemy, however, is the red thrips, which must be hunted up and
-destroyed if the health of the plants is to be maintained, but it may be easily
-kept under if promptly, perseveringly, and vigorously attacked.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dendrobium macrophyllum.</span>&mdash;We have received two splendid spikes of this
-magnificent Dendrobe, with flowers of an unusually fine colour, from a well grown
-specimen, such as we might expect from so experienced a grower as Mr. Penny,
-of the Royal Gardens, Sandringham, who has been one of the most successful
-exhibitors of specimen Orchids at our London shows, where he has, with the large
-collections staged by him, carried off nearly all the leading prizes. We hope at
-some future period to be able to figure this fine Dendrobium, the sepals and petals of
-which are of a rose-magenta colour, and the lip of the same colour, with a
-purplish crimson throat. We received with the Dendrobe a fine spike of the white-lipped
-form of <i>Odontoglossum Hallii</i> in grand condition, the sepals and petals being
-of a very bright golden yellow with rich markings of a brownish crimson colour.
-This variety forms a splendid contrast with the white-flowered <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i> and
-<i>O. Pescatorei</i>, of which kinds there is a fine collection at Sandringham. The
-Prince of Wales is a great admirer of these as well as of other good Orchids.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig37">
-<img src="images/p_0113.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1217" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 37.</span>
- CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_72">72</div>
-<h2 id="c39"><span class="h2line1">CYPRIPEDIUM CHLORONEURUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig37">Plate 37</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Garden Hybrid.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. Acaulescent. <i>Leaves</i> radical, distichous, coriaceous, oblong acute, closely
-tessellated with dark hieroglyphic markings on a light green ground, the under
-surface reddish purple. <i>Scapes</i> solitary in the central leaf-axils, pubescent, reddish
-purple, one-flowered, with a very short ovate bract. <i>Flowers</i> large, with expanded
-petals, rather attractive in colour; <i>dorsal sepal</i> broadly ovate, bright yellow-green with
-white margin, and a narrow purple central stripe, on each side of which are about
-four strongly marked dark green longitudinal veins, connected by finer transverse
-veins; <i>lateral (connate) sepals</i> small; <i>petals</i> oblong, broader upwards, two and a half
-inches long, and three-fourths of an inch wide, with green longitudinal veins, and a
-dark purple central line, on one side of which (the upper half) they are washed with
-wine-purple, and have a yellowish buff margin, and a few black warts near the base,
-where they are ciliated; on the other (lower) half very slightly tinted with purple, the
-cross veins more apparent, and the margin green; <i>lip</i> rather large, shortly pouch-shaped,
-heavily stained with wine-purple, and freely marked with bold reticulations
-of a darker purple, the upper angles yellowish at the margins. <i>Staminode</i> transversely
-reniform, pale green, with dark green feathery markings in front.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cypripedium chloroneurum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span>, xiv., 525.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This is one of the most distinct of the new hybrid Lady&rsquo;s Slippers that have
-been recently introduced to the notice of Orchid-growers; it will also be appreciated
-as one of the most useful, being of a neat free-growing and abundant-blooming habit
-of growth. The Cypripediums are everybody&rsquo;s plants, that is to say, any one who has
-a place adapted for their cultivation can manage them without difficulty. Many growers
-make them their especial care and study, procuring every species and variety that
-can be obtained, and thus forming a very interesting and diverse group.</p>
-<p>Our present subject was raised by Robert Warner, Esq., in whose collection at
-Broomfield it has been blooming very abundantly, and it was from Mr. Warner&rsquo;s
-plant that our drawing was taken. The variety resembles the one figured on plate
-36 in being of free-blooming habit, and also in being very attractive in regard to
-its foliage as well as its flowers. Many hybrid Cypripediums have been raised in
-this country of late years by the Messrs. Veitch and Sons, and also by other growers.
-Some of these have proved to be very beautiful and effective subjects, and no
-doubt there are others coming forward that have not yet bloomed. Many splendid
-novelties may yet be gained by crossing those kinds that have flowers of distinct
-forms and colours, and, as many of the varieties bloom simultaneously, the hybridiser
-will find abundant opportunities for carrying out his plans.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<p>These plants appear to be easily raised from seeds, and to reach the flowering
-stage sooner than most other seedling Orchids.</p>
-<p>Some of the Cypripediums thrive well in a cool house, and by fertilising these
-with the best of the stove species, a new set of cool-house forms would probably be
-obtained. Such a result would be one of considerable importance to Orchidists, as
-no doubt, if varieties of a different character to those we already possess could be
-obtained, some of our enthusiastic growers would take up their cultivation in good
-earnest. At present the majority of the Lady&rsquo;s Slippers require a warm house.</p>
-<p><i>Cypripedium chloroneurum</i> is a dwarf compact-habited plant, with evergreen
-foliage about six inches in length, beautifully variegated with closely chequered
-markings of dark and light green. The flowers are produced in January and February,
-and continue on for several weeks. The colours are distinct and attractive, the broad
-flat dorsal sepal being of a bright lively pale green striped with darker green nerves
-and bordered with white, the petals suffused with purple on the upper half and
-marked with black marginal warts, and the purplish lip freely ornamented with bold
-dark purple reticulations, altogether presenting a remarkably effective appearance.</p>
-<p>This novel hybrid grows freely when potted in rough fibrous peat with good
-drainage. When in vigorous growth it requires a liberal supply of water at the
-roots. Propagation is accomplished by dividing the plants after they have finished
-blooming and are ready to start into fresh growth; they can then be divided with
-safety by cutting off a back growth with a leading shoot in front of it, but care
-must be taken in cutting that the remaining portion of the plant is provided with
-an eye so placed as to break and form a new growth. When this young growth
-has been made, the divided plant may be shaken out from the old soil and potted.
-The offshoots should be placed in small pots until the following year, when, if they
-have made good growth, they may require to be repotted. They must be kept
-moist and in a plump condition, as they have only slender resources of their own
-to rely upon, but they root freely. As the plants get established they will require
-larger supplies of water, for which reason good drainage must be secured.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">A&euml;rides Leeanum.</span>&mdash;This novelty has bloomed in the collection of G. W. L.
-Schofield, Esq., of New Hall, Hey, Rawtenstall, near Manchester, producing four
-flower-spikes. It is a beautiful object, its spikes of richly-coloured rosy pink blossoms
-hanging gracefully from the plant. It is very distinct from any other species of
-<i>A&euml;rides</i>, and will doubtless become a great favourite. One of its great recommendations
-is that it blooms in the winter, which is not the case with the generality of these
-plants, their usual flowering season being during the spring and summer months. <i>A.
-Leeanum</i> is a small growing plant, but produces its spikes of blossoms very freely; and
-requiring, as it does, but a limited space for its accommodation, it will be a most
-useful introduction for amateur cultivators.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig38">
-<img src="images/p_0116.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1223" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 38.</span>
- DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_74">74</div>
-<h2 id="c40"><span class="h2line1">DENDROBIUM BIGIBBUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig38">Plate 38</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Tropical North-east Australia.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> long, slender, erect, fusiform, one to two feet in length,
-closely invested between the nodes with dry light brown sheaths, the older ones
-swollen at the very base. <i>Leaves</i> oblong-lanceolate, sub-acuminate, five ribbed, of a
-deep green colour, and a somewhat coriaceous texture, a few only (five or six) being
-developed towards the extremities of the stems. <i>Racemes</i> erect or curving, six to
-twelve flowered, nearly a foot in length, usually produced from the upper nodes
-of the old leafless stems, but sometimes from the apex of the younger leafy stems.
