290 UNRECORDED STATIONS OF SOME UNCOMMON PLANTS. 
Monachorum. Previously recorded from another part of this extensive 
common 
Cesc Trifolii, Bab.—This has appeared rather plentifully this 
season in clover-fields on Fursdon estate, Egg Buckland, also at 
Coldridge in the same parish, and in a clover-field at Compton Gifford. 
It seems to be quite a recent introduction at these places. 
Orobanche minor, Sutt—A very rare species near Plymouth, if 
amethystea be distinct. On Trifolium pratense in a field at Fursdon, 
where the Cuscuta Trifolii occurred, July, 1866. 
Mentha piperita, B, Smith ; vulgaris, Sole, t. 8 —On a sand-bank by 
the Plym, near Plym bridge. Pronounced to be this by Mr. J. G. 
e 
x. 
Centunculus minimus, L.—By damp road-sides, between Launceston 
and Bude, Cornwall 
Rumex sanguineus, L.—A few specimens of the typical plant on 
hedge-banks on both sides of the road between Plymouth and Mile- 
house. 
Orchis Morio, L.—Very rare near Plymouth, growing only, so far 
as I am aware, in a bushy spot on limestone, and in an adjoining old 
pasture near Elburton, Devon. 
Habenaria bifolia, Br —Viverdon Down, near Callington, Corn- 
wall. 
Narcissus poeticus, L.— The very generally cultivated double-flowered 
variety of this Narcissus grows in two orchards at Bickleigh: in pro- 
fusion in one of them. The single-flowered plant is not common, even 
in gardens in the neighbourhood of Plymouth, and does not, like N. 
, occur in orchards as a doubtfully indigenous species. 
pom oleraceum, L.—Since I recorded this, last year, as a Devon 
plant, from my having found it near Plymstock, I have discovered it 
in many spots on limestone, growing in bushy places on the borders of 
fields, and in earth on tops of old walls, in the tract of country lying 
between Pomphleet, Plymstock, Elburton, and Plympton, as well as 
on a wall near Oreston. 
10, Torrington Place, Plymouth, August 17, 1866. 
