Archive image from page 298 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofam02bail Year: 1900 HUMATA 779 ti. m this time I inperatiire 111 legard 1 1 them, I .Mition ot SI s I leasonable i to advantage. the grower has I il IS lapidly as I' Iishgured, IS pei- m growth last named species i. i i i it t on th


Archive image from page 298 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofam02bail Year: 1900 HUMATA 779 ti. m this time I inperatiire 111 legard 1 1 them, I .Mition ot SI s I leasonable i to advantage. the grower has I il IS lapidly as I' Iishgured, IS pei- m growth last named species i. i i i it t on the tree, the seeil- t // / twelve months. Foi \u>u< ulTui Pitlm6. HOYA (Thomas Hoy was once gardener to the Duke of Northumberland). Asclepiadiicew. More than 50 tropical Asian and Australian climbing or trailing evergreen shrubs, bearing thick, opposite lvs.,and odd, often showy tls. in umbel-like clusters. Corolla rotate, 5-lobed, thick and n in appearance : crown of 5 thick and depressed fleshy appendages: pollen-masses 10, short, fixed by their base in pairs to the 5 glands of the stigma: follicles acuminate, smooth: stems twining,or climbin by means of roots. Hoyas are summer-blooming plants, of comparatively easy culture. They need an intermediate or warm tem- perature. Let them rest or remai; (50° in a dryish place), but start them into growth wards spring. In the summer they plunged in the border, but better results are to be ex- pected, as a rule, by keeping them in pots in the con- servatory. In their growing and blooming season, give plenty of sun and air. They propagate by cuttings of the top growth in spring, and also by layering. The lat- ter method is particularly adaptable to H. carnosa and other species which climb by means of roots. A. P. Meredith advises as follows: 'For compost, use fibrous loam, lumpy (or coarse) in two parts, to one of leaf- mold, using charcoal pounded fine, brick dust, or lime rubble if procurable, instead of sand. They are ofte


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