Gymnocladus 43 1 



According to Nicholson,^ it is very easy to transplant, and bears drought well. 

 It is propagated either by seeds or by root-cuttings. Pieces of the roots, 4 to 5 

 inches long, placed in prepared beds and kept moist, will develop in the first year 

 into plants three or four feet high. Some of the cuttings, however, will not start 

 into growth until the following year. 



I have raised seedlings from American seeds, which, being large and hard, 

 should te soaked in warm water for some days before sowing. The seedlings 

 grow slowly, and should be kept under glass for a year or two before planting 

 out. 



In spite of Loudon's assertion to the contrary, it appears to flower very rarely in 

 England, the only record being at Claremont, where Mr. Burrell ^ says it produces 

 flowers freely early in summer. Pods have never been produced, so far as we know, 

 in this country. 



It is a rare tree in cultivation ; but though stiff and peculiar in habit, it is not 

 at all ungainly when well-grown, even when bare of leaves. It comes into leaf very 

 late in the season, and it drops its leaves early in autumn, the stalks, however, often 

 remaining on the tree for weeks. The foliage, like that of many leguminous plants, 

 shows the phenomenon of sleep, the leaflets drooping and closing together soon 

 after sunset in summer. 



Remarkable Trees 



There are two trees at Claremont, which were about 55 feet high in 1888. 

 When I measured them in 1907 the largest was 60 feet by 6 feet 7 inches, and 

 seemed quite healthy ; the other was broken. 



A tree at Chiswick House measured, in 1903, 53 feet high by 3^ feet in girth. 

 Another at Barton, Suffolk, was in 1904 57 feet high by 5 feet 2 inches in girth at 

 two feet from the ground, and divided above this into two stems. In the Botanic 

 Garden at Cambridge there is a good specimen, which was 45 feet by 3 feet 9 inches 

 in 1906. There are three smaller trees in the Oxford Botanic Garden. 



At Kayhough, Kew, in the garden of Mr. Charles Wright, there is a healthy 

 and well-shaped tree, which was in November 1905, 40 feet high by 2 feet 9 inches 

 in girth, with a bole of 6 feet, dividing into two main stems. This tree was 

 purchased from a nurseryman at Kingston in 1878, when it was said to be twenty- 

 two years old, and was then about two-thirds its present height. After trans- 

 planting, it made no growth for three years ; but since then it has grown steadily 

 though very slowly, and has not been injured in any way by severe winters, though 

 it has never flowered. It has been much surpassed in rate of growth by an 

 Ailanthus in the same garden. There is a tree of about the same size growing 

 close to Mr. Clarke's house at Andover, Hants, which is fifty to sixty years old and 

 measures 43 feet by 2 feet 10 inches. There are several small trees in Kew 

 Gardens, the largest one being near the main entrance. 



It seems evident that the tree, to attain a large size, requires a much greater 



Garden, xxir. 29 (1883). J' Garden, xxxiii. 329 (1888) and xlv. 404 (1894). 



