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LANDSCAPE<br />

RCHlTEGTUgf<br />

The Gift of Beatrix Farrand<br />

to the General Library<br />

University of California, Berkeley<br />

I<br />

m<br />

Ex<br />

Libris<br />

BEATRIX<br />

JONES<br />

LANDSCAPE<br />

ARCHITECTURE<br />

m<br />

REEF POINT GARDENS<br />

LIBRARY


EDITED BY<br />

R. HOOPER PEARSON<br />

MANAGING EDITOR<br />

OF THE GARDENERS<br />

CHRONICLE<br />

A LIST OF VOLUMES<br />

IN THE SERIES IS<br />

GIVEN ON THE NEXT<br />

PAGE.


Tresent-Day<br />

(gardening<br />

List of Vc<br />

1<br />

:nes in the Series.<br />

1. SWEET PEAS. By HORACB J.<br />

WRIGHT, late Secretary<br />

and Chairman of the National Sweet Pea <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

With Chapter on "Sweet Peas for Exhibition" by THOS.<br />

STEVENSON.<br />

2. PANSIES, VIOLAS, AND VIOLETS. By WILLIAM<br />

CUTHBERTSON, J.P., and R. HOOPER PEARSON.<br />

3.<br />

ROOT AND STEM VEGETABLES. By ALEXANDER<br />

DEAN, V.M.H., Chairman of the National Vegetable <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

4. DAFFODILS. By the Rev. J. JACOB, Secretary of<br />

the Midland Daffodil <strong>Society</strong>, with Preface by the Rev. W.<br />

WILKS, M.A., Secretary of the Royal Horticultural <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

5. ORCHIDS. By JAMES O'BRIEN, V.M.H., Secretary<br />

of the Orchid Committee of the Royal Horticultural <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

6. CARNATIONS AND PINKS. By T. H. COOK, Head<br />

Gardener to Queen Alexandra at Sandringham ; JAMES<br />

DOUGLAS, V.M.H. ;<br />

and J. F. M'LEOD, Head Gardener to<br />

Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan.<br />

7. RHODODENDRONS AND AZALEAS. (The first<br />

popular volume published on this subject,) By WILLIAM<br />

WATSON, A.L.S., Curator of the Poyal Botanic Gardens, Kew,<br />

with Preface by Sir FRED. W. MOORE, M.A., A.L.S., V.M.H.<br />

8. LILIES. By A. GROVE, F.L.S., with Preface by<br />

H. J. ELWES, F.R.S.<br />

9. APPLES AND PEARS. By GEORGE BUNYARD,<br />

V.M.H., Chairman of Fruit and Vegetable Committee of Royal<br />

Horticultural <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

10. ROSES. By H. R. DARLINGTON, Member of Council<br />

of National Rose <strong>Society</strong>. (Double volume.)<br />

11. IRISES. By W. RICKATSON DYKES, M.A.,L.-es-L.<br />

With Preface by PROFESSOR I. BAYLEY BALFOUR, D.Sc.,<br />

F.R.S., &*c,<br />

These will be followed by volumes on Annuals, Rock<br />

Garden and Alpine Plants, Chrysanthemums, Dahlias,<br />

Paeonies, Primulas, Trees and Shrubs, Cucumbers,<br />

Melons, Bedding Plants, Hardy Herbaceous Plants,<br />

Ferns, Tomatoes, Bulbous Plants, Peaches and Nectarines,<br />

Vines, Stove and Greenhouse Plants, &C.


PLATE I<br />

(Frontispiece)<br />

I. BUCHARICA A TYPICAL JUNO IRIS


Q<br />

PREFACE BY PROFESSOR BAYLEY BALFOUR


Add" I<br />

LANDSCAPE<br />

AP^H'T^<br />

Farrarid


LANDSCAPE<br />

ARCH, j<br />

LIBRARY<br />

PREFACE<br />

THE gardening world has recognised for some time past<br />

that in the realm of <strong>Iris</strong> the mantle of the late Sir Michael<br />

Foster descended upon the writer of this book and it will<br />

confirm the succession. It is a good book written with<br />

all the verve and freedom of accurate knowledge derived<br />

from observation of the plants as they grow as well as from<br />

study of their dried bones in collectors' herbaria an essential<br />

combination for the elaboration of any sketch that is to<br />

suggest claim to authority in such plants, and this book does<br />

suggest and makes good its claim in this respect.<br />

Not the most ardent enthusiast can pretend that <strong>Iris</strong>culture<br />

attracts in our days with the intensity which the<br />

intrinsic merit of the species should command, and in some<br />

degree this lukewarmness may be ascribed to difficulties over<br />

which no help has been obtainable from any concise but<br />

not technical exposition of their forms and needs. The<br />

facile rhizome with potential immortality of the Bearded<br />

<strong>Iris</strong> has given<br />

it a dominance in cultivation through which<br />

it has become an obsession as the type of <strong>Iris</strong>, and it must<br />

always have a prominent place in estimation, but the growthforms<br />

of members of other groups Juno, for example<br />

modify in no small measure the stereotyped concept of what<br />

less demon-<br />

is an <strong>Iris</strong>, and the daintiness, softer blendings,<br />

strativeness of many of them ask for them a share of attenvU<br />

I. 069


viii<br />

PREFACE<br />

tion which they have not received. True, the Xiphiums of<br />

the bulbous section have established for themselves rightly a<br />

popular position, but hardly so the Reticulatas nor yet the<br />

Junos ; and what is there more beautiful than a " bush " two<br />

feet high such it is even in the inclement climate of Southeast<br />

Scotland of that gem of the Junos,<br />

7. bucharica f Can<br />

we say of the Evansias that those unfailingly responsive and<br />

dainty forms, /. gracilipes and /. cristata, are known as they<br />

deserve ? or that free-growing Apogons like the Californian<br />

/.<br />

Douglasiana and /. Purdyi are sufficiently known ? No<br />

more need be said. By the publication of this book the<br />

conditions will be changed. Mr. Dykes supplies in it just<br />

the assistance that has been hitherto wanting, opening wide<br />

the avenue of <strong>Iris</strong>-culture, and the outcome of his effort will<br />

be a wider interest in the cultivation of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> and a more<br />

general introduction of forms as yet unusual in gardens.<br />

Beginning with a short but adequate account of the<br />

structure of the <strong>Iris</strong> plant and of the groups into which the<br />

genus may be conveniently divided, Mr. Dykes continues<br />

with an easy and reliable description of the leading characteristics<br />

and requirements of the several cultivated species in<br />

their respective groups. In this part of the book the<br />

gardener will gather with peculiar joy the suggestion of those<br />

easily grasped marks tips from the man who knows which<br />

will enable him to recognise his species with certainty and<br />

to tell one species from another. He will find differential<br />

garden puzzles, such as that of /. pumila and /. chamceiris,<br />

of /. Icevigata and /. Kcempferi, of /. ruthenica and 7.<br />

humilis, and many others, dealt with succinctly and a key<br />

supplied, and problems of hybridisation and other problems<br />

touched upon suggestively with a stimulus to investigation.


PREFACE<br />

ix<br />

The chapters on the best species for planting<br />

situations form a garden-guide of judicious<br />

in different<br />

advice to the<br />

cultivator, and along with the concluding calendar provide<br />

a directory by means of which any gardener may achieve<br />

success in <strong>Iris</strong>-culture and enjoy the delight of uninterrupted<br />

succession of bloom from January to December.<br />

The whole story is necessarily brief within the compass<br />

of so small a volume nevertheless compendious.<br />

It is,<br />

however, no secret that in this little guide for everybody<br />

we have only a whet to the banquet which Mr. Dykes has<br />

prepared for us in the larger book, with full descriptions and<br />

many illustrations of the species of <strong>Iris</strong>, that is to appear<br />

shortly through the enterprise of the Syndics of the<br />

Cambridge University Press. In relation to that larger work<br />

this sketch will be a primer. In their association Horticulture<br />

will have a story of <strong>Iris</strong> in Present-day Gardening<br />

for which Mr. Dykes will merit gratitude.<br />

ISAAC BAYLEY BALFOUR.<br />

ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS,<br />

EDINBURGH.


CONTENTS<br />

PREFACE<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

PAGE<br />

vii<br />

i<br />

CHAP.<br />

I. THE DIVISIONS OF THE IRIS GENUS 5<br />

II. THE STRUCTURE OF THE IRIS FLOWER ... 7<br />

III. BULBOUS IRISES 9<br />

IV. BULBOUS IRISES (continued) 15<br />

V. BULBOUS IRISES (continued) 17<br />

VI. THE ONCOCYCLUS IRISES 23<br />

VII. THE EVANSIA SECTION 30<br />

VIII. "GERMAN" IRISES 34<br />

IX. OTHER BEARDED IRISES .... -45<br />

X. THE APOGON IRISES 48<br />

XI. IRISES FOR THE ROCK GARDEN . . . .68<br />

XII. IRISES FOR THE ROCK GARDEN (continued)<br />

. .<br />

72<br />

XIII. IRISES FOR THE HERBACEOUS BORDER . . .81<br />

XIV. THE CULTIVATION AND PROPAGATION OF IRISES .<br />

89<br />

XV. IRISES THAT SELDOM FLOWER 92<br />

XVI. SOME IRIS PROBLEMS .<br />

-95<br />

XVII. THE ILLUSTRATIONS . . 101<br />

XVIII. AN IRIS CALENDAR . .<br />

.103<br />

INDEX OF SPECIES AND VARIETIES OF IRIS . .<br />

107<br />

GENERAL INDEX<br />

no


LIST<br />

OF ILLUSTRATIONS<br />

PLATE<br />

I. I. BUCHARICA A TYPICAL JUNO IRIS . . Frontispiece<br />

PAGE<br />

II. I. LONGIPETALA A FlNE APOGON IRIS . .<br />

-14<br />

III. I. SUSIANA A TYPICAL ONCOCYCLUS IRIS .<br />

.<br />

26<br />

IV. I.<br />

JACQUINIANA A GOOD "GERMAN" IRIS . .<br />

42<br />

V. ONE OF THE NEW GIANT XIPHIUMS OR "DUTCH"<br />

IRISES 58<br />

VI. I. XIPHIOIDES OR ANGLICA A TYPICAL GARDEN<br />

FORM 74<br />

VII. I. OCHROLEUCA .... ... 88<br />

VIII. A DOUBLE JAPANESE FORM OF I. K^EMPFERI . .<br />

98<br />

xiii


IRISES<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

It is not the object of this book to provide a scientific<br />

account of the <strong>Iris</strong> genus, nor is it proposed<br />

to enter into<br />

questions of classification and affinity, however interesting<br />

these may be. Indeed, it would hardly be possible within<br />

the limits of this series to give detailed descriptions of<br />

all the individual species, or to unravel the entanglements<br />

that have arisen in their nomenclature.<br />

To accomplish the latter, it is in many cases necessary<br />

to start with the account given in Linnaeus' Species Plantarum,<br />

of which the first edition was published in 1753,<br />

and to try to discover to what Linnaeus was really alluding<br />

when he wrote his description. It is a fascinating inquiry,<br />

for, with the help of a good botanical library, such as that<br />

of the Kew Herbarium, it is possible to trace back Linnaeus'<br />

species through<br />

the earlier writers until we come to the first<br />

description of each species, from which the plant can usually<br />

be recognised. For instance, in early days the Spanish and<br />

the English <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> were hardly separated, and in trying to<br />

discover what Linnaeus meant by /.<br />

xiphium we get back<br />

at length to Carolus Clusius,<br />

name of one Charles de 1'Escluse, a<br />

the latinised version of the<br />

botanist who travelled<br />

A


2 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

in the Spanish peninsula and in Germany and Austria about<br />

the middle of the sixteenth century. He published<br />

accounts of the rarer plants that he found in these two<br />

regions, and it is in his Spanish volume that we find<br />

accounts of both the Spanish and the English <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> as we<br />

now know them. One feature alone is sufficient to distinguish<br />

the two, and that both were known to Clusius is<br />

proved by the fact that he notes that the one has larger seedvessels<br />

than the other so large,<br />

in fact, that the seeds rattle<br />

in them when ripe. This exactly describes the capsule of<br />

the English <strong>Iris</strong>. That of the Spanish varieties is much<br />

narrower, so that the seeds have not room to rattle much<br />

in it.<br />

From this we may<br />

infer that Linnaeus included under<br />

the name of /.<br />

xiphium both the plants that are now<br />

known as the English and Spanish <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>.<br />

But it is obvious that it would be impossible to give<br />

here the result of similar inquiries and searches with regard<br />

to all the other hundred and fifty<br />

odd species, that have<br />

been found growing wild from California and Alaska in the<br />

west to China and Japan in the east, and from Hong- Kong<br />

in the south to Labrador in the north.<br />

It will be better to devote the space at our disposal to<br />

the consideration of the <strong>Iris</strong> as a decorative and pleasuregiving<br />

garden plant, which might be far more often<br />

employed than at present seems to be the case for the<br />

adornment of rock gardens, bog gardens, and herbaceous<br />

borders. Few gardeners realise the possibilities of species<br />

and varieties of <strong>Iris</strong> for one or other of these purposes.<br />

Still less is<br />

it<br />

generally known and appreciated that, possibly<br />

with the help of a cold frame or a few small portable lights,


TIME OF FLOWERING 3<br />

it is not at all difficult to have some <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> in flower in every<br />

week in the year. It is true that two of the species that can<br />

be relied upon to flower in November and December must<br />

usually be renewed every year, for in our climate it is<br />

almost impossible so to ripen the growth of /. alata and /.<br />

Vartanii as to ensure their flowering again in the following<br />

season. However, bulbs of /. alata can now be obtained<br />

or two invested in them will be<br />

very cheaply, and a shilling<br />

well repaid.<br />

In September and October the supply of<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> is somewhat<br />

uncertain, and depends a good deal on the season, and<br />

even, it appears, on the idiosyncrasies of individual plants ;<br />

that is to say, that of certain kinds of Bearded <strong>Iris</strong>is, one<br />

seedling may prove to have the habit of flowering a second<br />

time in the autumn in favourable circumstances, while all<br />

the others that have been raised from seeds of the same pod<br />

content themselves with a single flowering season in the<br />

early part of the year.<br />

Instances of bulbous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> flowering twice are very<br />

but some bulbs of the rare /. Rosen-<br />

uncommon,<br />

bachiana once came into flower in December and<br />

January after they had already bloomed in the previous<br />

March. Most of them unfortunately paid the penalty of<br />

the rashness in flowering again thus prematurely by<br />

growing very feebly in the following spring and failing<br />

to complete and ripen their growth in a satisfactory<br />

manner. On the contrary, an autumnal display of<br />

flowers does not seem to be in any way<br />

harmful to<br />

vigorous, rhizomatous species. A variety of /. variegata,<br />

known as Gracchus, which is a most profuse flowerer<br />

in May and early June, will not infrequently flower again


4 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

in September and October, and even then be ready to<br />

bloom again in the following spring.<br />

The existing literature on the <strong>Iris</strong> is<br />

mostly<br />

to be found<br />

scattered in various botanical and horticultural publications,<br />

many of which are only accessible in the libraries<br />

of the Herbarium Department at Kew and at the Natural<br />

History Museum at South Kensington, or in a few other<br />

large libraries. A most useful compendium of many of<br />

these scattered references will be found in Mr. J.<br />

G.<br />

Baker's Handbook of the Iridece, published in 1892.<br />

Since that date no attempt has been made to bring together<br />

in a systematic manner either the references to the newer<br />

species or the results of further research concerning those<br />

already known. And yet much remains to be done, both<br />

in the direction of clearing up many<br />

difficulties of<br />

nomenclature and synonymy, and also in reviewing the<br />

species already described in the light of the recent advances<br />

in the study of heredity<br />

Bateson.<br />

that we owe to Mendel and<br />

In 1904 Mr. R. Irwin Lynch, of the Cambridge Botanic<br />

Garden, published in The Book of the <strong>Iris</strong> a more<br />

popular and less severely technical version of Mr. Baker's<br />

treatment of the genus. Little attempt was made to check<br />

the accuracy of the references and descriptions given in the<br />

Handbook, but Mr. Lynch's work made a great appeal<br />

to those gardeners who were interested in <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> and yet<br />

were not sufficiently conversant with botanical terms to<br />

be able to derive from the dry details of the earlier work<br />

much idea of the appearance of the plants therein described.<br />

To the professional botanist, the colour of the actual


DIVISIONS OF IRIS GENUS 5<br />

flowers is of very little importance, and indeed it is often<br />

unknown to him, for in most cases he has never seen the<br />

living plant, but only dried herbarium specimens. To the<br />

gardener, however, it is somewhat disconcerting to find<br />

that in the scientific Handbook the flowers of five out of the<br />

first six species are dismissed with the laconic description<br />

"limb lilac," nor is he much helped by the occasional<br />

addition of the qualifying adjectives, "bright," "dark,"<br />

and "plain."<br />

Mons. H. Correvon's little work, entitled Les <strong>Iris</strong> dans<br />

les JardinSj is obviously founded on Mr. Lynch's book,<br />

but contains certain additions and some useful cultural<br />

hints.<br />

CHAPTER I<br />

THE DIVISIONS OF THE IRIS<br />

GENUS<br />

VARIOUS attempts have been made to arrive at the natural<br />

divisions among <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, but no entirely satisfactory system<br />

has yet been thought out. It<br />

may, however, be as well to<br />

give some rough outline of the main classes into which<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> seem to fall, and to explain the significance of the<br />

names that have been applied to the various groups.<br />

The first and main division is into bulbous and nonbulbous<br />

species. Each of these two main divisions falls<br />

in its turn into several subdivisions, which themselves may<br />

be further subdivided into groups.<br />

To take first the bulbous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, the bulb may in its resting


6 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

state, either be a simple bulb something like that of a<br />

small Narcissus but without the neck of the latter, or it may<br />

possess several thick, tapering, fleshy roots, attached to the<br />

base of the bulb, which send out branching rootlets when<br />

growth begins again in autumn.<br />

To the former class belong the Xiphium, or Spanish<br />

<strong>Iris</strong><br />

group and the reticulata section. To the latter class<br />

belong the Juno <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, most of which are of comparatively<br />

recent introduction from Central Asia, although one<br />

member at least of the subdivision, /. persica, has been in<br />

cultivation in England at any rate since the middle of the<br />

sixteenth century.<br />

So far the task of division has been easy, but when we<br />

come to the other main division, namely, the species with<br />

rhizomatous rootstocks, our difficulties immediately become<br />

greater. The various divisions with which we have here to<br />

deal are less clearly and easily defined. They consist, in<br />

the first place, of the Pogoniris group or Bearded <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, the<br />

name being derived from the Greek Troyyav, a beard, and<br />

the Apogon species, which, as the name implies, should be<br />

beardless. Unfortunately, some of the species, which in<br />

other respects seem to belong to the latter group, have on<br />

the blade of the fall a pubescence, which under the<br />

microscope becomes distinctly a beard. However, both<br />

these classes are easily distinguished from the Evansias, a<br />

small group in which the beard is replaced by a crest. The<br />

name Pseudevansia has been invented for a group of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

in which the beard was supposed to spring from a kind of<br />

low ridge, running down the centre of the fall, it<br />

though<br />

is<br />

doubtful whether there are really any <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> belonging to<br />

such a class.


