Eriodictyon californicum, Yerba Santa, Mountain Balm—Shrub, 4 ft. 
Pleasantly aromatic foliage. Many panicles of lavender or china-blue 
flowers. Dry mountain slopes of northern California to 4000 ft. 
Eriogonum arborescens —Evergreen shrub, 3 ft. Stout trunk. Narrow revo¬ 
lute leaves, woolly beneath. Broad clusters of rose-pink flowers. Santa 
Barbara Islands. 50 cents per packet. 
E. compositum— 10 in. Downy foliage. Yellow to cream flowers. North 
Coast Ranges to Washington. Hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
E. fasciculatum, Wild Buckwheat—2 ft. Narrow revolute leaves. Branch¬ 
ing woody stems ending in dense umbels of white flowers. Chaparral 
slopes of southern California. 
E. giganteum— Branching evergreen shrub, 4 ft. Ovate leathery white-woolly 
leaves. Flat clusters, 8 in. broad, of white or pink flowers. Santa Bar¬ 
bara Islands. 50 cents per packet. 
E. latifolium, White Buckwheat —18 in. Broad gray-white basal leaves. Large 
compact heads of white to pale pink flowers. California coast. 
E. ovalifolium —Alpine, 2 in. Compact deep pink flower-heads rising from 
a mat of crowded basal leaf rosettes. Free-blooming. Granite peaks and 
ridges, 9000 to 12,000 ft. Hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
E. parvifolium, Pink Buckwheat—Woody plant, 2 ft. Small shining ever¬ 
green leaves. Many densely compact heads of white, pink or deen rose 
flowers on long stems. Coast of central California. 
E. rubescens—8 in. Gray-green foliage. Large compact heads of clear pink 
flowers. Santa Barbara Islands. 50 cents per packet. 
E. umbellatum, Sulphur-flower— 8 in. Branching woody base with small 
ovate leaves. Umbels of flowers on slender stems, ranging in color from 
sulphur yellow to deep red. Montane to 9000 ft. Hardy. 50 cents 
per packet. 
Eriogonum, Mixed—The use of annual eriogonums has proved so popular as 
a decorative background planting for cactus gardens, that we are listing 
a mixture of desert species for this purpose. 
Eriophyllum caespitosum, Oregon Sunshine—10 in. Mats of gray downy 
foliage. Bright yellow, aster-like flowers. Profuse bloomer. Coastal 
bluffs of northern California. Hardy. 
Eriophyllum confertiflorum, "Golden Yarrow”—Bushy plant, 18 in. 
Green and gray foliage. Flat-topped clusters of yellow composite flowers. 
Sea-level to 7500 ft. Hardy. 
Eriophyllum lanatum, var. monoense —8 in. White-woolly basal foliage. 
Yellow composite flowers on leafless gray stems. High montane in the 
Sierra Nevada mountains to 11,000 ft. Hardy. 
Erysimum asperum, Western Wallflower—2 ft. Fragrant yellow or orange 
flowers. Dry rocky hills and mountains. Hardy. 
Erysimum capitatum, Coast Wallflower—12 in. Cream or yellow flowers. 
Coastal. 
Erysimum insulare, Island Wallflower—Broad branching shrub, 2 ft. Light 
yellow flowers. Santa Barbara Islands. 50 cents per packet. 
Erythronium citrinum —Corm, 8 in. Mottled leaf. Flowers pale and deep 
yellow, strikingly contrasted. Open pine woods, central Sierra Nevada 
mountains and southwestern Oregon. Hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
E. giganteum, Trout Lily—Corm, 10 in. Loose raceme of two to six large 
cream-white flowers. Rich woods of Coast Ranges. Hardy. 50 cents per 
packet. 
E. grandiflorum, Glacier Lily—Corm, 10 in. Raceme of two to five large 
fragrant golden-yellow flowers. High montane in northern California and 
north to British Columbia. Hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
Packets Twenty-five Cents Unless Otherwise Indicated 
T welve 
