<h2>CHAPTER XXV<br/> <span class="small">ON CLIMBING PLANTS</span></h2>
<p class="hanging">Robin-run-the-Hedge—Bramble bushes—Climbing roses—Spiny, wiry
stems of smilax—The weak young stem of a liane—The way in which
stems revolve—The hop and its little harpoons—A climbing palm—Rapidity
of turners—The effect of American life on them—Living
bridges—Rope bridges in India—The common stitchwort—Tendrils—Their
behaviour when stroked or tickled—Their sensibility—Their
grasping power—The quickness with which they curve and their sense
of weight—Charles Darwin—Reasonableness of plants—Corkscrew
spirals—The pads of the Virginian Creeper—The ivy—Does it do
harm?—Embracing roots—Tree ivy.</p>
<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HERE are many plants which depend upon and cling
to other more sturdy kinds, and which would be quite
unable to live upon the earth at all if they had not
developed the most beautiful methods of doing so.</p>
<p>In autumn, as soon as the leaves of the Hawthorn have
fallen off, one is sure to find upon the hedges the common
Robin-run-the-Hedge (Goosegrass, Cleavers, or Sticky Willie,
for it is known by all these nicknames as well as by its
proper name, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Galium aparine</i>).</p>
<p>Its stem is exceedingly weak, but it will be found sometimes
to be six or seven feet long. It does not support itself, but
is resting amongst and entangled in the outer twigs of the
hedge in such a manner that it cannot be blown away by the
wind or indeed picked out without its being broken. The
young stems grow upright and are vigorous at first, but soon
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314">314</SPAN></span>
they cannot bear their own weight, and fall back upon a
branch of the hedge. There are small curved little roughnesses
along the stem and on the under side of the leaves of
the Galium; these hitch on to the twig. Up to this point then
the stem is supported, and the young part above grows until
it also gets a lodgment, and so it goes on until it sometimes
reaches right over the top of the hedge.</p>
<p>Its young flowering branches grow out towards the light
away from the main stem, and the yellow withered stem in
autumn rests upon the hedge just as a piece of string laid
upon it might do.</p>
<p>The Bramble and Rose manage to get a support in very
much the same way, but in Great Britain the Bramble
generally grows in open ground and its branches take
root.</p>
<p>The peculiar, curved-back prickles of the Bramble and its
arching sideways growth would of course hang it on to any
horizontal branches in the neighbourhood. Kerner measured
the length of the stem of a Bramble which had interwoven
itself into the boughs of a tree, and found that it was over
twenty feet long, although it was only one-third of an inch
thick. In Chile one often finds hedges of Brambles ten to
fifteen feet in height, which have been formed by the aid of
other plants, and also by the way in which the branches
become entangled with one another.</p>
<p>Some Climbing Roses act in a very similar way, especially
if grown on trellis, but the flower shoots always turn to the
light like those of the Galium.</p>
<p>But it is the creepers and lianes of the tropical forests
that are the most remarkable of all climbing plants. They
twine round the stems and hang in great loops and grotesque
folds from the branches. Sometimes in the dense shade it
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315">315</SPAN></span>
may be difficult to see the main stem, for it is quite thin,
though as strong as a piece of steel wire. It often happens,
when hurrying through a rather open part of the forest
after game, that one's leg suddenly catches in a thin, spiny,
wiry stem of Smilax or some such creeper. The first that
one knows of the creeper is when a quarter of an inch of the
spine is buried in one's flesh.</p>
<p>Away up amongst the branches and foliage far above one's
head, leaves and flowers are developed on numerous branches
which have vigorously pushed out as soon as they got near
the sunlight, this tough, spiny, thread-like stem being
their only connexion with the ground.</p>
<p>The development of these climbing plants is probably
connected with the dense shade of forests. In such places
a young stem growing up will become long and drawn out;
its tip will droop over and hang downwards. But there is a
curious peculiarity in the growth of all stems. The stem
generally grows more rapidly at any one time on one side,
say on the north, and therefore bends over to the opposite
side. After a time it will be growing most rapidly on the
eastern side and then its head points westwards, and so on.
