"Leaving out of consideration the more exact methods of classification employed by algologists, algae may be divided into their four great botanical sub-classes on the basis of color, although this method of identification is not always correct. The blue-green or purple sea-weeds are all small — mostly microscopic — with two genera consisting of fine, hair-like, filamentous plants. The grass-green algae are among the most widely diffused of plant forms, being found everywhere between tide marks, floating on the surface of the deep sea, covering damp earth, walls, palings and tree trunks, sticking to the surface of leaves in damp forests and existing in every brook, river, ditch, pond or casual pool of rain water. Many are microscopic in size, but others are quite large, resembling grass, leaves, mushrooms and a multitude of other common land plants."
Tag: California trees
WITH THE FLOWERS AND TREES IN CALIFORNIA, by Charles Francis Saunders, 1914
"Vignes was a popular citizen in his time and lived in a house near the Los Angeles River with a fine old sycamore tree before it, of which he bragged as much as he did of his grape vines. The Spanish-American word for sycamore is aliso, and so he was nicknamed Don Luis del Aliso. The tree is long since swallowed up in the growth of the city..."



