333 
fi. fiGljoUa tf.v.M. In England. (7th August, 1920, p. 67.) 
E. globulus L'Herit. See issue of 24th December, 1887 (Suppl.), for a fine plate 
of a flowering spray grown in Britain. At p. 777 is a figure of a tree at Heyeres, South 
of France. 
E. ylobulm is 1 8 feet in height from seeds sown in January, 1897, grown off in heat, 
and planted out the same season. They have been unprotected ever since the frost, 
which registered 13 degrees, which lurl no effect on them whatever. Maidenhead, 
England. (7th January, 1899, p. 13.) The editor adds that' if these Eucalypts are 
protected from the coldest winds, they are really hardy in the warmer maritime 
counties. At. p. 19 it is stated that they live for a few years till a really severe frost 
come? along, and then they are all destroyed. S^neiftc instances are given. 
A tree in county Cork, Ireland, rather more than 13 years old and 61 feet high, 
was killed by 18 degrees of frost. There is a tree of E. ylobulus in the south-west part 
of the county of Cork, planted out from a small pot in 1880. At end of 1893, when 
it was killed by frost, it was 61 feet high. (14th January, 1899, p. 28.) 
E. globuhts at Torquay is a tree twenty years old, 50 feet high, " spreading 
circumference of the trunk at the base is 3 feet." There is a tree at Lutterworth, 
Leicestershire, planted out in May, 1895, now over 35 feet high; the stems have 
been bound for about 10 feet with hay bands each winter. (28th January, 1899, 
p. 61 ; 4th February, 1899, p. 76.) 
E. Gunnii Hook f. See 24th December, 1887, p. 781, where there is a figure of 
juvenile foliage and also a leaf and flowering twig (the latter not very satisfactory) 
of " E. Gunnii," thought at. the time to be the " hardiest species " in Britain. 
A remarkable avenue at Brightlingsea Hall, near Colchester (25th March, 1899 
p. 189), was planted from seed received from the Argentine. See also 1st April, 1899, 
p. 202. 
E. urnigera Hook f. The Whittinghame (Prestonkirk, Scotland) tree is figured 
at pp. 460, 461, 14th April, 1888; a flowering and fruiting twig, and also the tree, which 
is of considerable height. It is referred to as E. Gunnii by Rev. Dr. Landsborough, in 
Trans. Bot. Soc. Edin., 1887, p. 21. See also p. 595 (G.C.). It is over 60 feet in height, 
1888, having been planted in 1845 and cut down by frost in 1860. But see also p. 628. 
It yields fertile seeds. It has been variously referred to E. viminalis and E. Gunnii. 
E. viminalis Labill. In issue of 24th November, 1888, p. 597, we have a twig, 
in bud and flower, from the Isle of Arran. where it was looked upon as E, amygdalina, 
probably by Landsborough. 
2. Notes on collections, or more than one species. 
LANDSBOROUGH, D. " Report on Australian and New Zealand Plants grown 
on the East Coast of Arran (Scotland).'' ( Trans. Roy. Bot. Soc. Edin., xvi, 194.) 
Miscellaneous plants. 
E 
