286 



JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



t. 3 ; Lamb. Pin. ed. 2, ii. 109, t. G5 ; Loud. Arbor, iv. 2477, f. 

 2328, andEncycl. of Trees, 1075, f. 1998 ; Forb. Pin. Wob. 177, t. GO ; 

 Knight, Syn. Conif . 19 ; Carr. Man. des PI. iv. 325, Tr. Gen. Conif. 

 119, and ed. 2, 153 ; Gord. Pin. 63, and Suppl. 25. 



Habitat. — Indian peninsula, especially in Goa. 



Introduced two hundred years ago. 



Wintered indoors. 



C. MacTiabiana, Murray, Descrip. of Conif. Trees from Calif. 

 12, t. 10. Oupressus glandnlosa, Hook, ex Gord. Pin. 64. Juniperus 

 MacNahiana, Laws. Catal. ex Gord. I.e. Cupressus MacNabiana, 

 A. Murr. Ann. Soc. Bot. Edinb. 1855 ; Gord. Pin. 64 ; Henk. and 

 Hochst. Syn. der Nadelh. 241 ; Carr. Tr. Gen. Conif. ed. 2, 165 ; 

 Beissn. Nadelh. 100. 



Habitat. — Different mountains of Northern California, south of 

 Clear Lake, at 41° S. latitude, and at about 5,000 feet in height. 

 Lake County. 



Introduced into Europe in 1856. 



A small tree, sometimes 30 feet in height, with a trunk 1-lj foot 

 in diameter, or more often a tall shrub branching from the ground ; 

 very rare and local ; not rediscovered in the original station reported 

 by Jeffrey, the Mount Shasta region (Ch. S. Sargent, " Forest Trees 

 of North America "). 



Wintered indoors. 



C. macrooarpa, Hartweg in Journ. Hprt. Soc. ii. 187. Cupressus 

 Lamhertiana, Carr. Conif. 124. Cupressus Hartwegii, Carr. Conif. 

 168 ; Carr. in Rev. Hort. 1855, 232. Cupressus Eeinwardtii, hort. 



Habitat. — California, Monterey (Cypress Point, Pescadero Ranch, 

 and Carmelo Point). 



A tree 50-70 feet in height, with a trunk 4-6 feet in diameter ; 

 on granite rocks immediately upon the sea-coast ; very local (Ch. S. 

 Sargent). 



According to Gordon, seeds of a Cypress were given to the 

 Royal Horticultural Society in 1838, by Mr. Lambert, without 

 name or other information. These seeds were raised, and the 

 seedlings proving different from any other Cypress known, the plant 

 received the garden name of C. Lambertiana , a name which does not 

 appear to have been formally published. Gordon further says that 

 on subsequently visiting Mr. Low's nursery at Clapton he observed a 

 plant of the same kind which had been received from California, 

 through His Excellency Professor Fischer of St, Petersburg. In 

 1846, Hartweg, writing an account of his mission to California in 

 search of plants for the Horticultural Society, mentions finding his 

 No. 143, Cupressus macrooarpa, at Carmel Bay. The tree is described 

 by him as "attaining the height of 60 feet, with a stem 9 feet in 

 circumference, with far-spreading branches, flat at the top like a 



