6 
UPTON GARDENS 
CASTILLEJA, Paint Brush. Probably parasitic, hence difficult to 
establish. 
collina. Scarlet bracts, 1 ft. stems. 
haydenii. Bright old-rose flowers; alpine. 
occidentalis. D/warf, yellow tinged with dark red; alpine. 
sulphurea. Soft yellow; subalpine. 
CEANOTHUS, Buckthorn. 
fendleri. A dwarf spiny subalpine shrub, small white flowers. 2 ft. 
Plants 75c. 
CERASTIUM, Mouse Ear. 
arvense. Forms a green carpet from which rise quantities of white 
flowers. 4 inches. A really good thing in the rock garden. 
CERCOCARPUS, Mountain Mahogany. 
parvifolius. A subalpine shrub; thousands of spiral plumose seed- 
tails lend a silky haze to bleak stony hillsides. 5 ft. Young 
plants 75c. 
CHAMAENERION (Epilobium). Tolerant of conditions, but resents 
being transplanted. 
angustifolium, Fireweed. Brilliant purple-pink spikes, 2 to 3 ft. 
CHIONOPHILA, Snowlover. 
jamesii. Perky little spikes of white two-lipped flowers. Alpine; 
4 inches. Scree with a dash of leafmold. 
CHRYSOPSIS, Golden Aster. 
villosa. A yello/w daisy, roughish foliage. Dry sunny slopes. 10 in. 
CEAYTONIA, Spring Beauty. 
megarrliiza. Rosettes of shining succulent deep green, circled, as an 
after-thought, by a wreath of little white flowers pink backed. 
Scree. 
CEEMATIS, Virgin’s Bower. Tolerant of almost any condition. 
douglasii. Attractive blue flowers. Clarence Elliott says, “Like a 
Paris hat.” Pinnate foliage. 1 to 2 ft. 
ligusticifolia. White flowers and fluffy seed heads in abundance; a 
rampant climber. 
pseudoalpina. Lavender to blue; an obliging plant, grows flat or 
climbs. Semi-shade. 
scottii. Thick blue-purple flowers. Shrubby to climbing habit. 2 ft. 
CLEOME, Rocky Mountain Bee Plant. 
serrulata. Pinky-purple heads. 2 y 2 ft. Annual, seed only. 
CORNUS canadensis. Suggests a dwarf, four-petal trillium; 6 inches. 
Shade. Plants only. 
CORYDALIS aurea. Golden Smoke. Forms a little bouquet of dainty 
filigree in irridescent gray with half-hidden yellow flowers; early. 
Resents transplanting. 
CRASSINIA grandiflora. Miniature single yellow zinnia, from sunny 
dry plains 
CRATAEGUS, Hawthorn. 
coloradensis. A low, well-branched tree; clusters of scarlet berries 
lovely with large coarsely-toothed leaves. Exceptionally hardy. 
Seed only. 
CYPRIPEDIUM parviflorum, Yellow Lady Slipper. Lovely butter-col¬ 
ored blobs, moccasin shaped. 6 to 10 inches. 
DASYPHORA. see Potentilla. 
Give Cypripediums and Calypsos leafmold and shade. 