-<i>Flowers</i> large, showy, rich rosy purple; <i>sepals</i> oblong acute, flat, of a rich purplish
-magenta, the lateral ones united at the base into a short blunt spur below the
-setting on of the lip, above which spur is a gibbosity, occasioned by a similar swelling
-at the base of the lip (whence comes the specific name <i>bigibbum</i>); <i>petals</i> large,
-roundish, spreading, recurved, of the same colour as the sepals; <i>lip</i> three-lobed, the
-lateral lobes incurved, the retuse middle lobe somewhat reflexed, rich crimson-purple
-veined with darker purple, the base decurrent and gibbose, and the disk with three
-white papillose crests. <i>Columns</i> compressed, grooved, the back united with the sepal.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Dendrobium bigibbum</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, in <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Flower Garden</i>, iii, 25, fig. 245;
-<i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 4898; <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>,
-vi., 302; <i>Warner</i>, <i>Select Orchidaceous Plants</i>, 2 ser. t. 8; <i>Van Houtte</i>, <i>Flore
-des Serres</i>, xi., t. 1143; <i>Bateman</i>, <i>Second Century of Orchidaceous Plants</i>, t. 169;
-<i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Growers&rsquo; Manual</i>, 5 ed., 165.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This plant belongs to one of the most noble and popular, one of the most
-showy and beautiful genera of the whole family of Orchids, and one among the flowers
-of which nearly every colour occurs&mdash;bright yellow, pure white, rich crimson, bright
-purple, soft mauve, rich orange, nankeen, and many others being found among the
-many and various habited species of Dendrobes.</p>
-<p><i>Dendrobium bigibbum</i>, the subject of our plate, is a species of a remarkably
-beautiful and showy character, which, until within the last few years, has been
-somewhat rare. In 1876, however, we received a large consignment from our collector,
-Mr. Goldie, who was then on his way to New Guinea, and who met with it growing on
-an island in Torres Straits, it having hitherto, we believe, been found only on the
-mainland of Australia. These plants were very fine, some of the specimens being of
-enormous dimensions, with stems quite two feet long, and from one and a-half to
-two inches in circumference. The specimens from which our figure of one of the
-most charming forms of this species which we have yet seen, was prepared, were kindly
-sent to us from the fine collection of the Marquess of Lothian, at Newbattle Abbey.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_75">75</span>
-Dalkeith, where it bloomed in September last in full beauty, amongst many other
-notable Orchids which are well cultivated by the intelligent gardener, Mr. Priest, who
-takes great delight in the careful management of his plants.</p>
-<p>This species of <i>Dendrobium</i> is partially deciduous, the fully ripened stems
-sometimes losing the whole of their foliage, while the young growths retain their
-leaves until the following year. It grows from one to two feet in height, and
-produces its racemes of flowers sometimes from the top of the young growths, and
-sometimes from the old stems, in the latter case often bearing many spikes on the
-same stem. The flowers are of a rich rosy purple, and last in perfection for a
-considerable period. It is a most useful subject for associating with a button-hole
-bouquet, single flowers being shown off to great advantage by placing a light-looking
-fern frond behind them. The racemes of flowers last a long time after being cut if
-placed in water, and are most useful in all floral decorations. By growing several
-plants, successional blooms may be had at different periods.</p>
-<p>This Tropical Australian species is best grown in a warm house, as the plants
-require a good amount of heat&mdash;70&deg; to 80&deg; while growing&mdash;and plenty of light, but
-the burning rays of the sun must be kept from them. They thrive best when
-planted in pans or baskets amongst rough fibrous peat and sphagnum moss, and
-suspended from the roof of the Orchid house. During the summer season they
-require a liberal supply of water, but in winter should have only sufficient to keep
-the stems plump. The plant will also succeed on blocks of wood, but, if grown in
-this way, it will in hot weather need watering twice a day, and once a day at
-other times. Some cultivators have been unsuccessful with this species, but we
-have found it to thrive well in a house where Crotons, Dipladenias, Stephanotis, etc.,
-are grown; the Dendrobes seem to enjoy the moisture transmitted to them by the
-stove plants which are generally syringed in warm weather, and the dew arising
-from this operation appears to suit the Orchid. The syringe is also useful in subduing
-the red spider, which will sometimes attack the young growth. Insects often infest
-those kinds of <i>Dendrobium</i> that are grown in strong heat, but they must by this and
-other means be kept under.</p>
-<p>Such treatment suits almost all the popular Dendrobes, namely, <i>D. Devonianum</i>,
-<i>D. Wardianum superbum</i>, <i>D. chrysanthum</i>, <i>D. superbum (macrophyllum)</i>, <i>D.
-crassinode</i>, etc.; and the plants are found to be much stronger by reason of hanging
-near the glass well exposed to light, in which position they can be syringed on
-warm days&mdash;this moistening not only invigorating their growth, but being also a
-means of keeping insects under control.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig39">
-<img src="images/p_0119.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1186" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 39.</span>
- PHAL&AElig;NOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<h2 id="c41"><span class="h2line1">PHAL&AElig;NOPSIS STUARTIANA NOBILIS.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig39">Plate 39</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the East.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. Acaulescent, the plants clinging to their supports by stout flattened
-roots. <i>Leaves</i> coriaceous, distichous, ligulate-oblong, acute, channelled, equitant at
-the base, the upper surface marbled with transverse grey blotches which disappear
-with age, the under surface purplish red, similar in size to those of <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis
-Schilleriana</i>. <i>Scape</i> radical, bearing a many-flowered (120 or more) branching panicle
-of very handsomely and peculiarly spotted blossoms. <i>Flowers</i> nearly three inches
-across, expanded, cream-coloured at first, becoming white; <i>sepals</i> oblong, or ovate-oblong,
-about an inch in length, the dorsal one white, the lateral ones white along
-the upper side, the lower side being yellow thickly spotted with cinnamon-red; <i>petals</i>
-much broader, narrowed near the base, white; <i>lip</i> three-lobed, with a four-horned
-yellow callosity at its base, the lateral lobes oblong, rounded, the middle lobe oval,
-with an anchor-like extremity, the apex terminating in a pair of narrow recurved
-lacini&aelig;, all the lobes yellow at the base, white upwards and handsomely spotted
-with rich cinnamon-red. <i>Column</i> clavate, white.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Phal&aelig;nopsis Stuartiana</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, <span class="small">N.S.</span> xvi.,
-748, 753, fig. 149; Moore, <i>Florist and Pomologist</i>, 1882, 49, t. 559.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><i>Var.</i> <span class="small">NOBILIS</span>; flowers larger in all their parts, marked with fewer and larger
-spots; front lobe of the lip rhombic.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Phal&aelig;nopsis Stuartiana</span> <i>var.</i> <span class="small">NOBILIS</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>,
-<span class="small">N.S.</span> xvi., 748.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>There can be no doubt that the species of <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis</i> rank amongst our
-finest Orchids, on account of the purity and soft tinting of their blossoms and the
-profusion in which they are produced. Unfortunately, at present, we only possess a
-limited number of them. During the last few years, indeed, many new kinds, which
-are giving a fresh interest to the genus, have been introduced by our collectors; and,
-although it is barely possible that any new introduction should surpass the old species,
-yet it is gratifying to know that there are yet to be found distinct and novel kinds of
-great beauty. <i>P. Stuartiana</i>, which we now bring under the notice of our readers, is
-a very fine and well-marked species, recently imported from the East by Messrs. Low &amp;
-Co., of Upper Clapton, and named by Professor Reichenbach in honour of Mr. Stuart
-Low, who is one of the largest importers of this class of Orchids. Our plate,
-which represents the variety called <i>P. Stuartiana nobilis</i>, was sketched from a plant
-now in the fine collection of William Lee, Esq., of Downside, Leatherhead, who
-purchased it when in full beauty from the Messrs. Low, and we have to thank
-Mr. Lee for his kindness in allowing the drawing to be made. It is to be hoped
-<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
-that collectors may find more of it in its native country, although we believe it to be
-very rare, and, like many other recent discoveries to be probably a natural hybrid
-produced by insect fertilisation. We have no doubt that there are yet many fine
-forms of <i>Phal&aelig;nopsis</i>; and if we could but obtain the scarlet one, which some years
-ago was reported to have been seen by a collector who was not able to bring it
-home, what a grand acquisition that would be!</p>
-<p><i>Phal&aelig;nopsis Stuartiana nobilis</i> resembles <i>P. Schilleriana</i> in the young growth, its
-newly developed leaves being of the same shape and colour and similarly spotted, but
-the older leaves assume more of the character of <i>P. amabilis</i>; while the flowers,
-instead of being mauve-coloured, are pure white, with the inferior halves of the
-lateral sepals yellow and boldly spotted with cinnamon-red, as also is a portion of
-the lip, the side lobes of which bear smaller and more closely set spots. We
-have little doubt that this plant is a wild hybrid between <i>P. Schilleriana</i> and <i>P.