STRUCTURE OF IRIS FLOWER 7<br />

Another division bears the mysterious name of Oncocyclus,<br />

whose author does indeed give the two Greek words<br />

of which the name is<br />

composed, but omits to give the interpretation<br />

thereof. As one of these means a circle and the<br />

other anything from a mass or the space that contains it to<br />

dignity, majesty, or even a topknot, we are left in the dark<br />

as to the meaning that he attached to the word. It may<br />

have some reference to the curious shape of the seeds, which<br />

is characteristic of this and another closely allied group,<br />

named Regelia after Dr. Regel, of St. Petersburg, by whose<br />

were introduced<br />

exertions so many Central Asian species<br />

into cultivation.<br />

Outside these main subdivisions, there are various miscellaneous<br />

species that do not seem to fit into any of them.<br />

Two species, for instance /. nepalensis and I. Collettii,<br />

have neither a bulb nor a rhizome for their rootstock,<br />

but a mere growing point to which a bundle of fleshy<br />

roots is attached, closely resembling those of the Hemerocallis.<br />

CHAPTER II<br />

THE STRUCTURE OF THE IRIS<br />

FLOWER<br />

To define an <strong>Iris</strong> is not altogether as easy as it might<br />

seem at first sight. To say that it is a monocotyledonous<br />

plant, whose perianth<br />

is divided into two regular whorls,<br />

each of three segments, is prosaic, mystifying to the nonbotanical<br />

mind, and unsatisfying even to the botanist.<br />

For this definition includes, besides <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> proper, other


8 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

bulbous plants such as Moraeas, which used, indeed,<br />

formerly to be classed with <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. But what is the difference<br />

between an <strong>Iris</strong> and a Moraea ? The standard book<br />

on the Irideae affords us no further light on this question<br />

than that <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

grow north of the Equator and Moraeas<br />

south of it ! This may be true, but it is<br />

hardly scientific,<br />

although it would certainly add to the interest with which<br />

the botanical world would await the first flowering of any<br />

bulbous plants that might be brought from the temperate<br />

regions on the Kenia and Kilimanjaro Ranges, which lie<br />

almost directly under the Equator in Central Africa. As<br />

a matter of fact <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are only separated from Moraeas<br />

by the existence of a tube, however short, between the<br />

ovary and the base of the segments of the perianth. In<br />

a Moraea, the divisions of the flower rise directly from<br />

the top of the ovary without the intervention of any tube.<br />

The six segments of the flowers of an <strong>Iris</strong> are popularly<br />

known as the "standards" and the "falls." The terms<br />

are convenient, but nevertheless inappropriate when applied<br />

to such groups as that of the Juno <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, where the standards<br />

are either horizontal or drooping, while the falls<br />

stand up<br />

at an angle of at least 45. In addition to these six<br />

segments, there are the three style branches, which arch<br />

over the anthers and bear on their under side near the<br />

extremity the stigmatic surface, through which the flower<br />

is fertilised. The style branches form the roof and the<br />

haft of the falls the floor of a kind of tunnel. The<br />

stigma projects downwards at the mouth of this tunnel,<br />

along the roof of which lie the anthers. These bear the<br />

pollen, and at their base exudes the nectar which entices<br />

the insects.


THE RETICULATA GROUP 9<br />

In theory and in the text-books, the bee or other insect<br />

pushes his way obligingly down the tunnel, collects pollen<br />

on his back from the anthers, and deposits some of it<br />

on the<br />

stigma in the next tunnel that he enters. In practice, however,<br />

the bee is apt to take short cuts, and may be observed<br />

time after time forcing himself in between style and fall<br />

near the base of the tunnel and so avoiding both anther and<br />

stigma. Occasionally a bee is unenterprising and does the<br />

expected, and then pollination is effected, if he happens to<br />

have <strong>Iris</strong> pollen on his back. This, again, is a point in<br />

which the text-books do not agree with fact, for a little<br />

observation in the garden on a sunny day will soon prove<br />

that a bee does not on each expedition from the hive confine<br />

himself to the flowers of one particular species or genus.<br />

Insects cannot therefore be relied upon to fertilise <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>,<br />

and the result is that, in cultivation in England at any rate,<br />

and these are<br />

only certain species set seed at all readily,<br />

precisely those in which a certain formation of the stigma<br />

makes self-pollination not only possible, but probable and<br />

even almost necessaryĊHAPTER<br />

III<br />

BULBOUS IRISES<br />

I. THE RETICULATA GROUP<br />

THIS group of winter or early spring flowering <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

comprises those species in which the bulbs are covered


io PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

with an outer coat consisting of a network of fibres.<br />

The name is derived from the Latin reticulum, a little<br />

net<br />

All the members of this group are natives either of Asia<br />

Minor or of the regions immediately to<br />

the east, north, and<br />

south of that country, and all agree in possessing narrow<br />

leaves, which are irregularly four-sided, and which end<br />

in a horny top. The southernmost representative is<br />

apparently /. Vartanii, which comes from Nazareth, and<br />

flowers in October or November. It is<br />

consequently difficult<br />

to keep, and as the colour is a poor, slaty blue, it would<br />

hardly be worth cultivating, except for its delightful scent<br />

of almonds, and for the fact that it flowers when few other<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> can be relied upon to send up<br />

their blooms. Next<br />

and<br />

year we may hope to see a pure white form of this <strong>Iris</strong>,<br />

let us hope that it will prove to have a stronger constitution<br />

than the type.<br />

It is said to have appeared among seedlings<br />

in a garden.<br />

Next in order of time comes an <strong>Iris</strong>, which was named<br />

Histrio from the fact that its flowers are so brightly and<br />

conspicuously blotched and splashed with deep blue on a<br />

pale blue ground that the colours appear almost to have<br />

been laid on with a brush. It is said to be distinguished<br />

from histrioides by the fact that its leaves are of some<br />

length before the flowers appear, while histrioides throws<br />

up its bloom simultaneously with the leaves. This distinction<br />

is of doubtful value, and the probable explanation<br />

is that both the one and the other are merely<br />

local forms<br />

of the same thing.<br />

A very early flowering dwarf <strong>Iris</strong> of this group<br />

is that<br />

named by Foster /. reticulata sophenensis. The colour is


RETICULATA<br />

n<br />

a peculiar blue-purple, without the blotches so characteristic<br />

of the two species just mentioned.<br />

These three are usually closely followed by the redpurple<br />

/. Krelagei, which in its turn is succeeded by the<br />

well-known deep violet /. reticulata the so-called type.<br />

/. Krelagei may be a very poor thing, scarcely worth growing,<br />

but there are some forms which have magnificent, broadpetalled<br />

flowers of a shade approaching crimson. Both<br />

this and the type increase fast when the conditions suit<br />

them, and should therefore be frequently lifted and replanted.<br />

If this is not done, the flowers become so crowded that the<br />

outline of each is lost and half the beauty gone. On the<br />

other hand, the sight of a bed of several hundreds of these<br />

exquisite flowers of brilliant violet and gold gleaming amidst<br />

the grey-green mist of glaucous foliage does indeed rejoice<br />

the heart on some sunny morning at the end of February<br />

or early in March.<br />

The method of frequent lifting has another advantage<br />

in that it enables steps to be taken to counteract the<br />

ravages of a deadly fungous disease which first shows<br />

itself in the shape of inklike stains on the outer coat of<br />

the bulbs. Soaking for about two hours in a solution<br />

of formalin of the strength of one in three hundred parts<br />

seems to check the disease.<br />

As to cultivation, all that can be said is that shelter<br />

from wind is advisable for such early flowering bulbs,<br />

and that it is<br />

impossible to say that any particular soil<br />

is more suitable than another. The bulbs appear to be<br />

most capricious, and except that humus in some form<br />

may with advantage be added to a very poor soil, no<br />

directions can be given. It<br />

may be useful to remember


12 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

that with care the bulbs can be moved successfully when<br />

in flower. This enables seedlings and chance mixtures<br />

to be sorted out, a process which is<br />

extremely difficult<br />

later on, when the foliage has died down and the position<br />

of any particular bulb in a group can no longer be<br />

ascertained.<br />

The above-mentioned members of this group<br />

all have<br />

four-sided leaves, but there is one species, 7. Bakenana,<br />

named after Mr. J.<br />

G. Baker, the late keeper of the Kew<br />

Herbarium, in which the leaves have eight sides,<br />

or rather<br />

are round with eight raised ribs. The flowers are small,<br />

but have a delightful velvety texture. The colour is<br />

produced by deep<br />

violet dots and broken veins on a white<br />

ground, which becomes entirely obliterated in the deep<br />

self-coloured tip of the blade. This beautiful little species<br />

blooms in January or early in February, and is indeed<br />

worthy of some sheltered nook in the rock garden or<br />

even the protection of a cold frame.<br />

7. Danfordice, the one yellow-flowered species of the<br />

group, is a little dwarf <strong>Iris</strong>, of brilliant colour, remarkable<br />

for the almost total disappearance of the standards.<br />

Indications are not wanting that other <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> of this<br />

class may yet be found when Asia Minor becomes more<br />

thoroughly explored. Farther East in Turkestan, to be<br />

more exact two curious <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> have been discovered<br />

which may or may not belong to this group, 7. Kolpakowskiana<br />

and 7. Winkleri. It is greatly to be hoped that<br />

they will<br />

soon be brought once more into cultivation, and<br />

their position in the genus settled.<br />

7. Sisyrinchium can hardly be said to belong<br />

to this


PLATE II<br />

I. LONGIPETALA A FINE APOGON IRIS


THE XIPHION GROUP 15<br />

group, but, as its bulbs have netted coats, it may perhaps<br />

be just<br />

mentioned here. It is distinct from all other<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> in its method of increase and in the extreme frailty<br />

of its flowers, which last only from twelve to four on a<br />

sunny day. Its habitat extends from Portugal to Kashmir,<br />

and its colour varies through all shades of lavender, lilac,<br />

and purple. It has been said to have the additional merit<br />

that, if<br />

you<br />

you do not like the flower or the habit of the plant,<br />

can eat the bulbĊHAPTER<br />

IV<br />

BULBOUS IRISES (continued)<br />

II.<br />

THE XIPHION GROUP<br />

THIS group contains the so-called Spanish and English<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, both of which are well known, and a certain number<br />

of wild species akin to them that might<br />

well be more often<br />

seen in gardens.<br />

/. xiphium comes from Spain and Portugal, and affords<br />

brightly-coloured masses of flower about the middle of<br />

June. It delights in a warm, rich soil, and the bulbs should<br />

be lifted occasionally when the foliage withers, and separated<br />

before overcrowding<br />

occurs to diminish the size of<br />

the flowers. In recent years a number of very fine largeflowered<br />

hybrids have been introduced into cultivation by<br />

the well-known Dutch firm of C. G. Van Tubergen, Jun.,<br />

of Haarlem. The flowers of these hybrids are of great size


16 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

and substance, and moreover begin to<br />

open<br />

of May, a full fortnight before the majority<br />

about the end<br />

of the older<br />

forms. It would be difficult to specify as particularly<br />

worthy of notice any of these new hybrids, for all those<br />

that have up to the present been distributed well deserve<br />

a place in any collection.<br />

Of the older and cheaper varieties, mention must be<br />

made of Thunderbolt, a very vigorous plant with flowers<br />

of a peculiar mixture of brown, yellow, and purple ;<br />

of<br />

Leander, a sweet-scented yellow flower of<br />

; lusitanica,<br />

which is<br />

perhaps a wild species and has wide petalled<br />

flowers of yellow and white and also of<br />

; "filifolia," which<br />

is<br />

remarkably early, with large blue flowers. The name<br />

filifolia is misleading, because it already belongs to a wild<br />

species which has only just<br />

been reintroduced into cultivation,<br />

a species that is quite distinct from the Spanish <strong>Iris</strong>.<br />

Those gardeners whose soil is too cold and wet for the<br />

success of I. xiphium must console themselves by<br />

the reflection<br />

that it is<br />

probably admirably suited to the Pyrenean<br />

/. xiphioides, or English <strong>Iris</strong>. This species has larger<br />

flowers than the Spanish <strong>Iris</strong> and stouter It<br />

foliage. has<br />

been in cultivation for centuries, and now exists in a host<br />

of colour varieties. It is hard to advise others in the<br />

choice of colours, and the best method is to note down the<br />

names of the most pleasing varieties in the groups that<br />

will certainly be seen at shows in July.<br />

Some will admire<br />

the flecked or mottled forms, by which the lover of self<br />

colours will not be attracted, and each must choose for<br />

himself.<br />

It is a thousand pities that the most glorious of all the<br />

xiphion species, /. tingitana, is such a shy flowerer. The


THE JUNO GROUP 17<br />

broad falls are light blue with a brilliant central line of gold<br />

colour, and the standards of a slightly deeper shade of purple.<br />

To ensure success the bulbs must be very liberally treated<br />

with old manure, placed some inches below their bases, and<br />

given the warmest and most sheltered corner of the garden.<br />

Even then success is not certain, for a late spring frost<br />

may kill all our hopes of seeing /. tingitana in flower.<br />

The Algerian<br />

/. juncea is valuable for its deep yellow<br />

colour, but it is rather tender, and often fails to ripen its<br />

bulbs after flowering. I. Boissieri is even more difficult to<br />

keep, but it is worth an effort for the sake of its brilliantly<br />

coloured flowers of contrasting blue and red purple, set<br />

off by a scanty beard of golden<br />

hairs. With one rare<br />

exception, namely, /. Tubergeniana, I. Boissieri is the only<br />

bulbous <strong>Iris</strong> that can boast of a conspicuous beard.<br />

CHAPTER V<br />

BULBOUS IRISES (continued)<br />

III.<br />

THE JUNO GROUP<br />

THIS section is based upon the peculiarity of the structure<br />

of the bulbs, which still retain some thick fleshy roots even<br />

in the resting state.<br />

The first to flower is /. alata from the western shores of<br />

the Mediterranean. It is now so largely imported that bulbs<br />

can be purchased for little more than a penny apiece, and<br />

at this price<br />

it may be well worth a shilling<br />

or two to ensure<br />

B


i8<br />

PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

a display of /. alata in November, December, and January.<br />

These freshly imported bulbs, that have been thoroughly<br />

ripened in the heat of the southern sun, can be relied upon<br />

to flower well, especially<br />

if<br />

they can be obtained with their<br />

fleshy roots more or less intact. Bulbs without these roots<br />

should be refused, for the resultant plants will be weak and<br />

puny, and probably unable to develop their flowers. They<br />

do fairly well in deep pots, but it is not an <strong>Iris</strong> that readily<br />

lends itself to forcing. After flowering either in the open or<br />

in pots, the plants may as well be thrown away, for it is<br />

almost impossible so to ripen off the growth that sound<br />

bulbs are formed for the succeeding year. With careful<br />

nursing the bulbs can possibly be brought on to flowering<br />

size in about two years' time, but is it worth the trouble<br />

involved, since success is always uncertain ?<br />

The Eastern Mediterranean species, /. palcestina, is an<br />

even worse offender in this respect<br />

its bulbs are weaker<br />

;<br />

than those of /. alata, and even fresh bulbs cannot all be<br />

relied upon to flower.<br />

As to the actual flowers, those of /. alata are usually of<br />

a deep blue-purple, and should be of large size, about four<br />

inches or more across. The breadth of the conspicuously<br />

winged falls is some compensation for the minuteness of the<br />

horizontal "standards." White-flowered forms of the <strong>Iris</strong><br />

are not infrequently found, and there is also obtainable a<br />

form called marginata, in which the deep blue falls have a<br />

the flowers are smaller<br />

distinct, light edge. In /. palcestina<br />

and vary greatly in colour, from a fairly deep blue through<br />

turquoise to green and greenish-yellow.<br />

In Eastern Asia Minor there occur several forms of a<br />

small and wonderfully beautiful <strong>Iris</strong>, called I.persica, which at


VARIETIES OF I. PERSICA 19<br />

its best has flowers of white and sea-green, with a brownpurple<br />

patch on the blade of the falls. It has been in cultivation<br />

in England for some centuries, but is<br />

apparently<br />

becoming rarer owing to the fact that it is not a strong<br />

grower.<br />

In light, sandy soil it is most disappointing, but would<br />

probably do better in heavy loam. Even then it would<br />

need to be kept dry and well ripened in summer. The<br />

chief difficulty with regard to it<br />

probably<br />

that the trade supplies are grown in heavy<br />

lies in the fact<br />

soil and lose all<br />

their roots when torn up for sale. The result is that newly<br />

purchased bulbs are weakly, and often exhaust themselves<br />

by attempting to flower in their first season. This should<br />

be discouraged by removing the bud, if it is hoped to<br />

establish the plant. It will then probably form a stronger<br />

bulb for the following year, together with an offset<br />

or<br />

two.<br />

Besides the type there are at least two varieties which<br />

are well worth growing and which appear to have better<br />

constitutions, namely,<br />

/. Tauri from the Cilician Taurus<br />

and 7. Heldreichii (or stenophylla) from a somewhat lower<br />

elevation in the same neighbourhood.<br />

7. Tauri has rather<br />

small but brilliant flowers of deep purple lined with gold,<br />

while those of 7. Heldreichii are a combination of blueblack<br />

blotches on a grey-blue ground.<br />

Besides these there are other colour forms of 7. persica<br />

that are much more rarely seen in cultivation. A variety,<br />

purpurea, is wholly of a warm claret-purple colour. One<br />

called galatica, from the region in which it is<br />

found, has<br />

flowers of pale, dingy yellow, tipped with brown-purple,<br />

and another with large flowers of silver-grey flushed and


20 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

blotched with dull purple has been named Sieheana, after<br />

its discoverer, Herr Siehe.<br />

So far the Juno <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> enumerated are all stemless,<br />

though the flowers are raised on perianth tubes of some<br />

length moreover their ; flowering season is over by the<br />

middle of March. As the season advances, so also do the<br />

stems of the Junos increase in height. The persicas are<br />

usually followed, and often overtaken, by the Mesopotamia!!<br />

/. sindjarensisf which grows about a foot high, and opens in<br />

succession five or six rather small flowers in the axils of the<br />

leaves, which are arranged on alternate sides of the stem,<br />

much in the same way as in the Maize or Indian Corn.<br />

The colour of the flowers is usually some shade of blue.<br />

In some examples the tint is deep, in others it is very pale,<br />

or it<br />

may even be a beautiful turquoise colour. There is<br />

also a pure<br />

white form of this <strong>Iris</strong> in cultivation.<br />

/. sindjarensis is not perhaps a very striking <strong>Iris</strong>, and it was<br />

left to the ingenuity of Mr. J. Hoog, of the firm of C. G.<br />

Van Tubergen, of Haarlem, to combine the orange central<br />

ridge of /. persica with the stronger constitution and larger<br />

flowers of /. sindjarensis. The resulting hybrid known as<br />

Sindpers<br />

is one of the most beautiful of all bulbous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>.<br />

The exact shade of colour seems to vary from season to<br />

season and in different soils, but at its best it is a most<br />

brilliant turquoise blue. It is a most desirable <strong>Iris</strong>, and<br />

one that is not difficult to grow or to keep. It is also<br />

very floriferous. Another cross, Sindpur, was raised from<br />

sindjarensis fertilised by pollen of /. persica purpurea.<br />

It<br />

is dwarfer than /. sindjarensis and very floriferous, with<br />

flowers of a dark purple colour. One form is paler, and has<br />

been aptly christened Amethyst. The reverse cross, Pursind,


OTHER JUNO SPECIES 21<br />

is scarcely so pleasing, for the combination of reddishpurple<br />

and grey does not produce a brilliant colour.<br />

Before sindjarensis and its<br />

hybrids are over, the<br />

brilliant 7. Rosenbachiana from Turkestan should be in<br />

flower. It is<br />

unfortunately rarely seen, and as its price<br />

is rising, it is presumably difficult to keep even in Holland.<br />

Early in March there appear through the bare ground<br />

broad, pale nipple-shaped shoots which soon show the<br />

tips of the green leaves ;<br />

then in a day or two, if the<br />

weather is at all warm or sunny, up shoots the flower on<br />

a long 4-inch perianth tube. It is usually some combination<br />

of white, crimson, and gold, but this is a very<br />

variable <strong>Iris</strong>, and some more recently discovered forms<br />

have a very wide range of colours. Each bulb may<br />

produce as many<br />

as three flowers in succession.<br />

Shortly after this, the white form of 7. orchioides usually<br />

opens, closely followed by ccerulea and sulphurea. Why<br />

the colour varieties should usually bloom in advance of the<br />

golden-yellow type it is difficult to see, but this has been<br />

the experience of some years' cultivation. Each of these,<br />

when well grown, produces five or six flowers, which open<br />

in succession down the foot-high stem. Simultaneously<br />

we may expect to see the brilliantly coloured 7. Warleyensis<br />

of<br />

deep purple with a yellow central patch, blue crest, and<br />

pale edges to the falls, and the more delicately coloured<br />

7. Willmottiana, with its<br />

deep lavender flowers, conspicuously<br />

blotched with white and broad, glistening<br />

deep green.<br />

leaves of<br />

Lastly, and perhaps most beautiful of all, comes 7.<br />

bucharica from Bokhara, with creamy-white flowers with<br />

clear golden-yellow tips to the broad falls. This grows


22 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

about 15 inches or more in height, and a clump of this <strong>Iris</strong> in<br />

bloom with several flowers on each stem is a wonderful<br />

sight in the middle of April.<br />

It<br />

might be thought impossible that<br />

be absolutely hardy. On this point it may<br />

such plants should<br />

be said that<br />

very severe late frost may nip the flowers that are actually<br />

open at the time, but the unopened buds are uninjured, and<br />

quickly open to fill the place of those that are over.<br />

There are many other rare Juno <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, some of which<br />

have never yet been introduced into cultivation. The<br />

mountains of Turkestan and Bokhara seem to be a perfect<br />

treasure-house of floral gems, but until they become more<br />

accessible, we shall presumably not know all their contents.<br />

one or two of the rarer<br />

Mention may, however, be made of<br />

met with in cultivation. /.<br />

species which are occasionally<br />

Fosteriana from the Afghan frontier is distinguished by its<br />

yellow<br />

falls and deep purple standards, which form a most<br />

striking contrast. Of /. Tubergeniana, a yellow-flowered<br />

species, the most conspicuous feature is the distinct beard<br />

of scanty hairs. Neither of these is very easy to keep alive,<br />

and there is indeed some danger of their dying wholly out<br />

of cultivation. Plants of both species seem to weaken<br />

themselves so much by the effort of flowering that it is some<br />

years before the bulbs become strong enough to flower<br />

again.<br />

The tall<br />

Junos do not seem to be fastidious as to soil,<br />

so long as it is moderately rich and not too dry while<br />

growth<br />

is active. Sir Michael Foster advised a heavy rather<br />

than a too light soil, but they can certainly be grown with<br />

very fair success in well-enriched sand.


