112 Misc. PUBLICATION 101, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 
fs. 
Sao ies € 
er 
i 
\ 
+ 
mom 
Ss 
x 
PAA 
aS 
= 
2 
Ceanothus fendler?t 
Ceanothus greggi. 
FIGuRB 32.—A, B, Fendler soapbloom (Ceanothus fendleri) ; C, D, Gregg hornbrush 
(C. greggii), two common shrubs. The former, a Rocky Mountain species, is a 
very important browse plant. The latter is a southwestern species, of inferior 
palatability 
them useful in wild-life conservation, and they have some erosion- 
control value. Bluewood, known locally as brasil, capulin, logwood, 
and purple haw, often a small tree, one of the commonest chaparral 