-amabilis</i>, as though the young leaves come spotted, they afterwards change to the
-colour of those of <i>P. amabilis</i>, as already described.</p>
-<p>This plant requires the same treatment as <i>P. Schilleriana</i>, and is best grown
-among sphagnum moss in baskets suspended from the roof, care being taken to give
-it a good supply of water during the growing season. It should have the heat of
-the East India house, and should at all times be kept moist at the roots, for if
-allowed to become dry, it will loose its lower leaves. If the plants are in a healthy
-and free-growing condition, flowering does not injure them; but, if at all sickly, they
-should not be allowed to blossom until they regain strength and vigour, as they are
-naturally free-flowering plants, and under such circumstances might bloom themselves
-to death. The moss about their roots must be sweet and in a living state; when
-it becomes decayed it should be removed, the roots washed, and the plant replaced
-in clean live moss with fresh free drainage, so that the water, of which a
-considerable quantity is required, may never become stagnant. Shading is an
-important element in the successful cultivation of these plants; therefore the sun, when
-at its full power in summer, must never be allowed to shine upon them, but in
-winter a little sun-heat is beneficial, and they then require all the light which it is
-possible to give them. Neither drip, nor water in any other form, must be
-suffered to reach the hearts of the plants, as it causes them to rot.</p>
-<p>Insects are troublesome at times. The thrips, if allowed to multiply, will greatly
-disfigure the plants, causing damage by depriving them of the juices which should
-go to sustain their vigour. When free from such pests, and in a healthy
-condition, the leaves of the Phal&aelig;nopsids have a pleasing appearance; and, if they
-are well looked after, it will not be difficult to keep them clean, the more especially
-as being of large size, they can be readily operated upon.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig40">
-<img src="images/p_0122.jpg" alt="" width="896" height="1183" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 40.</span>
- ODONTGLOSSUM KRAMERII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<h2 id="c42"><span class="h2line1">ODONTOGLOSSUM KRAMERI.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig40">Plate 40</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Costa Rica.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> nearly orbicular, much compressed, ancipitous or sharply
-two-edged, one and a-half inch in diameter, pale green. <i>Leaves</i> solitary, oblong-lanceolate,
-acute, keeled, six to eight inches long, one and a-half to two inches broad,
-light green, with a smooth even surface. <i>Scapes</i> radical, four to six inches long,
-shorter than the leaves, three to five flowered, drooping or ascending, flexuous, pale
-green, with small appressed bracts and longish peduncles. <i>Flowers</i> one and a-half
-inch or more across, and delicately coloured; <i>sepals</i> oblong acute, rosy lilac with a
-white margin; <i>petals</i> about equalling the sepals in size, and similar to them in form
-and colour; <i>lip</i> with a short stout neck, deeply hollowed in front, with two erect
-calli, the lateral lobes semi-ovate, narrow, deflexed, the much larger middle lobe three-fourths
-of an inch broad, roundish reniform, emarginate, bearing at the base a pair
-of erect lamell&aelig;, the unguis or neck yellow spotted with red, the front lobe deep
-rosy lilac, marked near its base with two semi-circular bands of white and purplish
-rose. <i>Column</i> short, thick, white in front.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Krameri</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1868, 98,
-with woodcut; <i>Hooker fil.</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 5778; <i>Bateman</i>, <i>Monograph of
-Odontoglossum</i>, t. 24; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Growers&rsquo; Manual</i>, 5 ed., 236; <i>Floral
-Magazine</i>, t. 406 (as O. Kremeri.)</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This is a most charming small-growing Orchid, with remarkably pretty delicately
-coloured flowers. It is at the present time very rare in collections, and, in fact, had
-become almost lost to cultivation, but fortunately during the last year a small number
-of plants was imported into this country and distributed. Our drawing was made
-from a plant which formed part of this importation, and which produced its chastely
-coloured blossoms in the Victoria Nursery. Many years ago we remember to have
-seen a fine lot imported by the late George Ure Skinner, Esq., but since then it has
-until last year disappeared from our notice. We are, however, glad to see it again
-making its appearance in our Orchid-houses; for, as will be seen by reference to our
-illustration, it is a plant of a most distinct and pleasing character, and will be a
-real acquisition to the group of Odontoglots, of which numerous highly popular
-species are at present in cultivation.</p>
-<p><i>Odontoglossum Krameri</i> is a plant of compact-growing habit, with small flattened
-light green pseudobulbs, each producing from the top a solitary leaf of a pale green colour.
-The plant generally attains about ten inches in height. The flower spikes or peduncles
-are freely produced from the base of the pseudobulbs after they have completed their
-<span class="pb" id="Page_79">79</span>
-growth, several flowers being produced on each peduncle. The sepals and petals are
-of a rosy lilac colour, margined with white; the lip is also rosy lilac, but of a darker
-shade, flushed with yellow and marked and spotted with purple at the neck, and
-having two semi-circular bands of dark purplish rose and white near the base. The
-plants continue in bloom for several weeks.</p>
-<p>We have found this species to thrive well in the Cattleya house, planted in
-small pans or pots with good peat and sphagnum moss. It might possibly do in
-a cooler structure, but we have as yet only cultivated it in the Cattleya house, and
-this treatment has been found to suit it. It requires to be kept moist during the
-growing season, but when at rest should have only just sufficient water to keep it
-in a plump condition. The plant possesses one great advantage&mdash;that of blooming
-during the autumn months, when such flowers are so much in request. It has also
-another good quality&mdash;that of occupying but a small space, so that any cultivator
-who has a spare niche in his Orchid house can grow it without any inconvenience.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cattleya Trian&aelig;.</span>&mdash;R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of Blackburn, has kindly sent us a
-wonderfully fine series of flowers of the different varieties of <i>C. Trian&aelig;</i>, including
-some of the grandest that have yet come under our notice. Of two or three of these
-our Artist is preparing plates, which will be issued in due course in the <i>Orchid Album</i>.
-The variety named <i>C. Trian&aelig; Dodgsoni</i> bears most beautiful flowers, which are quite
-distinct from all that we have previously seen, the sepals and petals being large, and
-of a pure white, while the lip is of a rich magenta colour, with the throat rich orange,
-white in the upper part. <i>C. Trian&aelig; Osmani</i> is also a very fine variety, the flowers
-being rich in colour, the sepals and petals rosy pink, and the lip large, of a bright
-magenta colour; it is in fact altogether a wonderfully fine flower. There were
-several other varieties sent, including one which we have selected as the original
-<i>C. Trian&aelig;</i>; this we shall first bring under the notice of our readers, and the other
-two will follow.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Mr. Dorman&rsquo;s Orchids.</span>&mdash;When visiting this grand collection last month (March) we
-noticed the rare <i>Epidendrum Wallisii</i> in flower. Mr. Coningsby, the gardener,
-informed us that the flowers on this plant had been open since November, and
-they still looked fresh. <i>L&aelig;lia flava</i> was also good. <i>Galeandra Devoniana</i>, a plant
-one seldom sees in bloom, was quite at home here, flowering and growing luxuriantly.
-<i>Lycaste Skinneri alba</i>, with its pure white flowers looked very charming; this was
-an extra fine variety, with flowers as large as any we remember to have seen. In
-addition to these there were many fine things in flower, which space will not permit
-us to mention. Mr. Dorman&rsquo;s Orchids are looking remarkably well, and are well
-cared for, both employer and gardener being enthusiastically fond of them.&mdash;H. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig41">
-<img src="images/p_0125.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1186" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 41.</span>
- ANGR&AElig;CUM EBURNEUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<h2 id="c43"><span class="h2line1">ANGR&AElig;CUM EBURNEUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig41">Plate 41</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Madagascar and Bourbon.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stem</i> erect, leafy, producing roots from the lower part and from
-between the bases of the lower leaves. <i>Leaves</i> distichous, ligulate, very oblique at
-the apex, coriaceous, of a shining green colour, striated, about two inches broad,
-carinate below and overlapping each other at the base. <i>Peduncles</i> axillary, furnished
-with dark sheathing scales, and bearing an erect spike of numerous large flowers of
-peculiar form and appearance, all pointing in one direction and placed alternately
-back to back in a distichous or two-ranked manner. <i>Flowers</i> of a thick fleshy
-texture, green, with a broad conspicuous white lip; <i>sepals</i> and <i>petals</i> lanceolate,
-pale green, the dorsal sepal and the petals reflexed, the lateral sepals patent; <i>lip</i>
-large, broadly cordate, cuspidate, ivory white, the centre concave, and bearing a cleft
-acuminated ridge; <i>spur</i> tapering, considerably longer than and parallel with the
-dorsal sepal, dark green. <i>Column</i> short, thick, greenish white.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Angr&aelig;cum eburneum</span>, <i>Du Petit-Thouars</i>, <i>Orchid&eacute;es des Iles Australes d&rsquo;Afrique</i>,
-t. 65; <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Botanical Register</i>, t. 1522; <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 4761;
-<i>Paxton&rsquo;s Magazine of Botany</i>, xvi., 90, with woodcut; <i>Bateman</i>, <i>2nd Century of
-Orchidaceous Plants</i>, t. 111; <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1873, 216, fig. 46; <i>Williams</i>,
-<i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed., 88, with woodcut.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Angr&aelig;cum superbum</span>, <i>Du Petit-Thouars</i>, <i>Orchid&eacute;es</i>, tt. 62-4.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Limodorum eburneum</span>, <i>Bory</i>, <i>Voyage</i>, i., 359; t. 19.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>A grand Orchid which was first introduced to this country from Madagascar by
-the Horticultural Society of London, through their collector, Mr. Forbes, in the third
-decade of the present century, that is, more than fifty years since. It is, without
-doubt, one of the finest of the species, and when well grown forms a noble plant, its
-long spikes of attractive flowers, in company with its bold and characteristic foliage
-and its majestic habit of growth, imparting to it an aspect of dignity which no one
-can fail to recognise. Indeed, the magnificent appearance it has when placed on
-the central stage of the East India house is quite sufficient to win for it the favour
-of Orchid fanciers.</p>
-<p>Wherever space can be given to it, it should always be grown, as it blooms
-during the winter months and continues in perfection for many weeks longer than
-any other of its family that has come under our notice. Our drawing was taken
-from a very fine specimen, producing three well developed spikes, in the collection
-of D. B. Crawshay, Esq., Rosefield, Sevenoaks, Kent, who is a great lover of Orchids,
-and is forming a nice collection of them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
-<p><i>Angr&aelig;cum eburneum</i> is, as we have before noted, from Madagascar, and
-consequently requires the heat of the East India house. It is of comparatively easy
-cultivation. The strap-shaped leaves grow to about eighteen inches in length, and
-are of a pleasant glossy, light green colour; the flower spikes are produced from the
-leaf axils on each side of the stem, and extend to the length of eighteen inches,
-bearing many flowers of which the broad cordate lip is of a conspicuous ivory white.
