ROSES FOR THE WILD GARDEN, 83 
“We have,” says a correspondent, “a pretty extensive col- 
lection of 
Roses, but 
one of the 
most attrac- 
tive speci- 
mens on the 
place is an 
old double 
white Ayr- 
shire Rose, 
growing in 
a group 
of common 
Laurelinthe 
shrubberies. 
We cannot 
tell how old 
the plant 
may be, but 
it has prob- 
ably been in 
its present 
situation for 
thirty years, 
struggling 
the best way 
it could to 
keep its 
place among 
Wild Rose growing on a Pollard Ash in Orchardleigh Park, Somerset. 