THE ONCOCYCLUS IRISES 23<br />

CHAPTER VI<br />

THE ONCOCYCLUS IRISES<br />

MOST gardeners with any enterprise<br />

have at some time or<br />

other invested in a rhizome or two of the mystic Oncocyclus<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> and as many at least in England have been<br />

grievously disappointed with the result, if not immediately,<br />

then certainly in the end. The truth is that these inhabitants<br />

of Syria and Persia are homesick for the baking sun<br />

of their native haunts, and never consent to stay long with<br />

us. Even if<br />

they flower, they seem to cry out as did the<br />

Roman<br />

"<br />

gladiators, Morituri te salutant" (The doomed<br />

salute thee), and few escape their doom. However, they<br />

count among their number the largest flowered of all <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>,<br />

Gatesii, whose standards and falls are five inches and more<br />

across, and the most beautiful of all, Lortetii, which is<br />

delicately<br />

veined and minutely dotted with purple and crimson<br />

on a creamy ground. The circular standards incline<br />

slightly inwards so as to meet, and the falls reflex to show<br />

their broad beards and curl so far back as to touch the<br />

stem. Indeed, the whole flower seems to hug<br />

delight in its own beauty.<br />

What would we not give to have /. iberica flowering as<br />

itself with<br />

freely with us as does /. pumila ? And yet in its native<br />

haunts in the Caucasus, and even in gardens in that region, it<br />

is every bit as floriferous. A photograph of a long edging of<br />

these <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> with their white standards and curious, hanging<br />

concave falls puts one out of conceit with the few scattered


24 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

flowers that reward in England much pains in preparing<br />

the soil and in choosing a site, and no small outlay.<br />

Those who think they can see design in everything<br />

would perhaps be puzzled to account for the weird shape of<br />

the fitly named paradoxa. It is indeed the " unexpected."<br />

The standards are normal, but the falls are more like the<br />

back of an elongated humble-bee than anything else. To<br />

be prosaic, they are strap-shaped with a rounded tip,<br />

and<br />

not more than half an inch wide. The whole length and<br />

width is covered with thick, velvety hairs of black purple,<br />

except that there is left uncovered near the tip of the falls a<br />

mark of the shape that heralds might call a chevron. This<br />

is of a dull pinkish colour. No one who has ever grown<br />

and flowered this <strong>Iris</strong> wishes to be without it, and therefore<br />

its price grows and grows, far more readily, indeed, than<br />

the plant itself.<br />

One of the rarest and also one of the most beautiful<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> of this section is the clear yellow urmiensis from<br />

Northern Persia. It is fervently to be hoped that the Persians<br />

will one day reduce themselves and their distracted Government<br />

to order, for the present unrest in Persia a truly<br />

journalistic euphemism makes it almost impossible to get<br />

fresh supplies of this <strong>Iris</strong>, and we can only speculate as to<br />

whether its brilliant colour would have any marked effect on<br />

hybrids obtained from its pollen.<br />

It is<br />

always a matter for surprise that the gardeners of<br />

the south of France seem to have chosen for cultivation<br />

on a large scale the gloomiest of all the Oncocyclus <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>.<br />

Susiana is sold in all the flower markets of the south, and<br />

sometimes the great buds find their way on to the barrows<br />

in the streets of London. The present writer has before


PLATE III<br />

I. SUSIANA A TYPICAL ONCOCYCLUS IRIS


COLD STORAGE IN WINTER 27<br />

now bought a handful at a penny apiece,<br />

all of which<br />

unfolded magnificent flowers, in shape and size at least, if<br />

not perhaps in colour. For it cannot be denied that there<br />

is some truth in the criticism that this <strong>Iris</strong> looks as though<br />

it were made of wet newspaper on which the type had run.<br />

If<br />

any still wish to try their luck with these mysterious<br />

plants, let them contrive a bed in the sunniest, hottest, and<br />

driest corner of their gardens. There let them make up a<br />

bed of rich soil, but without fresh manure. If the soil is<br />

heavy, so much the better. The surface should slope<br />

sharply to the south, for this will help to throw off superfluous<br />

moisture. The rhizomes will probably be obtained in<br />

the autumn, but it is<br />

important to get them early, for about<br />

October they begin to shoot whether they are in the ground<br />

or out of it. The best thing to do is to pack them up in a<br />

box just as they arrive and send them off at once to some<br />

cold storage establishment, with instructions that they should<br />

be kept at a temperature of about 30<br />

until the last week in<br />

February. (If there is no local establishment, application<br />

might be made to the Imperial Cold Storage Co., of South<br />

Tottenham, London, where the experiment was first made<br />

by the author.) They may then be planted on the prepared<br />

bed, and when the flowers are over, the beds must either be<br />

covered and kept dry<br />

till<br />

growth begins again, or the roots<br />

must be lifted, dried, and re-stored.<br />

Having mentioned the chief members of this group, we<br />

will pass over the numerous interesting and rarer species,<br />

such as Bismarckiana, Elizabethce, Marice, and lupina,<br />

which will all be found attractively described in catalogues,<br />

and which, when they do flower, are weird and wonderful<br />

rather than really beautiful. Fortunately there is a closely


28 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

allied group Regelia whose members are distinguished<br />

by being far more floriferous and far more amenable to<br />

cultivation in England. These Regelia <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are so called<br />

after a certain Dr. Regel, who, as Director of the St.<br />

Petersburg<br />

Botanic Garden, was able to introduce into cultivation<br />

so many plants from Central Asia. The finest is Leichtlinii,<br />

with flowers of a fawn or brown colour shot with electric<br />

blue and gracefully waved at the edge, but the best known<br />

is /. Korolkowii, after one of the numerous Russian generals<br />

or explorers, who have enriched our gardens and come near<br />

to breaking our jaws. <strong>Iris</strong> lovers may be thankful that<br />

Przewaldski found no new <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, though he brought back<br />

many specimens of Mongolian and Central Asian species.<br />

Gentiana P-r-z may be as good as its name is bad, but one<br />

such name is<br />

enough.<br />

When even Sir Michael Foster in his marvellous garden<br />

on the south slope of a hill at Shelford found that the<br />

Oncocyclus species could not be induced to settle down<br />

there permanently, he set to work to infuse as many of<br />

their characteristics as possible into more vigorous plants.<br />

He experimented in two directions, and in both met with<br />

some success. Plants of the Regelia section fertilised<br />

with Oncocyclus pollen produced hybrids far stronger<br />

and more vigorous than either parent. The flower<br />

combined the shape and to some extent the colouring<br />

of the father with the floriferous character and general<br />

habit of the mother. Similar hybrids raised by the<br />

Haarlem firm of Van Tubergen are now widely distributed,<br />

and, though scarcely sufficiently distinct one from another,<br />

they form a very valuable addition to gardens.<br />

It is difficult to specify any particularly good specimens


VARIOUS HYBRIDS 29<br />

among these hybrids, but the warm, golden-brown colour<br />

of Charon, the size and shapeliness of Persephone, and<br />

the evident traces of Leichtlinii in Hera are all<br />

worthy of<br />

mention.<br />

Foster also managed to combine iberica and paradoxa<br />

with various bearded <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, such as pallida, variegata, and<br />

possibly sambucina. The habit of these hybrids<br />

is intermediate<br />

between the two parents ; they are stronger than<br />

as their other<br />

the Oncocyclus, but hardly so vigorous<br />

parents. In some the influence of paradoxa<br />

is most<br />

marked. The falls become narrow and have a broad,<br />

thick beard of blackish hairs. In iberica x pallida, of<br />

which there were no fewer than fourteen varieties, the<br />

flowers call to mind those of both the parents. The colour<br />

is rather that of pallida, in which species the orange beard<br />

is, however, overcast with the dingy brown of iberica.<br />

Since Foster's death several of these hybrids have fallen<br />

into the hands of dealers, and some have been rechristened.<br />

At Shelford the best of them had Persian names, obtained<br />

from some professor of Oriental languages, who had also<br />

supplied the interpretation thereof. Unfortunately this<br />

was lost, but names such as Dilkush remain. These<br />

plants are undoubtedly very interesting, but scarcely worth<br />

the inflated prices that are now asked for them.<br />

Another interesting result of the same kind was obtained<br />

by the present author by combining the colour and habit of<br />

a claret olbiensis a dwarf bearded <strong>Iris</strong> from the southeastern<br />

corner of France with the conspicuous veining<br />

of Korolkowii. Here, too, the yellow and the blackish<br />

beards combined to form a dingy brown, and apparently<br />

followed no law of Mendelian dominance. Nearly every


30 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

feature in all these hybrids is a kind of compromise<br />

between the characteristics of the two parents.<br />

All these hybrids are more amenable to ordinary cultivation<br />

than the pure Oncocyclus and Regelia species.<br />

Indeed, those with Pogoniris blood in them may be left<br />

in the open ground all the year round, but the Regeliocyclus<br />

hybrids are certainly the better for an annual lifting<br />

when the leaves begin to wither early in July. They<br />

should not be planted again until October.<br />

For those who contemplate hybridisation,<br />

it may be as<br />

well to insert here a warning that the Oncocyclus blood<br />

does not tend to produce clear, bright colour. It imparts<br />

a certain gloom and dinginess, which is peculiar and undoubtedly<br />

interesting scientifically, but from the purely<br />

horticultural and decorative point of view,<br />

it is useless.<br />

Moreover, 7. Leichtlinii, which is in some ways one of the<br />

most beautiful of all <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, seems always to produce the<br />

most indescribably ugly offspring when crossed with any<br />

bearded <strong>Iris</strong>. This at any rate has been the characteristic<br />

of all the specimens that the author has either raised<br />

himself or seen in the gardens of others.<br />

CHAPTER VII<br />

THE EVANSIA SECTION<br />

THE members of this group of rhizomatous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are<br />

distinguished by the fact that the falls 'are provided with<br />

a more or less jagged crest that takes the place of the beard<br />

in other <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>.


THE EVANSIA SECTION 31<br />

All the species are well worth growing. The earliest<br />

to flower and the plant that has been longest known is 7.<br />

japonica. Unfortunately in most parts of England this<br />

is a greenhouse plant, not because it is not hardy but<br />

because it will not flower out-of-doors, owing to the fact<br />

that in March and April, when it<br />

should flower, we do not<br />

get enough heat to enable it to throw up<br />

its stems. In<br />

pots, however, or in a border in a cool house this <strong>Iris</strong> is<br />

well worth growing. The broad, deep, green leaves with<br />

their polished surface provide a delightful background for<br />

the much branched stem with its numerous pale, lilac,<br />

crested flowers. The edges of the petals are waved and<br />

crimped, and the name 7. fimbriata,<br />

that has also been<br />

applied to it, is not inappropriate.<br />

When this <strong>Iris</strong> is<br />

grown in pots, it flowers best, probably,<br />

if it is left alone and allowed to become somewhat<br />

pot-bound. Water may be withheld when growth becomes<br />

less active after the flowers are over, and the rhizomes will<br />

then ripen.<br />

The individual flowers are about 3 inches across,<br />

flat in outline, owing to the fact that the standards are<br />

spreading rather than erect. Each flower lasts only about<br />

twenty-four hours, but each spathe contains three or four<br />

buds, and the numerous heads of flowers on the stem<br />

prolong the display for several weeks.<br />

Varieties with variegated leaves are said to exist, and<br />

will doubtless appeal to those who appreciate such freaks.<br />

A better <strong>Iris</strong> from the garden point of view is /. tectorum,<br />

so called because it<br />

grows on the ridge of thatched roofs<br />

in China and Japan. This has large flowers of the same<br />

shape as 7. japonica and the other members of this class.


32 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

but is of a deep blue-purple colour, slightly mottled with<br />

blotches of a darker shade. A conspicuous feature is the<br />

jagged crest, which is white with brown markings. There<br />

about the constitution of this <strong>Iris</strong><br />

appears to be something<br />

that we do not yet understand. It comes very readily from<br />

seed, and flowers within eighteen months of the first appearance<br />

of the seedlings, but in subsequent years vigorous<br />

plants are apt to lie almost dormant, or at best to produce<br />

weak growths.<br />

If it will grow on roofs, it can hardly be<br />

a gross feeder, and yet<br />

it<br />

transplanted and grown in good light<br />

seems to do best when frequently<br />

soil. The transplantation<br />

should of course take place immediately the<br />

flowers are over, or even before they have faded, and the<br />

chosen should be warm and sheltered.<br />

position<br />

Besides the type, there is a beautiful white-flowered<br />

form, the crest of which is marked with gold. It is not<br />

usually quite as vigorous as the type, nor does each stem<br />

it is one<br />

produce as many flowers, but, when well grown,<br />

of the most beautiful of all <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. It resembles the type<br />

in coming easily from seed, and is<br />

extremely accommodating<br />

in that the seedlings all come pure white. At any rate,<br />

this was the result of raising over a hundred seedlings,<br />

variation. There<br />

among which there was not the slightest<br />

is t>ne appeal that must be made on its behalf, and that<br />

is that it should always be called /. tectorum alba instead<br />

of the monstrous I. tectorum album of the catalogue writer.<br />

The Himalayan cousin of /. tectorum is distinctly disappointing.<br />

/. Milesii promises great things by its vigorous<br />

growth and yard-high leaves. Up come the tall stems,<br />

overtopping even these big leaves, and at last there unfold<br />

the insignificant flowers, barely half the size of those of


THE SMALLEST EVANSIA 33<br />

/. tectonnn. They are curiously<br />

mottled with two shades<br />

of pale and deep red-purple, and the characteristic crest<br />

of the group is conspicuous. The gardener's obvious<br />

course is to hybridise /. Milesii with pollen of /. tectorum,<br />

and this is<br />

perhaps one of the few cases where a hybrid<br />

<strong>Iris</strong> would be better than the parent. But 7. Milesii has<br />

some deep-rooted objection to being hybridised,<br />

and in<br />

spite of the many attempts that have been made no hybrid<br />

of this species is yet known. With its own pollen it is,<br />

on<br />

the other hand, readily fertile, and it sets seed in abundance.<br />

There is in commerce a form called magnifica, but any plant<br />

worthy of this name is difficult, if not impossible, to obtain.<br />

Having mentioned the largest of the Evansia, we will<br />

take next the smallest, 7. gracilipes, another Japanese plant.<br />

It likes a somewhat cool position in moist soil, where its<br />

slender rhizomes will not be parched by drought.<br />

It has<br />

narrow, grassy leaves 9 inches or a foot in height, and<br />

a slender, branching stem of about the same height, and<br />

three heads of flowers. The latter agree in shape with<br />

those of 7. tectorum, and are of a delicate pale pinkish-lilac<br />

colour. This graceful little plant<br />

deserves to be far more<br />

widely cultivated than it appears to be. That it is little<br />

known is<br />

perhaps due to the fact that it is not always quite<br />

easy to establish. This is, however, hardly a matter of<br />

astonishment, for such a frail little rhizome can scarcely<br />

be expected to resist the effects of alternate frost and thaw<br />

unless it is firmly anchored in the ground.<br />

It is therefore<br />

inadvisable to<br />

shift this plant when growth has finished for<br />

the season. It should rather be moved when growth is<br />

active.<br />

Of the southernmost representative of the <strong>Iris</strong> family<br />

C


34 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

on the mainland of Asia, namely ; /. speculatrix,<br />

little need<br />

be said, for it is not now in cultivation, although a supply<br />

of seeds has lately been obtained from Hong- Kong, where<br />

the <strong>Iris</strong> is abundant on the hills behind the town.<br />

The two remaining members of the group are American,<br />

namely, /. cristata and 7. lacustris. The former grows in<br />

damp gravel beside streams in the Central States, and the<br />

latter, which is<br />

merely a dwarf copy of cristata, is only<br />

found on the shores of Lake Huron. They both creep<br />

rapidly over the surface of the ground by means of running<br />

rhizomes, and both can be easily propagated by taking off<br />

the side-growths, which will be found ready to root shortly<br />

after the flowers fade. These two <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> have a form of<br />

seed that is found in no other species at present in<br />

cultivation, but the curious appendage which is attached<br />

to them when fresh does not seem to assist in germination,<br />

but rather the reverse.<br />

The flowers of /. cristata are of some shade of lilac<br />

with a low but distinct crest running along the centre<br />

of the haft of the falls. The stem is<br />

only an inch or so<br />

in length, but the tube is about twice as long. The<br />

flowers of 7. lacustris only differ in being somewhat<br />

smaller, and usually<br />

of a darker shade of colour.<br />

CHAPTER VIII<br />

"GERMAN" IRISES<br />

THE name " German," commonly applied to a very large<br />

number of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, is in no way specially appropriate. As a


"GERMAN" IRISES 35<br />

matter of fact, very few <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are found wild in Germany,<br />

and those that are natives of that country are not the<br />

parents of the plants now known by the name.<br />

The explanation lies in the fact that, roughly speaking,<br />

all the <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> comprised under this title resemble, in growth<br />

of which the botanical<br />

and shape, the common purple flag,<br />

name is I. germanica. Even as applied to this plant, the<br />

name is not particularly appropriate, for no certain instance<br />

is known of the plant growing wild anywhere in Germany,<br />

while forms of it extend from Spain to Nepal. Moreover,<br />

its various forms appear to have been long in cultivation, and<br />

it is<br />

impossible to say that the plant is growing where no<br />

human agency is likely ever to have placed it.<br />

For " garden purposes, German " <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are usually<br />

divided under such names as germanicae, pallidae,<br />

variegatae, &c., according as they most closely resemble<br />

one or other of certain supposed wild species. Without<br />

entering into the botanical details of these various species,<br />

it<br />

may be useful to give here a list, under the usual<br />

headings, of the most effective garden<br />

forms. Endless<br />

varieties are in existence, and the number is<br />

constantly<br />

increasing, though a new name does not always mean a<br />

new <strong>Iris</strong>.<br />

The subject of the ultimate parentage of this group of<br />

plants is very difficult, and though the method of solution<br />

that suggests itself, namely, breeding experiments,<br />

is<br />

obvious enough,<br />

it is<br />

unfortunately almost impossible<br />

in England, owing to the fact that most of the plants<br />

which appear to be wild, and the possible parents of<br />

which we are in search, prove in our gardens to be almost<br />

invariably sterile. Thus the so-called type of /. germanica


36 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

is nearly always defective in its sexual organs<br />

or else its<br />

pollen appears to be imperfect, with the result that, though<br />

large capsules sometimes form and develop, they prove<br />

in the end to contain nothing but undeveloped ovules.<br />

In Southern Europe, however in the south of France,<br />

for example the problem might be solved, for there<br />

apparently<br />

/. germanica is fertile, to judge from the<br />

numerous colour forms of it that may be found in cultivation.<br />

It would, for example, be extremely interesting to<br />

know the result of crossing /. germanica and /. pallida<br />

with pollen of /. variegata and vice versa, for it is almost<br />

certain that the garden forms with yellow standards and<br />

brown falls are derived from /. variegata, but we do not<br />

know the origin of such plants as /. sambucina, I. squalens,<br />

and /. lurida, nor even whether they are really good<br />

species.<br />

THE GERMANICA SECTION<br />

The common purple flag is too well known to need<br />

much description, but there are other forms of it,<br />

either<br />

local or of seedling origin, which deserve to be much better<br />

known than they usually are. For instance, a dwarf and<br />

rather bluer form comes from Fontarabie, while the giantflowered<br />

macrantha was sent to Foster from Amas in Asia<br />

Minor. In colour it also is slightly bluer than the ordinary<br />

germanica type. Quite recently MM. Vilmorin-Andrieux<br />

of Paris have introduced an improvement even on Amas<br />

under the name of Oriflamme. This is indeed a noble plant,<br />

growing nearly 3 feet high in good soil,<br />

and bearing<br />

immense flowers. In colour it differs little,<br />

if at all,<br />

from<br />

the two shades of blue-purple of Amas.


