47 
CADDELL. Cow-parsnip or Hogweed, Hera- 
cleum Sphondylium (Devon). 
CADLEY WOBBLES. A correspondent at East 
Harptree gives me this as local name for Fir cones. 
CADWEED. Same as CADDELL. 
CAINS AND ABELS. (1) Columbine, Agquilegia 
vulgaris (S.W. Wilts). 
(2) Mr. T. W. Cowan tells me that in other 
parts of the country the name Cain and Abel is 
applied to the tubers of Orchis latifolia. 
CAKERS. Cow-parsnip or Hogweed, Hera- 
cleum Sphondylium (Luxborough). 
CAKE SEED (1) Cow-parsnip, Heracleum 
Sphondylium (Charmouth, Upottery, and Colyton 
districts). 
(2) Hemlock, Conium maculatum (Upottery). 
See KEx. 
CAKEZIE. Hemlock, Conium maculatum (Brad- 
ford-on-Tone). Often called Kex or Kexie in 
other parts of the county. 
CALL ME TO You. Wild Pansy, Viola arvensis. 
CALTROP. Several correspondents at Horton 
give this as a local name for the Crowfoot, 
Ranunculus (? acris). Mr. T. W. Cowan writes 
me, “I do not know what Ranunculus this can 
be, but the name is applied te Centaurea Calcitrapa 
in other parts of the ecuntry. The specific name 
Caleitrapa suggests it to be a corruption of this.” 
CALVARY. False Hop, called Calvary from the 
spots of blood on the leaf (Wilts). ‘* Diogenes’ 
Sandals,” p. 85. 
CALVES-Foot. (1) Wild Arum or Cuckoo 
Pint, Arum maculatum, from the shape of the leaf. 
It bears a similar name in France and Flanders. 
(2) Coltsfoot, Tussilago Farfara. 
CALVES’ SNnoutT. Snapdragon, Antirrhinum 
majus. 
CAMMICK or CAMMOCK. (1) A common name 
for the Rest Harrow, Ononis repens. 
(2) Also applied in Devon to the Common 
Yarrow, Achillea Millefolium. 
CAMPANELLE. Hedge Convolvulus, Calystegia 
sepium. 
CANARY BIRD FLOWER. See AMERICAN 
CREEPER. 
CANARY CREEPER. Trop@olum peregrinum, 
frequently called ‘‘ Canariensis.’? See AMERICAN 
CREEPER. 
CANARY FLOWER. Greater Plantain, Plantago 
major, of which Anne Pratt says “ Its tall spikes 
of greenish flowers, or the brown ripened seeds 
which succeed them, invite the possessor of the — 
captive bird to carry the plant away for the meal 
of the songster.”’ 