The result is that the tip of the stem swings in an irregular
circle round the stem itself. Its head turns to every point
of the compass in succession. Supposing a stone is tied to
the end of a piece of string, and one swings the stone
horizontally in a circle, then, if an upright stick is put in
the ground and the string comes against it, the string will
coil itself round the stick because the stone goes on swinging
horizontally.</p>
<p>Our young climbing plant in the shade of the forest acts
in exactly the same way. If there is any trunk of a suitable
size, it will in the course of its revolving or sweeping round
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316">316</SPAN></span>
first touch and then coil itself round and round the trunk.<SPAN name="FNanchor_138" id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</SPAN>
Of these twining stems, one of the most interesting and
beautiful is the common Hop. The young shoots or suckers
which come from the ground may be seen waving their
stems helplessly round in the air. If they cannot find something
to cling to, then they form weak limp curves, but if
one such shoot touches a pole it very soon obtains a hold,
wraps itself round the support, and easily climbs up to
a height of many feet. But the Hop is worth examining
closely. If one passes the fingers along the stem, it feels
rough and prickly. With the aid of a hand-lens, a whole
series of most exquisite little hooks will be discovered. They
are like small pimples with two or three very fine and minute,
sharp grappling-hooks on the top. These prevent the stem
from slipping off. It is also helped in climbing by its
leaves, which curve outwards, and are also provided with
grappling prickles on the under side. At the top of the
stem the young leaves are close together, and folded near the
point, so as not to interfere with the tip finding its way in
and out of a trellis-work or amongst branches.</p>
<p>These grappling-hooks on the Hop are as perfect in their
way, though by no means so beautiful and elegant as those
which are found in the climbing palm, Desmoncus, so well
described by Kerner in his <cite>Natural History of Plants</cite>. It is
one of the rotang palms which reach lengths of 600 feet,
though their stem may be no more than 1-1/3 to 2 inches
thick. The leaflets towards the end of the leaf are transformed
into strong spiny barbs which are exquisitely adapted
to hang on to other plants. In many places, thickets in
which these rotang palms have developed are so matted and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317">317</SPAN></span>
tangled together that it is quite impossible even to cut into
them, and they are practically impenetrable.</p>
<div><SPAN name="in_a_kentish_hop_garden" id="in_a_kentish_hop_garden"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_316.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="smcap">In a Kentish Hop Garden</p> </div>
</div>
<p>Some of our common British twiners climb very quickly.
A complete turn round the supporting pole was made in
England, at Charles Darwin's home, in the following times.
The Hop took 2 hrs. 8 mins., Wistaria 2 hrs. 5 mins., Convolvulus
1 hr. 42 mins., and Phaseolus 1 hr. 54 mins. A
Honeysuckle took 7 hrs. 30 mins. to make one complete turn
round the support.</p>
<p>Recently Miss Elizabeth A. Simons timed the rate of
growth of the same plants at the University of Pennsylvania.
They seem to have been stimulated by the exhilarating
atmosphere of the United States, for they were all growing
faster. The Hop did its turn in 1 hr. 5 mins., Phaseolus
took from 1 hr. to 1 hr. 20 mins., Convolvulus 57 mins.
only, Lonicera from 1 hr. 43 mins. to 2 hrs. 48 mins., and
Wistaria 2 hrs.<SPAN name="FNanchor_139" id="FNanchor_139" href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</SPAN> But there are curious variations in the
rate at which these plants revolve.</p>
<p>Thus when coming towards the light they go as fast as
they can, but revolve more slowly, and as it were reluctantly,
away from it. It has been found in one case that
the shoot took thirty-five minutes to do the semicircle
towards the light, and an hour and fifteen to twenty minutes
going away from it, but this is not always the case, for
sometimes the reverse takes place<SPAN name="FNanchor_140" id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</SPAN> (Baranetzki).</p>
<p>These twining plants are not very common in Great
Britain, and indeed in Europe. Some of them move or
twine to the right (in the same direction as the hands of
a watch or of the sun), such as Convolvulus (Bindweed),
Phaseolus, Ipomœa, and Aristolochia. Others, like the Hop,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_318" id="Page_318">318</SPAN></span>
Polygonum, Convolvulus, Honeysuckle, and Elephant's Foot,
move in the opposite way from right to left, or "widder-shins."