THE GERMANICA SECTION 37<br />

Another good "germanica," of a totally different shade<br />

of colour, came to Foster from Kharput in Asia Minor, and<br />

is named accordingly. It is remarkable for its distinctly<br />

red-purple colouring the standards being, as usual, lighter<br />

in shade than the falls and for the great length of all its<br />

segments.<br />

If it has a fault, it is that the standards are of<br />

such delicate texture that they very easily feel the effects of<br />

rough weather, and collapse. It should therefore be grown<br />

in a rather sheltered position well back in a border, where<br />

its<br />

flowers may get some protection from the wind.<br />

The darkest coloured of all the true germanicas is /. nepalensis,<br />

whose origin is sufficiently<br />

indicated in the name.<br />

It is about the same height as the common germanica,<br />

perfectly hardy, and of a deep red-black colour, the standards<br />

Somewhat similar to this is /. Kochii,<br />

in this case being practically of the same shade as the falls.<br />

of a dark blackpurple<br />

colour, nearly uniform throughout the whole flower.<br />

A very beautiful, almost blue relative of /.<br />

germanica<br />

has been introduced under the name of /. Madonna. It<br />

is<br />

probably a wild plant, and, coming<br />

from a southern<br />

latitude, it seems unable to grow with the vigour<br />

of the<br />

other kinds in our cooler climate. It is somewhat dwarf,<br />

and both falls and standards are of a distinctly blue shade of<br />

purple. It is still, unfortunately, somewhat rare, but will<br />

make a notable addition to any group of German <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> by<br />

reason of its<br />

unique colouring. Whether the author is<br />

justified or not in holding the opinion that<br />

the well-known<br />

/. albicans is really the albino form of this /. Madonna, the<br />

fact remains that the former is the best pure-white bearded<br />

<strong>Iris</strong> that we possess, although<br />

it is dwarfer and scarcely<br />

perhaps so robust as /. florentina, with somewhat grey-


38 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

or blue-white flowers and a more widely branching stem.<br />

In addition, there is also in existence, though<br />

it is more rare<br />

in cultivation, a white form of /. germanica, which corresponds<br />

closely to the atropurpurea or deep violet-black<br />

form.<br />

Taken as a whole, the germanicae are the earliest to<br />

flower of all the so-called German <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, and are at their<br />

best in May at any rate in the south of England. Unless<br />

they are banished to sunless corners or choked in the " wild<br />

garden," they can usually be relied upon to flower well. It<br />

is seldom that they suffer from such a catastrophe as befell<br />

them this year (1911), when the extremely hard frost and<br />

cutting east wind of the first days of April literally nipped<br />

all the buds of the typical<br />

/. germanica that were not growing<br />

in very sheltered positions,<br />

while the stems were still<br />

only a few inches long, and could only be found by cutting<br />

open the bases of the tufts of the leaves.<br />

THE PALLIDA GROUP<br />

This group takes its name from some South European<br />

plants, which, as compared with germanicas, are certainly<br />

paler, both as regards the flowers and the foliage, which<br />

is<br />

very glaucous. They are also distinguished by the curious<br />

spathes, which assume the appearance of whitish paper or<br />

parchment even before the tips of the buds emerge from<br />

them. The typical pallida has a tall stem that grows to a<br />

height of 3 feet and is closely set in the upper part with<br />

numerous, pale lavender flowers, which, in the sunlight, at<br />

any rate, have a faint, rosy tint. The conspicuous beard<br />

is composed of thickly-set orange-coloured hairs. An even


THE PALLIDA GROUP 39<br />

more striking plant<br />

is the Dalmatian pallida, sometimes<br />

known as Princess Beatrice. The colour is<br />

very similar to<br />

that of the type, but the flowers have more substance and<br />

the plants have a sturdier appearance, although the stems<br />

do not rise to such a height, nor do they carry quite so<br />

many flowers. For some reason or other, this plant is slow<br />

of increase. It seems to put so much of its strength into<br />

producing its huge flowers of wonderful substance that it<br />

has little<br />

energy left to form much new growth for succeeding<br />

years.<br />

In this respect,<br />

it is<br />

surpassed by<br />

a rather darkercoloured<br />

form of similar habit, known as Albert Victor.<br />

This grows more freely, and it is a pity that it has not quite<br />

such a clear, bright colour-scheme as Princess Beatrice.<br />

However incongruous<br />

it<br />

may seem, there are some<br />

pallidas that are distinctly dark in colour. For instance,<br />

Foster had one form from Monte Brione, of which the<br />

flowers are a uniform dark red-lilac or lavender-purple,<br />

and in most collections similar forms may be found under<br />

varying names.<br />

To this group, too, belong the numerous varieties,<br />

whose flowers are in colour an approach to pink. One<br />

of the best known, of a pale shade, is Queen of May, Her<br />

Majesty being somewhat deeper, and the colour perhaps<br />

not quite so clear. The newer Trautlieb is of a soft rose<br />

colour. A dwarf pink, and one moreover that is<br />

very floriferous,<br />

is Mrs. Allan Grey, which was a hybrid obtained<br />

by Foster by fertilising 7. Cengialtii with pollen of Queen<br />

of May. Cengialtii itself and its variety Loppio come from<br />

the slopes adjacent to Monte Baldo on the north-eastern<br />

side of the Lago di Garda. Cengialtii with its clear blue


40 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

purple<br />

flowers is the<br />

more charming of the two, and very<br />

beautiful hybrids of it can be obtained by fertilising it<br />

with pollen of the typical pallida. The result is<br />

usually<br />

a series of plants intermediate in habit between Cengialtii<br />

in some cases set off with a most<br />

and pallida, very free flowering, of various shades of distinctly<br />

blue-purple,<br />

striking orange beard.<br />

The varieties of pallida are endless, but perhaps the<br />

present list may be closed by a reference to two plants<br />

which have in them a good deal of blood that is not<br />

pallida, but which are conveniently taken here. They are<br />

both rosy-purple of a much deeper shade than Queen of<br />

May, and may be obtained under the names of Madame<br />

Pacquitte and Cytheree.<br />

THE VARIEGATA GROUP<br />

The wild /.<br />

variegata is chiefly found in Austria and<br />

Hungary, and has clear yellow standards and falls that are<br />

more or less completely covered with dark red-brown or<br />

black-brown veins, which often coalesce and run together.<br />

From this come all the varieties with clear yellow standards<br />

of varying shades and usually with brownish falls.<br />

It is<br />

commonly supposed that Innocenza is a whiteflowered<br />

form of variegata, and it<br />

certainly has many of<br />

the characteristics of the type. The pure white segments<br />

are slightly reticulated at the base, and the fall has a golden<br />

beard.<br />

Of the variegatae a good example is Gracchus, with<br />

particularly bright, clear yellow standards and falls closely<br />

veined with red-brown on a white ground. John Eraser


PLATE IV<br />

I.<br />

JACQUINIANA A GOOD "GERMAN" IRIS


THE AMCENA GROUP 43<br />

is deeper in colour, and the falls are distinctly of a rich<br />

mahogany shade.<br />

Maori King is even more richly coloured,<br />

and the falls are edged with gold, while the finest of all<br />

is perhaps King of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, a recent introduction from Germany.<br />

In several instances the brown veins have entirely<br />

disappeared from the falls, giving us such clear yellow<br />

varieties as aurea (which must not be confused with the<br />

beardless species from Kashmir) and Mrs. Neubronner.<br />

With the other sections of " German " <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> we are<br />

on less certain grounds, when we attribute their origin<br />

to any wild species, but it<br />

may be convenient here to keep<br />

the conventional names for the groups.<br />

THE AMCENA GROUP<br />

This name has been given to those <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> of which the<br />

standards are pure<br />

white while the falls are of some shade<br />

of blue or violet. Of these one of the most striking is<br />

Thorbeck, with deep velvety-violet falls, contrasting strongly<br />

with the white standards. For this, the inferior variety<br />

Victorine is often substituted, but it is not so pleasing,<br />

for the white of the standards is marred by a few<br />

irregular blotches of the same colour as the falls. Even<br />

more handsome is an unnamed seedling of Black<br />

Prince, a late-flowering <strong>Iris</strong> which will be mentioned<br />

among the neglecta group. Here the standards are<br />

white, and the falls of the deepest velvety-violet with a<br />

conspicuous silvery border. The flowers closely resemble<br />

in shape the somewhat spreading outline of Black Prince.<br />

be of interest to record here that self-fertilised seed<br />

It<br />

may


44 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

of this last gave seedlings both of the variegata and of<br />

the amcena types as well as others more nearly resembling<br />

itself in colour. In all cases the shape of the flower bore<br />

a distinct likeness to that of Black Prince, and all agreed<br />

in having a pale edge to the falls.<br />

In other members of the amcena group, the falls are<br />

veined with some shade of blue or purple on a white<br />

ground. Of this type, it is almost impossible to give<br />

names, because they are apt to vary with different growers,<br />

and there is no standard by which differences may be<br />

settled.<br />

If examples must be given, Glorietta and Morpheus<br />

are names usually applied to two very striking varieties.<br />

THE NEGLECTA GROUP<br />

The above-mentioned Black Prince may perhaps be<br />

taken as a good representative of the neglecta section, the<br />

members of which are characteristic by having both<br />

standards and falls of some shade of blue, though the<br />

former are always of a lighter shade than the latter.<br />

Another very good neglecta variety has<br />

been called Perfection,<br />

which is both earlier and taller than Black Prince, but<br />

not quite so rich in colour.<br />

THE SQUALENS GROUP<br />

This group comprises some of the most richly coloured<br />

and also some of the most sombre of all the " German "<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. The standards seem always to have yellow and<br />

purple of various shades struggling for the mastery, with<br />

the result that the colour is of a curious lurid tint that<br />

is not easy to describe. The falls are darker, of some


THE PLICATA SECTION 45<br />

shade of purple or brown-crimson. Of this section the<br />

best-known representative is<br />

perhaps Jacquiniana, with a<br />

combination of coppery-purple and velvety-maroon. A<br />

new introduction by Vilmorin, Prosper Laugier,<br />

is even<br />

finer, being both larger and, if anything, more richly<br />

coloured. A much smaller flower, but one that well repays<br />

close inspection, is borne by an <strong>Iris</strong> sometimes grown<br />

under the name of Abdul Aziz, though such forms are<br />

so easily raised from seed, that names are really somewhat<br />

misleading. In this, the lilac or deep lavender standards<br />

appear to be sprinkled at the edge with gold dust, and the<br />

effect of the sunlight on this edge is delightful.<br />

THE PLICATA SECTION<br />

The typical /. plicata has white flowers delicately<br />

veined at the edges with pale blue-lilac. It is probably,<br />

if not certainly, of hybrid origin, and the best-known<br />

garden forms are Madame Chereau, Mrs. Reuthe, and<br />

Jeanne d'Arc, though many of the best in existence have<br />

probably received no names at all,<br />

or names that are<br />

confined to the gardens where the plants were first raised<br />

from seed and where they are still<br />

grown.<br />

IN this chapter it<br />

CHAPTER IX<br />

OTHER BEARDED IRISES<br />

is intended to notice some of the various<br />

bearded species that do not readily find a place in the<br />

definite sections of the previous chapter.


46 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

First in order of flowering after 7.<br />

pumila, which will<br />

be mentioned elsewhere, is /. chamceiris, to one or other<br />

of the forms of which belong nearly all the varieties of dwarf<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, usually known as 7. pumila. Roughly speaking,<br />

when the stem is<br />

obvious, the <strong>Iris</strong> is not a form of<br />

pumila but probably belongs to 7. chamceiris.<br />

Another dwarf <strong>Iris</strong> of many synonyms is 7. aphylla, to<br />

which all such names as bohemica, hungarica, biflora,<br />

Fieberi, must be referred. Its distinguishing mark is the<br />

fact that the stem divides almost at the ground line.<br />

An early-flowering <strong>Iris</strong> of uncertain origin, but of<br />

considerable garden value, is 7. flavescens, a pale yellowflowered<br />

and very free-blooming plant. It is said to come<br />

from the Caucasus, but this is probably a confusion which<br />

has yet to be unravelled.<br />

The true 7. Albertii is still rare, and is remarkable for the<br />

way in which the conspicuous broad veins stop abruptly at<br />

a straight line across the fall at the extremity of the beard.<br />

The colour of the type<br />

is a clear light purple, though<br />

a yellow form is also known in cultivation. Foster<br />

obtained a pale pearly-grey form, which is apt to flower<br />

unexpectedly at any time of year, but it is uncertain<br />

whether it is of hybrid origin or merely a seedling.<br />

7. Kashmiriana seems to have a peculiarly unmanageable<br />

temper, for it<br />

always apparently dies out after flowering<br />

well in the first year after its arrival from the East. Its<br />

flowers are of a milky white, with falls that tend to spread<br />

rather than to droop. Foster obtained from it a beautiful<br />

hybrid, with white flowers of great substance and only a<br />

slight blue tinge, which is easier to it<br />

manage, though can<br />

hardly be said to be one of the hardiest of garden <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>.


LARGE BEARDED IRISES 47<br />

This is now in commerce as the Shelford variety of<br />

/. Kashmiriana.<br />

There remain to be mentioned some large bearded<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> from Asia Minor and Syria, whose relationship to one<br />

another is not yet determined. The names that have been<br />

given to them are Biliottii, troyana, cypriana, junonia,<br />

and Ricardii. They are all distinguished by their tall<br />

stature (especially /. Ricardii), by their habit of flowering<br />

late, after the other bearded <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, and by their large<br />

flowers, usually of two shades of lilac and purple. With<br />

the exception of the first two, which do well under<br />

ordinary conditions, none of them are quite easy to<br />

manage, and they seem to want more heat in summer<br />

than our climate usually vouchsafes them. Several hybrids<br />

have been raised, notably Caterina, Carthusian, and several<br />

fine hybrids, which have come from Ricardii when crossed<br />

with various " German " <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. These latter have been<br />

raised in France and are not yet in commerce.<br />

are larger than those of any of<br />

The flowers<br />

the ordinary German <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>,<br />

and in a warm district in heavy soil they should prove<br />

valuable acquisitions to our gardens. The seed parent,<br />

Ricardii, is not a very hardy plant, and has the unfortunate<br />

habit of growing during the winter only to be injured<br />

by late frosts. Later in the season it revives, but there is<br />

of course little<br />

hope of flowers being produced under these<br />

circumstances.<br />

More is to be hoped, perhaps, from /.<br />

junonia. The<br />

flowers are scarcely so large as those of /. Ricardii, though<br />

they do not fall far short of them. The stem, however,<br />

is nearly as sturdy, and the plant has the great advantage<br />

that it behaves in winter like /. pallida and dies down


48 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

entirely. The new growths are therefore later in making<br />

their appearance, and pass unharmed through the vicissitudes<br />

of our spring. The standards of /.<br />

junonia are of a<br />

pale blue, contrasting sharply with the much deeper<br />

purple-blue falls, which spread rather than droop.<br />

CHAPTER X<br />

THE APOGON IRISES<br />

THE great division of Apogon or beardless <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> contains<br />

many natural groups of species that agree in the possession<br />

of several characteristics, either in habit of growth, in the<br />

shape of the seeds, or in the arrangement of the inflorescence.<br />

It also contains a number of species that hardly<br />

seem to form part of any group, but stand by themselves,<br />

having in common only the absence of beard. Moreover,<br />

this absence of beard is<br />

only relative, for many of the<br />

so-called Apogon <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are distinctly downy or pubescent<br />

along the haft and on the centre of the blade. Indeed, the<br />

Austrian form of /. spuria was called by one botanist /.<br />

subbarbata, the slightly bearded <strong>Iris</strong>, on account of the<br />

presence of this pubescence, which, however, is not in any<br />

case so prominent as to lead us to confuse its possessor<br />

with the members of the bearded group.<br />

It will be convenient, perhaps, to take together those<br />

members of the division which form natural groups, following<br />

roughly the order of their flowering seasons rather than<br />

any alphabetical arrangement. The first<br />

group must then


THE APOGON IRISES 49<br />

be that which contains 7. stylosa. Strictly speaking, we<br />

should not use the name stylosa, but that of 7. unguicularis,<br />

which is the senior by a dozen years or so. However that<br />

may be, the <strong>Iris</strong>, which is best known as 7. stylosa, is by far<br />

the most valuable of the winter-flowering <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. It comes<br />

from Algeria, and likes a well-drained soil containing lime,<br />

and does best when planted in a warm, dry, sheltered corner<br />

where it will escape the coldest winter winds and catch all<br />

the available sun. It thrives close up against the wall of a<br />

house, especially if that wall happens to have warm pipes<br />

on the other side. The plant<br />

is<br />

cunningly adapted for reproducing<br />

its kind even in winter. It has a very short stem,<br />

which usually does not extend above the ground level.<br />

Then come a pair of long, narrow spathes, each pair being<br />

wrapt in a sheathing leaf and containing one flower. The<br />

ovary is situated at the base of these spathes, and the ovules<br />

have thus three wrappings to keep out the cold. The flower<br />

itself is raised on a long perianth tube, which usually attains<br />

the length of 6 inches.<br />

searched for among<br />

In cold weather the buds should be<br />

the leaves a sharp look-out being kept<br />

for slugs and snails at the same time and picked when the<br />

flowers have risen wholly clear out of the spathes. Some<br />

cafe must be exercised in pulling the buds. It is easy to<br />

crush the slender, delicate tube, and a violent jerk is apt to<br />

break off the stem with perhaps two other immature buds,<br />

which will then fail to develop. If the tube be firmly<br />

grasped and pulled very gently, it is possible with a little<br />

practice to obtain the whole length of the tube uninjured.<br />

It is a joy to watch the buds quiver open in the warmth of<br />

a room on a cold winter's day. They even mistake an<br />

electric lamp for the sun, and quickly respond<br />

to its influence,<br />

D


50 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

Their scent is delightful, and the colour is of various shades<br />

of lilac, purple, or even white. In all cases there is a central<br />

band of yellow or orange extending on to the blade.<br />

Many seedling varieties and local forms of this <strong>Iris</strong> are<br />

known, and it is a curious fact that those forms that flower<br />

earliest usually have foliage long enough<br />

to shelter the<br />

flowers, while the late-flowering varieties throw up the<br />

blooms above the foliage.<br />

Among the late-flowering forms there is a variety with<br />

blooms of a dark reddish-purple called " speciosa," and<br />

various dwarf forms from the shores and islands of the<br />

Greek Archipelago. The easternmost form is again more<br />

luxuriant and has much broader foliage than the Greek<br />

plants. It comes from Lazistan, on the coast of the Black<br />

Sea at the south-eastern corner, and is known either as<br />

lazica or pontica.<br />

The flowering season of these various forms extends<br />

from November until about the end of April, and the number<br />

of flowers thrown up by a well-established clump in a warm,<br />

sheltered position is quite amazing.<br />

If the roots are disturbed<br />

at the proper season, either in April or early in<br />

September, it seems to do no harm, but it is usually not<br />

advisable to break up a clump too much. A wet clay soil<br />

does not suit these <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> in England, even though in Greece<br />

they prosper in the stiffest clay. The heat of our summers<br />

is usually insufficient to penetrate far into the soil unless<br />

this is light and porous, and heavy soils should therefore<br />

be lightened by a liberal admixture of mortar rubble before<br />

planting I. unguicularis.<br />

About the time that the last forms of this <strong>Iris</strong><br />

go out<br />

of flower, there appear the buds of a little-known species,


A LITTLE-KNOWN SPECIES 51<br />

called /. ruthenica. It is found wild from Transylvania in<br />

Hungary to Peking and Shantung. As is<br />

only natural in<br />

the case of such a widely distributed species, local forms are<br />

numerous, and this is fortunate, for some are by no means<br />

floriferous. It is also an <strong>Iris</strong> that does not accommodate<br />

itself to the nurseryman's habit of moving most herbaceous<br />

plants<br />

in the autumn. In common with other <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> that<br />

possess only a very slender rhizome, it<br />

must be moved while<br />

growth is active, and roots are consequently being formed.<br />

The flowers appear among the grassy leaves on stems<br />

perhaps only an inch or two or as much as 6 inches long.<br />

The spathes are usually tinged with pink, and each contains<br />

usually only a single flower. The colour is a dark blue,<br />

with white veinings about the bend of the falls. This<br />

species should form close mats of foliage not more than<br />

9 inches or a foot high at most when fully grown, and it<br />

might be far more widely planted in rock gardens, where<br />

it at is, present, almost unknown.<br />

Various confusions have occurred with regard to this<br />

<strong>Iris</strong>. One nurseryman in England<br />

distributed it at an exorbitant<br />

price as the American /. Purdyi, though a glance<br />

at the description of the latter would have shown<br />

that its flowers are always yellow. On the other<br />

hand,<br />

/. humilis has been sent out from Holland under<br />

this name, and the mistake is not likely to be easily<br />

discovered, for 7. humilis is distinguished by the fact<br />

that it seldom flowers at all. However, the two can be<br />

distinguished even in leaf with a little care. The foliage<br />

of /. humilis is stiff and rigid and somewhat glaucous,<br />

while that of /. ruthenica is of more fan-shaped, drooping<br />

growth without the glaucous bloom.


52 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

There is usually in flower before the end of April, in<br />

company with /. ruthenica, another equally widely distributed<br />

<strong>Iris</strong>, namely, I. ensata. Whenever any kind friend<br />

sends home <strong>Iris</strong> seeds from Central Asia or even plants from<br />

China, they usually turn out to be /. ensata. It seems to<br />

abound everywhere in Central Asia and Northern China. It<br />

is<br />

not very ornamental, but some varieties have flowers remarkable<br />

for the delicacy of their grey-blue colouring and exquisite<br />

veinings.<br />

A curious feature of this <strong>Iris</strong> is that the new<br />

growths always appear pale yellow in spring. The colour<br />

is at once conspicuous in an <strong>Iris</strong> garden, and does not occur<br />

in any other species to anything like the same extent. The<br />

flowers appear among the leaves usually before the foliage<br />

is more than half grown. In Central Asia, where the<br />

change from winter to spring<br />

is more sudden and complete<br />

than with us, this <strong>Iris</strong> appears to throw up<br />

its blooms<br />

very quickly, and they thus rise above, or at least to a<br />

level with the leaves. It is not a difficult <strong>Iris</strong> to grow, and<br />

appears to have but few likes or dislikes in the matter of soil.<br />

Once May is reached, it becomes difficult to keep to<br />

any strictly chronological order, for this month and June<br />

are the height of the <strong>Iris</strong> season.<br />

to flower after<br />

Usually the next Apogon<br />

ruthenica and ensata is an American species<br />

which frequently goes by the name of /. Tolmeiana, to which,<br />

however, it is only doubtfully entitled. This is a plant with<br />

a simple, foot-high stem, and two flowers of some shade<br />

of lilac, more or less blotched or marked with yellow at<br />

the junction of haft and blade. It is nearly allied to the<br />

mountain forms of /. longipetala, a species possessing a<br />

taller stem that sometimes bears a side branch and always<br />

has three or four flowers in its spathe. Sir Michael Foster


THE CALIFORNIAN SPECIES 53<br />

crossed these two species and obtained some very floriferous<br />

hybrids, which are now obtainable under the awkward<br />

but informing name of Tollong (Tolmeianaxlongipetala).<br />

The true /. longipetala has larger flowers, the falls being<br />

veined with deep violet on a grey-white ground, and the<br />

standards being plain lilac. These two <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> and their<br />

hybrid offspring are some of the few American species that<br />

apparently succeed in calcareous soil. Foster was practically<br />

unable to grow in the wonderful Shelford garden any<br />

other of the beautiful Californian species, which with the<br />

exception of /. longipetala are lime-haters.<br />

As these Californian plants have been mentioned, it<br />

will perhaps be best to give<br />

an account of them next.<br />

They are as little known as they are beautiful. Two things<br />

seem to have contributed to keep them out of our gardens.<br />

The first is<br />

undoubtedly the great difficulty that is encountered<br />

in establishing them, when transplantation is<br />

attempted at the favourite autumn season. They must be<br />

moved when in growth, and preferably when growth<br />

is<br />

just beginning in spring. An examination of the base of the<br />

side growth will soon show when the new roots are pushing<br />

out, and this is the time when plants may be shifted with<br />

success.<br />

The only other method of obtaining these species is to<br />

raise seedlings and plant them out in summer, when they are<br />

soil rich in humus and deficient in<br />

still quite small, in light<br />

lime. Growth will then be rapid, and the plants well able<br />

to stand the winter, and some should flower in the following<br />

are all<br />

year. The members of the Californian group<br />

absolutely hardy in England, even though we might have


54 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

expected them to be delicate. Of one species, indeed, /.<br />

Douglasiana, from the neighbourhood of San Francisco, the<br />

foliage is at its best in winter, and a broad clump of the<br />

evergreen leaves is a striking sight at the time when most<br />

other <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are looking their worst, or have hidden their<br />

heads entirely beneath the surface.<br />

The beauty of the flowers of these <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> is, however, well<br />

worth the few elementary precautions that must be taken in<br />

order to establish the plants. /. Douglasiana<br />

has the most<br />

bewilderingly variable colour forms, from the deepest violet,<br />

through rosy-lilac, to a pale yellowish-fawn colour. The<br />

stems produce several heads, each bearing several flowers,<br />

so that the display lasts for some weeks.<br />

Another almost equally variable species, both in stature<br />

and in colour, is /. macrosiphon, which, as its name implies,<br />

has a long perianth tube. The stem may be very short or<br />

as much as 6 inches in length, and the colour seems to<br />

vary from a deep purple to pale lavender and even white.<br />

This <strong>Iris</strong> is rarely seen in cultivation, owing to the difficulty<br />

in establishing the plant to which allusion has already been<br />

made.<br />

A closely allied pair of Californian species consists of 7.<br />

bracteata and /. Purdyi. In both the flowers are yellow, the<br />

shade being somewhat deeper in /. bracteata, and the falls<br />

have the same curious network of brown-crimson veins.<br />

The difference between the plants lies in the fact that 7.<br />

bracteata has a very short perianth tube, while that of 7.<br />

Purdyi is about 2 inches in length.<br />

The leaves of the<br />

former are scanty in number and very tough, about ^-j<br />

inch broad, while those of the latter are more numerous<br />

and only about half the width.


IRIS TENAX 55<br />

It is not yet certain whether these species are liable to<br />

give colour variations when raised from self-fertilised seed,<br />

but /. bracteata has already produced some delightful and<br />

very free-flowering forms with soft-pink flowers. The seed<br />

parent grew near /. Douglasiana, and it is possible that some<br />

passing bee transferred the pollen of this latter to the flower<br />

of 7.<br />

bracteata.<br />

These Californian species seem to run in pairs, for yet<br />

another consists of 7. tenax and 7. Hartwegil. These are<br />

both of slender growth, producing<br />

leaves and' stems from 6 inches to i foot in length, each<br />

close tufts of narrow<br />

bearing about three flowers. Botanically, there is really<br />

very<br />

little difference between the two. The flowers of 7.<br />

tenax are somewhat larger and the segments of a different<br />

shape. As a garden plant 7. tenax is by far the more valuable.<br />

It ranges in colour from a deep claret colour, with a network<br />

of silvery veins on the bend of the falls, through<br />

lilac and pale lavender to a soft pale grey. The foliage,<br />

too, is largely evergreen, and the leaves are of some length<br />

even in the depth of winter. 7. Hartwegii, on the other<br />

of a pale straw shade, and is altogether<br />

hand, has shown no sign of colour variation, being always<br />

a somewhat insignificant<br />

little species.<br />

All the Californian <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> delight in a well-drained soil<br />

rich in humus, and should have full sun. They seem to<br />

abhor lime and clay.<br />

We must now return to the Old World, to a widely<br />

distributed group of plants that are characterised by flowers<br />

of the same shape as those of 7.<br />

xiphium (the Spanish <strong>Iris</strong>),<br />

and by the formation of the ovary, which is more or less<br />

three-sided, with a double ridge running down each corner.


56 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

The seeds, too, of all the members of this group closely<br />

resemble one another. Of these, 7. graminea has been in<br />

cultivation in England for at least two centuries and<br />

probably longer. Its home is in Southern Europe, and<br />

it owes its name to its<br />

close-growing tufts of grass-like<br />

leaves, among which the numerous flowers are almost<br />

hidden. It is not a very ornamental <strong>Iris</strong>, but those who<br />

like sweet-scented flowers will value this species more<br />

than most others, for its<br />

perfume is that of a ripe greengage.<br />

It is true that among seedlings some specimens are much<br />

more strongly scented than others, but a little care in<br />

selection will soon eliminate the worthless plants.<br />

Very similar to 7. graminea, but smaller, is 7. hutnilis,<br />

which is distinguished for its habit of sulking and refusing<br />

to flower. Probably we gardeners are to blame and not the<br />

plant, but the fact remains that even the ingenuity<br />

of the<br />

Dutchmen has not yet succeeded in making this plant<br />

flower. Herbarium specimens show that it flowers well in<br />

its home in Transylvania and in the Caucasus, and that it<br />

differs from 7.<br />

graminea by having scarcely any stem at all<br />

and an inch or two of perianth tube. In cultivation the<br />

author had never seen flowers of this <strong>Iris</strong> until one of his<br />

plants flowered in 1911.<br />

We come next to I.<br />

spuria,<br />

the various forms of which<br />

are perhaps more perplexing than those of any other<br />

species. Its representatives range from Spain to Kashmir,<br />

and the names that botanists have given to the various<br />

local forms are legion. In Spain it is a slender plant<br />

with somewhat thick and rigid, rather glaucous, narrow<br />

leaves, and has a stem about a foot in height producing<br />

a single head of two or three flowers, packed one above


PLATE V<br />

ONE OF THE NEW GIANT XIPHIUMS OR<br />

"DUTCH" IRISES


A COMMON ASIATIC IRIS 59<br />

the other close to the axis, on pedicels of unequal length.<br />

In Kashmir its relative grows 3 or 4 feet high, and bears<br />

a tall stem with about three closely packed heads each<br />

bearing several flowers. The colour also varies : it may<br />

be yellow or a mixture of yellow and white, or it may be<br />

some shade of lavender blue more or less veined with<br />

white.<br />

A Central Asian form of this <strong>Iris</strong> has received the name<br />

of Giildenstadtiana. It is a poor form, with flowers of<br />

small size unredeemed by any good features. Like most<br />

unwelcome intruders in our gardens,<br />

it is a most prolific<br />

seed-bearer, and if ever, after much correspondence with<br />

those in foreign parts, some wonderful <strong>Iris</strong> seeds arrive,<br />

the chances are that, if and when they at length germinate<br />

and finally flower, the grower will find himself in possession<br />

of one more form of this ubiquitous <strong>Iris</strong> or of the<br />

equally ubiquitous 7. ensata. There is preserved in the<br />

Kew Herbarium a letter from Dr. Lange, a Danish botanist,<br />

who tried to form a collection of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> soon after the middle<br />

of last century, and who after laboriously getting together a<br />

large number, complained that " the larger part of the <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

that he had educated from seeds had received improper<br />

names." /. Giildenstadtiana is one of the chief offenders<br />

in company with /. Pseudacorus and /. versicolor, and here<br />

is the explanation. All these seed freely, and the seeds germinate<br />

as readily. The consequence<br />

is that seedlings come<br />

up among rare or delicate species<br />

in the borders of botanical<br />

gardens, and finally choke or oust the legitimate occupants.<br />

The labels still remain, and the seeds are then carelessly collected<br />

and distributed in the name of the more desirable<br />

but departed species.


60 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

But to return to the more valuable members of the<br />

spuria group. The Austrian form is<br />

capable of giving<br />

good deep blue flowers, and so too is<br />

probably the<br />

Caucasian /. spuria Notha. The Kashmir plants are probably<br />

the finest of all those forms with purple as opposed<br />

to yellow flowers, though they are not yet commonly<br />

found in cultivation. However, they do not differ widely<br />

from the hybrids that Sir Michael Foster obtained by<br />

crossing a large yellow-flowered /. Monnieri with pollen<br />

from /. spuria. These hybrids are of various shades of<br />

lavender, or blue-purple, and are showy garden plants.<br />

The best of the yellow-flowered races have been called<br />

ochroleuca, Monnieri, and aurea. The first comes from<br />

Asia Minor, and has large flowers of yellow edged with, 01<br />

rather shading into, white, and grows from 3 to 6 feet high<br />

according to soil and position. Monnieri has wholly<br />

yellow flowers of a deep lemon shade, while aurea is a<br />

Kashmir plant with flowers of a deep golden colour, distinguished<br />

by its crimpled segments. The origin of<br />

Monnieri is veiled in mystery.<br />

It was first described as a<br />

garden plant, and the supposed specimens of it in all the<br />

chief herbaria of Europe which were obtained from Crete<br />

are not this <strong>Iris</strong> at all, but 7. Pseudacorus,<br />

our common<br />

yellow water-flag. It<br />

may well be that it arose as a seedling<br />

form of some variety of spuria or 7. ochroleuca. A hybrid<br />

ochraurea, whose name sufficiently indicates its parentage,<br />

is<br />

perhaps more free flowering than any of the above.<br />

All the plants do well in heavy soil. If the soil is<br />

naturally light and dry, it must be kept cool by plentiful<br />

additions of old manure or decayed humus, and they<br />

all<br />

respond to liberal supplies of moisture during the growing


A SIBERIAN PLANT 61<br />

season. The sturdy, sword-shaped, upright leaves are a<br />

welcome addition to any border, set off as they usually are<br />

by a graceful twist in their growth and topped by the large<br />

clean-coloured flowers.<br />

Another large group of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> that make good and showy<br />

garden plants may be distinguished by the name of its bestknown<br />

member,<br />

/. sibirica. This is a European as well as<br />

a Siberian plant, and in its best forms has hollow stems<br />

3 feet or more in height, rising high above the narrow<br />

leaves and bearing a lateral, as well as the terminal, head of<br />

several flowers. The colour is usually blue, more or less<br />

veined with white, though several<br />

almost white forms are<br />

not uncommon. It is<br />

very easily raised from seed, and the<br />

young plants, planted out early and well treated, should<br />

flower a year later. The best forms can then be selected,<br />

either for size, shape, or colour, or even floriferousness,<br />

for individual plants certainly vary in their capacity for<br />

throwing up a large number of flower spikes. The clumps<br />

it is decided to keep should then be left alone, and if<br />

the soil is rich and not too dry their beauty will increase<br />

from year to year. The individual flowers are somewhat<br />

small, but the effect of a number of plants<br />

of fine forms<br />

of this <strong>Iris</strong> is<br />

very striking.<br />

A fine Eastern relative of /. sibirica is I. orientalis,<br />

which is indeed probably a distinct species,<br />

if we may rely<br />

upon the characters of the seeds and the capsule and on the<br />

general habit of the plant. The flowers are of nearly the<br />

same shape of those of /. sibirica, but larger, fewer in<br />

number, and not raised much above the foliage. The<br />

this is<br />

spathes are usually brightly tinged with red, though<br />

a somewhat variable feature. Of this <strong>Iris</strong> there are forms


62 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

with flowers of a milk-white colour, among the best of which<br />

is<br />

that known in gardens as Snow Queen.<br />

In recent years the exploration of Western China has<br />

added many beautiful plants to our gardens, and it is to the<br />

two well-known plant collectors, Wilson and Forrest, that we<br />

are indebted for two yellow-flowered relatives of /. sibirica,<br />

namely, /. Wilsonii, and /. Forrestii. The former has the habit<br />

of the true /.<br />

sibirica, with numerous flowers on tall, hollow<br />

stems, of two shades of pale yellow, lightly veined with<br />

purple near the base of the segments. /. Forrestii is dwarfer<br />

even than /. orientalis, but is of a clearer yellow colour, and<br />

in some plants, at any rate, the falls are remarkably long<br />

and ample. Enough time has not elapsed since their introduction<br />

into our gardens to enable us to say whether these<br />

species will afford colour variations. Another Chinese<br />

novelty is /. chrysographes, with flowers of the richest, deep<br />

red-purple, veined with gold. This is another of Wilson's<br />

introductions, and it flowered for the first time in England<br />

in 1911.<br />

A less recent introduction from China, belonging to<br />

the same group of hollow-stemmed plants, is /. Delavayi,<br />

which needs more moisture than those previously mentioned<br />

if it is to flower well. The stems grow 4 feet<br />

in height in rich soil, and the flowers are conspicuously<br />

blotched, rather than veined, with white on a deep<br />

purple ground. In the wild plant the flowers are somewhat<br />

small, but hybrids of it have already given forms<br />

with far finer flowers, that will flower much more freely<br />

in drier soil than that which /. Delavayi demands.<br />

In America the group is represented by /. prismatica,<br />

which has a slender, wide-running rhizome, a peculiarly


WATER-LOVING SPECIES 63<br />

wiry stem, and small, blue flowers of the shape<br />

of /.<br />

sibirica. It is not common in cultivation, but is a very<br />

graceful little plant.<br />

Lastly we must notice the Himalayan member of the<br />

group, 7. Clarkei. It is distinguished by a solid stem and<br />

by peculiar foliage. In habit it is not unlike /. orientalis,<br />

while the flowers faintly resemble those of /. Delavayi.<br />

In colour they vary considerably, and may be either blue<br />

or purple of various shades.<br />

The mention of Delavayi as a water-loving species leads<br />

naturally to the consideration of others that do well in<br />

moist positions. One of our two native <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 7. Pseudacorus,<br />

is well worthy of a place in any garden, and is moreover<br />

very accommodating.<br />

It will grow and flower well,<br />

although producing somewhat smaller flowers, even in dry<br />

Surrey sand. Colour variations of this are numerous,<br />

for some are pure yellow without the usual brown markings<br />

on the base of the blade, and there are also several<br />

pale primrose forms, one of which is known as Bastardi.<br />

This <strong>Iris</strong> is common in moist places all over Europe, and<br />

extends even into North Africa and Syria. Attempts have<br />

even been made to see in it the Fleur-de-lys of the French<br />

kings, and to derive Jts adoption as an emblem, from the<br />

fact that its<br />

yellow flowers indicated a ford over a difficult<br />

river to a king, who was hard pressed by the Saracens.<br />

The account is ingenious but not necessarily authentic.<br />

In America the place of this <strong>Iris</strong> is taken by a somewhat<br />

closely related species, 7. versicolor (syn. 7. mrginica).<br />

In habit it is not unlike 7. Pseudacorus, nor is the shape of<br />

the flowers very different. The colour, however, is totally<br />

unlike, for it is<br />

always some shade of red- or blue-purple.


