CASSELL'S POPULAR GAEDEXIisG. 



such as bloom during the depth of winter. These 

 are for the most part quite hardy, hut the flowers 

 appear at a time when they would almost certainly 

 be injured if grown unprotected out of doors in 

 nearly all parts of England. The kinds named below 

 are such as bloom either in spring or autumn, and 

 are all moderate or not very extravagant in price. 

 They all thrive in rich alluvial soil. They should 

 be planted about three inches below the surface, and 

 taken up and re-planted every third year, as the 

 corms get nearer the surface 

 each year, the new one form- 

 ing above the old one. The 

 earlier they are planted 

 after the corms are pro- 

 curable the better, as when 

 they are ready to com- 

 mence growth they rapidly 

 deteriorate. The foliage 

 should in no case be re- 

 moved prematurely, as is too 

 often done, but should be 

 allowed to die off natm-allv, 

 or the corms will not be so 

 large as they otherwise 

 would be. Crocuses may 

 be gTOwn prettj' successfully 

 beneath the dwarfer Saxi- 

 frages and other similar 

 plants, but this plan is at 

 best somewhat of a make- 

 shift method, and is only 

 mentioned here for the pur- 

 pose of suggesting how to 

 avoid bare places on the 

 rockery. 



Spring - blooming Crocuses. 

 — First to be named are 

 the best Dutch kinds, 

 which are usually offered 

 in seedsmen's catalogues. 

 Many of these are of great beauty, and 

 elude the following colours : — Blue, 

 striped, white and yellow, and intermediate shades 

 and combinations of these colours. Some of the 

 choice named Dutch Crocuses are very large and 

 handsome, and are particularly adapted to produce 

 striking effects on the rockery when out-door flowers 

 are very scarce, and consequently correspondingly 

 precious. Besides these, which for the most part are 

 the progeny of C. vermis and C. aureus and their 

 varieties, there are some species of greater rarity 

 which, where variety is desired, may well be grown 

 by enthusiasts. Of these we will mention C. alata- 

 vicm (white, with black hues), C. atlanticus (white, 

 striped with brown), C. aureus (rich golden-yellow). 



Crocus Boryi. 



they in- 

 pu-x-ple, 



C. bannaticus (purple), C. biforus pusillus (a minia- 

 ture form of the Scotch or Cloth of Silver Cro- 

 cus), C. Boriji (white, bright orange at the throat), 

 C. Imperati (variable in colour and markings), 

 C. lacteus (creamy- white), C. Sieberi (bright lilac, 

 orange at the base), C. stellaris (yellow, striped 

 with black), C. suJphureus concolor (sulphur), C. s. 

 striatus (yellow, striped with black), C. s. pal/id us 

 (primrose). These specially named kinds vary in 

 price from 3d. to Is. per corm, and are easily obtain- 

 able from leading houses 

 in the bulb and Dutch 

 flower-root trade. 



Autumn-blooming Crocuses. 

 — Crocus cancellatus (vari- 

 ously coloured from white 

 to pale bluish-purple), C. 

 arpetanus (pale purple), C. 

 etruscus (blue, grey, and 

 white), C. iridiflorus — of 

 which hyzantmus is a 

 synonym (rich lilac, shaded 

 with purple), C. longiflorus 

 militensis (light purple, 

 yellow at the throat), C. 

 medius (bright purple, veined 

 at the base; the stigmata 

 bright scarlet and much 

 branched), C. nudiflorus 

 (violet-purple), C. ochroleucus 

 (creamy- white, orange base), 

 C. odorus longijlorus (soft 

 lilac), C.pulchellus (lavender- 

 blue), C. sativus (purple), 

 C. serotinus (blue), C. speci- 

 osus (blue), C. suaveolens 

 (violet, fawn, and black), 

 and C. zonattis (pale la- 

 vender, with scarlet zone 

 — most beautiful). These 

 autumnal kinds vary from 

 3d. to Is. 6d. each corm, except sativus, which is 

 procurable at 6d. per dozen. 



As Crocuses are good seed-bearers and are readily 

 hybridised, it is to be hoped that amateurs will 

 possess themselves of many of the species named 

 above, and devote some attention to raising new 

 varieties. They will find the work very interesting. 

 Crocuses are easily raised from seed, which should 

 be sowTi as soon as ripe. In from two to three years 

 the seedlings will bloom. The additions made to 

 this genus in recent years are of sufiicient interest 

 and variety to warrant the expectation tnat still 

 further valuable additions will be speedily made, if 

 a sufficient number of amateurs can be induced to 

 engage in che work of hybridisation. 



