338 TRANSACTIONS, NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY OP GLASGOW. 



Stereum hirsutum, Fr. 



sanguinolentum, Fr. 

 Lycoperdon coelatum, Fr. 

 Peziza badia, Pers. 

 Reticulata umbrina, Fr. 



Few Tipulidae were netted, the rains of the eai-ly morning 

 having so damped the grass and undergrowth that no sweeping 

 could be done. The following is a list of those taken : — 



Dixa maculata, Mg. 

 nebulosa, Mg. 

 Dicranomyia didyma, Mg. 

 Empeda 7iubUa, Schum. 

 Ehypholophus haemorrhoidalis, Ztt. 

 Limnophila senilis, Hal. 

 Trichocera annulata, Mg. 

 hiemalis, Deg. 

 Dicranota bimacidata, Schum. 

 Tipula 2Mgana, Mg. 



signata, Staeg. 



Campsie Glen and Lennox Castlb were visited on 28th Sep- 

 tember, 1901, and Cadder Wilderness on 19th October, but 

 nothing deserving of special mention falls to be recorded. The 

 excursions were under the guidance of Mr. Wm. Stewart, and 

 were principally for mycological purposes. 



Craigends, 19th April, 1902. — Mr. John Renwick, the con- 

 ductor, has contributed the following report: — 



'■ On this occasion the grounds of Craigends House were visited 

 first," and thereafter the party proceeded by the village of 

 Crosslee, up the side of the lade that supplies the mills there, 

 and along the River Gryfe to Bridge of Weir. 



" The lands of Craigends were, in 1479, given by the fii*st 

 Earl of Glencairn to his second son, William Cunninghame, and 

 have since remained in the possession of his lineal descendants. 

 Near the house is a veiy large Yew tree — the largest that we 

 know of in the West of Scotland. On this occasion it was 



