IQ2 THE NURSERY LIST. 



Brunsvigia. Amaryllidacecs. 



Increased by offsets of considerable size. They should 

 be potted carefully in a mixture of sandy loam and peat, 

 with good drainage, and kept tolerably warm and close 

 until established ; water sparingly until root action has 

 commenced. The best place for growing the offsets into 

 a flowering size is on a shelf near the glass, in a tempera- 

 ture of from 50 to 55. 



Brussels Sprouts. See Cabbage. 



Bryonia. Cucurbitacece. 



Propagated by seeds, or by divisions of the tuber. Cut- 

 tings of the shoots will also strike (but with difficulty) in 

 water. 



Bryophyllum. Crassulactz. 



Propagated by cuttings ; or by simply laying the leaf on 

 moist sand or moss, and at the indentations upon the mar- 

 gin plantlets will appear. (See Fig. 77. ) 



Buceras. See Terminalia. 



Buckbean. See Menyanthes. 



Buckeye. See ^sculus. 



Bucklandia. Hamamelidece. 



Increased by cuttings of ripened shoots placed in sandy 

 loam under a hand-glass, in moderate heat. Water care- 

 fully, for they are liable to rot off. 



Buckthorn. See Rhamnus. 



Buckwheat {Fagopyrum esculentum and F. Tataricum ) . 



Polygonacece. 

 Propagated by seeds. 

 Buffalo Berry. See Shepherdia. 

 Bugwort. See Cimicifuga. 

 Bulbine. Liliacecs. 



The bulbous rooted species by offsets, and the herba- 

 ceous sorts by suckers and divisions. Also by cuttings. 



Bulbocodium. Liliacece. 



Increased by offsets in a rich, sandy loam. Take up the 

 bulbs, divide and replant them every second year, hand- 

 ling in autumn and renewing the soil or planting in new 

 positions* 



