GENERAL LANDSCAPE PLANTING 



11. PLANTS FOR NATURAL INFORMAL EFFECTS 



These plants are quite the opposite to those in list 

 No. 10. Irregular in outline, loose in texture and habit of 

 growth, they are not adapted in general to produce the neat 

 lines of foliage required in formal developments. 



Forsythia suspensa Robinia pseudacacia 



Drooping Golden Bell Black Locust 



Tamarix gallica Cornus (in variety)* 



French Tamarisk Dogwood 



Hippophae rhamnoides Deutzia (in variety) 



Sea Buckthorn Weigela (in variety) 



Rhus cotinus Philadelphia grandiflorus 



Smoke Bush Large-flowered Mock Orange 



Chionanthus Virginica Rosa rugosa 



White Fringe Wrinkled Japanese Rose 



Salix Babylonica Spiraea Van Houttei* 



Weeping Willow Van Houtte's Spirea 



Amelanchier botryapium Viburnum opulus 



Service Berry High Bush Cranberry 



Cerasus avium fl. pi.* Lonicera Tatarica 



European Double-flowering Tartarian Honeysuckle 



Cherry Native Rhododendron 



Laburnum vulgare Rhus (in variety) 



Golden Chain Sumac 



Sambucus Canadensis Ribes* 



Elder Flowering Currants 

 Symphoricarpos racemosus 

 Snowberry 



12. PLANTS VALUABLE BECAUSE OF THE 

 AUTUMN COLORATION OF LEAVES 



This list consists of trees and shrubs which brighten the 

 landscape at the end of the growing season. No reference 

 in this list is made to trees and shrubs whose leaves merely 

 turn brown in the fall. Many of these types can be used 

 for specimen and accent purposes. (See list No. 4.) 



EARLY 



Acer negundo Liquidambar styraciflua 



Box Elder Sweet Gum 



Acer rubrum Sassafras officinalis 



Red Maple Common Sassafras 



NOTE: All plants marked (*) must be watched at frequent intervals to keep 

 them entirely free from insects and scale. 



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