But there is nothing very important in this distinction,
for the Bittersweet may be found twining in either
direction, and in some plants part of a stem may be twining
one way and the other in the opposite direction.</p>
<p>It is in the tropics, and especially in the rank, dark,
moisture-laden atmosphere of the coast jungle forests, that
these twiners attain their greatest development.</p>
<p>They show the most extraordinary variety. Sometimes
a twiner hangs in elegant festoons from branch to branch,
forming a convenient suspension bridge for monkeys. Sometimes
four or five are wound round one another or twisted
together, so that they look like some gigantic cable. In
other cases they are knotted, looped, tangled, and twisted in
the most inextricable manner.</p>
<p>Some creepers are flat, like green ribbons or broad
bands. In others the dense mass of old, thick creepers and
twiners round some sturdy trunk becomes so thick and so
fused together that when the trunk dies the lattice-like
arrangement of these creepers may keep them upright
although the original supporting trunk is quite rotten and
decayed away.</p>
<p>More usually, a tree will become unhealthy because its
branches are overladen with the dense foliage and flowers of
heavy lianes, and because both trunk and branches are so
strangled in the embrace of great creepers that they cannot
expand and develop in the proper way. Then a storm will
overthrow the dead giant of the forest, and these creepers,
entangled with all the surrounding trees, will produce ruin
and destruction all around.</p>
<p>A regular duty of the foresters in India is to cut the stems
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_319" id="Page_319">319</SPAN></span>
of climbing plants. These twining, trailing, rope-like creepers
are, in fact, natural ropes, and are used as such in India,
Burma, and other places. Sometimes they form natural
bridges of living plants extending across a stream. The
great suspension bridges in the valleys of the Himalayas are
sometimes made without a single nail or plank. They are
just three ropes (one for the feet and two to hold on by)
made of jungle creepers. Crossing one of these swinging,
swaying creeper-bridges is not an easy matter for those whose
heads are unaccustomed to depths of hundreds of feet below
them, especially if combined with a motion of the creeper-bridge
sufficient in itself to produce violent seasickness. Yet
the natives run across them with loads on their heads!</p>
<p>But it is not necessary to go to the tropics to find
interesting and ingenious climbing plants.</p>
<p>There is a very common little British plant, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Stellaria
holostea</i> (the Star of Bethlehem, Great Starwort, or Stitchwort),
which is common in shady places, light woods, and by
hedges. In the spring it grows very quickly, and the pairs
of leaves are shut together over the growing point, so that
the end of the stem is narrow and can insert itself between
the leaves and twigs of the neighbouring plants. As soon
as such a growing end gets out of the foliage into the light,
each pair of leaves opens out and curves backwards, making
a pair of broad, curved hooks excellently suited to hang the
stem on to the leaves or twigs. Then another period of
growth follows, and again a new pair of hook-like leaves
opens out. The stem may be five or six feet long.</p>
<p>In a rather rare Speedwell (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Veronica scutellata</i>) a very
similar method is used, but the leaves have special little
backward-pointing teeth on their edges which assist in the
attachment process.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_320" id="Page_320">320</SPAN></span>
But these leaves are not to be compared as regards perfection
of mechanism with the tendrils by means of which plants
climb. These tendrils are thin, flexible, twining threads,
which may be formed by the modification of whole leaves,
in other cases of leaflets, or sometimes of branches. Sweet
Peas, Vetches, Passion-flowers, Vines, and many other plants
possess them.</p>
<p>They are like twining plants in the way in which they
revolve or twine so as to wrap themselves round anything
which they touch. They move much faster than twining
plants. A Cobæa tendril only takes twenty-five minutes to
make a complete turn, Passion-flowers take from half to
three-quarters of an hour, and the Vine tendril takes a little
over an hour to make one complete turn.</p>
<p>But in one way they differ altogether, for they are sensitive
to contact. If tickled, they contract and embrace closely
the object which is touching them. They show a most
extraordinary sensibility and sensitiveness.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, these tendrils have a finer sense of
touch and a much more delicate feeling of weight than any
human being. They detect the weight of twenty-seven
inches of a spider's thread.</p>
<p>It is, however, best to explain what happens. A half-grown
