reetinas • • • 
WATER GARDENERS 
Juno—night-blooming Lily 
To our many old friends who appreciate the incom' 
parable delights of water gardening, we need not dwell 
at length upon the abundant happiness which their 
1936 water gardens will surely bring to them. New' 
comers, who have yet to be thrilled by the entrancing 
beauty of Water Lilies and other aquatics cultivated 
by their own hand, we extend a most sincere welcome 
and a promise of real adventure in the realm of horti' 
culture. 
The letters which we received last year from our 
friends throughout the country reveal the increasing 
interest and partiality displayed toward the pool as 
compared to other forms of gardening. Li arranging 
and caring for a pool of interesting, colorful plants, 
the garden lover soon finds wholesome expression that 
is distinctly different from that experienced in his 
regular soil gardening. 
The cold, wet spring of 1935 was very discouraging 
to general gardening—but the joys of the water gar' 
deners were unconfined! For example, Mr. D. 3. McKee 
of Wheeling, W. Va., wrote us: “I am sure that no 
one could have more beautiful foliage and blossoms 
than those in my pool!” 
It is with pardonable pride that we reflect upon the pleasant hours 
which Loveland Aquatic Plants have provided in the past. Our 1936 
list of Tropical Lilies, Hardy Lilies and Goldfish is complete and will 
answer your every need. But whether your order is large or small, be 
assured of our deep appreciation and our fullest co-operation in adding 
to your water garden enjoyment. 
ADD A BOG GARDEN 
In addition to your water garden, wouldn’t you like a little brook, 
trickling on and on—rocky sides in minature for plants that choose to 
grow near a brook—little inlets for plants that prefer wet ground but 
do not grow aquatic. 
Be sure to add a bog—whether it is large or small. The bog should 
be planted in the lowest part of the ground where water naturally cob 
lects. Many bogs are built adjacent to an informal pool—so arranged 
that the overflow of the pool floods the bog. 
The best plants for this type of garden are those listed on pages 
11, 12 and 13. 
