2/4
[ stop the slideshow ]

Gourds

Gourds.jpg Formal arrangements in London parksThumbnailsAcanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).Formal arrangements in London parksThumbnailsAcanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).Formal arrangements in London parksThumbnailsAcanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).Formal arrangements in London parksThumbnailsAcanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).Formal arrangements in London parksThumbnailsAcanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).Formal arrangements in London parksThumbnailsAcanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).Formal arrangements in London parksThumbnailsAcanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).

The Gourd tribe is capable, if properly used, of adding much remarkable beauty and character to the garden; yet, as a rule, it is seldom used. There is no natural order more wonderful in the variety and singular shapes of its fruit than that to which the melon, cucumber, and vegetable marrow belong. From the writhing Snake-cucumber, which hangs down four or five feet long from its stem, to the round enormous giant pumpkin or gourd, the grotesque variation, both in colour and shape and size, is marvellous.