curved tendril of the Passion-flower is perhaps the
most interesting to experiment with, but any sort of tendril
does quite well. If one very gently rubs the inner or concave
side of its little hook, then in a very few minutes, or even
seconds, the tendril distinctly curves. If this has happened
naturally, as when for instance it has been rubbing upon a
pea-stick, this curve makes it curl round the stick, and the
more it touches the more it curls, until the whole tendril is
wrapped round the support.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_321" id="Page_321">321</SPAN></span>
It is, of course, quite impossible to explain it all exactly:
the sensitive part on the inside of the curve differs from the
outside or convex part of the tendril; the former has a layer
of elongated, thin-walled cells, full of the living matter, protoplasm,
which are absent on the outer side. Immediately
the tendril touches the stick, the outer convex surface begins
to grow rapidly. It grows from forty to 200 times as fast as
the inner side which touches the stick! Very soon after it
has clasped the stick the tendril becomes woody and forms a
strong, woody, spiral coil.</p>
<p>These tendrils can be made to curve by a weight exceedingly
small. The most sensitive part of our own skins is
quite unable to distinguish so small a weight as is perceived
by these tendrils. Even the sensation of taste can only be
produced by a weight eight times as great as that shown by
some of them. Tendrils curve very quickly after they have
been touched. In twenty seconds some tendrils curve
(<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cyclanthera</i>), others (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Passiflora</i>) take thirty seconds, and
some of them require four to five minutes or even longer
before they make up their minds to coil.</p>
<p>Even more remarkable, however, is the fact that they do
not coil when raindrops fall on them, giving a much harder
blow than small weights. If one tendril touches or rubs
against another, it is said not to curve. They are persevering
little things also, for Darwin got a passion-flower tendril
to curve when struck or rubbed no less than twenty-one
times during fifty-four hours.</p>
<p>If one reflects on all these curious facts, it is difficult to
help feeling that these plants behave very much in the way
that a reasonable animal would do. There are many other
cases in which some vegetable does exactly what we should
expect of reasonable beings under the circumstances. The tip
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_322" id="Page_322">322</SPAN></span>
of the root (see p. <SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN>), the Sensitive Plant, the Monkey
and Barberry flowers, are all well-known cases.</p>
<p>So that it is difficult to find anything in science to contradict
the comfortable belief that wide-open flowers and
stretched-out leaves of plants as they drink in the warm rays
of the sunlight are really enjoying themselves, whilst they
are doing their day's work.</p>
<p>All these interesting facts are so beautifully described and
so carefully summed up by Charles Darwin, that we shall
only earnestly recommend our readers to get first that fascinating
book <cite>The Power of Movement in Plants</cite>, and then
read all the rest of his works.<SPAN name="FNanchor_141" id="FNanchor_141" href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</SPAN></p>
<p>There are an extraordinary number of these plants and
the tendrils are formed exactly where they will be most
useful. Every part of a leaf may become a tendril. The
whole leaf is changed into one in some kinds of Lathyrus.
In a very beautiful creeper which is not so often grown in
greenhouses as it might be (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Gloriosa superba</i>), the tip of the
leaf only acts as a tendril. Leaflets are often made into
tendrils. The Clematis is the most economical of them all,
for the leaf-stalk coils round and forms little woody rings
which hold up the plant.</p>
<p>Before leaving the subject of tendrils, it may be interesting
to notice the queer corkscrew spirals in which they roll
themselves up. These spirals are formed after the end of the
tendril has tied itself to the support and become woody.
The free part between the end and its own stem goes on
revolving; now if you tie a piece of string at both ends and
make it revolve, you will see at once that it must coil itself
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_323" id="Page_323">323</SPAN></span>
into a double spiral, one part in one direction and the other
in the opposite way, with a flat piece between them.</p>
<p>One might be disposed to think no more about these
double coils; but here comes in one of the curious, inexplicable
coincidences which happen so often in plant life. Such
a coil is much stronger than a straight bit of wire or string
would be, because if pulled out it yields and is springy.
