150 ONAGRACE^. 



ONAGRACE^. 



EPILOBIUM. L. 



286. E. angustifolmm, L. Wild French Willow, or Rose-Bay. 



Native or Denizen ; on a bank. Very rare. July, August, or 

 later. 

 D. lY. Bank by the Great Western Railway, below a wood at Chaddle- 

 wood, away from houses, and the wild form, niacrocarinim, 

 Hteph., but it could not have grown at the spot before the line 

 of railway was made, as this is below a 'cutting.' Known 

 there since 1866. 



h. hrachycarpum, Leight. 

 An escape from gardens. 

 D. III. Well established on a hedge-bank and in an adjoining plantation, 

 close to Maristow Lodge, by Roborough Down. 



287. E, hirsutum, L. Great Hairy Willow-herb. 



Native ; by ditches and watercourses. Common. July to Sep- 

 tember. 

 0. I. Between Crafthole and Port AVrinkle. Between Seaton and 

 Hessenford. Near Moditon Mill. Between Tregunnus' and the 

 coast. Landrake. Tideford. Wacker. 

 II. Saltash and Callington Road ; a very hairy form near the Holland 

 Inn. St. Johns. 

 D. III. Keyham ; Mutley ; Keys, Fl. ii. 149. Pennycomequick, close to 

 Ptymouth, 1879. Ham Valley. Tamerton Foliot. 

 IV. Shalaford, &c., Egg Buckland. Between Marsh Mills and 

 Plympton St. Mary Church. Plymstock. Near Newnham. 

 Bickleigh Vale. 

 V. Bridgend. Efford, near Harestone. Brixton. Yealm Valley. 

 VI. Flete. 

 Partial to the low warm tracts. 



288. E. parviflorum, Schreb. Small -flowe7'ed Hairy Willow-herb. 



Native ; by damp roadsides and in waste spots. Very common. 



July to September. Area general. 



Occurs in the innnediate neighbourhood of the town, and is a frequent 



species in the enclosed portions of country, sometimes growing in the 



wilder tracts, as on Viverdon Down. A nearly glabrous form at Tamerton 



Foliot and elsewhere. 



