34 



THE HAWTHORNDEN APPLE. 



Hawthornden. Hort. Soc. Fruit Cat. no. 440. 

 White Hawthornden. NicoVs Fruit Gardener, p. 256. 



This valuable variety is said to have been origi- 

 nally raised eight or ten miles south of Edinburgh, 

 in the village, the name of which it bears, which is 

 better known as the birth-place of the poet Drum- 

 mond. It is one of the most abundant bearers we 

 have; and as the extreme buds of the branches 

 are mostly blossom-buds, the ends become pendu- 

 lous when the crop of fruit is fully grown. 



Ripens in October, and will keep good about 

 a month or six weeks. 



Wood short-jointed, of a light chestnut colour, 

 downy, with small white specks. 



Leaves oval, taper-pointed, regularly serrated, 

 with small stipule. 



Flowers middle-sized, with bright, rose-coloured, 

 roundish, cordate petals. 



Fruit large, flattish, irregularly shaped, one 

 side being larger than the other. Stalk half an 

 inch long. Eye a little depressed. Skin clear, 

 greenish yellow, reddish on the side next the sun. 

 Flesh white. Juice plentiful, sweet and pleasant. 

 This is reckoned the best Apple in Scotland ; but 

 it is apt to canker in that country. 



