602 FORCING 



rectly in a Forcing-box or pots, generally made over the 

 pipes in the hottest house, where a temperature of 80° to 

 95° F. can be maintained. They are first soaked in water 

 for a day or two and then kept in this heavy heat until 

 flower buds are well developed (Fig. 853). tulips, hya- 

 cinths and 

 , otherbulbs, 

 sometimes 

 an azalen 

 or lilac, can 

 also be hur- 

 ried up in 

 box, but it is 

 dangerous, and not 

 good practice; better 

 and more lasting 

 flowers come with or- 

 dinary t r e a^ m e n t. 

 Trilliums (Fig. 854) 

 and various early- 

 flowering wild plants 

 may be forced with 

 faction. 

 Although no rules 

 be given for the 

 time required in Forc- 

 ing, it is knowledge 

 not hard to acquire 

 with even surprising 

 exactness. Nothing 

 is likely to require 

 more than three 

 months in houses 

 ranging from 45° to 

 — " ' e., after 

 bringing in from the 

 pits. A month or six 

 weeks is good time to 

 allow in February 

 and March, hut with the same plants and temperatures, 

 more time would be needed earlier; with the advance of 

 the .season, the work is quicker and less uncertain. 

 There is great difference in plants. Rhododendrons (the 

 hybrids) require eight weeks or more, but one species 

 will oftpn binniii ill Mmvi-Ii. within twenty-four hours. 

 t make a growth before 

 lian azaleas. The differ- 

 \ lather is an important 

 the useof the Forcing- 

 nd the average time of 

 In this work, a man with 

 to succeed. 



B. M. Watson. 



Plants lik 

 the bu.lM 

 ence \n-tv. 



flowering is wonderfully even. 

 good plant sense is most likely 



FOEESTlfiSA (after Forestier, a French physician). 

 Syn. Adelia. OleAcea. Deciduous, rarely evergreen 

 trees or shrubs, with opposite, entire or serrate, gener- 

 ally rather small Ivs., inconspicuous yellowish fls. and 

 small black or bluish berries ; without much decorative 

 value, and but rarely cultivated. They cannot be grown 

 North, except F. acuminata and J', lignstrina, which 

 are tolerably hardy in New England. They grow in al- 

 most any soil, and are propagated by seeds and layers. 

 About 15 species in N. Amer.. from Illinois south; 

 also in Mex. and Vt. Indies. Fls. dioecious, apetalous, 

 with or without calyx, in small, axillary clusters in early 

 spring, before the Ivs.; stamens 2-4: fr. a small, 

 mostly black, 1- or 2-seeded berry. 



acuminita, Poir. (Adelia acuminata, Michx.). De- 

 ciduous shrub, to 10 ft. high, sometimes spiny, glabrous: 

 Ivs. slender petioled, ovate-oblong or ovate-lanceolate, 

 remotely serrate, IJ-j-i in. long : staminate fls. in dense 

 clusters ; pistillate fls. in short panicles : fr. narrow, 

 oblong or cylindrical, falcate, acute, }^ in. long. W. 

 Illinois to Texas. Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 2:225. B.B. 

 2:603. 



ligustrina.Poir. (4(Ze(io ligiisMva, Miabx.). Decidu- 

 ous shrub, to 6 ft., pubescent: Ivs. elliptic-obovate to 

 oblong, obtuse, appressed-serrulate, about 1 in. long : 

 fls. in fascicles : fr. sessile, short-ovoid, obtuse, M in. 

 long. Tenn. to Fla. and Ala. 



F. Nio-Mexicana, 6r,iy. .Shrub, to 10 ft.: Ivs. spathulate, al- 



most entire, usually filabrons, grayish green and r.ather small: 

 f r. ovate or short-oblong, obtuse, y^ in. Texas to N. Mex. and 

 Colorado, AI.FRED Rehder. 



FOBESTBY is the rational treatment of forests; this 

 treatment may vary with the object in view. Forests 

 may subserve various objects, giving rise to three 

 classes of forests: they furnish wood materials for the 

 arts — siipiiin forests ; they furnish a soil cover, which 

 prevents the blowing of the soil and formation of 

 sand dunes, or which retards the erosion and washing 



856. Flowers of 



of the soil and regulates the waterflow, or which acts as 

 a barrier to cold or hot winds, and exercises other bene- 

 ficial influences on climate and surroundings-;jro(ec- 

 tion forests ; or finally, they furnish enjoyment to the 



