Proceedings. CXXVii 
indebted for special and free permission to explore where we 
wished), we had an acceptable halt for lunch under the Scotch 
fir clump, between the road-fork at Wych Cross. After this 
the Forest Row road was followed a short way to the fine quarry 
(Hastings sand) in the Hindleap Warren estate, said to produce 
the finest building stone in Sussex. A long and charming 
ramble through this and the Kidbrooke estate brought us near 
_ Forest Row. Most branched off here to Brambletye Hall, the 
__ ruins of an early seventeenth century castellated building. The 
chief part left is the fine gateway. This party walked on to 
East Grinstead, having traversed some eleven miles in all. 
Here twenty-four of us took tea together. Afterwards the 
interesting timbered buildings of the town were inspected, and 
the fine old college, also of the seventeenth century. Close by 
here the Cowden road passes through a picturesque cutting in 
the Tunbridge Wells sandstones. Our train finally brought us 
back to Croydon soon after eight, or nearly twelve hours from 
the time we had left in the morning.—J. Epmunp Cuarx. 
Plants observed at West Hoathly, Ashdown Forest, Bramble- 
tye, and East Grinstead, June 26th, 1902. (Dr. Franklin 
Parsons’s list, with one or two additions) :— 
Ranunculus peltatus, R. Lenormand, RK. sardous = hirsutus, 
Nymphea lutea, Polygala depressa? = serpyllacea, Hypericum hu- 
 mifusum, H. elodes, Genista anglica, Lathyrus Nissoha, Rubus pli- 
catus, Galiwm Withering, Hieracitwm murorum, Wahlenbergia 
hederacea, Symphytum officinale, Saliaw ambigua = repens x awrita, 
Habenaria bifolia, Allium ursinum, Carex vulpina, C. flava, C. fulva, 
C. vesicaria, Polypodium vulgare, Lomaria spicant, Asplenium Tr1- 
chomanes, A. Adiantum-nigrum, Athyrium Filia-feenuna, Scolopen- 
driwm vulgare, Lastrea Filix-mas, L. Oreopteris, L. dilatata, Equi- 
setum limosum, Lycopodium clavatum, Agaricus on Sphagnum, 
Boletus elegans, Polyporus betulinus, Acidiwm Tragopogonis. 
Noted in district last April :—Lastrea spinulosa, Lycopodium Selago. 
July 5th.—The party went by the 2.36 train from Hast 
Croydon to Betchworth, and in the enforced absence of Mr. 
Salmon, who was to have been the conductor, the lead was taken 
by Mr. Whitaker, who happened to have brought the six-inch 
map. A change was made in the proposed route, and the walk 
was taken along the foot of the great Chalk escarpment. About 
a quarter of a mile northward of Betchworth station a pit was 
seen in the bottom beds of the Chalk through to the Upper 
Greensand, the firestone of the latter being worked in a gallery ; 
but the junction of the two formations was not seen. 
. North-eastward the pit at Buckland Lime Works was seen, 
with the junction of the Middle and Lower Chalk. 
The chief botanical occurrences noted were the frequence of 
the bee-orchis along the foot of the Buckland Hills, and the 
