358 SOME ACCOUNT OF CHESHIRE RUBI. 
one lane and the adjacent field-hedges, where, however, there is plenty of 
it over an area ofa few acres. Mr. Baker says of these specimens that 
they are unusually typical for the north of England. (2.) On Morrey’s 
farm, Bexton (in the Ordnance and Cassell’s maps, “ Black Hill 
Farm”), near Knutsford. I suspect local in Cheshire. 
19. R. Reuteri, Mercier —(2.) White House Farm and the Grange 
Farm, Plumbley; plentiful in company with R. rudis on Black Hill 
Farm, Bexton; thinly but generally scattered over all this immediate 
neighbourhood. Like Hypericum pulchrum, seldom much of it in one 
place, but nearly everywhere sparsely. An enormous bush, however, 
on the Grange Farm, near the Waterless Brook. This is a coarse radu- 
lesque form, evidently to be placed between Z. rudis and R. Radula. 
A year or two ago I named it R. saxicolus, Müll., from a Continental 
specimen in Mr. Baker's collection. I have lately found that M. Ge- 
nevier, in his * Rubus du Bassin de la Loire, states that Mr. Baker's 
coarse Yorkshire Radula, which I hold identical with the Cestrian, is 
thus to be named. His description sufficiently fits, and he notices the 
alliance to R. saxicolus, Müll. Mr. Bloxam seems inclined to put this 
form to R. Radula, B. Leightonii, Lees. 
20. R. Radula, Weihe.— Rather a local Rubus, in Mid-Cheshire, and 
seldom typical. (2.) Laneside, towards Arley, in Plumbley, near 
Trout Hall, Plumbley. (7.) Rudheath, in company with the R. fissus, 
in an exposed heathy spot. These specimens are, according to Mr. 
Baker, * excellent typical Radula,” and, indeed, the only quite typical 
Radula I ever got in Cheshire. 
21. R. Kehleri, Weihe.— Local. (2.) In the hedge by the laneside, 
one hundred yards south of Flitto Gate Farm, where it grows very 
densely = thirty or forty yards. 
22. R. infestus, Bab—Rather local. (2.) Sparse bushes, in 
Tabley Hill Lane. Finest bushes by the road which crosses the Cheshire 
Midland line, beyond Morrey’s Farm, or Black Hill Farm, Bexton. 
(7.) Roadside, between Bradshaw Brook and Rudheath. 
23. R. pallidus, Weihe.— Very common; the general undergrowth 
of plantations in Cheshire; the weak forms puzzling and easily mis- 
taken for Bellardine Brambles. (1.) Disley and Whaley Bridge. (2.) 
Very common. (4.) Near Eastham. (6.) Near Crewe station. (7.) 
== — Rudheath, ete., general. 
R. diversifolius, Lindl. = dumetorum, 8. feroz, Lomo .) Dis- 
