BULBS 



BUPHANE 



195 



OENEKA, ETC. HARDINESS. DORMANT. 



gpirea (Astilbe) * H Oct. to April 



Sprekelia * t § T Sept. to April 



Stembergia II h Aug. to Oct. 



Tecophylea* v h.h Aug. to Oct. 



Tigridia § T Oct. to April 



Trillium \\ H Oct. to March 



Triteleia t h.h Oct. to April 



Tritonia* h.h Aug. to Nov. 



Tritoma H h Oct. to April 



Tropreolum, Tuberous *1i H.H Aug. to Dec. 



Tuberoses § T Nov. to May 



Tulip* t H Aug. to Nov. 



Tydfiea *t t Oct. to April 



Urceolina t T Oct. to April 



Vallotat T Oct. to April 



Watsonia * § H.H Sept. to Dec. 



Zephyranthes *§ h.h Aug. to April 



Peter Henderson & Co. 



BULBlNE (Greek, hoUos, a bulb). IAlict.cece. Half- 

 hardy African plants, of several species, allied to Antheri- 

 cum, but practically unknown in this country. Some of 

 the species are bulbous, and require the general treat- 

 ment given Cape bulbs (see Bulhs], 



BULBIN£LLA. See Chrysobactron. 



BTTLB0C6DIUM (Greek, wooUy iulb). LiliAcece. A 

 half dozen low, croeus-like bulbous plants of the Medi- 

 terranean region and eastward, some spring-flowering 

 and others autumn-flowering. The spring-flowering spe- 

 cies, B. vernnm, is the only one in our gardens. It 

 is hardy, and demands the same soil and location as 

 crocuses. 



v6mum, Linn. Fig. 291. Blooms in earliest spring, 

 before the Ivs. appear, the fls. resting nearly on the 

 ground : fls. rosy purple, white-spotted on the interior, 



1-3 from each bulb: Ivs. 

 broad and channelled. 

 B.M. 153 (cf.Fig. 291). 

 F.S. 11 : 1149.- Bulbs 

 should be taken up and 

 divided every 2 or 3 

 years. Plant in the fall. 

 UsuaDy blooms in ad- 

 vance of the crocus. 



[)W ^- ^- ^• 



P»_j|i^_ __ BTJLBOPPYLLITM 



S^";'.;..; (Greek, bulb- leaf ). 



'ii'i'sj'-^y' OrchidAcem, tribe ^pi- 



^ .(^(SBH 'IHHISS^^*^ '^?- dindrem. Many species 



'^Tt !MHI\\\i^^Si;''V--:'. ' of trop. orchids, mostly 



^_ LVll F^So -■•'■■• °* *^® ^^^ World, more 



•■ "p;VTiS^B8 ^W M\M|\ i|i.|i|^ff-.. J >~v -. odd than ornamental. 



"^ ' "' - '- Very few are kno'wn to 



^^y^^^gjf^jggjfj^^^^^j^Ci^-,^ cultivators. They are 



plants with a stout, 

 ^ ^_^^^^^^ ^ ..__,. creepingrhizome, small 



rV^^^^^^^^^^^^^*^!- ^ pseudobulbs bearing 



■^:J^t-^i^k^SY^&Si^';-{S jointed, moving when 



fa-V^'>^M'<^^lS^'' touched, sometimes 



■■^■■•f- Pv hairy: fls. in racemes 



■V'l ' K V' °^ spikes, or solitary. 



■ 'H l\ \ Require warm temper- 



291. Bulbocodium vemum. ature and much water. 



Do not dry them off. 

 They thrive on blocks or trunks of ferns. B. Biccari, 

 Eeichb. f., is one of the largest of orchids, its rhizomes 

 twining about trees, and its fls. emitting the vilest con- 

 ceivable odor; see G.C. II. 11: 41, and 14: 326, 525; 

 B.M. 6567. 



Ldbbii, Lindl. Leaf solitary, broadly lance-elliptic : 

 scape 1-fld., arising from the side of the pseudobulb, 

 shorter than the If.: fls. large and spreading (2 in. 

 across) ; sepals lanceolate and acuminate, yellow, more or 

 less marked with purple ; petals smaller, streaked purple ; 

 lip cordate-ovate, yellow and orange-dotted, not bearded. 

 Java. B.M. 4532.— Flowers in early simimer. Once cata- 

 logued by Pitcher & Manda. 



BULL, EPHRAIM W. The introducer of the Concord 

 grape lived a long, quiet, and useful life in Concord, 



Mass., where he died Sept. 27, 1895, in his ninetieth year. 

