The Botanist's Companion, Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 295 pages of information about The Botanist's Companion, Volume II.

The Botanist's Companion, Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 295 pages of information about The Botanist's Companion, Volume II.

The seeds of this grass are small, and about one bushel would sow an acre of ground.

19.  Festuca rubra.  Red or creeping fescue-grass.—­A fine grass, very like duriuscula; but it is not common in this part of the country; it grows plentifully on the mountains in Wales.

It does not produce fertile seeds with us in the garden.

20.  Festuca pratensis.  Meadow fescue-grass.—­No plant whatever deserves so much the attention of the graziers as this grass.  It has been justly esteemed by Mr. Curtis and all other persons practically acquainted with the produce of our meadows.  It will grow in almost any soil that is capable of sustaining a vegetable, from the banks of rivulets to the top of the thin-soiled calcareous hills, where it produces herbage equal to any other plant of the kind; and all descriptions of cattle eat it, and are nourished by the food.  The plant is of easy culture, as it yields seeds very abundantly, and they grow very readily.  I have made some excellent meadows with this seed, which after a trial of ten years are now equal to any in the kingdom.  The culture of the seed selected is now nearly lost, which is a misfortune, I had almost ventured to say a disgrace, to our agriculture.

If the farmer could get his land fit for meadow laid down with one bushel of this seed, one bushel of Alopecurus pratensis, three pounds of Anthoxanthum, and a little Bromus mollis, with Clover, I will venture to predict experience will induce him to say, “I will seek no further.”

21.  Festuca ovina.—­SHEEP’S fescue-grass.—­This is very highly spoken of in all dissertations that have hitherto been written on the merits of our grasses; but its value must be confined to alpine situations, for its diminutive size added to its slow growth renders it in my opinion very inferior to the duriuscula.  In fact, I am of opinion that these are often confounded together, and the merits of the former applied to this, although they are different in many respects.  Those who wish to obtain more of its history may consult Stillingfleet’s Observations on Grasses, p. 384.

22.  Festuca vivipara.  Viviparous fescue-grass.—­This affords a striking instance of the protection that Nature has contrived for keeping up the regular produce of the different species of plants; as when the Festuca ovina is found in very high mountainous situations, places not congenial to the ripening seeds of so light a nature, the panicle is found to become viviparous, i.e. producing perfect plants, which being beaten down with heavy rains in the autumn, readily strike root in the ground.

This plant was introduced into our garden many years ago, and still preserves this difference; otherwise it is in all respects the same as the Festuca ovina.

23.  Festuca pinnata.  Spiked fescue-grass.—­I have observed this near the Thames side to be the principal grass in some of the most abundant meadows; and as the seeds are very plentiful, I am of opinion it might be very easily propagated:  it is, however, not in cultivation at present.

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The Botanist's Companion, Volume II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.