IIG 



DKSCRIPTIONS OF THE SHRUBS 



D. Leaves deciduous, blades ^1 inch long ; branches round, pubes- 

 cent ; racemes slender, — 3-8 inches long, June, July ; hardy to 

 middle states. Black-rooted Broom — Cytisus nigricans. 



D. Leaves deciduous of one lanceolate blade ; branches grooved, 

 green; flowers small, in early summer ; plant 1-2 feet. Whin or 

 Dyer's Greenweed (129) — Genista tinctoria. 



D. Leaves almost entirely absent, found only on vigorous shoots 

 near the ground ; very spiny and rigid shrub ; flowers fragrant, 

 I inch long; calyx 2-lobed. Furze or Gorse (127) — Ulex 

 europSeus. 



Laburnum. The Golden Chains are rather trees than shrubs but in 

 the North they are apt to grow somewhat bushy. They receive their 



Fig. 1^. — Scotch Laburnum 



Fia. 135.— Golden Chain. 



common name from the slender drooping clusters of large, generally yel- 

 low, pea-like flowers in late spring. The leaves are compound of 3 oblong 

 usually entire-edged blades. The pods (2 inches long) are hairy with one 

 thick edge and black or brown seeds. The tallest of these plants is the 

 Scotch Laiuirnum (134) — Laburnum alpinuni, — which grows occasionally 

 to the height of 30 feet with late flowers (June) and brown seeds. 

 The commonest species in cultivation is Golden Chain or Bean Tree 

 (135)— Laburnum vulg^re, —which grows to the height occasionally of 20 