-The plants will sometimes produce as many as four spikes at one time. The blooming
-period is in December, January, and February.</p>
-<p>There is in cultivation another variety of <i>Angr&aelig;cum eburneum</i>, called <i>virens</i>, but
-is not nearly so handsome and effective a plant as the type, its flowers being of a
-greenish white, but the spike has a somewhat more graceful contour, and the foliage
-is of a dark green colour, so that it also is worth cultivating where room can be
-found for its accommodation.</p>
-<p>The Angr&aelig;cums form a very interesting genus in the great Orchid family; and
-although amongst those that have bloomed in this country there are not many that
-we consider to be worth growing as ornamental plants, yet some, on the other
-hand, are very beautiful, and these we hope to be able to figure in due course. There
-have been several new introductions of late, and no doubt there are many yet to
-be acquired. We are glad to notice that Sir Trevor Lawrence is getting up a
-collection of all the best kinds, but it is found that some of them are difficult to
-obtain, and they are none of them so readily imported alive as many other Orchids
-are. They are mostly found growing on trees in their native country, different
-species being met with on the same trees. It was very interesting to hear the
-late Rev. W. Ellis talk of these plants, of which many years ago he brought home
-living specimens of some of the most beautiful of the species, such as <i>Angr&aelig;cum
-sesquipedale</i>, <i>A. Ellisii</i>, and others.</p>
-<p><i>Angr&aelig;cum eburneum</i> is best cultivated in a pot as it is a large growing plant,
-and produces thick fleshy roots. We find sphagnum moss to suit it well, but it
-must have good drainage as it requires a liberal supply of water during the summer
-months, for if it be allowed to shrivel the bottom leaves wither and decay; in the
-winter, on the other hand, it should have merely sufficient to keep the moss damp
-and the plant in a plump condition. It requires the same general treatment as the
-large growing Vandas, such as <i>Vanda suavis</i>, <i>V. tricolor</i>, and others. The plants
-are not subject to the attacks of insects, their thick fleshy leaves appearing to have
-no attraction for these pests.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Cattleya Trian&aelig;.</span>&mdash;We have received from E. Wright, Esq., Gravelly Hill,
-Birmingham, a very fine form of this splendid <i>Cattleya</i>; the flowers were six inches
-in diameter, the sepals and petals broad and of a rosy pink colour, the lip of a rich
-magenta and beautifully fringed, having the throat bright orange colour and the upper
-part rose-pink. It is altogether a desirable and charming flower. The varieties of
-this species are very useful, as they bloom in winter, when there are but few other
-Cattleyas in flower.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig42">
-<img src="images/p_0128.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1191" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 42.</span>
- DENDROBIUM MACROPHYLLUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<h2 id="c44"><span class="h2line1">DENDROBIUM SUPERBUM [MACROPHYLLUM].</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig42">Plate 42</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of the Philippine Islands.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> (pseudobulbs) stout, cylindrical, striated, the nodes of the
-flowering ones marked by the persistent scarious sheathing bases of the fallen leaves,
-drooping, and often attaining considerable length. <i>Leaves</i> alternate elliptic-oblong,
-acute or obtuse, subcordate at the base, nervose, thin in texture, two-ribbed. <i>Flowers</i>
-very numerous, usually in pairs from the joints of the stems, which form long floral
-wreaths; <i>sepals</i> lanceolate, plane, the lateral ones produced at the base, of a deep
-rich purplish magenta, varying in intensity in different forms; <i>petals</i> broadly oblong-ovate,
-somewhat undulated, of the same colour as the sepals; <i>lip</i> pubescent, cordate-ovate,
-acuminate, convolute at the base, so that with the extended front lobe it
-assumes something of the shape of an oblique-mouthed funnel, the margin denticulate,
-the basal portion of an intense sanguineous purple, appearing like two deep blotches;
-the front lobe purplish magenta, marked with longitudinal ribs, connected with finer
-transverse veins of a deeper purple, and having a transverse three-lobed callosity.
-<i>Column</i> short, included.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Dendrobium superbum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i> <i>MSS.</i>; <i>Id.</i>, <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 282; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed., 180.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Dendrobium macrophyllum</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Botanical Register</i>, 1839, misc. 46; 1844,
-misc. 62; <i>Id.</i> <i>Sertum Orchidaceum</i>, t. 35; <i>Pescatorea</i>, t. 40; <i>Paxton&rsquo;s Magazine
-of Botany</i>, viii., 97.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Dendrobium macranthum</span>, <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 3970; <i>Planchon</i> in
-<i>Flore des Serres</i>, viii, t. 757.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This is a magnificent Orchid, especially in the case of its finer varieties, whether
-superior on the score of size or colouration. It was first bloomed by the Messrs.
-Loddiges in 1839, in their wonderful plant emporium at Hackney, having been
-introduced by them from the Philippine Islands. A grand variety called <i>giganteum</i>,
-having flowers of immense size, is figured in Mr. R. Warner&rsquo;s <i>Select Orchidaceous
-Plants</i> (1 ser., t. 26); and in respect to colour, the form of which we now give
-an illustration, is one of the richest and most effective we have yet seen. The materials
-from which our figure was prepared were obligingly sent to us by Mr. C. Penny,
-gardener to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, at Sandringham. It will be at once seen
-that the specimen in question was a well-grown example, and we understand that
-the plant yielded two similarly well furnished wreaths, bearing as many as forty
-blossoms. Besides this there are many other Orchids of superior merit to be seen
-in the collection at Sandringham gardens, these plants, the magnates of the vegetable
-world, being highly appreciated both by the Prince and the Princess of Wales.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
-<p>The Dendrobiums are among the most beautiful and charming of our Indian
-Orchids, many of the species being of a most graceful habit of growth, and by
-their brightly coloured flowers imparting a remarkably picturesque character to our
-Orchid houses. Some of them, moreover, have delicately fragrant blossoms. In very
-many cases they bloom most profusely, and with their long pendent stems look well
-suspended from the roof of the house. Our present subject belongs to this latter
-class, and is one of the most showy and beautiful of the species.</p>
-<p><i>Dendrobium superbum</i>, which is more commonly known in gardens as <i>Dendrobium
-macrophyllum</i>, is a deciduous plant, losing its foliage just as it begins to blossom.
-It is a noble object when growing, producing stems from two to three feet long,
-furnished along each side with flowers growing in pairs; these flowers are four inches
-across, with sepals and petals of a lively magenta-rose, and a lip similar in colour,
-but with a purplish crimson throat. It blooms during February and March, the
-individual blossoms lasting about a fortnight in beauty. It thrives best when grown
-in a basket, and suspended from the roof. If hung up when in blossom, amongst
-the foliage of the other plants, the flowers are shown off to greater advantage, as
-it naturally blooms without foliage. It grows well in the East India Orchid house,
-and requires a good amount of heat and moisture during its growing season. After
-growth is completed it will do well in the Cattleya house during the dormant period,
-and when it begins to show its flower buds a little water may be given to induce
-the buds to swell and develop fine flowers. When the flowering season is over it
-may, if required, be placed in fresh sphagnum moss. It is a free growing plant,
-and thrives best suspended near the glass in the full light, but shaded from the
-burning sun. It is, indeed, absolutely necessary to give it all the light possible;
-and, in summer, a slight syringing when the house is closed will tend to keep the
-red spider and thrips in check.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dendrobium Hillii.</span>&mdash;There is in the collection of R. Wyatt, Esq., Lake House,
-Cheltenham, a very fine specimen of this cool Orchid, which has been bearing numerous
-spikes of blossom, some of the spikes being as much as twenty inches in length. The
-specimen was a most beautiful object, with its long racemes of creamy white blossoms,
-which proceed from the apices of its thick fleshy pseudobulbs; it has, moreover,
-dark green foliage. This plant was growing in the conservatory, and had continued in
-bloom for about two months, so that it is a most useful subject for winter decoration.