That of course makes it less probable that the tendril will
be broken. Attached by a series of wiry springs, the plant
yields and sways to the wind, and it is not likely that it will
be torn away. Besides this, the coiling of the tendril pulls
the stem closer to its support, which is also a great advantage.</p>
<p>Certain Virginian Creepers and Vines behave in quite a
different manner. The tendrils grow away from the light
and so seek the shadow of the leaves. They are also divided
into little branches. At the tip of each little branch is a
small knob; if this should touch the wall or the trunk of a
tree, etc., it immediately secretes a drop of cement and glues
itself firmly to the wall. There is a curious difference in
different sorts of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ampelopsis</i> in this respect. There is no
adhesive pad in one of them (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ampelopsis hederacea</i>) until it
touches, whilst <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">A. Veitchii</i> has them more or less ready for
gluing before they touch (though they become much
larger and better developed as soon as they rub against the
wall).<SPAN name="FNanchor_142" id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</SPAN></p>
<p>One of the most interesting of our common climbers, "that
rare old plant the Ivy green," has not yet been mentioned.
It is exceedingly decorative on walls, especially on ruins and
on old tree-trunks in winter time, where its dark, brilliant
green is most effective.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324">324</SPAN></span>
A violent controversy rages as to whether it does good or
harm. Unhappily it does not do any good to trees. It
does not suck their sap, for its roots do not get through the
bark, but it does choke, with its clinging branches, young
tree-stems, and prevents their growing properly.</p>
<p>Also, in winter storms an ivy-covered tree is much more
likely to be blown down. But on walls the ivy certainly
does good, for it sucks up the moisture, and ivy-covered
walls are much more dry inside than those which are exposed
to rain.</p>
<p>Its method of climbing is very curious. All along the
stem quantities of little roots are produced. They dislike
light, like most roots, and creep into crevices and cracks,
where they wedge themselves in by growing thicker. Thus
the stem is anchored all along its length. It is curious to
find that these roots are formed before a twig is actually
touching the wall, so as to be ready for any emergencies.<SPAN name="FNanchor_143" id="FNanchor_143" href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</SPAN></p>
<p>One interesting little point in the growth of the ivy on a
tree is perhaps worth mentioning. The main stem runs
nearly straight up the trunk, and when young is pulled
down into the crevices or cracks in the bark. But its
branches leave the main stem at an angle of forty-five
degrees or so to it; these latter may often grow in this
direction for a foot or eighteen inches, but then they
gradually begin to turn more and more distinctly up the
tree. Still these branches firmly clasp the trunk like arms
spread out on either side of it, and make it almost impossible
to dislodge the main stem.</p>
<p>Old plants of ivy entirely surround the trunk. The
flowering branches grow straight out into the air, and have
no tendency to cling to the bark. Their leaves are also
different.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325">325</SPAN></span>
The ivy may be considered as a root-climber, although the
branches assist by growing round the stem.</p>
<p>A curious instance has been given me of the longevity of
ivy and its power of clinging to life. A correspondent
mentions the case of a Scotch fir whose life was threatened
by an ivy. The trunk of the ivy was sawn through. That
did not kill it, at any rate immediately!</p>
<p>Probably the rain soaked up by the leaves, and by the roots
in the crevices of the bark, kept it sufficiently fresh to cling
to life. As it refused to die, a ladder was brought, and it
was dragged off the tree. No doubt it would have died if
the weather had been at all dry.</p>
<p>There are some very beautiful tropical plants which also
climb by means of their roots. These roots, the so-called
girdle roots, grow right round the stem and embrace it, so
that the climber is perfectly supported.</p>
<p>It is impossible not to be impressed with the extraordinary
variety of all these contrivances by which plants
are able to escape the trouble of supporting themselves.
But such ways of life involve certain disadvantages. Supposing
there is nothing on which to climb, the stems trail
feebly on the ground, and are probably soon choked by the
surrounding grasses. Curiously enough, there are varieties
of the Ivy, Wistaria, and the French Bean which are upright,
and do not climb at all. The Tree Ivy has all its
leaves like the leaves of the flowering shoot in the common
form. In America, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Wistaria sinensis</i> is often grown as a
standard tree, and does not send out the long shoots, sometimes
thirty feet in length, which are common when it grows
on walls. The dwarf French Bean has a thick stem and
requires no support, yet it often puts out a long slender
shoot which tries to twine round something.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326">326</SPAN></span>
In a tropical forest also, the creepers, though they damage
the trees, yet manage to find space for their leaves and
flowers: more vegetable matter is formed per square yard of
ground than would be the case if there were no climbing
plants.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327">327</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />