FLOWERING PLANTS. 353 
D. muralis, DC. Rather common in cultivated ground, par- 
ticularly when sandy. Var. Babingtonii, Syme. Roadside above 
Platte Saline, one plant. 
Alyssum maritimum, L. Plentiful on the walls and road- 
side below the Wesleyan Chapel, and in and about an old quarry 
lower down the valley. Walls above Government House, and near 
the Church. 
Draba verna, L. Common on banks and sandhills alevcr 
the east side. On a wall-top in Rose Farm Valley. I have seen 
this little plant in full flower here in February. 
Cochlearia officinalis, L. . Plentiful along about fifty yards 
of the sea-cliff between Fort Tourgis and Clanque: also in good 
- quantity on the north side of Fort Albert, and on the shore east of 
‘Corbelets. This species does not occur in Guernsey or the smaller 
islands. 
C. danica, L. One of the most widely distributed and 
abundant of spring flowers. 
Armoracia rusticana, Rupp. Occasional in all parts, 
flowering freely in several places, especially by the old millpond in 
Rose Farm Valley. 
Teesdalia nudicaulis, R. Br. Not uncommon on the cliffs: 
local, but usually abundant where it occurs. 
Lepidium Draba, lL. Rare. On the Railway embankment 
between White Gates and Baie de Saye, plentiful in one spot. 
L. Smithii, Hook. Very rare. Roadside by Fort Tourgis, 
one plant. 
L. ruderale, L. Rare. Roadside above Crabbie Bay, about 
twenty plants in 1899 and rgoo. 
Capsella Bursa-pastoris, DC. Common. In a cultivated 
field below the Terrace I noticed in 1899 some very large plants 
two and a half to three feet high. 
Senebiera Coronopus, Poiret. Frequent throughout the 
island : often plentiful where it occurs. 
S. didyma, Pers. Generally distributed, but rather rare. 
‘Sometimes grows intermixed with the last species, although much less 
common. 
AA 