-It is a very old Orchid, but is worth cultivating, especially as it will grow in a
-conservatory or in any cool house. There was also in the same collection a very
-fine variety of <i>Cypripedium villosum</i>, one of the best we have seen, the flowers
-being wonderfully bright in colour, and of large size. Of <i>Lycaste Skinneri</i> there was
-a well-grown plant, with very fine flowers, the sepals and petals being broad and pure
-white, and the front portion of the lip bright magenta, with the throat white.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig43">
-<img src="images/p_0131.jpg" alt="" width="928" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 43.</span>
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR&AElig; FLAVEOLUM.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
-<h2 id="c45"><span class="h2line1">ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR&AElig; FLAVEOLUM.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig43">Plate 43</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of New Grenada.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> ovate, compressed, one or two leaved. <i>Leaves</i> elongate,
-oblong-lanceolate, acute, of a bright green colour. <i>Scape</i> radical, supporting a many-flowered
-raceme (or panicle) of showy flowers, each subtended by a small ovate-oblong
-acute bract. <i>Flowers</i> large, differing from other known forms of the species by their
-yellow colour, about three inches across; <i>sepals</i> ovate-lanceolate, acute, slightly wavy
-at the edges, pale sulphur-yellow; <i>petals</i> ovate, much undulated at the margins and
-irregularly toothed, of the same pale yellow as the sepals; <i>lip</i> oblong, the apex
-truncately rounded and cuspidate, the margins undulated and fimbriated, and the
-basal angles rounded and produced, all of a bright yellow colour, marked near the
-centre with about three conspicuous round reddish brown spots, and at the base with
-fine radiating lines of the same colour, in front of which are two divergent bars or
-crests. <i>Column</i> arcuate, club-shaped, pale yellow behind, dull brown on the inner
-face, and furnished with the usual toothed wings at the edge.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig; flaveolum</span>, <i>supra</i>.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum crispum flaveolum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>,
-<span class="small">N.S.</span> xiii., 41, 232.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This very distinct variety is one which will become very useful in the decoration
-of our cool Orchid houses, for as the white-flowered varieties of <i>Odontoglossum
-Alexandr&aelig;</i> and other species are now so numerous, that now before us, being yellow,
-will produce a good contrast, which we must have in order to make a pleasing
-display. Our drawing was taken from a fine example in the collection of G. Hardy,
-Esq., Pickering Lodge, Timperley, near Manchester. We may add that Mr. Hardy&rsquo;s
-is one of the largest and best collections in the North of England, since he spares
-neither trouble nor expense in procuring the best varieties that can be obtained. As
-a proof of this we may refer to the recent Manchester Whitsuntide flower shows,
-where Orchids are one of the prominent features, and where Mr. Hardy&rsquo;s collection
-has frequently taken high honours.</p>
-<p><i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig; flaveolum</i> is a compact free-growing plant, like
-<i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i> itself, and produces fine drooping flower spikes which we have seen
-bearing fifteen expanded bright creamy yellow flowers, these continuing in beauty for
-several weeks. This variety is all the more useful because of its blooming in the
-winter months when so many of our white Odontoglots are also in flower. The
-plant requires the same treatment as others of its class. It was found growing on
-the branches of trees intermixed with <i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</i>, and no doubt, as is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_85">85</span>
-probably the case with others of the so-called new varieties, it has originated by
-intercrossing with some allied species, which may have been growing near to it, and
-has been flowering at the same time. We hope shortly to give an illustration of the
-original or typical form of <i>O. Alexandr&aelig;</i>.</p>
-<p>The best material in which to grow the Odontoglots is fibrous peat; they must
-have good drainage because they want plenty of water during the growing season,
-in fact the material should always be kept moist. The plants must never be over-potted,
-but just sufficient root room must be permitted them to secure healthy
-progression; over-potting, indeed, often becomes dangerous. We find that live
-sphagnum moss placed on the top of the peat is a great help in their cultivation, as
-it holds water, and there is always some degree of moisture arising from it; moreover,
-when it is kept in a healthy growing state it has a very neat and pleasing
-appearance.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Odontoglossums at Trentham.</span>&mdash;The <i>r&eacute;gime</i> adopted at Trentham for growing
-Cool Orchids, such as Odontoglots, is to give them water most profusely, the cold
-rain-water which falls from the roof being used summer and winter, and to allow
-fresh air to circulate freely amongst them at all times, night and day, except in
-very severe weather. The natural water at Trentham, as does any other water
-containing lime, will, after a time, kill the Sphagnum used for potting purposes, and
-this is most inimical to the plants, which never thrive so well as when the Sphagnum
-keeps fresh and in a growing state. In respect to the Sphagnum Moss used for Orchid
-growing, it does not appear to be generally known that amongst the different
-species the best for potting Odontoglots and similar plants is a dense-growing
-compact kind, whose very compactness gives it a sponge-like consistency, and enables
-it to suck up and retain water freely. This is what the Odontoglots like.&mdash;T. M.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Roezlii.</span>&mdash;A fine example of this showy Orchid has reached us
-from D. Todd, Esq., Eastwood Park, near Glasgow. The spike was a particularly fine
-one, bearing well-developed flowers, of which the sepals and petals were white, the
-lower part of the latter being of a dark magenta, and the lip white, coloured with lines
-of crimson on the disk. Mr. Todd grows these plants remarkably well, and deserves
-great credit for his felicitous treatment of them, as few persons are so successful in
-their cultivation. There is a very good collection of Orchids forming at this place,
-Mr. Todd being an admirer of good kinds. At the Glasgow exhibitions his fine
-collection forms one of the greatest attractions of the show.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig44">
-<img src="images/p_0134.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1156" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 44.</span>
- L&AElig;LIA ANCEPS DAWSONII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<h2 id="c46"><span class="h2line1">L&AElig;LIA ANCEPS DAWSONI.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig44">Plate 44</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Juquila in Mexico.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> oblong-ovate, four to five inches long, compressed and
-two-edged, with prominent angles on the flattened sides so as to render them
-tetraquetrous, clothed with large membranaceous scales. <i>Leaves</i> one or two from each
-pseudobulb, oblong-lanceolate acute, coriaceous, smooth and glossy on the surface, of
-a rich deep green colour. <i>Scape</i> rising from between the leaves at the apex of the
-pseudobulb, two to three feet long, ancipitous, clothed with carinate bracts, and
-bearing about three large and charmingly beautiful blossoms. <i>Flowers</i> large,
-measuring about four and a-half inches across; <i>sepals</i> lanceolate, acuminate, white;
-<i>petals</i> ovate, acuminate, white; <i>lip</i> prominent, three-lobed: the lateral lobes convolute
-over the column, white at the margin, stained with rosy purple exteriorly, and marked
-with numerous bright purple branched lines within the closed portion, where there
-is also a yellow ridge lined with purple which passes out into the base of the front
-lobe in the form of three yellow crests; the front lobe oblong acute, recurved at
-the tip, the base white, the rest of the lobe (about three-fourths of its surface) of a
-deep rich magenta-purple, evenly but narrowly bordered with white. <i>Column</i> enclosed.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia anceps Dawsoni</span>, <i>Anderson</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1868, 27;
-<i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1873, 254; <i>Warner</i>, <i>Select Orchidaceous
-Plants</i>, 2 ser., t. 34; <i>Jennings</i>, <i>Orchids</i>, t. 6; <i>Floral Magazine</i>, t. 530; <i>Williams</i>,
-<i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed., 202.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia anceps Dawsoniana</span>, <i>Rand</i>, <i>Orchids</i>, 296.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This is one of the most chaste and beautiful Orchids of its class. The type,
-<i>L&aelig;lia anceps</i>, has flowers of a rosy lilac and deep purple colour, while the one before
-us is pure white with the exception of the lip, which is of a rich sparkling purple,
-and makes a splendid contrast.</p>
-<p>This variety was imported many years ago by the Messrs. Low &amp; Co., of Clapton.
