184. HUNT’S DUKE OF GLOUCESTER—Hort.

Fruit, below medium size; roundish ovate. Skin, almost entirely covered with thin russet, except a spot on the shaded side, where it is green; and where exposed to the sun it is of a redish-brown. Flesh, white tinged with green, crisp, juicy, and highly flavored.

A dessert apple of first-rate quality; in use from December to February.

This variety was raised from a seed of the old Nonpareil, to which it bears a strong resemblance, by Dr. Fry of Gloucester, and received the name it now bears, from being sent to the Horticultural Society of London, by Thomas Hunt Esq., of Stratford-on-Avon, in 1820. Mr. Lindley gives Hunt’s Nonpariel as a synonyme of Duke of Gloucester; but it is a very distinct variety; it was, however, a seedling raised by Mr. Hunt from the Duke of Gloucester, and is a very first-rate variety.

185. HUNTHOUSE.—Hort.

Fruit, of medium size, two inches and three quarters wide, by two inches and a half high; conical, ribbed on the sides, and terminated at the apex, with rather prominent knobs. Skin, at first grass-green, but changing as it ripens to greenish-yellow; where exposed to the sun it is tinged with red, and marked with small crimson dots and a few short broken streaks of the same color; but where shaded it is veined with thin brown russet, particularly about the eye, and very thinly strewed with russety dots. Eye, large, half open, with broad flat segments, set in a narrow, and deeply furrowed basin. Stalk, an inch long, straight, inserted in a very shallow cavity, sometimes between two fleshy lips, but generally with a fleshy protuberance on one side of it. Flesh, greenish-white, firm, tender, and with a brisk, but rather coarse and rough acid flavor.

A useful culinary apple; in use from December to March.