601 



Oxalis Acetosella. Santhiugliam fir-wood, 



abundant. 

 Rosa rubiginosa. Borders of fields and 



woods, common. Wild ? 



canina. Roy don fen, not plentiful. 



Rubus fruticosus. Common. 



leucostachys. Rare. 



Id(Bus. Wade-moor wood, plentif. 



coi-ylifolius. Hedges, not uncom. 



ccesius. Ditcli-banks and moist 



places, not uncommon. 



Fragaria vesca. Frequent. 



Cornarum palustre. Dersingham heath ; 



Roydon fen : not uncommon. 

 Potentilla anserina. Frequent. 



reptans & Fragariaslrum. Com. 



Tormentilla officinalis. Moist heaths &c. 



abundant. 

 Geum urbanum. Common. 



rivale. Wolferton wood, abundant. 



Agrimonia Eupatoria. Common. 

 Spiraea Filipendula. Anmer road. 



Ulmaria. Moist places, common. 



Mespilus Oxyacantha. Hedges, almost 



everywhere. 

 Pyrus Mains. Hedges near Snettisham. 

 Prunus Padus. Wolferton wood. 



spinosa. Common. 



Poterium Sanguisorba. Not uncommon. 

 Ulex europoBus. Common. 

 Genista anglica. Heaths, occasionally. 

 Spartiuni scoparium. Ditto, common. 

 Ononis arvensis. Frequent. 



Anthyllis Vulnerariu. Anmer fields, not 



uncommon. 

 Medieago lupulina. Very common. 

 Trifolium repens. Extremely common. 



scabrurn. Snettisham beach, 



abundant. 



• subterraneum. Ditto, rare. 



pratense. Very common. 



arvense. Very frequent. 



procumbens and minus. Comn. 



-filiforme. Near Sandringham 



chalk-pit, frequent. 

 Lotus corniculatus. Abundant. 



major. Dersingham heath, among 



bushes, common. 



Ornithopus perpusillus. Sandringham 



broom-cover, common. 

 Vicia Cracca. Hedges, frequent. 



sativa. Frequent. 



angustifolia. Cornfields occasionally 



sepium. Hedges and woods, comn. 



Ervum tetraspermum. Not uncommon. 

 Lathyrus pratensis. Common. 



Orobus tuberosus. Dersingham heath, co. 



Saxifraga granulata. Dersingham com- 

 mon and heath, abundant. 



tridactylites. Walls, abundant 



Chrysosplenium oppositifolium. Wolfer- 

 ton wood. 



Parnassia palustris. Field at the back of 

 Wade moor wood ; Rising comn.; fr. 



Sedum acre. Sandy ground, walls, &c. 

 abundant. 



(To be continued). 



Art. CXLVI. — Journal of a short run into Badenoch, Strathspey, 

 ^c, from the \bth to the 2lst of April, 1843. By Mr. J. B. 



B RICH AN. 



Grantown, April 17, 1843. 

 Dear Sir, 



I am at present on my return from a very short sojourn 



in Badenoch ; and certainly the season of the year, and the weather 

 when I left home, afford little or no foundation on which to construct 

 any sort of article whatever for a botanical journal. It is quite possi- 

 ble, however, that the very negation of Botany may be made somewhat 

 interesting to the lovers of Flora, especially if it be merely a temporary 