-There have been several other white forms flowered lately, but none to equal the
-one represented in our plate, the drawing of which was taken from a very fine
-specimen bearing four spikes, growing in the rich collection of R. B. Dodgson, Esq.,
-of Blackburn; it was the finest plant we have seen in bloom, and the production of
-so grand a specimen reflects great credit on Mr. Osman, the Gardener, for his skill
-in cultivation.</p>
-<p><i>L&aelig;lia anceps Dawsoni</i> is, like the type form, of compact-growing habit. The
-pseudobulbs are from four to six inches in height, and the foliage of a light green
-colour. The flower spike is developed at the tip of the pseudobulb after it has
-completed its growth, and attains to about two feet in length, generally bearing two
-<span class="pb" id="Page_87">87</span>
-or three blossoms at the end; the sepals and petals are pure white, of good form
-and substance, and the lip is of a dark rosy purple edged with white, the disk orange
-coloured, the lower part of the throat pale orange veined with crimson, and the upper
-part white. It generally blooms in January and February, and continues in perfection
-for two and three weeks.</p>
-<p>This variety must be very rare in its native habitat, as we have received
-importations on several occasions purporting to be this white form, but after the
-plants have been grown on and flowered, they have invariably proved to be the
-type with rosy-coloured flowers. This is also the experience of other importers of
-Orchids.</p>
-<p>The plant is best grown in a pot or basket suspended from the roof, where it
-can obtain all the light possible, which induces it to grow with greater vigour and
-to flower more freely. It thrives well in the Cattleya house with a moderate supply
-of water in the growing season, but when at rest less water will suffice. We have
-found good rough fibrous peat to be the most advantageous material in which to
-grow it, allowing ample drainage; and when fresh potting material is required the
-operation of supplying it should be performed just as the plant begins to grow,
-which is after the blooming season. Always bear in mind that the plants must be
-kept free from insects.</p>
-<p>Propagation is effected by dividing the plant just as it begins to break into
-growth. In performing the operation two or three pseudobulbs should be detached
-from the plant, having a leading bulb; when taken off at this stage the plants
-soon become established.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dendrobium Wardianum.</span>&mdash;A fine variety of this grand Dendrobe comes from
-D. Alroy Salamon, Esq., Clapham Park. The specimen has very large flowers,
-four and a-half inches in diameter, and of great substance. The sepals and petals are
-one and a-quarter inch broad, of a pure white, heavily tipped with rich magenta; the
-lip is very large, and also heavily blotched with magenta, the throat being rich orange
-with two dark brown eye-like spots. These flowers were from an imported plant,
-and we are curious to see whether it will produce equally fine flowers from the home
-made growths. If so we shall hope to figure it at some future time, as in the state
-in which it has just bloomed, it is certainly one of the finest and best forms of this
-splendid species which we have met with. It is also a free grower.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dendrobium Falconeri.</span>&mdash;Mr. Priest, Gardener to the Marquis of Lothian, has
-sent us some fine flowers of this favourite Dendrobe. He informs us that the plant
-from which the flowers were taken has 150 blossoms upon it. This must be a remarkably
-fine specimen, and well cultivated, to produce flowers in such profusion.&mdash;H. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig45">
-<img src="images/p_0137.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1214" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 45.</span>
- CATTLEYA TRIAN&AElig;.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_88">88</div>
-<h2 id="c47"><span class="h2line1">CATTLEYA TRIAN&AElig;.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig45">Plate 45</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Colombia.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stems</i> oblong, club-shaped, furrowed, about a foot in height, clothed
-with whitish membranaceous sheaths. <i>Leaves</i> solitary, coriaceous, ligulate-oblong,
-recurved at the tip, of a deep green colour, six to eight inches long. <i>Scape</i> two
-or three-flowered, proceeding from a terminal oblong compressed brownish bract or
-sheath, about two inches long. <i>Flowers</i> large, variable in colour, from white to a
-dilute delicate tint of rosy purple in the typical form, the lip being of a rich
-magenta; <i>sepals</i> three inches or more in length, oblong-lanceolate, plane, of a
-delicate blush or pallid tint of rosy purple; <i>petals</i> of the same colour, rhombeo-ovate,
-retuse, crispulate at the anterior edge; <i>lip</i> convolute at the base, where it is of a
-pale purplish mauve, the front lobe obovate, rounded and crimped in the anterior
-part, where it is bilobed, wholly covered with crimson-magenta, exceedingly rich and
-brilliant, the disk marked with a broad rich orange-yellow bilobed blotch. <i>Column</i>
-club-shaped, bearing at the tip a pair of sickle-shaped wings.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya Trian&aelig;</span>, <i>Linden and Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Mohl and Schlechtendal&rsquo;s
-Botanische Zeitung</i>, xviii., 74 (1860); <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 315.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya labiata Lindigiana</span>, <i>Karsten</i>&mdash;fide <i>Reichenbach fil.</i></p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Cattleya labiata Trian&aelig;</span>, <i>Duchartre</i>, <i>Journal de la Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Imp&eacute;riale d&rsquo;Horticulture</i>,
-1860, 369&mdash;fide <i>Reichenbach fil.</i></p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Epidendrum labiatum</span>, <i>var.</i> <span class="sc">Trian&aelig;</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales
-Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 315.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This very charming species of <i>Cattleya</i> was first obtained from Colombia for
-European gardens, in 1856, by Mr. Linden, to whom we are indebted for so many
-choice introductions amongst exotic plants. It is one of the best and most useful
-of the species, especially for winter decoration, and though very variable as regards
-the tinting of the flowers in the many distinct forms which have been imported, it
-is always of a brilliant and strikingly beautiful appearance, owing to the rich
-colouring displayed on the lip. The shades of colour in the several kinds varies
-from pure White through blush white and pale pinkish rose to a pale shade of deep
-rose, the upper lobe of the lip being of a rich magenta-crimson.</p>
-<p>There are, as we have just said, many forms of <i>Cattleya Trian&aelig;</i>. That which
-we now figure we consider to be a very good representative of the typical form of
-the species. Our drawing was taken from a very fine specimen grown in the
-beautiful collection of R. B. Dodgson, Esq., of Beardwood, Blackburn, in which
-many forms of this lovely species occur, as we have already intimated under
-<span class="pb" id="Page_89">89</span>
-<a href="#fig40">Plate 40</a>. We have also mentioned Mr. Osman as being a most successful cultivator
-of Orchidaceous plants.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya Trian&aelig;</i> is a free-growing as well as a free-blooming species. It has
-dark green foliage, and attains the height of about fifteen inches, producing its
-blossoms during the winter months, after the growths are completed. The sepals
-and petals are of a pale pink or delicate tint of rosy purple; the lip is of a
-bright magenta, margined with delicate rose-pink, the edge being fringed, and the
-disk marked with a rich orange-coloured two-lobed blotch. The flowers are produced
-in February and March, and continue for several weeks in perfection, provided they
-are kept free from moisture, which if it lodges upon them will cause them to
-become spotted, and destroy their beauty. It is an excellent plan to place the
-plants when in bloom in a drier house than that in which they are grown, and to
-bestow all possible care upon their preservation. Of themselves they form a fine
-group of Cattleyas, there being so many distinct varieties, of colours such as to
-make them thoroughly useful for decorative purposes. By their agency our Orchid
-houses may be kept gay for several months in the most dreary time of the year,
-for when there is a number of plants they may be flowered in succession. The
-plants can now be bought at a reasonable price, as, in consequence of the large
-importations of them, they have become plentiful.</p>
-<p><i>Cattleya Trian&aelig;</i> requires the same treatment as <i>C. labiata</i>, <i>C. Mossi&aelig;</i>, and
-others of the same class, all these plants being, indeed, regarded by some botanists
-as varieties of one species. For their successful growth the use of good fibrous
-peat and sphagnum moss, with ample drainage, are requisite, and they should be
-kept well elevated above the pot rim. They will also thrive well suspended from
-the roof in baskets, and also on blocks of wood, but in these cases they require
-more attention as to watering, in order to keep them moist at the roots.</p>
-<p>Cattleyas thrive best when placed under the influence of strong light, but they
-must be shaded from bright sunshine. This <i>r&eacute;gime</i> induces them to blossom more
-freely, indeed, if the bulbs are not well ripened good results cannot be anticipated.
-The plants require a plentiful supply of water during the growing season, by which
-we mean that they should be kept constantly moist about the roots. When their
-growth is completed less may be applied, merely enough to keep them in a plump
-state. When the flower spikes begin to appear more water should again be
-given, as it will induce the buds to swell more freely, in consequence of which the
-flowers will be finer.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Orchids from Dr. Paterson.</span>&mdash;This gentleman has been kind enough to send
-us a grand spike of his <i>Vanda tricolor Patersoni</i>. It is a fine form of this
-noble Orchid, the flowers being of large size, and well marked, the lip beautifully
-coloured with rich magenta. A nice spike of the beautiful <i>A&euml;rides nobile</i> came in
-the same parcel, and a curious <i>Eria</i> with white flowers, named <i>stellata</i> (the true
-<i>stellata</i> has dull pale yellow flowers) on account of the star-shaped form of its
-blossoms.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig46">
-<img src="images/p_0140.jpg" alt="" width="926" height="1254" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 46.</span>
- MILTONIA CUNEATA.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<h2 id="c48"><span class="h2line1">MILTONIA CUNEATA.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig46">Plate 46</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Brazil.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> ovate-oblong, compressed, light green, diphyllous. <i>Leaves</i>
-ligulate-oblong, striate, somewhat carinate beneath, of a cheerful green colour. <i>Scape</i>
-radical, erect, bearing a five to eight flowered raceme, each of the pedicels having
-at its base a whitish glumaceous triangular bract about half as long as the ovary.
