1052 



ARRORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. 



the apex. Wood compact, whitish rose-colour. The plant, in the climate of 

 England, appears rather more tender than the silver fir ; being liable, from 

 its vegetating very early in spring, to have its leading shoots pinched bv 

 the frost. After a series of years, however, and propagation from seeds 

 ripened in this country, it will, in ail probability, accommodate itself in a 

 considerable degree to the peculiarities of our climate. When once the tree 

 begins to bear cones, they may be fecundated with the male blossoms of the 

 common silver fir, and thus a hybrid produced somewhat hardier than the 

 female parent. 



i 15. P. Pi'ndroW. The Pindrow, or Tooth-leaved, Silver Fir. 



Synonymes. Plnus Pindrow Royle III. t. 80., Lamb. Pin. 3. t. 92. ; Taxus Lambertmraa Wall. Cat. : 



Pindrow, and sometimes Morinda, in the Himalayas. 

 Engravings. Royle 111., t. 86. ; Lamb. Pin., 3. t. 92. ; our figs. 1970. and 1971. from Royle. 



1970. P. Pimdrow. 



