. The wild garden; or, Our groves and gardens made beautiful by the naturalisation of hardy exotic plants ... Gardening; Flowers; Wild flowers. 148 THE WILD GARDEN. wild garden and its suitable occupants, I venture to suggest Lath pyrenaious as an addition to the list. Most cultivators of flowers aware of the rambling habits of the greater number of plants of Leguminous tribe, but in that particular L. pyrenaious ecUpses t all. It produces an immense quantity of bright orange-colo blossoms, but the principal difficulty connected with its thorc development is the selection of an appropriate pla


. The wild garden; or, Our groves and gardens made beautiful by the naturalisation of hardy exotic plants ... Gardening; Flowers; Wild flowers. 148 THE WILD GARDEN. wild garden and its suitable occupants, I venture to suggest Lath pyrenaious as an addition to the list. Most cultivators of flowers aware of the rambling habits of the greater number of plants of Leguminous tribe, but in that particular L. pyrenaious ecUpses t all. It produces an immense quantity of bright orange-colo blossoms, but the principal difficulty connected with its thorc development is the selection of an appropriate place for it, for a a established plant of this sp will ramble over, and bj density of growth prevent e plant and shrub that cc within its reach from thriv indeed, it is a greater ran than the Hop, the Bind\\ or the Bryony, and is decid more handsome. Tying u training such a plant is ov the question; but there many rough places in the' garden where it would be c at home and form an att ive feature. Every kin( Everlasting Pea is exce for the vrild garden, eithe scrambling over hedgei stumps, or growing ar the grass.—J. W. Monkey-flower, M lus.—" Wandering one ds the neighbourhood of " Gruigfoot,"a queer-shaped hill in Linlithgows my eye was attracted by a small burn whose banks were literally jew throughout its visible course with an unfamiliar yellow flower, nearer approach showed me that it was the garden Mimulus (Mon flower), the seed of which must have escaped from some neighboi cottage garden, and established itself here, in the coldest part o British Isles. I took the hint, and have naturalised it by the b of a small stream which runs at the foot of my garden, and I strc recommend your readers to do the same. It mingles charmingly the blue Porget-me-not, and is equally ;—S. in Oarden, Grape Hyacinth, Muscari.—These free and hardy little 1. Everlasting Pea, creeping up stem in Please note that these images are extracted from scanne


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectflowers, booksubjectgardening, bookye