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Kilmarnock, 8th Feb. 1888. My dear Sir: Thanks for your kind and characteristic letter. Thanks also for your paper on
the Big Trees which I have read with much interest. You may be interested to know exactly how it grows in Auld Scotia. I give
you the most favorable example I am acquainted with in our neighborhood (Ayrshire). One was planted at Laufine (about 400
feet above sea-level) in 1856. It was in 1884, when I measured it, 28 1/2 feet in height, was a close mass of foliage from
tip to the ground, was 10 feet 11 inches in girth at the base, and 5 feet 3 inches in firth five feet from the ground. Is
that not well for Scotland. Could California beat it? I doubt not that in California it might grow faster; but would its proportions
be better? But what of the many thousands of years that the old trees have grown. If the Laufine plant grown on as it has
begun it will be a hundred feet in girth in less than three hundred years. Perhaps you may wish to know how the Gum trees
grow in Scotland. I sowed the seed of the White Gum (Eucalyptus grandiflora) in the spring of 1879 and in the autumn of 1886
the tree was 21 feet in height and 9 l/2 inches in girth at five feet from the ground, and is now growing yearly 3 l/3 feet
in height and adding 2 1/2 inches to its girth. It thus grows more than three times faster than the Sequoia gigantea in height
and slightly faster in girth, the gum adding 2 l/2 inches yearly, the Big Tree 2 l/3. I was much interested in the measurements
of the Fig tree you so kindly sent. I doubt much if it has its equal in the whole world -- age being taken into consideration.
How grateful must be its shade in a scorching day It leads us to think of the text, I sat under the shade with great delight.
May Christ be increasingly precious to us With kindest regards to you and yours, I am, Yours sincerely, David Landbonah