22 APPLES. 



Skin dark green, with numerous small dark specks intermix- 

 ed ; on the sunny side softly streaked with a clear pale red, 

 which extends only between the two widest ribs. Flesh pale 

 greenish white, crisp, and tender. Juice abundant, sub-acid, 

 but pleasant. 



A very good culinary apple from Michaelmas to Christmas. 



52. Dutch Codlin. Hort. Soc. Cat No. 175. 

 French Codlin. Forsyth, Ed. 3. No. 50. 

 Glory of the West. Of some JYurseries. 



Fruit very large, of an oblong figure, with five ribs extend- 

 ing from the base to the crown ; the three upper ones being 

 the broadest, and the two lower ones the shortest and most 

 acute, in the manner of the Catshead. Eye small and deep. 

 Stalk short and thick. Skin yellow, but, when fully ripe, of 

 an orange colour on the sunny side. Flesh white, rather dry. 

 Juice a little sugary, or sub-acid. 



A culinary apple from Michaelmas to Christmas. 



This apple is known in Gloucestershire, Somersetshire, 

 and some other western counties, by the name of Glory of 

 the West. The tree is not a large grower, although the 

 wood is remarkably strong. 



53. English Codlin. Lan^ley, Pom. Lond. t. 74. f. 3. 

 Codling. Ray (1688), No. 19. 



The English Codlin ie too well known in every part of 

 England to require any description of it here. It is noticed 

 only with the view of directing the attention of the orchardist 

 to it as an old and valuable apple. The customary method, 

 for at least one hundred and fifty years, has been to raise the 

 trees from suckers, and truncheons, as they are called ; and 

 in every old garden v/here they are found they are diminutive, 

 ill-formed, unproductive, and full of disease, incrusted, as it 

 were, root and branch, with the greatest of all pests, the aphis 

 lanigera, in consequence of which its fruit exhibits scarcely 

 any thing of its original character. 



Healthy, robust, and substantial trees are only to be ob- 

 tained by grafting on stocks of the real Crab ; they then grow 

 freely, erect, and form very handsome heads, yielding fruit 

 as superior to those of our old orchards, as the old, and at 

 present deteriorated, Codlin is to the Crab itself. 



54. Grey Leadington. Hort. Soc. Cat. No. 545. 

 Fruit very large, oblong, broader at the base than at the 



crown, with five obtuse angles, extending the length of the 

 fruit, in the manner of the French Codlin. Eye pretty large, 

 an inch deep. Stalk half an inch long, strong, not project- 



