The livable house, its garden . tum, tomentosum, and Carlesii, which has awonderfully fragrant flower; the honeysuckles, Indian currant,and snowberry; ilex Sieboldii (a little known but very brilliantberried shrub) ; and the red stemmed dogwoods. Of these, ber-beris vulgaris, all the viburnums, the honeysuckles, and dogwoodsgrow to be big shrubs and ought therefore to be planted wherethey will not interfere with windows. Another shrub with animpossible name but with the unusual possession of turquoise col-ored berries is Symplocos Crataegoides. Its berries ripen at thesame time as those of the


The livable house, its garden . tum, tomentosum, and Carlesii, which has awonderfully fragrant flower; the honeysuckles, Indian currant,and snowberry; ilex Sieboldii (a little known but very brilliantberried shrub) ; and the red stemmed dogwoods. Of these, ber-beris vulgaris, all the viburnums, the honeysuckles, and dogwoodsgrow to be big shrubs and ought therefore to be planted wherethey will not interfere with windows. Another shrub with animpossible name but with the unusual possession of turquoise col-ored berries is Symplocos Crataegoides. Its berries ripen at thesame time as those of the Tartarian honeysuckle, and the twoshrubs make a brilliant combination. Most of these shrubs haveattractive flowers as well as berries, and thus provide at the sametime for the summer and winter appearance of the base few shrubs interesting chiefly for their summer dress do notcome amiss in any group near the house, and some of them lookespecially well with the dark foliage of evergreens: lilacs, white [54] t s G a n. c/: hJ OJ < <u C/2 i—I ^ ^ a C/5 Lh OJ ^ ^ o —1 (<i tj Ph ^ 0-) •»* -^ »—* 1j ^o Z, h—« o m ^ o zl r ^ ^ « o ^^ o 5»i ^ =0 ^H H -6 Vv M ^ pq w H d ?; o I-H r«id ^ ^ ^ < o [55] The Livable House and purple; deutzia, Pride of Rochester, pink weigelia, and spireaVan Houttei are all good stand-bys which improve by their pres-ence any planting of evergreens. Another danger to be avoided in connection with evergreensnear the house is the use of forest trees. In most cases, eithereagerness for a quick effect or ignorance of the real character ofthe trees is responsible for their presence close to the house. Butwhatever the cause, it is not an uncommon sight to see the win-dows of houses five years or so old being overgrown by hemlocks,w^hite pines, spruces, and firs. These are all big timber trees, andfor this reason are extremely inappropriate planted against a housewall. They belong out where they have room to stretch


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectlandscapegardening