Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Fern Growing: Fifty Years' Experience in Crossing and Cultivation; With a List of the Most Important Varieties and a History of the Discovery of Multiple Parentage, Etc
The small-leaved Fuchsias were crossed with Fuchsia fulgens, and a hybrid obtained, named Polyhymnia, which has a small leaf of the pale colour of fulgens, and a long tubular ?ower with a large corolla also of the same colour as fulgens (the pollen of this would never cross with another Fuchsia). By using both Fuchsias as seed-bearers, it was apparent that the habit and form of leaf copied the seed-bearer, and the ?ower that of the male.
In Pansies the endeavour was to improve the form and size of the ?ower, and to obtain a more robust constitution, also to raise a Blue Pansy, which was then a desideratum; a Blue Pansy was raised (the first year), and is known by the name of Imperial Blue. Twenty-four seedling pansies competed with seven other exhibits at the Royal Botanic Society, and they won the First Prize and the Silver Medal against all the named well-known varieties of the other exhibitors.
With the Cactus, a scarlet was crossed with a white one; there are a number of seedlings, but they have not yet bloomed.
From the Dahlia crosses have resulted the new single Cactus, and other forms with lily-like petals.
The Aquilegia has been crossed with a Clematis, and Clematis-like ?owers have been produced.
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