 In commercial importance, the greatest event in the early 

 history of American grapes was the introduction, early 

 in the fifties, of this variety of the northern fox-grape. 

 The first fruit of this grape was obtained in 1849. Its 

 exact origin is obscure. In 1840, Mr. Bull bought the 

 house in which be lived until his death. That year some 

 boys brought from the river some wild grapes, and 

 scattered them about the place. A seedling appeared 

 from which Mr. Bull obtained a bunch of fruits in 1843. 

 He planted seeds of this bunch, and a resulting plant 

 fruited in 1849. This variety was named the Concord. 

 It soon became the dominant grape in all eastern 

 America, as it was the first variety of sufficient hardi- 

 ness to carry the culture of the vine into every garden 

 in the land. It is a pregnant type, and has given rise to 

 no less than fifty honorable seedlings, which range in 

 color from greenish white to purple-black. The quality 

 of the fruit is excelled by many varieties, but the latter 

 usually demand more careful cultivation. The Concord 

 is the one most important type of American grape, and 

 the really successful commercial viticulture of the coun- 

 try dates from its dissemination ; and yet this grape is 

 a pure native fox-grape, and evidently only twice removed 

 from the wild vine. 



Ephraim W. Bull was loved of his neighbors and hon- 

 ored by every countryman who grows or eats a grape. 

 He made very little money from his variety, and died in 

 extreme poverty. The original vine is still preserved. 

 It is a sprout from the old root. l H. B. 



BULLACE. A small wild or half -domesticated plum, 

 standing midway between the cultivated European sorts 

 (Prunus domestica) and the wild sloe {P. spinosa). This 

 plum is usually referred to P. insititia, but it is so closely 

 related to the Damsons as to be best classified with them. 

 The BuUace would then take the botanical name of the 

 Damsons, P. doynestUn, var. Bamascena (see Bot. Gaz. 

 27:481). This plum is rather common in parts of Eu- 

 rope, but is very seldom seen in America. 



F. A. Waugh. 



BTJH£LIA (ancient Greek name for an ash-tree). 

 Sapotd,cew. Small trees or shrubs, usually spiny, with 

 rather small, entire, deciduous or persistent Ivs. and 

 small white fls. in axillary clusters: fr. an oblong black 

 drupe. About 20 species from S. N. America to Brazil. 

 None of them is of much horticultural value, but as 

 they grow naturally, mostly on dry, rocky or sandy soil, 

 they may be used sometimes with advantage for plant- 

 ing in similar situations. Prop, by seeds. 



lanugindsa, Pers. Tree, sometimes 50 ft. : Ivs. oblong- 

 obovate or cuneate-obovate, rounded and often apiculate 

 at the apex, dark green and lustrous above, tomentose 

 beneath, sometimes nearly glabrous at length, 1-2K in. 

 long : clusters many-fld. ; pedicels slender hairy : fr. 

 oblong or obovate, ^in. long. S. S.5:247. S. states 

 north to S. Illinois, west to Texas. — This species and B. 

 lycioldes, Pers., are the hardiest. They have proved 

 hardy in very sheltered positions even in Massachu- 

 setts ; besides these, B. angustifdlia, Nutt., and B. 

 Unax, Willd., are the most common species in the S. 

 states. B. Pdlmeri, Rose, from Mex., is illustrated in 

 G.F. 7:196. Alfred Rehder. 



BUFHANE (Greek, eattle-destroyer, alluding to poi- 

 sonous properties). Amarylliddcece. Two or three South 

 African btilbs, practically unknown in this country. 

 They are large plants, with many red fls. in an umbel. 

 Perianth tubular, segments equal and narrow, spread- 

 ing : stamens 6, exserted : Its. long and sword-like, 

 thick. See Baker, Amaryllideffi. 



disticha, Herb. (B. toxicdria, Herb., Scemdnthus 

 toxicdrius, Thunb.). Bulb, &j9 in. in diam. : Ivs. sev- 

 eral, distichous, 1-2 ft. long : 'peduncle or scape stout 

 (6-12 in. high) and solid, compressed, glaucous, bearing 

 a dense umbel. B.M. 1217. — Sparingly offered in this 

 country. Lvs. said to be very poisonous to cattle in 

 S. Afr. ; bulb furnishes arrow poison for the natives. 



Another species is B. cilidris, Herb., with fewer, 

 shorter lvs., and shorter peduncle, bearing 50-100 fls. 

 Not known to be in the Amer. trade. l. h. B. 



