GAYLUSSACIA PSEUDO-VACCINIUM. 
309 
Potting. — Continue wherever requisite ; be 
careful not to use too much sphagnum or other 
moss about the roots or pseudo-bulbs. 
Shading. — Increase the thickness of this, if 
the sun is very bright and powerful, especially 
over the growing plants. 
Soils. — Collect various soils during the long 
fine days, and stack them up for use. 
Imported plants. — Water more freely as 
they advance in growth, and give them in- 
creased heat also. The best method of 
watering these, is to syringe them copiously. 
Aerides, Saccolabiwn, and Vanda. — Any 
of these that have completed their growth 
should be gradually removed to cooler quarters, 
where they will have more light and less water. 
JEschynanilius. — As these plants come into 
flower, remove them to a warm greenhouse, or 
a cool part of the orchid house, and keep them 
regularly watered. 
Cattleyas. — Pot such as show signs of 
growth, and place them in a hot, moist, and 
shady place. 
Cynibidiums. — Encourage as long as they 
continue to grow ; when they stop, rest them 
in a cooler house. 
Dendrob'mms. — Such as have made their 
growth should be exposed to powerful sun- 
light, and have very little water. 
Oncidiums. — Remove these to the coolest 
part of the house as they show signs of com- 
pleting their grow r th. 
Stanhopeas. — Treat as the last, giving very 
little water after they are at rest. 
GAYLUSSACIA PSEUDO-V ACCINIUM. 
(Chamisso.) 
BILBERRY-LLKE GAYLUSSACIA. 
Those who are at all familiar with plants j shrubs — chiefly evergreen ones — which in our 
will recognise in the engraving which accom- ' gardens bear the old-fashioned name of 
panies this notice, a near relation of those j Andromedas, or. at least are most familiarly 