-<i>Flowers</i> large and showy, with a broad flat white lip; <i>sepals</i> oblong-lanceolate,
-narrowed to the base, of a deep chocolate-purple with a yellowish green tip on
-which is a dark spot, the margins undulated, the lateral ones connate at the base;
-<i>petals</i> similar in form, size, and colour; <i>lip</i> white, with a pink tinge, and one or
-two chocolate spots near the base, wedge-shaped, with a narrow claw-like base and
-a broad flat anterior expanded portion, somewhat repand on the margin, and furnished
-on the disk with two raised plates or lamell&aelig;. <i>Column</i> short, creamy white,
-bidentate on the middle portion, the anther-bed cucullate, membranaceous, denticulate,
-retuse.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Miltonia cuneata</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Botanical Register</i>, 1844, misc. 28; 1845, t. 8;
-<i>Id.</i>, <i>Folia Orchidacea</i>, art. <i>Miltonia</i>, No. 8; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, <i>Xenia Orchidacea</i>,
-i. 131; <i>Moore</i>, <i>Illustrations of Orchidaceous Plants</i>, art. <i>Miltonia</i>, 7 t. 2; <i>Lemaire</i>,
-<i>L&rsquo;Illustration Horticole</i>, t. 237; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed., 223.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Miltonia speciosa</span>, <i>Klotzsch</i>, in <i>Otto and Dietrich&rsquo;s Allgemeine Gartenzeitung</i>,
-xvii. 129.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Oncidium speciosum</span>, <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, <i>MSS.</i>; <i>Id.</i>, <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi. 761.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>This genus of Orchids is not a very extensive one, but among the species
-which are known there are some beautiful plants of distinct and striking character.
-The species which we now represent is a very pretty one, which we are pleased
-to have the opportunity of introducing to the notice of our readers. The specimen
-figured was grown in the fine collection of W. Cobb, Esq., of Sydenham, who is
-a great lover of Orchids, and makes it a study to procure the best kinds and
-cultivate them in the best possible manner.</p>
-<p><i>Miltonia cuneata</i> was introduced by the Messrs. Rollisson, of Tooting, about
-the year 1843, and first flowered with them in the spring of 1844. It is a free-growing
-plant, with light green foliage, which grows about a foot in height, and
-produces its flowers in erect racemes, seven or often more together. The sepals
-and petals are chestnut-brown, tipped with greenish yellow, and the lip is broad
-and of a creamy white colour. The flowers are produced in February and March,
-and last for several weeks in beauty.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_91">91</div>
-<p>This <i>Miltonia</i> requires the heat of the Cattleya house, and thrives in good
-fibrous peat; it must be well drained in order that the superfluous moisture may
-pass off, as the plant dislikes stagnant water about the roots. In the growing
-season a moderate supply of water may be given at the roots, but less will suffice
-when the growth is completed. We find the Miltonias to require more shade than
-most Orchids. Their leaves are thin in texture, and consequently are soon injured,
-which makes it necessary to pay strict attention to the requirements of the plants,
-as while too much sun would dry up the foliage, too much moisture about it would
-cause it to go spotted.</p>
-<p>They are propagated by dividing the bulbs, leaving two old ones and a growth
-in front. These divided portions should be potted in small pots until they get
-well established, and always at all times be kept free from insects. The white
-scale will sometimes attack them, and do much injury if not promptly removed.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">L&aelig;lia elegans prasiata.</span>&mdash;From E. Harvey, Esq., Aigburth, Liverpool, comes a
-spike of a grand form of this fine <i>L&aelig;lia</i>. The flowers are six inches across, the
-sepals and petals purplish rose, the lip rich magenta. This is quite a distinct
-form, and worthy of a place in every collection. Accompanying this was a spike
-of <i>Scuticaria Hadweni</i>, var. <i>pardalina</i>, described some time ago in the <i>Gardeners&rsquo;
-Chronicle</i>.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Dendrobium nobile (three-lipped).</span>&mdash;Mr. Knight, Gardener to the Right Hon.
-W. H. Smith, M.P., Greenlands, Henley-on-Thames, sends us a curious form of
-this grand old Orchid, with three lips, two of the lips taking the place of the
-petals of the normal flowers, and being marked and coloured in a similar manner
-to the ordinary lip. In addition, the flower was deliciously scented. We do
-not suppose that this variation will be constant, being more probably a malformation.&mdash;B.
-S. W.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Bollea c&oelig;lestis as a block plant.</span>&mdash;When visiting the establishment of
-Messrs. Vervaet et Cie., of Gand, Belgium, in April last, we were surprised to see
-this lovely Orchid quite at home on a block, growing luxuriantly, and rooting in
-all directions; the growths were very strong, and as healthy as any we have seen.
-Is it possible that this may be the secret of success with this Orchid? Being an
-epiphyte, found growing on the limbs of trees, we should imagine this treatment
-would be the most natural for it. It is evident that pot culture does not suit
-it, as it frequently dies off after two or three years.&mdash;H. W.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig47">
-<img src="images/p_0143.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="742" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 47.</span>
- ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR&AElig;.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_92">92</div>
-<h2 id="c49"><span class="h2line1">ODONTOGLOSSUM ALEXANDR&AElig;.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig47">Plate 47</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Bogota, New Grenada.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Pseudobulbs</i> oblong-ovate, compressed, often stained brownish purple,
-two-leaved. <i>Leaves</i> ligulate-oblong, acute, channelled toward the base, of a pleasing
-light green colour. <i>Scape</i> radical, supporting a many-flowered raceme, or in the
-more vigorous plants a panicle equalling or exceeding the leaves, and having small
-acute bracts at the base of the pedicels. <i>Flowers</i> exquisitely chaste and beautiful,
-white, tinted with rose, and variously spotted, fully three inches across; <i>sepals</i>
-ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, entire or toothed, white, suffused more or less with a
-delicate tint of rose-pink; <i>petals</i> in the best forms, broadly ovate and much
-undulated, entire or toothed, white, rather less deeply tinted with pink; <i>lip</i> shorter
-than the petals, oblong-ovate, the margin much crisped and the shortly acuminate
-apex recurved, white, with a rich yellow stain down the centre, and marked with
-reddish brown radiating lines on the disk, and with one or two (or in some forms
-many) rich red-brown spots or blotches half-way down, the disk also bearing a
-bilamellate crest. <i>Column</i> arcuate, club-shaped, chestnut-red.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</span>, <i>Bateman</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1864, 1083;
-<i>Id.</i>, <i>Proceedings of the Royal Horticultural Society</i>, iv., 186; <i>Id.</i>, <i>Monograph of
-Odontoglossum</i>, t.t. 14, 19; <i>Hooker</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 5691 (var. <i>Trian&aelig;</i>),
-t. 5697 (var. <i>guttatum</i>); <i>Jennings</i>, <i>Orchids</i>, t. 26; <i>Warner</i>, <i>Select Orchidaceous
-Plants</i>, 2 ser., t. 23 (var. <i>Warneri</i>); <i>Floral Magazine</i>, t. 343; <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid
-Grower&rsquo;s Manual</i>, 5 ed., 228.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Bluntii</span>, <i>Reichenbach, fil.</i>, in <i>Mohl and Schlechtendal&rsquo;s Botanische
-Zeitung</i>, &ldquo;n. 53, Dec. 64;&rdquo; <i>Van Houtte</i>, <i>Flore des Serres</i>, t. 1652.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum crispum</span>, <i>Lindley</i>, in <i>Annals of Natural History</i>, xv., 256;
-<i>Id.</i>, <i>Folia Orchidacea</i>, art. <i>Odontoglossum</i>, No. 57; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo;
-Annales Botanices Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 845.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The Princess of Wales&rsquo; Odontoglossum, one of the most beautiful and one of
-the most useful of Orchids, was found in the province of Bogota, in New Grenada,
-at an altitude of from 7,000 to 8,000 feet, growing in great profusion on the
-branches of trees in the forests of that elevated region. It was introduced to this
-country in 1864 by Mr. Weir, when collecting for the Royal Horticultural Society,
-and was described in that year by Mr. Bateman as above quoted. There cannot
-be two opinions respecting its beauty, as it is one of the best Orchids in
-cultivation; and though there are amongst the imported plants great diversities in
-the form and colour of the flowers, yet all are beautiful. Some have the flowers
-of a pure white, in others they are variously suffused with a delicate rosy hue;
