Identifier: ornamentaltreeso00rock (find matches)Title: The ornamental trees of HawaiiYear: 1917 (1910s)Authors: Rock, Joseph Francis Charles, 1884-1962Subjects: Trees--Hawaii.Publisher: Honolulu: (s.n.)Contributing Library: Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, McLean LibraryDigitizing Sponsor: LYRASIS Members and Sloan FoundationView Book Page: Book ViewerAbout This Book: Catalog EntryView All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.Text Appearing Before Image:, and reaches a height of about forty feet, and a diameter ofover one and a half feet. The trunk is naked, that is not clothedwith the bases of the petioles. The leaves are suborbicular and exceedingly large, wTith manysegments, and a petiole of seven feet in length. The spadix is muchshorter than the fronds, and branches three times, with the flowersdensely set. The flowers are relatively large; the black shinyfruits are the largest in the genus. They are obpyriform, the vertexis rounded, while the base is very pointed, and symmetrical. Theseeds are brown shining, globose and depressed. This species occurs as a native exclusively in the Bermuda Isl-ands but has been planted in gardens a great deal owing to itsbeauty and ornamental value. It is one of the most distinct speciesof the genus Sabal which possesses about eighteen species. It differsfrom Sabal palmetto in its large dimensions, short spadix and ob-pearshaped fruits. This species is much less common in Honolulu than Plate XI.Text Appearing After Image:Washingtonia robusta H. Wendl.Another species of Washington Palms in Ainahou, Waikiki. Palmae. 29 Sabal palmetto. One fairly good specimen can be seen in theCapitol grounds. Sabal Palmetto Lodd. Palmetto Palm.Plate XII. The genuine Palmetto reaches a height of sixty feet in its nativehome, begins flowering rather early, and has the trunk clothed withthe old fronds, the petiole of which, especially the broad base, isdivided into two divaricating parts. The leaves are suborbicular andhave many segments (about eighty). The spadix forms large panicleswhich are drooping when in flower and are reflex-curved when infruit. The fruits are perfectly spherical, slightly less than half aninch in diameter; the seeds are globose-depressed and hemisphericalin the upper part. The Palmetto is widely diffused over the United States extendingfrom North Carolina to Florida. It is cultivated in Europe andother subtropical countries. In Honolulu it is much more commonthan Sabal Blackburmana. The specimen hNote About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
Scene in West Fork Canyon. Desert type and palms (Washingtonia filifera). (Same as # 241674) Quad name: San Jacinto. Quad number: 175. Reference to map: 8.
Scene in West Fork Canyon. Desert type and palms (Washingtonia filifera). (Same as # 241674) Quad name: San Jacinto. Quad number: 175. Reference to map: 8.