Nehrling's Plants, People, and Places in Early Florida / Edition 1

Nehrling's Plants, People, and Places in Early Florida / Edition 1

by Robert W. Read
ISBN-10:
0813024285
ISBN-13:
9780813024288
Pub. Date:
12/31/2001
Publisher:
University Press of Florida
Nehrling's Plants, People, and Places in Early Florida / Edition 1

Nehrling's Plants, People, and Places in Early Florida / Edition 1

by Robert W. Read

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Overview

"This book brings about feelings of both envy and gratitude. Envy because Nehrling lived during simpler times when natural Florida was still in its primitive glory. Gratitude for putting it all in elegant prose for future generations of Florida gardeners and explorers."—Roger L. Hammer, Tropical Audubon Society and Miami-Dade Parks Department

"Dr. Nehrling, who fully combined passion for observation with skill in the propagation and cultivation of a variety of species, is one of the real pioneers in the fascinating field of plant introduction. . . . In Dr. Nehrling’s own simple but fascinating language, these stories of a great plantsman . . . tell how one who learns to recognize plants can explore for a lifetime the unlimited variety of beautiful forms which compose the plant kingdom."—David Fairchild, from the foreword to the 1944 edition

First published in the 1940s as My Garden in Florida, these two newly revised  and edited volumes by Henry Nehrling (1853-1929) present a remarkable record of Florida’s botanical history and a delightful mixture of observations on the central and south Florida climate and growing conditions. His association with writers, scientists, and travelers presents a window into the gardening community of his era, and his intriguing mixture of subjects furnishes an important source of information for those interested in Florida’s social, botanical, and environmental history.
A noted authority on tropical and subtropical plant lore, Nehrling wrote with passion in a style rich in detail and free from technical jargon, and his plant descriptions and horticultural information are as valuable today as when first written.
In his gardens at Gotha near Orlando and at Naples (now Caribbean Gardens), Nehrling introduced into cultivation and popularized many plant species that have since become common in Florida landscapes. His articles provide invaluable first-hand accounts of the environment in his time, descriptions of natural conditions, and observations of areas no longer undisturbed. More than history, however, these books describe the beautiful tropical and subtropical flora that make Florida the Garden of Eden as we know it today.

Robert W. Read, Botanist Emeritus of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, lives in Naples, Florida. He has contributed articles and served as a consultant on several books, including Blooming Bromeliads. Currently he is a research collaborator at Fairchild Tropical Gardens and the Marie Selby Botanical Gardens.

Nehrling’s Early Florida Gardens describes his arrival in Florida, Florida’s climate and soils, the planting of his first garden and his mistakes and failures, the flatwoods, the hammocks, epiphytes, bamboos, magnolias, live oaks, Japanese and Chinese evergreens, the camphor tree, conifers, the myrtle family, oleanders, cycads, bromeliads, air plants, orchids, shade trees and flowering trees, fig trees, sacred trees, vines and sweet-scented plants, flowering shrubs, oleasters, annuals, perennials, and bulbs.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813024288
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Publication date: 12/31/2001
Edition description: First
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

Table of Contents

List of Illustrationsix
Foreword, from the First Edition of My Garden in Floridaxi
Preface and Acknowledgmentsxiii
Original Editor's Note from Andrews' 1946 Edition of Volume 2xvii
1.Henry Nehrling Biography1
2.Oriental Trees and Shrubs15
Chinese and Japanese Hollies18
Crape-Myrtles22
Azaleas and Camellias24
Chinese and Japanese Magnolias35
Other Notable Imports39
3.Cacti and Succulents43
Cacti43
Sansevierias and Agave62
4.Palms in Florida66
Symbol of the Tropics66
Beautiful Native Florida Palms68
The Cabbage Palmetto73
Pseudophoenix Palms81
Royal Palms83
Palms in Peninsular Florida Gardens90
Pleasure Not a Luxury100
Butia, the Hardiest of Palms with Edible Fruit101
Phoenix Palms Fail to Come True from Seed102
Washingtonia Palms among Most Rapid Growers103
Miscellaneous Palm Sketches104
Planting Palms105
Flowering of the Talipot Palm, Corypha umbraculifera108
Some Rare and Unusual Palms109
Palmyra Palms113
5.Gymnosperms123
Ancient Gymnosperms123
Propagation of Cycads from Cuttings128
Modern Gymnosperms129
6.Florida, a Land to Treasure132
The Palmetto, "State Tree"136
Florida Native Trees and Shrubs138
Heaths and Huckleberries160
Strictly Tropical164
7.Curious and Interesting Ornamental Plants176
Tropical Looking Leaves176
Ornamental Sedges, Grasses and Bamboos188
Aroids194
Water Lilies and Ferns202
Australian "Pine," Tonga Plant and Upas Tree207
8.Nehrling's Favorite Places of Beauty213
Tropical Fort Myers213
Old Gardens219
Our Proposed National Park223
9.Landscaping and Visions of the Future228
Landscaping the Home Grounds228
Landscaping Larger Areas229
Beautifying the Cemetery230
Monotony in Gardens233
Visions of the Future Are Before Me236
10.Some of Nehrling's Favorite People238
Selected References247
Index249
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