520 
LANDSCAPE GARDENING. 
all the terminal buds were eaten off by sheep ; and though the trees 
might have stood climate alone, yet they were unable to resist 
both climate and sheep, and they consequently perished. It has 
rugged, stiff leaves, ten or twelve inches long, and becomes a very 
striking tree, eighty to one hundred feet high ; from the moun- 
tains of Santa Lucia, in California, at an elevation of three or 
four thousand feet. 
P. macrophylla (the Long-leaved Mexican). — An uncom- 
Syn. monly fine variety, which we lost in the winter of 
p. Leroyi. 1355^ i n a very exposed situation, though we are 
not prepared to say it would have stood better in a protected 
one. It is a. very striking tree, from one of the highest moun- 
tains of Mexico, growing twenty to thirty feet high, with a fine, 
ample foliage, fifteen inches long. It is almost too stout and 
coarse for pot-culture, but would be very ornamental at the 
South, where it would grow perfectly well. 
P. maritima (the Maritima pine). — This tree, so called and 
so sold in our nurseries, is simply a nurseryman’s name, there 
really being no such tree. It is very curious, but nevertheless 
true, that the greatest confusion prevails, both in the English 
and French nurseries, about this variety. In England, it is 
confounded often with P. pinaster, Halepensis, and Laricio ; 
and in France, with Pallasiana, Pithyusa (Halepensis), Lari- 
cio, and Pyrenaica, and made synonymous with each ; and in 
this country, it seems to represent any thing which is un- 
known. 
The specimens we have seen in our neighborhood as Mariti- 
ma, are probably Calabrica — a sub-variety of Laricio — and, we 
think, most Maritimas in our nurseries are Laricio or Pinaster. 
Representing, as it does, so many different trees, it is difficult 
to get any reputation about it which is to be depended on. In 
Boston, it is returned to us as tender , from which we assume 
that the variety there may be Pinaster, which is sometimes 
tender here ; while at Rochester, it is reported hardy, and may 
be Calabrica, or one of the hardy synonyms. At Washington, 
the variety known as Maritima, does well, and also at Eliza- 
bethtown ; but what these trees really are at these two places, 
we have no means of knowing, except that they are not Mari- 
timas. 
