THE ORCHID REVIEW. 273 
HYBRID DISAS. 
THE hybrid Disas which have appeared in gardens during the past few 
years form, together with their parents, a very charming little group of 
summer-flowering plants, though they do not yet seem to be as widely 
cultivated as their merits deserve. Thehybrids at present known are the 
result of intercrossing the three original species, D. grandiflora (fig. 37), 
Fic. 36. DisA X PREMIER. Fic. 38. D. X KEWENSIS. 
Fic. 37. D. GRANDIFLORA. 
Fic. 39. D. X LANGLEYENSIS. Fic. 41. D. TRIPETALOIDES. 
1c. 40. D. X VEITCHII. 
D. racemosa, and D. tripetaloides (fig. 41). D. racemosa was not available 
when the annexed photograph was taken. 
D. x VeitTcut (fig. 40) was the first of the series, and was raised in 
the establishment of Messrs. James Veitch & Sons, from D. racemosa ? 
