IVfiSIA. All referred to PotentiUa. 

 IVY, The common or English Ivy is Hedera. Boston 

 l,=Ampelopsis tricuspidata. German I. = Climbing 

 Senecio and Herniaria glabra. Ground I.=Nepeta 

 Ohchoma. KenilwOTthI.=LinariaC!im.balaria. Poison 

 I.=i?;j«s, B. Toxicodendron. Some authors think that 

 two species of Rhus are confused, B. radicans being 

 the common Poison Ivy of the North, and B. Toxico- 

 dendron being a shrub of the South. 



IXIA (Greek, bird lime; said to refer to the juice). 

 Iriddcece. Ixias are delightful tender bulbs originally 

 from the Cape of Good Hope, with attractive grass-like 

 foliage and spikes of flowers borne in early spring, ex- 

 hibiting an exceptionally wide range of colors. They 

 grow about 1% ft. high on the average, with an un- 

 branched stem, a spike 3-8 in. long, containing G-12 fls. 

 each lK-2 in. or more across. The fls. have a very 

 slender tube usually about K in. long, and 6 segments. 

 The following colors are all well marked in Ixia: white, 

 yellow in at lea^t S shades orange lilac rose, pink, 

 crimson light and dirk purple ruby red pale blue, and 

 e\en green Perhaps the 

 only impjrtant colors lack- 

 g are skj blue and red in 

 e bright shades of scarlet 

 d vermilion The flowers 

 ly be eoncolorous (all of 

 e color) or these same 

 shades may be com- 

 l ined with an eye. 

 t of our cultivated 

 ras seem to have an 

 I of brown, purple 

 almost black, but 

 re have been kinds 

 \ ith a white, blue or 

 reen eve Occasion- 

 ll\ there is a ring of 

 I lown color above'the 

 I ill If Add tothis that the 

 I acks of the segments may 

 be more or less suffused 

 with various colors(usually, 

 however that of the eye) 

 and the interesting possibili- 

 of Ixias in color combi- 

 can be imagined. 

 Sooner or later all good 

 gardeners yield to the fascination 

 of bulbous plants, and whoever 

 has not yet succeeded in growing 

 Ixias has something to live for. 



Ixias number their cultivated 

 varieties by the hundreds. Next 

 to Crocuses and Freesias they 

 have no rivals in point of popu- 

 larity among spring -blooming 

 bulbs of the important Iris fam- 

 ily, which rejoices in the posses- 

 sion of such splendid summer- 

 ris. Gladiolus and Montbretia. Cul- 

 o the same class with Babiana and 

 also desirable and distinct in gen- 

 eral appearance and coloring, but are outstripped by 

 Ixias in popularity and in number of varieties. Botani- 

 cally, these three genera belong to the Ixia tribe, in 

 which the fls. are spicate, not fugitive and never more 

 than one to a spathe. The stamens of Ixia are equi- 

 lateral; those of Babiana and Sparaxis unilateral. Ixias 

 have about 6 erect grass like Ivs. arranged in 2 ranks; 

 Babiana has plaited, hairy Ivs. 



Bulb catalogues give no hint whatever as to the 

 parentage of the numerous named varieties. Not one 

 of them mentions /. maculata nor /. cohtmeVaris, 

 which were the two all-important parent stocks. Of the 

 23 species recognized by Baker in Flora Capensis, 

 vol. 6, 1896, only I. viriditlora appears as a trade name, 

 but /. speciosa and paniculala are advertised under 

 their synonyms eralerinides and longiflora. I. crocata 

 IS Tritonia crocata, and /. hybrida of the trade is not 

 the hybrida of the botanists, but means nothing more 

 than mixed varieties. 