-some are spotted with crimson, and there are those with yellow flowers, but the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_93">93</span>
-most chaste and beautiful of them all are the pure white varieties, tinted with
-rose colour, which are mostly sought after by cultivators, though the many beautifully
-spotted forms produce a fine contrast when intermixed with the others.</p>
-<p>The figure we now publish was taken from a well-grown specimen in the
-collection of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, at Sandringham, and, as this species is
-named in honour of the Princess of Wales, who is a great lover of flowers, and
-especially of the Orchidace&aelig;, we are proud to be able to announce that our artist
-has been permitted to prepare an illustration of this charming plant from such a
-source. There is a very fine collection of these plants at Sandringham, and among
-them are some very fine specimens, the accomplished gardener, Mr. C. Penny,
-being most successful in flowering them with grand spikes of bloom. There are
-also numerous varieties in the collection, but the one we have figured is a good
-example of the typical form.</p>
-<p><i>Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig;</i> is a compact-growing plant, attaining about a foot in
-height; it is furnished with lively green foliage, and produces its blossoms after the
-growth is completed on a drooping spike which, as it overhangs the green foliage,
-has a most graceful appearance. The sepals are white, slightly tinged with pale
-rose colour, the petals are pure white, and the lip is white, with reddish-brown
-spots upon it, and a patch of bright orange-yellow at the base. The plants bloom
-at different times of the year, according to the period of the completion of their
-growth, and, therefore, by having a good quantity of plants, a succession may be
-kept flowering all the year round. We are never without a good show of these
-plants in bloom, and it is the same in all collections where they are grown in
-considerable numbers. The individual flowers will last many weeks in beauty. They
-are extremely useful for cutting, as they keep for a long time in water.</p>
-<p>As this species requires what is called cool treatment very little expense need
-be incurred in its cultivation. Indeed, any one having a small house where a
-temperature can be kept up in winter of from 45&deg; to 50&deg;, with as little fire-heat as
-possible, can grow a great quantity of them, since they occupy but little space. In
-summer no fire-heat is required, unless the nights are cold, which is seldom the
-case at that season, but no draughts should be allowed to reach them, as draughts
-are as deleterious to them as to all other plants grown in glass houses. They
-require shading from the scorching rays of the sun, but like to have all the light
-that can be given them. Under this treatment they will grow stronger and stronger,
-and flower more and more freely.</p>
-<p>The potting material which we find most suitable for them is good fibrous
-peat, with the finer earthy particles shaken out; they must have good drainage, in
-fact the pots must be three-parts filled with drainage material, and the plants well
-elevated above the pot rim. They are naturally free-rooting plants, but we find a
-little live sphagnum moss on the top of the peat causes them to root more
-freely, and as they require a good deal of moisture at the roots during their
-period of growth, the moss, if kept in a growing condition, will help to supply
-their wants.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig48">
-<img src="images/p_0146.jpg" alt="" width="918" height="1068" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="lr">PL. 48.</span>
- VANDA C&OElig;RULESCENS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_94">94</div>
-<h2 id="c50"><span class="h2line1">VANDA C&OElig;RULESCENS.</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">[<a href="#fig48">Plate 48</a>.]</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line3">Native of Burmah.</span></h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Epiphytal. <i>Stem</i> one to two feet high or more, producing long stout flexuous
-roots from the leaf bases. <i>Leaves</i> close set, distichous, linear-ligulate, truncately-bilobed,
-coriaceous, channelled, five to seven inches long, of a deep green colour,
-carinate, the keel forming an angular projection at the tip. <i>Scapes</i> or <i>Peduncles</i>
-slender, distantly vaginate, with small appressed sheaths, axillary, erect, bearing a
-ten to twenty flowered raceme longer than the leaves. <i>Flowers</i> neat and very
-pleasing, pale mauve-blue; <i>sepals</i> incurved, cuneate-ovate, obtuse, clawed, of a pale
-greyish blue; <i>petals</i> similar in size, form, and colour, twisted at the base, with the
-two lateral lobes tawny-yellow, and adnate to the column, the middle or front lobe
-obcuneate dilated and emarginate at the apex, the margins deflexed, of a rich
-violet-blue, with a pair of keel-shaped deep violet calli and a short intermediate one
-on the disk, the spur straight or incurved, conical, tipped with green. <i>Column</i>
-small, blue.</p>
-<p class="biblio"><span class="sc">Vanda c&oelig;rulescens</span>, <i>Griffith</i>, <i>Notul&aelig;</i>, 352; <i>Id.</i>, <i>Icones</i>, t. 331; <i>Lindley</i>, <i>Folia
-Orchidacea</i>, art. <i>Vanda</i>, No. 19; <i>Reichenbach fil.</i>, in <i>Walpers&rsquo; Annales Botanices
-Systematic&aelig;</i>, vi., 868; <i>Id.</i>, in <i>Gardeners&rsquo; Chronicle</i>, 1869, 498; 1870, 529, fig. 97;
-<i>Hooker fil.</i>, <i>Botanical Magazine</i>, t. 5834 (colour faulty); <i>Williams</i>, <i>Orchid Grower&rsquo;s
-Manual</i>, ed. 5, 305.</p>
-</blockquote><hr />
-<p>The Vandas are a most noble family of Orchids, including amongst them many
-beautiful species, such as <i>V. suavis</i>, <i>V. tricolor</i>, <i>V. Batemanni</i>, and others. They
-are well furnished with leaves, and make splendid specimens, requiring considerable
-space in which to grow them, but they are plants of great beauty, and when not
-in bloom make grand objects of attraction. No collection should be without them,
-as they flower at all times of the year. Where a number of these Orchids are
-grown, as at Chatsworth, we have seen as many as 193 spikes in blossom at one
-time, presenting a most glorious sight.</p>
-<p>The Vandas are of easy cultivation. The species which we now figure is a
-small, elegant-growing, free-blooming plant, and also very distinct in character, as
-will be seen from the plate, which gives a good representation of it. Our drawing
-was taken from a beautiful specimen growing in the splendid collection of
-C. Dorman, Esq., The Firs, Laurie Park, Sydenham, who has one of the best
-grown collections of Orchids we have seen, and one which does great credit to
-Mr. Coningsby, the gardener.</p>
-<p><i>Vanda c&oelig;rulescens</i> is a compact growing species, as may be seen from our
-plate. In this instance it produced a flower spike of a drooping habit fifteen inches
-<span class="pb" id="Page_95">95</span>
-long, which is quite an exception, as the flower spikes are generally more or less
-erect or ascending. The sepals and petals are of a bluish-mauve, the lip of a deep
-blue. It is altogether most distinct in colour, and a plant that is greatly required
-in a collection of Orchids for the sake of the charming contrasts it yields. It
-blooms at different times of the year, and continues for several weeks in beauty.
-We find the heat of the East India house is congenial to it. It grows well in
-sphagnum moss, and must have good drainage, because it must be kept moist
-during the growing season; when at rest less moisture is required. The plant
-thrives either in a pot or in a basket suspended from the roof, so that it may
-get plenty of light, but must be shaded from the sun.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Odontoglossum Alexandr&aelig; regin&aelig;.</span>&mdash;F. A. Philbrick, Esq., Oldfield, Bickley,
-has sent us two fine spikes of this grand variety, the white flowers of which are
-of good form and profusely blotched, both on the sepals and petals, with reddish
-crimson. It is one of the finest spotted forms of this valuable species.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<hr /><p class="tb"><span class="sc">Orchids from Perth</span>, N.B.&mdash;We have received from W. Macdonald, Esq.,
-Woodlands, Perth, a nice spike of <i>Scuticaria Steelii</i>, with three flowers. This is
-a curious growing Orchid, and one seldom sees it in blossom. The flowers are
-produced from the base of the reed-like leaves, and are yellow, distinctly spotted
-with crimson. The plant makes a fine specimen for a block, and when suspended
-from the roof shows off its leaves and flowers to advantage. Accompanying this
-was a spike of a fine variety of <i>Odontoglossum Pescatorei</i>, with flowers measuring
-three and a half inches across. Mr. Macdonald informs us that this spike was
-produced from a plant with small bulbs, and he expects, as the plant gets
-stronger, that it will produce larger flowers. There was also in flower at The
-Woodlands a grand specimen of <i>Camarotis purpurea</i>, with about 100 spikes of its
-pretty rosy pink flowers fully open.&mdash;B. S. W.</p>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>Silently corrected a few palpable typos.</li>
-<li>Added arabic page numbers to non-plate pages.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
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-
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