64 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

This, again, is a plant where selection of the best forms<br />

is very necessary. The poorest are small in size and pale<br />

in colour, but the best have large flowers of a good deep<br />

blue-purple, or even of a velvety red-purple that borders<br />

on crimson. This form is in commerce as /. versicolor<br />

kermesiana, but it will appear among seedlings<br />

if the<br />

raiser has any luck at all. 7. versicolor is, of course, most<br />

luxuriant in damp rich soil, but it will do very fairly well<br />

with Pseudacorus in dry, hungry sand.<br />

/. setosa was originally described as an Asiatic plant, but<br />

forms that cannot be separated from it are found in<br />

America, both in Alaska and on the east side from<br />

Labrador to Maine. There it is known as /. Hookeri or<br />

/. setosa canadensis or 7. tridentata. At least half-a-dozen<br />

forms of it will come true from seed and be obviously<br />

dissimilar when growing side by side, but at the same<br />

time be practically indistinguishable as dry herbarium<br />

specimens. The peculiarity of this <strong>Iris</strong> is that the standards<br />

have dwindled until they are only small points of<br />

various shapes about half an inch long, and their disappearance<br />

is, in most forms, counterbalanced by the increased<br />

size of the falls. The colour is usually blue, but<br />

some shades are so light<br />

and pale as to become almost grey.<br />

The last of the water-loving <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, as also one of the<br />

latest to flower, is the well-known Japanese hybrid 7.<br />

Kcempferi, so familiar an object in Japanese<br />

art. The<br />

varieties known as 7.<br />

Kampferi are evidently the highlydeveloped<br />

product of the hybridiser's art, but no account<br />

has ever yet been given of the steps by which they<br />

have been obtained from the wild species. The latter<br />

is a much more easily cultivated plant than the imported


SHOWY IRISES 65<br />

Japanese hybrids, which seem to need moist, rich, or at any<br />

rate heavy, soil, and a warm, sheltered position, to do well.<br />

As mere colour, the Japanese hybrids are<br />

marvellous, but it<br />

is<br />

always hard to see how the Japanese, with their feeling for<br />

graceful lines, can ever have countenanced the doubling<br />

and distortion which seems to have been one of the chief<br />

aims of the hybridisers. The wild plant<br />

is much more<br />

More-<br />

shapely, and has flowers of a rich velvety red-purple.<br />

over (and this is curious in view of the diversity of the<br />

Japanese results), its seedlings show here in England, at<br />

any rate no variation.<br />

Another name that has been much confused with /.<br />

K&mpferi, namely, /. Icevigata, does stand for a definite<br />

wild plant, which is the most magnificent of all really<br />

blue <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. It is found wild in proximity to /. Kcempferi,<br />

but it is still<br />

very rare in cultivation. Garden forms of it<br />

are perhaps slightly better known, for they have been in<br />

cultivation in England for some years under the name of<br />

albopurpurea, which was given to a form which has white<br />

flowers of the same shape as the type, spotted with blue<br />

or purple. This appeared by chance at Kew among a<br />

Japanese importation, and some specimens of it may still<br />

be seen there in the new water garden.<br />

A trio of showy <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> from the Southern United States<br />

deserves to be better known. It consists of /.<br />

hexagona, I.<br />

Lamancei, and /. fulva. The first, it is true, will only<br />

flower out-of-doors in a well-sheltered and warm corner,<br />

by preference close against the wall of some heated glasshouse<br />

;<br />

but it is a majestic plant, with large purple- blue<br />

flowers on a tall, branching stem. /. Lamancei is becoming<br />

much more common in cultivation, and is more easily<br />

E


66 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

flowered. The only drawback is that the short stem is apt<br />

to hide the flowers low down among the crowded foliage.<br />

However, the individual flowers are remarkably pleasing,<br />

and present a combination of purple-blue on the segments<br />

and green on the style branches. The flowers are almost<br />

identical with those of /. hexagona, although botanically the<br />

structure is slightly different. Both produce their flowers<br />

from the axils of the leaves, and this is also a characteristic<br />

of /. fulva, which is<br />

unique<br />

in its terra-cotta colour and<br />

curiously drooping outline. It is quite hardy, but not always<br />

a free-flowering <strong>Iris</strong>. It rarely blooms before the end of<br />

in flower at the same time<br />

June, and Lamancei is usually<br />

with it. The result of a cross between the two is interesting.<br />

/. fulva was the seed parent, and the tall, branching<br />

habit of this plant is retained, but the hybrid has flowers of<br />

the shape and substance of I. Lamancei, the pollen parent.<br />

The colour of one form is a rich, velvety-red, indeed almost<br />

crimson-purple, while others have retained more of the blue<br />

colour of the pollen parent.<br />

All the members of this group seem to prosper in a rather<br />

rich soil, and respond to moisture in the growing season by<br />

more vigorous development.<br />

A little-known set of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> comes from Syria, and<br />

comprises /. Grant Duffii, I. Aschersonii, and /. masia.<br />

An /. melanosticta has been introduced to commerce ;<br />

but it is doubtful whether it is more than a colour variety<br />

of /. Grant Duffii. This latter is an ill-natured <strong>Iris</strong>, and one<br />

that is difficult to handle. In the first place,<br />

Sir Michael<br />

Foster lavished all his arts upon it for five-and-twenty<br />

years without once inducing it to flower, and the author<br />

has had no better result with some of these identical plants.


OTHER APOGON IRISES 67<br />

Moreover, it is spiteful even when gently handled, for the<br />

rhizome is covered with long and very sharp spines, which<br />

enter the flesh and then break off and make their presence<br />

known in the most unmistakable way. The flowers are of<br />

a greenish-yellow, and, as catalogues have it,<br />

it is a plant<br />

" of botanical interest." I. Aschersonii is somewhat similar<br />

in appearance ;<br />

but it flowers more easily and its spines are<br />

less vicious. /. masia is a purple-flowered plant of the<br />

same structure as the other two, but though the late Max<br />

Leichtlin once had it in cultivation and sent it to Foster,<br />

with whom it<br />

flowered, it is apparently not to be obtained<br />

at present.<br />

The remaining Apogon <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> hardly<br />

seem to fall into<br />

any group. For instance, we have in England a very<br />

peculiar <strong>Iris</strong>, namely /. fcetidissima ; its habit is peculiar to<br />

itself, and so too are its<br />

orange-red seeds, which cling fast<br />

through the winter to the open capsules. Its usual form<br />

has dingy purple flowers of but little beauty, but there<br />

is to be found a yellow-flowered variety which is some<br />

improvement in this respect on the type. It is worth<br />

growing in half-shady places for the decorative value of<br />

the seed capsules in winter. Its leaves should be carefully<br />

handled, for they requite rough treatment by emitting a<br />

curious half-foetid odour.<br />

The small Japanese species /. minuta seems to stand<br />

by itself except for another species from China, not in<br />

cultivation, which, as far as can be seen by herbarium<br />

specimens, is closely allied to it. It produces about the<br />

middle of April small yellow flowers tinged with brown,<br />

and the plant is peculiar in that nodules form on its roots<br />

as on those of leguminous plants. It is not yet certain


68 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

what the signification of these nodules may be, nor whether<br />

a separate class must on the strength of them be made for<br />

this species and its Chinese cousin.<br />

There are in addition certain Central Asiatic and Chinese<br />

species that are either not cultivated or very rare in cultivation,<br />

such as tenuifolia, Bungei, ventricosa, songarica,<br />

Henryi, Rossii, &c. These can hardly yet be said to have<br />

their place in our "present day" gardens, though<br />

it is<br />

to be hoped that those who have the opportunity will<br />

be kind enough<br />

to send home a few seeds with the<br />

capsules. From these it would in most cases be possible<br />

to identify the species and to raise seedlings, which would<br />

introduce these <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> into general cultivation. Seeds<br />

travel more easily and more successfully than rhizomes,<br />

and the resulting plants usually establish themselves more<br />

readily in their new quarters.<br />

CHAPTER XI<br />

IRISES FOR THE ROCK GARDEN<br />

I. BULBOUS SPECIES<br />

FEW rock gardens contain many <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, and yet some of<br />

the species are seen to the best advantage on its ledges,<br />

which raise them to the level of the eye. In the winter<br />

months especially, when many alpine treasures are either<br />

dormant with their heads tucked beneath the surface or<br />

what could<br />

reduced to mere withered tufts of dry leaves,


BULBOUS SPECIES 69<br />

be more welcome than the large blue flowers of /. alata<br />

with their golden central stripe ? It is unfortunately true<br />

that our summers are not long enough nor hot enough<br />

to ripen this Mediterranean bulb, but it is now so cheap<br />

that it is worth a shilling or two expended in purchasing<br />

annual supplies. The bulbs should be obtained as soon as<br />

possible, in August or early September, and planted at once<br />

in rich soil. Care must be taken not to break off the<br />

fleshy roots, which have a way of "coming off in your<br />

hand," and when this happens the bulbs are necessarily<br />

weakened, for these roots contain supplies of nourishment<br />

on which the bulb draws during the effort of flowering.<br />

When all is well, the reward is a succession of flowers<br />

from November till<br />

February.<br />

Those who are fond of sweet-scented flowers, and those<br />

who are interested in any plant that comes from Palestine,<br />

should not fail to plant a few bulbs of /. Vartanii in some<br />

sheltered, sunny corner. In this case, too, the bulbs must<br />

be obtained early and planted at once. Old leaf-soil may<br />

with advantage be added to lighten a heavy soil or to<br />

enrich dry sand. Then almost immediately the leaves<br />

begin to push up, and usually well before Christmas the<br />

pale slaty-blue flowers appear. They are of the same<br />

shape as the well-known /. reticulata, but the style crests<br />

are longer, and somehow the effect is more fragile, and so<br />

too, unfortunately,<br />

is the constitution of this bulb. With<br />

care, however, and the aid of a sheet of glass to throw<br />

off excessive rain in the early months of the year when<br />

the foliage should be ripening off, the bulbs might be<br />

induced to live on from year to year, and possibly to<br />

accustom themselves to the altered conditions of our


70 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

climate.<br />

But then unfortunately they would probably lose<br />

their early-flowering habit. The other quality that makes<br />

this <strong>Iris</strong> so valuable is its delightful scent of almonds,<br />

which any gleam of pale winter sun is<br />

enough to bring out.<br />

Even if these two autumnal <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are hard to keep and<br />

almost demand annual renewal, this is not the case with<br />

the other small bulbous plants that seem so well adapted for<br />

the rock garden, /. reticulata, with its brilliant uniform of<br />

intense violet and gold and faint scent of violets, is<br />

probably<br />

the best known of the early spring-flowering species. It<br />

has, however, several relatives that are no less beautiful and<br />

quite as hardy. The smallest of all, I. Danfordice, found<br />

nearly forty years ago by Mrs. Danford in little colonies on<br />

the slopes of the Cilician Taurus, is bright yellow, sometimes<br />

faintly dotted with olive-green. This little mite seems<br />

indeed not yet to be full grown, for its standards are merely<br />

diminutive spines. A cousin that usually flowers at the<br />

same time in February<br />

is I. Bakeriana* The falls here<br />

seem to be cut out of violet velvet, so dark as almost to be<br />

black. It is<br />

dappled with white at the throat, where the<br />

blade of the fall meets the haft, and it distinguishes itself<br />

from all other <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> by its eight-ribbed leaves.<br />

Bulbous plants with blue flowers are rare, and even when<br />

we have made up our minds to pay as much as three or four<br />

shillings for a single bulb of that most brilliant of all blue<br />

bulbs, Tecophilcea cyanocrocus, we cannot all succeed in<br />

making it flower or increase. But any one who cares to<br />

invest the same sum in a dozen bulbs of the form of /.<br />

histrioides that is supplied by Mr. C. G. Van Tubergen, Jun.,<br />

of Haarlem, will surely not regret the outlay.<br />

It is<br />

necessary<br />

to specify the source from which these bulbs may be


A BEAUTIFUL IRIS 71<br />

obtained, for there are many forms that masquerade under<br />

the name of /. histrioides, but none is so good as this.<br />

Early in February the fat buds should appear almost as<br />

soon as the horny tips of the leaves pierce the soil. They<br />

quickly open and show their splendours of light<br />

and dark<br />

blue, splashed with white at the throat. /. Krelagei is another<br />

<strong>Iris</strong>, which at its best has magnificent flowers of crimson<br />

velvet, but there are Krelageis and Krelageis, and the poorest<br />

have small flowers of a washy purple and are hardly worth<br />

cultivating.<br />

Almost before /. alata has sent up its last flower, some<br />

small but brilliantly coloured relatives should be ready to<br />

succeed it.<br />

It is hard indeed to describe the colour scheme<br />

of /. persica. Even with the help of the most elaborate<br />

colour charts we are entirely baffled. Imagine a pearly<br />

white flower washed over with turquoise-blue and sea-green<br />

laid on unevenly ; give it a blotch of warm purple-brown<br />

on the blade of the falls and a central orange stripe, and you<br />

will have some faint idea of the beauties of I. persica. It<br />

was grown in England three hundred years ago,<br />

its constitution is not strong or there is<br />

something<br />

but either<br />

in its<br />

cultivation that we do not understand, for it seems to get<br />

rarer instead of more common, and it is seldom that one<br />

sees /. persica in the form of a vigorous colony. Wretched<br />

specimens appear in tiny pots at shows from time to time,<br />

but the flowers are then undersized and puny, and attract<br />

but little attention.<br />

Those who cannot succeed with persica itself should<br />

try I. Heldreichii, which is sometimes called stenophylla,<br />

though its leaves are scarcely narrower than those of<br />

persica itself. Its large flowers are a combination of pale


72 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

grey-blue and indigo, the latter appearing in large conspicuous<br />

blotches. A good contrast, and perhaps a better<br />

doer, is I. Tauri, with deep purple flowers gaily veined with<br />

gold.<br />

None of these bulbous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> exceeds 8 inches in height,<br />

and their leaves wither away completely by mid-summer,<br />

so that some small annual can well be sown among<br />

them to cover the ground in the later summer months.<br />

The only disadvantage of this plan<br />

is that I. reticulata<br />

and its kind cannot be lifted and replanted unless one<br />

can make up one's mind to root up the annuals when<br />

in full flower in July. This frequent lifting and replanting<br />

of /. reticulata and its varieties is undoubtedly beneficial,<br />

but at the same time the bulbs should not be kept<br />

many weeks out of the ground, for they are apt to shrivel<br />

and deteriorate. If they must be stored for any length<br />

of time, they should be covered in dry sand, to keep<br />

excess of air from the bulbs. This will prevent the<br />

evaporation<br />

keep them plump<br />

of" the moisture within them and tend to<br />

and sound.<br />

CHAPTER XII<br />

IRISES FOR THE ROCK GARDEN (continued)<br />

II.<br />

RHIZOMATOUS SPECIES<br />

THE previous chapter dealt with certain small bulbous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

that find a fitting home and shelter in the rock garden. So<br />

long as the bulbous species are in flower, no rhizomatous


PLATE VI<br />

I. XIPHIOIDES OR ANGLICA A TYPICAL<br />

GARDEN FORM


RHIZOMATOUS SPECIES 75<br />

<strong>Iris</strong> throws up<br />

its blooms, except the Algerian<br />

/.<br />

unguicularis or stylosa,<br />

and this will soon become too<br />

big for its position unless the rock garden is on a large<br />

scale. Once, however, the last flowers of /. reticulata and<br />

I. persica of the year have faded, the first dwarf rhizomatous<br />

<strong>Iris</strong> may be expected to unfold its earliest buds, usually<br />

not long after the beginning of April. The actual date<br />

will vary slightly with the season, and also with the amount<br />

of shelter from cold winds that the surroundings afford.<br />

In most seasons it is a race between the dwarf, narrowleaved<br />

Greek forms of /. stylosa (sometimes known as /.<br />

as to which shall<br />

cretensis) and the true type of /. pumila<br />

be the first to unfold its flowers, and the Greek plant<br />

usually wins by a day or two. It is important to lay stress<br />

on obtaining the real I. pumila, for this plant is still somewhat<br />

rare in cultivation. There is no difficulty in finding<br />

the name in catalogues, but it is quite another matter to<br />

find plants that fit the name, except, as a rule, those<br />

varieties that are offered under the names of pumila<br />

ccerulea and pumila azurea. These two names are not<br />

quite synonymous, or it<br />

perhaps would be nearer the<br />

truth to say there do exist two garden forms for which<br />

these two names may be used. There is very<br />

little difference<br />

between them : in colour, in fact, there is none,<br />

but one is superior to the other both in size and vigour,<br />

and is moreover more floriferous. Of the better form<br />

it is<br />

possible to have as many as thirty<br />

flowers on a<br />

patch a foot square, and the colour is a rather grey<br />

sky-blue.<br />

These pumilas are, for their size, at any rate, some<br />

of the most floriferous of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, and the whole plant with


76 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

the flower is not more than 6 inches high. As it flowers<br />

so profusely on any dry, windy, and sunny slope, it is<br />

obviously well suited to exposed ledges in the rock garden.<br />

There are many colour varieties even in the wild state,<br />

and forms may be obtained with purple, yellow, blue, and<br />

even nearly white flowers. The yellow seems to predominate<br />

in the East and the purple in the West, and it is to<br />

be hoped that some kind traveller to Greece, and especially<br />

to Attica, where the plant is common on Mount Pentelicus<br />

and on the surrounding hills, will bring or send home<br />

a fresh supply of either rhizomes, seeds, or both, of the<br />

Greek form of this <strong>Iris</strong>. Most rhizomatous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are<br />

excellent travellers. They can be torn up when in full<br />

flower, wrapped in a little dry moss and wool, and posted<br />

home by sample post, for, of course, they are scientific<br />

botanical specimens. They should not be elaborately<br />

packed in damp moss, for this is apt to engender mildew<br />

on the way. The close wrapping in some nearly dry<br />

material is quite enough to prevent<br />

all the natural moisture<br />

being evaporated out of the rhizomes, and also secures them<br />

against crushing in the post.<br />

Another little<br />

April flowering species<br />

for the rock<br />

garden, /. minuta, comes from the Far East, and is still<br />

rarely seen. It has small, bright yellow flowers and narrow,<br />

grassy leaves. It is difficult to say with certainty to which<br />

group it really belongs ; indeed, in some ways<br />

it stands<br />

widely separated from all other species known in cultivation,<br />

though it has a Chinese relative that has not yet been<br />

introduced. Here, again, one would like to invoke the help<br />

of travellers in China. There are at least half-a-dozen<br />

delightful little species, all well suited to the rock garden,


AMERICAN IRISES 77<br />

which we only know as dried herbarium specimens.<br />

It<br />

is doubtful whether living plants of some of these could<br />

stand the long journey, unless they came by post through<br />

Siberia, but seeds would soon give us a stock of plants,<br />

probably more vigorous and better acclimatised than any<br />

transplanted roots.<br />

I. ruthenica is a very widely distributed plant in the<br />

wild state, but it has suffered from neglect in our gardens,<br />

owing to the fact that some of its varieties live on from year<br />

to year without flowering. To what cause this is due<br />

it is<br />

impossible to say, for other forms growing<br />

in similar<br />

conditions a few feet away throw up many flowers, and<br />

very pleasing they are, with their pink-edged spathes and<br />

blue falls veined with white. It does not seem fastidious<br />

as to the soil in which it<br />

grows, but it does object to being<br />

moved, except while growth is active. The grassy leaves<br />

are arranged in spreading, fan-shaped tufts, which soon<br />

spread into great mats.<br />

For half-shady spots, low down, when the soil is kept<br />

cool and somewhat moist, two small American <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>,<br />

/. cristata and I. lacustris, are eminently<br />

latter is<br />

nothing but a dwarf, deep-coloured<br />

suited. The<br />

relative of<br />

the former, but it has the additional merit of flowering in<br />

September and October, as well as in the spring. They<br />

both require well-rotted vegetable mould, to which the<br />

addition of small, gravelly stones will prove beneficial by<br />

helping to retain moisture. The delicate lavender or lilaccoloured<br />

flowers are spreading in outline and set off by an<br />

irregular, yellow-dappled crest, recalling<br />

the well-known /.<br />

japonica, to which indeed these species are distantly related.<br />

America also supplies us with a group of most beautiful


78 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> from California, which,<br />

if<br />

they were better known,<br />

would certainly be found in nearly every rock garden,<br />

except, perhaps,<br />

highly charged<br />

in those where the whole of the soil is<br />

with calcareous matter. For lime-haters<br />

they undoubtedly are, though in light, sandy soil they thrive<br />

amazingly, and most of them have, moreover, the excellent<br />

quality of remaining more or less evergreen throughout the<br />

winter. No one who has seen the crimson-veined, ochreyellow<br />

flower of /.<br />

bracteata or the brilliant silver and claret<br />

of /. tenax will willingly be without them. /. Douglasiana,<br />

too, of which no two plants seem to produce flowers of<br />

identically the same shade of colour, is scarcely too vigorous<br />

for a large sunny corner. Not one of these <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> seems to<br />

appear at shows in good form, because few nurserymen<br />

grow them. As a matter of fact, transplanted roots are<br />

seldom a success, and the best plan is to beg seeds from<br />

gardening friends, who, if they grow these <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> at all, will<br />

probably have plenty to spare, for all seed freely. Those<br />

who are eager to have their plants sooner in flower than the<br />

two years that seedlings demand, may try their luck with<br />

pieces taken off, while growth is active, and if the root<br />

fibres are preserved undamaged and not allowed to dry up<br />

and wither, their efforts may meet with success. Some<br />

gardeners seem to have the knack of being able to transplant<br />

anything at any time. It can only be done when the<br />

gardener has a kind of intuitive knowledge of the habits of<br />

the plant, and prefers to act by the light of nature rather<br />

than to follow out blindly and unintelligently the letter of<br />

the instructions given by the owner of some other garden<br />

where conditions are slightly different.<br />

Perhaps the most amazing of all rock-garden<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> is