1187. Ixiafl. 

 in their di 

 ine: staee. 



blooming bulbs as I 

 turally they belong i 

 Sparaxis, which are 



IXIA 



Before speaking of the dominant types, it is conve- 

 nient to mention some very distinct species which are 

 still cultivated in a condition not essentially different, 

 botanically, from the wild types. /. paniculala is in- 

 stantly distinguished from all other Ixias in cult, by its 

 very long tube, which is often 3 in. long. It is also the 

 last to bloom. I. viridiflora is unique in the genus for 

 its green flowers, and it is one of the few green-flowered 

 plants that are attractive. Whether this species has 

 hybridized with the other dark-eyed species is conjec- 

 tural. At any rate, the prototype is a popular plant 

 to-day. 



Of 86 named varieties received from 3 leading dealers 

 in America, England and Holland, and supposed to be 

 a representative collection, all but a bare dozen seem to 

 be the offspring of /. maculata and /. colutnellaris. 

 Both of these species have a purple or purple-black eye, 

 sometimes brown, and the white and yellow colors of the 

 segments are derived from maculata, while the lilac and 

 purple shades of the segments are derived from columel- 

 laris. Baker makes no distinction between these two 

 prototypes except that of color. The common opinion 

 is that Ixias hybridize freely, both at the Cape and in 

 cultivation, and it is usually said that they are now 

 so thoroughly mixed by hybridization and selection 

 that it is impossible to refer any of the named horti- 

 cultural varieties to their proper species. Nevertheless, 

 from a study of the specimens mentioned above and the 

 colored plates cited below, the writer ventures the opin- 

 ion that the vast majority of cultivated Ixias are eyed 

 forms, which, with the exception of viridiflora, can be 

 readily referred either to maculata or to columellaris, 

 and that all such forms could be reproduced without 

 hybridization if the original types were reintroduced 

 from the Cape and subjected to an equal period of selec- 

 tion. 



The real mystery in Ixia is why the self-colored forms 

 are so little cultivated. There are at least 7 species with 

 self-colored fls. which should be obtained directly 

 from the Cape, if necessary, for they would all make 

 decided additions to the Ixias that are in common culti- 

 vation. These are: po?)/s/ac/i)/a,pure white; flexuosa, 

 white, veined rose, with fine red and purple varieties; 



•istata, a superior pink; Zii^ea, orange; patens, bright 



as this color seems to be lacking among the varieties 

 that are commonly cultivated; also monadelpha in its 

 variety with pale blue segments. 



One of the most desirable of all these little-known 

 types is 7. s;)eciosn, which is shown in the Botanical 

 Magazine, with a delightful ruby-red color, untouched 

 with any suggestion of purple, lilac or allied shades. 

 This form would seem to promise to the hybridizer the 

 possibility of several distinct shades of red that now 

 seem to be practically unknown in cultivated Ixias. A 

 synonym of /. speciosa is /. craterioides, which is a 

 common trade name, but it is doubtful if the ruby-red 

 form is in general cultivation. At any rate, it has not 

 been sufficiently exploited. The dearth of good colored 

 plates of modern cultivated Ixias is out of all proportion 

 to their commercial and artistic value. The writer has 

 no record of any good one since that published in 1884 in 

 "The Garden." 



Ixia flowers are charming in every stage of develop- 

 ment. At first the flowers are erect and cup-shaped. 

 They close at night and remain closed on dark days. 

 As they grow older they open wider and become more 

 star-shaped. The reader may judge by Fig. 1187 of the 

 beauty of the flowers in their drooping stage. The plants 

 remain in flower for three weeks, though the faded 

 flowers at the bottom of the spike should be taken off 

 toward the end of the period. As cut-fiowers, they are 

 presentable for a week or two. \y, ji. 



Culture op Ixias Oct-of-doors.— The writer has al- 

 ways liked Ixias, but has considered that it is too much 

 trouble to grow them under glass. They are vastly more 

 satisfactory when grown outside. The planting of the 

 bulbs should be delayed until the last moment, because 

 Ixias are more inclined than most things to make an au- 

 tumnal growth. They should be planted 3 inches deep, 

 as late as November 30. In planting bulbs it is always 



