This pretty plant belongs to a different section from 
any we have yet published; the division to which it 
pertains is intermediate between the tribe to which P. 
zonule, &c. belong, and the true Pelargonia; this di- 
vision takes in P. peltatum, P. lateripes, and a new 
species raised last year from Cape seeds by Mr. Colvill, 
which has also been raised at the Botanic Garden at 
Berlin, as we are informed by Mr. Otto. 
We are not certain whether this plant is a real 
species or a hybrid production ; if the latter, it has 
been produced between peltatum and the red variety 
of lateripes. 
Our drawing was taken from a plant communicated 
by Robert H. Jenkinson, Esq.: it is rather more tender 
than its congeners, the leaves being very apt to turn 
yellow, if it happens to receive too much wet: it thrives 
well in an equal mixture of turfy loam and peat, and 
the pots should be well drained, that the wet may pass 
readily off. Cuttings soon strike root, planted in pots 
and set on a shelf in the greenhouse. 