ROCK-GARDEN IRISES 79<br />

/. arenaria, which, as its name implies, likes sand, but not<br />

pure<br />

sand without nourishment. The slender rhizome<br />

creeps about just under the surface, and should spread in<br />

all directions. Then in April many of the growths are<br />

seen to be getting plump, and by May they burst out into<br />

bright, clear yellow flowers with thick orange<br />

beards. It<br />

is unfortunate that the plant seems almost to exhaust itself<br />

by overflowering. It needs therefore to be given fresh soil<br />

about every two years, or at least be top-dressed in spring.<br />

The surface soil<br />

may be nearly pure sand, but an inch or<br />

two down the roots should be able to find something more<br />

Seed may easily be obtained by artificial pollination<br />

nourishing, though still light and warm. The brilliance of<br />

a good mass of this little gem among <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> is not easily forgotten.<br />

of the flowers, and it<br />

germinates fairly readily. Young<br />

plants grow very fast, and soon cover quite a large space<br />

with their wide-creeping rhizomes, and produce six or<br />

eight flowering stems in their second season.<br />

Near /. arenaria might well be grown such small Oncocyclus<br />

species as paradoxa, iberica, acutiloba, &c., and their<br />

darker flowers will provide a foil for the brilliant yellow of<br />

the former species. The sharp drainage of the rock garden<br />

will also be in their favour.<br />

So far there have been mentioned those small <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

which seem to be very<br />

little<br />

known, but which only need to<br />

be known to be installed in most rock gardens. We must<br />

not, however, forget that even the most negligent of gardeners<br />

may obtain a fine display of colour among the<br />

rocks in April and May, by planting largely the more<br />

common small, bearded <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, such as /. chamceiris, I.<br />

olbiensis, I. bosniaca, and /. balkana, even if he does not


8o PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

care for the less garish beauties of the tiny<br />

/. rubromarginata,<br />

with deep red edges to its leaves and curious,<br />

lurid flowers.<br />

Other <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> still rarer are kumaonensis and Hookeriana,<br />

both from the Himalayas, where whole upland valleys seem<br />

in some districts to be thick with them. The former<br />

especially is very desirable, for a little clump no more than<br />

four inches across may send up half-a-dozen flowering<br />

shoots from which, while the leaves are still quite short,<br />

burst<br />

out the curiously mottled red- or blue-purple flowers<br />

with their thick beards of white silky hairs tipped with yellow<br />

or orange. No one seems to know why it is that nearly all<br />

Himalayan<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> have flowers mottled with two shades of<br />

the same colour ;<br />

it is a very peculiar characteristic, and<br />

found in /. Milesii and in /. goniocarpa as well as in the two<br />

just-mentioned species. These latter both need moisture<br />

from March to October and all the sun that they can get.<br />

Our tale of dwarf rock-garden <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> is nearly ended,<br />

but we have yet to introduce the most fairy-like of all, /.<br />

gracilipes. This slender, beautiful little species<br />

comes from<br />

open glades in cool woods in Japan. In dealing, however,<br />

with Japanese plants we must always remember that the<br />

Japanese sunlight seems to be of a different quality to our<br />

own. Growth ripens in woods there that need almost full<br />

sun here. Gracilipes, for instance, will here succeed well<br />

in moist vegetable soil in any position where it is shaded<br />

from the sun for about half the day, but does not like a<br />

wholly shaded position. This does not mean that it must<br />

be overhung, for dripping moisture would prove fatal to it,<br />

but in an open space between small shrubs at the edge of<br />

a peat bed it does well. There the rooting medium is cool


IRISES FOR THE BORDER 81<br />

and slightly moist, and the shadows of the surrounding<br />

shrubs will save the slender rhizome and stem of /. gracilipes<br />

from succumbing to the parching drought. Similar conditions<br />

may be obtained in the rock garden by planting this<br />

<strong>Iris</strong> where the shadow of some rock will shield it from the<br />

sun for part of the day. It does best in a position facing<br />

west. Its thin, wiry stem bears two or three little branches,<br />

each tipped with a delicate pinkish-lilac flower of the same<br />

flat, spreading form as /. cristata and /. japonica. The tiny<br />

crinkled crest is flecked with gold, and it is altogether a<br />

most desirable <strong>Iris</strong>.<br />

IRISES<br />

CHAPTER XIII<br />

FOR THE HERBACEOUS BORDER<br />

IT is<br />

always somewhat surprising to find that in the majority<br />

of gardens comparatively<br />

little use is made of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> in borders<br />

of herbaceous plants. The reason seems to be that <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

are looked upon as short-lived flowers, and therefore not<br />

worth the space they occupy. But, while it is no doubt<br />

true that the individual blooms do not last more than two<br />

or three days,<br />

it 4s equally true that the flowers on each<br />

stem open in succession, and thus extend the flowering<br />

time to a period not much shorter than the space during<br />

which other herbaceous plants are at their best. It<br />

may also<br />

be remarked that the leaves of many<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are more decorative<br />

as mere foliage, and last, in good condition, longer<br />

than the often unsightly remains of other herbaceous plants<br />

when the flowering season is past.<br />

The object of this chapter is,<br />

therefore, to make sugges-<br />

F


82 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

tions as to the various sorts of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> that seem especially<br />

adapted for use in the herbaceous border.<br />

In the first place, it is not easy to find many plants that<br />

make a better permanent edging than some of the dwarf<br />

early-flowering bearded <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. For mere floriferousness,<br />

the true /.<br />

pumila in its endless colour varieties can hardly<br />

be surpassed. When in flower, the whole plant<br />

is not<br />

more than 6 inches high, and the flowers ought to be so<br />

closely packed as almost to obscure the leaves. It is usually<br />

at its best by about the middle of April, and if there is any<br />

drawback to the employment of this particular species<br />

as an<br />

edging, it is that it loses its leaves almost entirely in late<br />

autumn and winter. On the other hand, the extraordinary<br />

range of colour to be found in the flowers is distinctly in<br />

its favour. They may be white, pale blue, yellow, yellow<br />

with a mahogany blotch, pale purple, or even a deep and<br />

rich velvety black-purple.<br />

It is difficult to give any reason for the undoubted fact<br />

that to some people a far greater appeal<br />

is made by wild<br />

species than by mere florists' varieties, however huge and<br />

gorgeous the latter may be. There appears to be some<br />

indefinable quality in the flowers of the wild types, and<br />

possibly also in those of first crosses between them, that is<br />

altogether lost in plants whose parents and ancestors have<br />

been hybrids for two or three generations. Those who<br />

have this feeling will prefer the true I.<br />

pumila to the<br />

mongrels that are usually grown under this name, and which<br />

appear in endless numbers in every catalogue. Almost<br />

without exception they are forms or varieties of /. chamcziris,<br />

which is easily distinguished from the real pumila by the<br />

shorter tube, the shorter, broader, and less scarious spathes,


DWARF HYBRIDS 83<br />

and by the fact that a stem is<br />

always present. This may<br />

vary from i to 2 inches to nearly a foot in height, according<br />

to the conditions under which the plants grow. In<br />

the South of France, the smallest forms are found in open<br />

positions on dry, limestone formation, while in half-shade,<br />

or where the soil has collected in a hollow and formed a<br />

richer bed, other forms occur which are two or three times<br />

as large, but which differ in no other particular. In<br />

cultivation under uniform conditions this difference disappears,<br />

and we get a series of plants having stems of about<br />

6 to 10 inches in length and bearing one or two flowers.<br />

The leaves are usually slightly shorter than the stems at<br />

flowering time, and the plants are very floriferous, besides<br />

providing us with flowers of very different colours bluepurple,<br />

claret-purple, yellow, white, and various combinations<br />

of these shades. Another peculiarity of /. chamceiris<br />

and one which need not surprise us when we contrast<br />

the different conditions that prevail in winter in the South<br />

of France and in Northern Italy with those that are experienced<br />

on the hills near the Danube is that the leaves<br />

remain more or less green throughout the winter. In fact<br />

the plants may almost be called evergreen, and not unnaturally,<br />

therefore, the wild plants when introduced into<br />

our gardens do not prove to be quite so hardy as /. pumila.<br />

However, so many varieties of these dwarf hybrids of<br />

/. chamceiris are now obtainable that a visit to any good<br />

nursery garden will almost certainly lead to the discovery<br />

of plants of the colour desired. It is<br />

impossible to give<br />

any list of names here, for each catalogue seems to have<br />

a list of its own, and thus the only way to make certain<br />

of getting what is<br />

required is to see the plants in flower


84 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

and to transplant them at once. This early disturbance,<br />

it<br />

cannot be repeated too often, will do the plants no harm ;<br />

in fact they should be all the better for it in the following<br />

year, for these comparatively shallow-rooting and fastgrowing<br />

plants cannot be grown year after year in the<br />

same spot without deteriorating, unless they are lifted from<br />

time to time and given fresh soil.<br />

A good effect may be produced in borders by planting<br />

late flowering Darwin or Cottage tulips among clumps<br />

of such forms of /. germanica as that which is known<br />

in<br />

England as the type, Amas (macrantha), Kharput,<br />

Oriflamme, atropurpurea, or florentina. Only the tallest<br />

of the so-called Cottage tulips are suitable for use in this<br />

to throw<br />

way, but all the Darwins are of sufficient height<br />

up their flowers well among the <strong>Iris</strong> blooms. Not only<br />

do these two plants do well together, but they may be<br />

left untouched in any well-drained soil for two or three<br />

years, after which the whole should be lifted, as soon in<br />

the season as the tulip stems can be bent double without<br />

their snapping. The <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> can then be replanted in clumps,<br />

with possibly some dwarf-growing annual to hide the bare<br />

patches between them until the autumn, when the tulips<br />

can be replanted early in November.<br />

Where such an arrangement<br />

is<br />

adopted, care must be<br />

taken that rampant plants, such as perennial Sunflowers,<br />

Delphiniums, and above all Michaelmas Daisies, do not<br />

encroach upon the <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, when the latter have become<br />

mere clumps of foliage, and thus deprive them of that<br />

place in the sun, and of the consequent ripening of the<br />

rhizomes, which is essential if the plants are to flower<br />

well in the following season.


A DECORATIVE IRIS 85<br />

The broad glaucous foliage of /. pallida, especially<br />

of the Dalmatian forms, is an ornament in any border<br />

long after the flowers are over ; or,<br />

if a thick mass of fine<br />

deep green leaves is wanted, a place near the front might<br />

be found for 7. gmminea. The flowers are never conspicuous,<br />

hiding themselves among the leaves,<br />

but their<br />

scent is delicious, although here again care must be<br />

exercised in obtaining the plants, for some are scentless,<br />

while in others of the same batch of seedlings the fragrance<br />

is most marked.<br />

Few <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are more decorative or more worthy of a<br />

border than the best forms of 7. sibirica.<br />

place in any<br />

Once more, the form or variety is all-important, and,<br />

once again, few catalogues can be relied upon.<br />

It is<br />

perhaps only those who have raised 7. sibirica from seed<br />

who can realise the endless variations that can be obtained.<br />

The probability is that there are a certain set of factors<br />

or unit characters that can be united in various combinations<br />

according to Mendelian principles, but these factors have<br />

not as yet been worked out for any <strong>Iris</strong>. At present,<br />

all that can be said is that the Western forms of 7. sibirica<br />

are much more decorative than the Eastern 7. orientalis,<br />

which was described more than a century ago by Thunberg.<br />

The latter is<br />

apt to hide its often magnificent flowers<br />

among the foliage, but the best of the European forms<br />

throw up a whole sheaf of slender stems, each surmounted<br />

by about six flowers, opening in succession, and either<br />

blue or white. 7. sibirica likes a soil that is rich in<br />

humus, and prefers to be left undisturbed provided that<br />

there is no lack of nourishment for its roots. This may<br />

be provided by an annual winter mulch of leaf-mould


86 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

and manure, which will also tend to keep the surface<br />

loose during the summer, and so prevent loss of moisture<br />

by evaporation.<br />

I. sibirica is at its best early in June, and after that date<br />

few <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> can be recommended for the ordinary herbaceous<br />

border except the various members of the spuria group.<br />

The exceptions, of course, are the well-known Spanish<br />

(xiphium) and English (xiphioides) <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. Of these the<br />

former will succeed better in dry and the latter in moist<br />

soils. A flower of the spuria group<br />

is in many ways very<br />

similar to a Spanish <strong>Iris</strong>. The segments of the flowers of<br />

these two species are almost identical in outline, and both<br />

exude the curious drops of sticky moisture on the outer<br />

surface of the perianth tube. But whether this is or is not<br />

the point at which the bulbous and the rhizomatous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

meet, the spuria group deserves to be represented in any<br />

border. All the members have tall, stiff, sword-like leaves<br />

of a dark green, topped by a sturdy stem, bearing two or<br />

three close-set heads of flowers. The branches do not<br />

spread, but rise alongside the main stem,<br />

so that the<br />

flowers, as they open in succession, beginning at the topmost,<br />

produce the effect of being set one below the other<br />

on the same stem.<br />

One of the best known of the group is ochroleuca,<br />

white and yellow, while aurea has golden flowers with<br />

wavy edges to the petals. Monnieri is a lemon-yellow<br />

ochroleuca to all intents and purposes, and ochraurea is a<br />

free-flowering hybrid of the two first-mentioned plants.<br />

If either of the others fail to flower, ochraurea should be<br />

given a trial, and in any case all need rich feeding in<br />

autumn and winter, and a certain amount of moisture when


PLATE VII<br />

I. OCHROLEUCA


CULTIVATION OF IRISES 89<br />

growth is active in the summer. Blue-purple is provided<br />

by the wild European spuria and also by some hybrids,<br />

raised by Foster, between Monnieri and spuria, which are<br />

in commerce under the names of Dorothy Foster, &c.<br />

Many other <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> might be recommended for the<br />

herbaceous border, as, for instance, the grassy-leaved<br />

/. ruthenica, which, when its best form is<br />

doing well, literally<br />

hides its foliage beneath its close-set flowers, or the dwarf<br />

pale, grey-blue form of /. setosa, which probably comes<br />

from Labrador. Both of these would make excellent<br />

edgings, and should certainly be tried as soon as they<br />

become somewhat more common in our gardens than<br />

they are at present.<br />

to /.<br />

The same temporary disability attaches<br />

bucharica, a Juno species well worthy of a prominent<br />

place in any early April bulb border. If well treated, it<br />

increases fast so fast that the bulbs should be lifted and<br />

separated at least every two years, or they will begin to<br />

deteriorate from sheer lack of nourishment.<br />

The plants mentioned in this chapter are not intended<br />

to form an exhaustive list, but merely to act as suggestions<br />

for a more extensive use of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> in our borders.<br />

CHAPTER XIV<br />

THE CULTIVATION AND PROPAGATION<br />

OF IRISES<br />

RHIZOMATOUS <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> have suffered much from the very fact<br />

that their hold on life is tenacious. Many<br />

of them will


90 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

continue to live in dark, shady corners, only<br />

to be blamed<br />

because they cannot there ripen their rhizomes sufficiently<br />

to produce flowers. Again, that most murderous of garden<br />

institutions, the herbaceous border, in which, according to<br />

its devotees, no gleam of the soil must be allowed to appear,<br />

is fatal to many <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. They cannot be expected to ripen<br />

their growth if they are choked throughout the late summer<br />

by "carpeting" plants, and then transplanted late in the<br />

autumn, when the borders are renovated and tidied up<br />

for the winter. If gardeners would only realise that much<br />

trouble may be saved by shifting <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> when they have<br />

only just finished flowering, or even when actually in<br />

bloom, far fewer flowers and plants would be sacrificed.<br />

The reason for this protest against autumnal transplantation<br />

is obvious to any one who has ever taken the trouble<br />

to examine the root system of an <strong>Iris</strong>. The roots seem<br />

to grow to their full length unbranched, and it is<br />

only when<br />

the tips cease to grow down into the soil that the upper<br />

parts begin to send out the fine rootlets on which the plant<br />

depends for its nourishment. To ensure success, then, in<br />

transplanting <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, they should be shifted in time for the<br />

main roots to grow down uninjured into the soil, where<br />

they will then be anchored, long before winter arrives,<br />

by the branching<br />

lateral rootlets. If the rhizomes are<br />

disturbed at a late period, the roots obtain a very<br />

slender hold, if any, on the ground, and alternations of<br />

frost and thaw in winter lift<br />

may them out of the soil<br />

altogether.<br />

Another advantage of this early transplantation will<br />

appeal even to those whose main object in gardening is<br />

the production<br />

of colour schemes in their borders. It is


PROPAGATION OF IRISES 91<br />

that mistakes in arrangement are far less likely to occur,<br />

when the remains of the flowers can still be seen on the<br />

plants, than when fallacious labels are the only guides<br />

that remain.<br />

The propagation of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> is effected either by division<br />

of the rootstock or by means of seeds. The process of<br />

raising <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> from seed is<br />

far easier and more certain than<br />

is usually supposed. All that is<br />

necessary<br />

is to sow the<br />

seeds in pots early in the autumn and to plunge the pots<br />

outside in some cool position. Germination should ensue<br />

in the following spring, and in May, June, and July, the<br />

young plants may be planted out in the positions where<br />

they are to flower. Given good soil, fair weather, and<br />

some attention in the matter of weeding and cultivation<br />

of the surface between the plants, the majority should<br />

flower in the following spring.<br />

This does not apply to bulbous species, which should<br />

be allowed to complete their growth for<br />

one or two years<br />

They take as much as four or five years<br />

in the seed pots.<br />

before they reach flowering size, but here again care and<br />

good cultivation will reduce the period of waiting<br />

years.<br />

to three<br />

germinating<br />

Hybrid seed is much more apt to be irregular in<br />

than the seeds that result from the selffertilisation<br />

of a species, and, when only a few seedlings<br />

appear in a pot, it may be necessary to go through the<br />

tedious process of sifting the soil to separate the remaining<br />

seeds, which may be re-sown at once.


92 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

CHAPTER XV<br />

IRISES THAT SELDOM FLOWER<br />

IT may appear somewhat paradoxical to mention <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

that seldom flower, but the following<br />

list<br />

may prove a<br />

warning to some, and at the same time be of interest to<br />

those who delight in the overcoming of difficulties and<br />

in the cultivation of fastidious plants.<br />

One of the most puzzling of these <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> is the /.<br />

humilis, which is a relative of 7. spuria and /. graminea,<br />

but which is sometimes confused with /. ruthenica. In<br />

habit it is not unlike a small /.<br />

graminea, and the stiff, rigid<br />

leaves seem always to be in the best of health, but year<br />

after year the plant disappoints our hopes and remains<br />

flowerless, and this even in the hottest and driest of<br />

positions.<br />

This year, for some unknown reason, one small plant<br />

of this <strong>Iris</strong> sent up two flowering shoots, each producing<br />

two flowers. As, however, the latter are practically identical<br />

with those of a dull-coloured example of 7. graminea,<br />

to touch<br />

and as they are produced so low down as actually<br />

the ground, the only interest that the plant<br />

offers is the<br />

discovery of the exact requirements.<br />

Another enigma is presented by the 7. ruthenica which<br />

has just been mentioned. Some forms are very floriferous<br />

and are delightful indeed, but on others flowers are very<br />

rare, and on others, again, they are never seen at all.<br />

Aspect<br />

and position seem to have no effect, and the only way to


DIFFICULT IRISES 93<br />

obtain a satisfactory form of this <strong>Iris</strong> is to beg or buy a<br />

plant when it<br />

happens to be encountered flowering properly.<br />

Besides ensuring the acquisition of a free flowering<br />

variety, this plan has the additional merit of leading to<br />

the transplantation of the plant at the season when success<br />

is most probable, namely, when the plant<br />

is in full growth.<br />

In gardens where the soil is a cold, wet clay, great<br />

difficulty is often found in inducing /. unguicularis to<br />

flower an <strong>Iris</strong> popularly known by the incorrect name, /.<br />

stylosa.<br />

The best hope of success would be the construction<br />

of a raised bed against a wall facing south. It<br />

need only consist of a small heap of light soil, containing<br />

by preference plenty of old mortar rubble. This can be<br />

supported and edged with a few large stones in such a<br />

way as to assure good drainage. The plant does not need<br />

rich soil. In it, indeed, its growth is phenomenal, and in<br />

inverse proportion to the number of flowers produced.<br />

Another difficult species is /. hexagona, from swampy<br />

ground<br />

in the Southern United States. It needs warmth and<br />

space, for its rhizomes run straight ahead for a considerable<br />

distance. One of the few places where it flowers well in the<br />

open is in a sheltered border between two of the glasshouses<br />

in the Cambridge Botanic Garden.<br />

A near neighbour of /. hexagona<br />

is the somewhat un-<br />

from all other<br />

common I. fulva, which is distinguished<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> by the terra-cotta colour of its flowers. Although<br />

it comes from the swamps of the South-eastern States, and<br />

although in a hotter climate than ours, as, for instance, on<br />

the Mediterranean coast of France,<br />

it will flower well when<br />

actually grown in water; with us it needs a hot and dry<br />

position if it is to produce its extraordinary flowers in any


94 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

profusion. It well repays trouble, for its flowers come<br />

late in June, when <strong>Iris</strong> blooms are beginning to get scarce,<br />

and its graceful growth with the flowers set at intervals up<br />

the stem in the axils of the leaves produces a particularly<br />

pleasing plant.<br />

Another <strong>Iris</strong>, and this a bulbous species, that under<br />

ordinary garden conditions remains flowerless year after<br />

year, is /. tingitana. This, as its name implies, is a North<br />

African species, and really wants more heat than we can<br />

give it here. However, in the case of this <strong>Iris</strong>, lack of heat<br />

