JUNE. 195 



Remarkable Plants of the "banks of the Wye, "between 

 Symond's Yat and CJiepstow. 



Clematis vitalba. Abundant. 



Helleborus viridis. Westerauside of the river. 



d 



Aquilegia vulgaris. Several spots, and in a truly wild state. 

 Arabis hirsuta. On the Windcliff, &c. 

 Cardamine impatiens. In profusion on Symond's Yat. 

 Diplotaxis tenuifolia. Sandstone cliff, near Ross. 

 Koniga maritima. Near Chepstow. 

 Cochlearia officinalis. At Chepstow. 

 Lepidium ruderale. Ditto, on the Monmouthshire side 

 Saponaria officinalis. Plentiful at the New Weir and near Red- 

 brook. 



Althsea officinalis. Below Chepstow. 

 Tilia parvifolia. Most abundantly in a large wood extending 



from Redbrook almost all the way to Big Wier, but mostly 



pollarded. 

 Hypericum calycinum. In a bushy place under the cliff beyond 



Chepstow Bridge. 



H. Androsaemum. Near Whitchurch. 

 H. maculatum. About Goodrich. 

 H. montanum. Lancaut Cliffs. 

 Geranium sanguineum. Finely adorning Lancaut Cliffs and the 



Windcliff. 

 G. lucidum. Symond's Yat, &c. With white flowers on the 



Windcliff. 



Trifolium scabrum. At Lancaut. 

 Anthyllis vulneraria. In calcareous spots. 

 Vicia sylvatica. This elegant plant dangles over the rocks that 



overhang a sequestered part of the road between the 



Windcliff and St. Arvans. 

 Lathyris sylvestris. 



Hippocrepis comosa. Near Chepstow. 

 Spiraea filipendula. In hilly pastures between the Wye and 



Severn, abundant. 

 Potentilla argentea. Lancaut Cliffs. 

 Rubus suberectus and Sprengelii, grow in the woods between 



New Weir and Hillersland. 



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