‘Laurelwoodi’ 
‘Lavinia Rulgers’ 
‘Leprechaun’™ 
‘Leucocarpa’ 
40 
(LaBar’s Rhododendron Nursery, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. Catalog, p. 
6. 1960, as P. ‘Laurelwoodi’) : Fruit red, abundant; very hardy. Letters 
December 30, 1964 and April 3, 1967, Russell Harmon, LaBar’s Rhodo- 
dendron Nursery : Introduced by LaBar’s Rhododendron Nursery in 1960; 
original plant no longer in existence; propagation discontinued in 1964. 
(C. Philip, compiler. The Plant Finder, 4th ed., p. 383. 1990, without 
description) : As available from Hillier Nurseries. Letter September 11, 
1990, A.J. Coombes, Hillier Gardens and Arboretum, Ampfield, Hamp- 
shire, England : Dense, low-spreading habit; no record of origin; presum- 
ably ‘Rutgers’. 
= ? ‘Rutgers’ 
(Bart’s Nursery, Fullerton, Pennsylvania. Catalog. April 1, 1964) : Fruit 
orange. Letter March 31, 1967, William A. Bartholomew, Bart’s Nursery : 
Origin unknown. D.R. Egolf and R.F. Drechsler. Baileya 15(2):84. 1967 : 
Chromosome number 2n=34. 
= ‘Lalandei’, ‘Cole Erect’, ‘Latifolia’, ‘Pirate’ 
P. coccinea 
Orange Red 32A, RHS 
(Hines Wholesale Nursery, Santa Ana, California. Catalog, p. 34. Spring 
1974) : Dwarf; fruit red. Letter August 27, 1974, James W. Hines, Jr., 
Hines Wholesale Nursery : P. ‘Leprechaun’ should not be classified or 
registered as a new variety; is similar to variety called ‘Red Elf’ if not the 
same plant. 
= ‘Red Elf’, ‘Monelf, ‘Red Midget’, ‘Red Pixie’ 
(H. Zabel. Handbuch der Laubholz-Benennung, p. 168. 1903, as Coto- 
neaster Pyracantha ‘Leucocarpa’, hort., without description). A. Rehder, in 
L.H. Bailey, ed., Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, vol. 5, p. 2864. 
1916, as P. coccinea var. leucocarpa : Fruit white or yellowish. 
= ‘Fructo Alba’, ‘Lalandei Fructu Albo’ 
P. coccinea 