gives rise to a demand for a more liberal diet, and it seems<br />

to be able to assimilate the plant food in any amount of old,<br />

well-rotted manure that may be placed an inch or two below<br />

the base of the bulbs, which are themselves surrounded with<br />

sand. Even with this treatment the bulbs should either be<br />

lifted annually and planted rather late, or else kept absolutely<br />

dry under lights for some months. When /. tingitana<br />

flowers well, it is a really glorious sight. Its flowers are<br />

larger than those of any other kind of xiphium or Spanish<br />

<strong>Iris</strong>,<br />

and the different shades of blue and purple in the<br />

standards and the falls form a most delightful contrast.<br />

Owing to the fact that the flowers appear late in April or<br />

early in May, the bulbs should be planted in a sheltered,<br />

sunny spot, where some protection from late frosts can be<br />

afforded. In exposed positions a sudden snap of cold may<br />

nip all the flowers in the bud, and frustrate all our hopes<br />

for that year of seeing this noble <strong>Iris</strong> in bloom.<br />

The complaint<br />

is sometimes made that " German "<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> will not flower, and are not worth the space they<br />

occupy.<br />

It will usually be found that this is caused by<br />

one of three things. Either the position is such that no


SOME IRIS PROBLEMS 95<br />

sun reaches the rhizomes, or the plants have deteriorated<br />

through being left so long in one place that the soil in<br />

contact with their roots is exhausted, or else some devotee<br />

of " no-bare-earth-anywhere " gardening has carpeted the<br />

rhizomes themselves as well as the soil between them with<br />

mossy Saxifrage, Arenaria, or Acaena, with the result that<br />

the sun is no longer able to reach and ripen the rhizomes,<br />

which after all are the most essential and permanent part<br />

of the plant. At first the <strong>Iris</strong> leaves may look well rising<br />

from their green carpet, but in the following season the<br />

flowers will most probably be looked for in vain. If those<br />

three conditions are avoided, /. germanica and its allies<br />

cannot be placed among shy-flowering <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, provided<br />

always that they are not grown in such heavy clay that<br />

drainage is<br />

practically<br />

non-existent a few inches below the<br />

surface. This last condition is most likely to be present<br />

in town gardens, especially in London, where the subsoil<br />

is less energetically and constantly<br />

worked than should be<br />

the case under more ideal conditions in the country.<br />

Rhizomatous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> are healthier, on the whole, in a heavy<br />

soil than in poor sand, but the drainage must be good, or<br />

the<br />

rootlets will rot away, and the plants remain stationary<br />

instead of growing.<br />

CHAPTER XVI<br />

SOME IRIS<br />

PROBLEMS<br />

IN case this small book falls into the hands of any one of<br />

an inquiring turn of mind, who cannot rest until he has


96 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

done his best to solve any enigmas that he meets, it may be<br />

as well to mention some of the difficulties which remain<br />

unsolved with regard to the <strong>Iris</strong>.<br />

One very interesting problem lies in the determination<br />

of the factors that produce the colour of the flower. Research<br />

on Mendelian lines into the colours of flowers<br />

has led to the discovery of the factors in such flowers as<br />

Primula sinensis, but <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> seem to be peculiar in that the<br />

colours of the flowers of an individual plant are apt to vary<br />

from year to year, especially in the case of purples and<br />

yellows. For instance, plants of /. cham&iris, bosniaca,<br />

serbica, Talischii, which are picked out one year for the<br />

clearness of their yellow colour, may in the following season<br />

be entirely spoilt, from the garden point of view, by the<br />

appearance of purple veins and streaks, which give the pure<br />

yellow a muddy appearance. Stranger still, perhaps, are<br />

the instances, rare, but not unknown, where one segment<br />

of a flower is<br />

purple on one side, and yellow on the other,<br />

of the centre line.<br />

It seems as though there is underlying these changes<br />

a delicate chemical question. For instance, a solution of<br />

purple colouring matter from <strong>Iris</strong> flowers is changed by<br />

addition of a solution of lime into bright yellow, and the<br />

question of its origin and nature is probably very intricate.<br />

It would, however, be a great gain<br />

to know what the<br />

determining factors are, for then we might be able, by<br />

making suitable additions to the soil in which the plants are<br />

grown, to have at will purple or yellow flowered forms of<br />

certain <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, or, at any rate, eliminate from our gardens<br />

those dingy yellow flowers, which sooner or later appear on<br />

those plants which, in a former year, we have picked ou*


PLATE VIII<br />

A DOUBLE JAPANESE FORM OF I.<br />

K^EMPFERI


CONDITIONS OF FLOWERING 99<br />

from their fellows as being distinguished for the purity of<br />

their colouring.<br />

Another problem, of no less interest, is to determine the<br />

conditions most likely to ensure the germination of seeds.<br />

Generally speaking, the seed of a species, when fertilised<br />

with its own pollen, germinates readily, but hybrid seeds<br />

are apt to lie dormant for years. The longest time for<br />

which an <strong>Iris</strong> seed has been known to lie dormant in the<br />

ground before seeing fit to germinate is eighteen years.<br />

This happened with one of Sir Michael Foster's hybrids<br />

only a few months before his death, and instances of seeds<br />

germinating after several years are by no means unknown<br />

to any who have engaged in the fascinating pursuit of raising<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> from seed.<br />

It would be useful, too, to know the conditions which<br />

would induce more <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> to flower again in the autumn.<br />

Is this character an idiosyncrasy of<br />

the individual plant, or<br />

is the second flowering brought about by any external<br />

circumstances ? The author once raised an /. pumila from<br />

seed, which germinated early in spring, and flowered in the<br />

month of October in the same year. It is well known that<br />

these autumnal displays can be obtained, given a favourable<br />

autumn, by timely sowings in the case of other perennials.<br />

Delphiniums, for instance, sown in the open in spring, and<br />

transplanted early, often make a brave show of spikes in<br />

October. <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, however, cannot be relied upon to flower<br />

as soon as this, but is it<br />

possible by refusing, for instance,<br />

to allow a plant to flower in the spring, or by special treatment<br />

during the summer, to ensure an autumn display of<br />

flowers ?<br />

It is a question worth some thought.<br />

A query for those who seek to find adaptation in every-


ioo PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

thing, is the use and origin of the beard. The answer can<br />

scarcely be found in the general view that it serves as a kind<br />

of sign-post to direct intruding insects towards the nectar<br />

in search of which they come. For why should most bulbous<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> be either beardless or else so closely shorn that the<br />

beard is<br />

only microscopic,<br />

while at the same time two or<br />

three species adorn themselves with conspicuous beards ?<br />

it mere chance, or can any design or purpose be detected ?<br />

Why do many species find a beard necessary while as many<br />

prosper without it ?<br />

Moreover, there is the position of the crested species<br />

to be considered. Is the crest an intermediate or an<br />

extreme character ? Did the crest arise as a variation<br />

of the beard or the beard from the crest, or did they<br />

both arise independently from a parent possessing<br />

neither ?<br />

Another point, on which some light may perhaps be<br />

thrown by comparing <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> with other genera of plants,<br />

is this. About half the species may each be readily<br />

distinguished by their seeds alone, while others belong<br />

to groups, each having seeds of a certain type. Within<br />

each of these groups the seeds cannot with certainty be<br />

distinguished. On the supposition that all <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> have<br />

developed in the course of ages from one ancestor,<br />

which are the more ancient, the species whose seeds<br />

are peculiar to themselves, or the members of groups whose<br />

seeds are indistinguishable among themselves though readily<br />

differentiated from those of all other groups? Or what<br />

is the explanation of the phenomenon ?<br />

These are some of the many interesting problems to<br />

which the close study of any group of living organisms<br />

Is


THE ILLUSTRATIONS 101<br />

cannot fail to give rise, and attempts at their solution must<br />

needs add zest to the interest of the mere growing of<br />

the plants.<br />

CHAPTER XVII<br />

THE ILLUSTRATIONS<br />

IT is difficult in a series of so few as eight plates to give<br />

much idea of the diversity of types to be found within<br />

the <strong>Iris</strong> genus. In deciding what species or varieties should<br />

be represented, two courses suggested themselves. It<br />

might<br />

have been possible to select eight of the rarest species ;<br />

but since the beginner will not want to start with these,<br />

it seemed better to choose those <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> which, while being<br />

themselves easily obtainable, were at the same time representative<br />

of the different groups.<br />

The bulbous species are represented by /. bucharica<br />

(see Plate which I.), is undoubtedly the finest for garden<br />

purposes of the Juno group (see page 17), and by one of<br />

the so-called Dutch <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> (see Plate V.), which are a<br />

great improvement in size and vigour on the old forms of<br />

Spanish <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>. The third representative bulbous <strong>Iris</strong> is<br />

also a member of the Xiphion group, and is included<br />

because /. xiphioides or anglica (see Plate VI.) can be<br />

grown with success by those whose soil is too damp and<br />

retentive for such species as /. xiphium and /. bucharica<br />

to do well except in specially well-drained and prepared<br />

quarters.


102 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

Since various forms of bearded or Pogon<br />

<strong>Iris</strong> are so<br />

commonly found in all gardens, it seemed unnecessary to<br />

devote to them more than the single plate of /.<br />

Jacquiniana<br />

(see Plate IV.), a richly-coloured representative of the<br />

so-called German <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>.<br />

/. Susiana (see Plate III.) was included as being the<br />

least capricious and perhaps the least difficult to grow of<br />

the Oncocyclus group. Its sombre colouring<br />

is to some<br />

extent typical of the group, though<br />

it must be added that<br />

7. Susiana is the most sombre member of the group, and<br />

that there are some species, such as /. urmiensis, with its<br />

pure yellow, and 7. Lortetii, with its soft pink and deep<br />

crimson, that are really gorgeous in their colouring.<br />

section it would have<br />

To the great beardless or Apogon<br />

been easy to devote the whole of the eight plates without<br />

reproducing any two <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> that were at all similar.<br />

Of the three examples chosen, 7. longipetala (see Plate<br />

established member of the<br />

II.)<br />

is<br />

perhaps the most easily<br />

much neglected, but very beautiful, Californian <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> ;<br />

7. ochroleuca (see Plate VII.) is the finest of the large group<br />

either of 7. ochroleuca<br />

of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> akin to 7. spuria, and a clump<br />

or of its kindred 7. aurea and 7. Monnieri or of some of<br />

Foster's Monspur hybrids is an ornament to any border.<br />

The last of the three plates of beardless <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, a Japanese<br />

hybrid of 7. Kcempferi see Plate VIII.), shows the usual form<br />

of these double flowers, which for some unaccountable<br />

reason the Japanese seem to prefer to the more graceful<br />

single-flowered forms. They are at home in sunny watergardens<br />

or in any rich, heavy<br />

moist in summer.<br />

soil where the subsoil is


AN IRIS CALENDAR 103<br />

CHAPTER XVIII<br />

AN IRIS<br />

CALENDAR<br />

THE following<br />

list is not intended to be absolutely exhaustive,<br />

and only includes those species that are easily<br />

obtainable. The few exceptions, e.g.<br />

dichotoma and<br />

chamceiris X trojana, are included in order to show that<br />

some <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> may be had in flower even in August and<br />

September, though neither of these plants is commonly<br />

to be found in catalogues.<br />

The dates for planting and transplantation are not the<br />

only possible times, but the best times the times, that is,<br />

at which the plants, given ordinary conditions, most quickly<br />

become established in the ground. In most cases <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong><br />

may be planted at considerably<br />

later dates than those<br />

mentioned, but there is then always the risk that an exceptionally<br />

hard winter will either cripple the plants or kiH<br />

them outright, or at least prevent any display of flowers in<br />

the following season.<br />

Species in Flower.


104 PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

Species in Flower.


AN IRIS CALENDAR I0 5<br />

Species in Flower.


io6<br />

PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

Species in Flower.


INDEX OF SPECIES<br />

OF IRIS<br />

AND VARIETIES<br />

ABDUL Aziz, 45<br />

chrysographes, Guldenstadtiana, 59<br />

acutiloba, 79<br />

Clarkei, 63<br />

Collettii, 7<br />

alata, 3, 17, 18, 69<br />

cretensis, 75<br />

Albert Victor, 39<br />

cristata, 34, 77<br />

Albertii, 46<br />

cypriana, 47<br />

albicans, 37<br />

albopurpurea, 65<br />

DANFORDIJE, 12, 70<br />

Amas, 36, 84<br />

Delavayi, 62<br />

amoena group, 43<br />

aphylla, 46<br />

Douglasiana, 54<br />

arenaria, 79<br />

Aschersonii, 66<br />

aurea, 69, 43<br />

BAKERIANA, 12, 70<br />

balkana, 79<br />

biflora, 46<br />

Biliottii, 47<br />

Bismarckiana, 27<br />

ELIZABETH/E, 27<br />

ensata, 52<br />

FIEBERI, 46<br />

filifolia, 1 6<br />

fimbriata, 31<br />

flavescens, 46<br />

florentina, 37, 84<br />

Black Prince, 43<br />

fcetidissima, 67<br />

bohemica, 46<br />

Forrestii, 62<br />

Boissieri, 17<br />

bosniaca, 79<br />

Fosteriana, 22<br />

fulva, 65, 93<br />

bracteata, 54<br />

bucharica, 21, 89<br />

Bungei, 68<br />

GATESII, 23<br />

germanica, 35, 36, 84<br />

goniocarpa, 80<br />

CARTHUSIAN, 47<br />

Caterina, 47<br />

Cengialtii, 39<br />

chamaeiris, 46, 79, 82<br />

Gracchus, 3<br />

gracilipes, 33, 80<br />

graminea, 56, 85<br />

Grant-Duffii, 66<br />

107


io8<br />

PRESENT-DAY GARDENING<br />

HARTWEGII, 55<br />

Heldreichii, 19, 71<br />

Henryi, 68<br />

Her Majesty, 39<br />

hexagona, 65, 93<br />

Histrio, 10<br />

histrioides, 10, 70<br />

Hookeri, 64<br />

Hookeriana, 70<br />

humilis, 51, 56, 92<br />

hungarica, 46<br />

IBERICA, 23, 79<br />

Innocenza, 40<br />

JACQUINIANA, 45<br />

japonica, 31<br />

Jeanne d'Arc, 45<br />

John Fraser, 40<br />

juncea, 17<br />

junonia, 47<br />

K>MPFERI, 64<br />

Kashmiriana, 46<br />

Kharput, 37, 84<br />

King of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 43<br />

Kolpakowskiana, 12<br />

Kochii, 37<br />

Korolkowii, 28<br />

Krelagei, u, 71<br />

kumaonensis, 80<br />

LACUSTRIS, 34, 77<br />

laevigata, 65<br />

Lamancei, 65<br />

lazica, 50<br />

Leichtlinii, 28<br />

longipetala, 52, 53<br />

Loppio, 39<br />

Lortetii, 23<br />

lupina, 27<br />

lurida, 36<br />

MACRANTHA, 36, 84<br />

macrosiphon, 54<br />

Madame Chereau, 45<br />

Madonna, 37<br />

Maori King, 43<br />

Mariae, 27<br />

masia, 66<br />

melanosticta, 66<br />

Milesii, 32, 80<br />

minuta, 67, 76<br />

Monnieri, 60, 86<br />

Monspur, 89<br />

Mrs. Allan Grey, 39<br />

Mrs. Neubronner, 43<br />

NEGLECTA group, 44<br />

nepalensis, 7<br />

nepalensis (germanica), 37<br />

OCHRAUREA, 86<br />

ochroleuca, 60, 86<br />

olbiensis, 79<br />

orchioides, 21<br />

orientalis, 61, 85<br />

Orinamme, 36, 84<br />

FAUSTINA, l8<br />

pallida, 36, 38, 85<br />

parodoxa, 24, 79<br />

persica, 6, 18, 71<br />

plicata group, 45<br />

Pogoniris, 6<br />

prismatica, 62<br />

Prosper Laugier, 45<br />

Psuedacorus, 59, 63<br />

Pseudevansia <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 6<br />

pumila, 75 1 82<br />

Purdyi, 51, 54<br />

pursind, 20<br />

QUEEN of May, 39<br />

REGELIA <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 7, 28<br />

reticulata, 6, u, 69, 72


INDEX OF SPECIES 109<br />

reticulata, cultivation, 1 1<br />

disease,<br />

n<br />

Ricardii, 47<br />

Rosenbachiana, 3, 21<br />

Rossii, 68<br />

rubromarginata, 80<br />

ruthenica, 51, 77, 89, 92<br />

SAMBUCINA, 36<br />

setosa, 64, 89<br />

sibirica, 6 1, 85<br />

sindjarensis, 2O<br />

sindpers, 20<br />

sindpur, 20<br />

Sisyrinchium, 12<br />

Snow Queen, 62<br />

songarica, 68<br />

sophenensis, IO<br />

speculatrix, 34<br />

spuria, 48, 56, 86<br />

squalens, 36, 44<br />

stenophylla, 19, 71<br />

stylosa, 49, 75> 93<br />

subbarbata, 48<br />

Susiana, 24<br />

TAURI, 19, 72<br />

tectorum, 31<br />

alba, 32<br />

tenax, 55<br />

tenuifolia, 68<br />

Thorbeck, 43<br />

Thunderbolt, 16<br />

tingitana, 1 6, 94<br />

Tollong, 53<br />

Tolmeiana, 52<br />

Trautlieb, 39<br />

tridentata, 64<br />

trojana, 47<br />

Tubergeniana, 17, 22<br />

UNGUICULARIS, 49, 50, 75, 93<br />

urmiensis, 24<br />

VARIKGATA, 3, 36, 4O<br />

Vartanii, 3, 10, 69<br />

ventricosa, 68<br />

versicolor, 59, 63<br />

Victorine, 43<br />

virginica, 63<br />

WARLKYKNSIS, 21<br />

Willmottiana, 21<br />

Wilsonii, 62<br />

Winkleri, 12<br />

XIPHIOIDKS, l6<br />

xiphium, I, 6, 15


GENERAL INDEX<br />

APOGON <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 6, 48<br />

Autumn flowering, 99<br />

Autumnal planting, bad effects of, 90<br />

BEARD, use of, in <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 100<br />

Book of the <strong>Iris</strong>, The, 4<br />

Bulbous <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 9<br />

CALIFORNIAN species, 53, 78<br />

Charles de 1'Escluse, I<br />

Clusius, Carolus, I<br />

Cold storage in winter, 27<br />

Colour changes in <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 96<br />

Crested <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 100<br />

DISEASE in I. reticulata,<br />

ENGLISH and Spanish <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, points of<br />

difference in, 2<br />

English <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 16<br />

Evansia <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 6, 30<br />

u<br />

FLEUR-DE-LYS, the, 63<br />

Flowers of <strong>Iris</strong>, structure of the, 8<br />

France, culture of /. Susiana in, 24<br />

GENUS, the divisions of the, 5<br />

German <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 34, 95<br />

Germination of seeds, 99<br />

HANDBOOK of the Irideas, 4<br />

ILLUSTRATIONS, the, 101<br />

<strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> that seldom flower, 92<br />

JUNO <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 6<br />

LITERATURE of the <strong>Iris</strong>, the, 4<br />

MOR^EA and <strong>Iris</strong>, separating character,<br />

8<br />

NEGLECTA group, 44<br />

ONCOCYCLUS <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 7, 23, 27<br />

Hybrids, 28, 29<br />

PACKING collected <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 76<br />

Planting, the best time for, 90<br />

Plicata group, the, 45<br />

Pollination, 9<br />

Problems, <strong>Iris</strong>, 98<br />

Propagation of <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 90<br />

Pseudevansia <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 6<br />

REGELIA <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 7, 28<br />

Reticulata <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, cultivation of, 1 1<br />

Rock garden, <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> for the, 68<br />

SEASONS, <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> in bloom through<br />

four, 2, 3<br />

Seeds, germination of, 99<br />

Seeds, variety in, 100<br />

Seedlings, raising of, 91<br />

Structure of <strong>Iris</strong> flowers, 8<br />

the<br />

Spring or early-summer planting, good<br />

effects of, 90<br />

Spanish <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong>, 16<br />

TRANSPLANTATION, 90<br />

WATER garden, <strong><strong>Iris</strong>es</strong> for the, 60, 63, 64<br />

PrinUd by BALLANTVNE, HANSON &* Co.<br />

Edinburgh &> London


14 DAY USE<br />

RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED<br />

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE LIBRARY<br />

This book is due on the last date stamped below, or<br />

on the date to which renewed.<br />

Renewed books are subject to immediate recall.<br />

MAR 3 1 1960


U.C. BERKELEY LIBRARIES

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