9 PITTONIA. 
appears to have been drawn from the plant here defined as 
new, rather than from the north western and true C. miniata- 
C. REMOTA. Perennial, the stems erect, 1 to 2 feet high, . 
rather sparsely leafy and the flowers very loosely spicate; 
the margins of leaves and bracts sparingly hirsute-ciliate 
and the other short pubescence scanty : leaves rather broad, 
of oblong outline, somewhat digitately cleft at and near the 
summit, the body of the leaf quite entire: flowers an inch 
apart in the spike, or more, their bracts almost like the 
leaves in cut, either the tips of their lobes or the whole up- 
per portion of the bract scarlet: calyx only slightly cleft 
into 4 subequal obovate-oblong obtuse lobes, these scarlet- 
tipped: comparatively short corolla exserted from the calyx 
by about half the length of the galea. 
Goldstream, Vancouver Island, 20 May, 1887, collected by 
John Macoun. A very distinct a of the group to which 
C. angustifolia belongs. 
C. sUBINCLUSA. Perennial, the tufted erect rather slender 
very rigid and brittle stems about a yard high, these and 
the long narrowly linear entire leaves cinereous with a fine 
short very rough pubescence: spike at length 6 or 8 inches 
long and somewhat lax : bracts very narrow, far surpassing 
the flowers, narrowed in the middle, the acute scarlet tip 
slightly dilated: calyx nearly 2 inches long, spathaceous 
by a very deep anterior fissure, the long upper lip fully as 
long as the galea of the corolla and deeply cut into four very 
narrow and slenderly acuminate lobes. 
Foothills of the Sierra Nevada in Amador and Calaveras 
counties, California, Geo. Hansen, July, 1896 (numbers 1730 
and 1800). A very distinct and remarkable species allied to 
C. linaricfolia and C. candens ; the flowers greatly elongated, 
and corolla almost enclosed by the mainly scarlet calyx. 
