170 
Rhodora 
[SEPTEMBER 
NOVEMBER FLOWERS IN NORTHERN VERMONT. 
Inez Appie Howe. 
THE unusually wet, mild weather of October and November 1918 
induced the second. or continued blooming of so many species of 
flowering plants that I think it will be of interest to New England 
botanists to read the list noted in this part of northern Vermont. 
Gramineae: 
Phleum pratense. 
Poa annua. 
Urticaceae: 
Pilea pumila. 
Polygonaceae: 
Polygonum aviculare. 
Rumex crispus. 
Carophyllaceae: 
Stellaria media. 
Cerastium vulgatum. 
Ranunculaceae: 
Ranunculus acris. 
Caltha palustris. 
Cruciferae: 
Brassica campestris. 
* arvensis. 
Capsella bursa-pastoris. 
Lepidium virginicum. 
Hamamelidaceae: 
Hamamelis virginiana. 
Rosaceae: 
Potentilla argentea. | 
Rubus idaeus var. aculeatissimus 
Fragaria virginiana. 
i vesca var. americana. 
Leguminosae: 
Trifolium pratense. 
P repens. 
Oxalidaceae: 
Oxalis corniculata. 
Malvaceae: 
Malva rotundifolia. 
Umbelliferae: 
Zizia aurea. 
Cornaceae: 
Cornus canadensis. 
Boraginaceae: 
Myosotis laxa. 
Labiatae: 
Lamium amplexicaule. 
Galeopsis tetrahit. 
Plantaginaceae: 
Plantago major. 
Lobeliaceae: 
Lobelia inflata. 
Compositae: 
Tanacetum vulgare. 
Achillea millefolium. 
Erigeron canadensis. 
" philadelphieus. 
Solidago nemoralis. 
w canadensis. 
juncea. 
Aster puniceus. 
“ undulatus. 
cordifolius. 
ericoides. 
Taraxacum officinale. 
Rudbeckia hirta. 
Gnaphalium polycephalum. 
" uliginosum. 
& 
“ 
“ 
The forty-four species in the above list were exhibited on the Flower 
Table at the Fairbanks Museum, St. Johnsbury, Vermont, between 
November 1 and 22, all having been collected within a short distance 
of the Museum, a very unusual record for northern Vermont. 
FAIRBANKS MUSEUM. 
