908 ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM, PART III. 
on the leaves of the apple tree; and there are other fungi which attack these 
leaves, for the names and figures of which we refer our readers to the Ency- 
clopedia of Plants. : 
Statistics. Yn the environs of London, the largest apple trees which we have seen, in the oldest 
market-gardens, do not exceed 30 ft. in height. In the neighbourhood of Hereford, some are as high 
as 40 ft. In Worcestershire, and in Devonshire, the oldest apple trees are more frequently under 
30 ft. than exceeding it. In Scotland, a tree 25 ft. high is considered of a large size, On the Conti- 
nent, the apple tree is, in general, a small tree. In North America, it appears to attain a much 
Jarger size, and to be more productive, than in Europe, A pearmain, in New England, noticed in the 
Gent. Mag., vol. 'xxxiii. p. 377., had a trunk $3ft. 43 im. in diameter, at 1 ft. from the ground ; 
and a mammoth apple tree, of which an account has lately been sent us by Dr, Mease of Philadelphia, 
is 45 ft. high, with a trunk 3ft. 12 in. in diameter, and the diameter of the head 55ft. In 1835, this 
tree produced 180 bushels of fruit fit to send to market; besides 4 or 5 bushels left under the tree 
as damaged, and several bushels which it was calculated had been gathered by passers by throughout 
the summer and autumn: so that the total produce is estimated by Dr. Mease as 200 bushels. The 
tree stands at Romney, in Virginia, where it grew spontaneously from seed; and, though estimated 
to be 40 years old, it still continues to increase in magnitude, The fruit is of a very large size. The 
produce of this tree far exceeds one mentioned by Speechly, as standing in an orchard at Burton- 
joyce, in Nottinghamshire, which, in 1792, produced upwards of 100 pecks of apples, which is the 
largest produce that we have heard of in England. 
Commercial Statistics. The price of crab stocks, in the London nurseries, 
is from 20s. to 30s. per thousand ; at Bollwyller, from 20 to 30 francs; and at 
New York, from 4 to 5 dollars. Grafted apple trees, in the London nurseries, 
are from 9d. to 1s. 6d. each for dwarfs, and from 1s. 6d. to 2s, 6d. for stand- 
ards; and the price at Bollwyller and New York is according to the same 
ratio. 
¥ 18. P.corona‘ria L. The garland-flowering Apple Tree. 
Identification. Lin. Sp., 687. ; Dec. Prod., 2. p. 635.; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 647. 
Synonymes. Malus coronaria Mill.; Crab Apple, the sweet-scented Crab, Amer. 
Engravings. N.Du Ham., 6. pl. 44. f.1.; Bot. Mag., t. 2009. ; Michx. Arb., 2, t.65.; and the plate 
in our Second Volume. 
Spec. Char.,§c. Leaves broadly ovate, rounded at the base, subangulate, ser- 
’ rated, smooth. Peduncles in corymbs, glabrous. Flowers odorous, white, 
becoming purple before they drop off. The fruit is flatly orbiculate, of a 
deep green when it falls from the tree, and becoming yellow after lying 
some time on the ground. (Dec. Prod., adapted.) A native of North 
America, from Pennsylvania to Carolina, and more especially abundant in 
the back parts of Pennsylvania and Virginia. It generally forms a tree 
from 15 ft. to 18 ft. in height, with a trunk 5 in, or 6in. in diameter; but 
Michaux has found it 25 ft. high. It appears very doubtful to us, whether 
this tree is specifically distinct from the wild apple of the Old World; though 
it differs from it in both the flowers and the fruit having the scent of violets, 
the former perfuming the air at the blossoming season. According to 
Michaux, some of the American farmers make cider of the fruit ; and it is 
also preserved, and made into various sweetmeats. The fruit lies under 
the trees all winter, and seldom begins to rot till the spring. The leaves, 
when young, have a bitter and slightly aromatic taste; whence Michaux 
thinks that, with the addition of sugar, they would make an agreeable tea. 
This species was introduced into England in 1724, and is not unfrequent 
in collections. In some places, as at White Knights, and at Pepper Har- 
row near Godalming, it has become naturalised in the woods; and plants 
of all ages are found wild, which have sprung up from seeds disseminated by 
birds, and which preserve the distinctive features of the species, or race, 
The largest trees at Pepper Harrow are nearly 30 ft. in height; but they 
appear to have attained this size only in consequence of having been drawn 
up by other trees. In British gardens, the leaves and the fruit are retained 
much longer on the tree than is the case with the European crab ; so much 
so, that in very mild seasons, and sheltered situations, it might be almost 
considered subevergreen. The deep green and flat round form of the fruit, 
and the lobed and veined character of the leaves, render this sort of JZalus 
easily distinguished from every other; and this distinctiveness of character, 
and the fragrance of the blossoms, together with the lateness of their ap- 
pearance (which is in the end of May), render it a most desirable tree, in 
every shrubbery, however small. 
