December is, 1886. ] JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE AND COTTAGE GARDENER. 
? thery green fol,a S e ’ 11 ™nld b> difficult to find a 
from thpir h ftn p antS ln . more P r °m>siD? condition, and I do not doubt 
irom their appearance rtrong flower sp-kes with large bo d flowers will 
543 
in potting these plants annually after flowering—-hat is, directly they 
fined’w P ith b0 Z°mST l he bS ' e * In a T™°°™ greenh °- e - S-S 
tilled with Zonal Pelargomums-a sflection of the best varieties, just 
Fig. 75.—Chrysanthemum White Ceres. 
be tbe result. Disa grandiflora was quite at home in this etructur 
h«Ji nS \T° W w e< a P rofu *® , y> and throwing up luxuriant growths from th 
Mr. W. Swan, the well-known and successful Orchid grower fc 
nv rporo of Fa1Ia<wAa 1/4 _i_. t _ ,1 . ~ 
Du^ucooiui wrcDia grower ic 
so many years at Fallowfield, in whose charge these gardens are, believi 
coming into full bloom—were numbers of Baikerias in a most flourishing 
condition. These plants had made stout pseudo-bulbs and had flowered 
profusely. The cool treatment and abundance of light to which they have 
been subjected is evidently the treatment that Barkerias require if they 
