CRUC1FER/E 2J9 



petiole like the webs of a feather; flowers pale lilac or 

 whitish. Same districts as preceding. 



It requires light sandy peat with plenty of leaf mould, 

 and a cool situation under moderate shade. Propagated 

 from seed or, with ease, from root-division. 



Hugueninia 



Ti. tanaceti folia : a plant from 20 to 40 in. high, with 

 greyish leaves very deeply divided into delicately incised 

 and dentate leaflets; stem erect, branched at the top, 

 with very many leaves; flowers small, pleasant yellow, 

 slightly scented, in large panicles. July-August. Cool and 

 shady parts of the valleys of Arolla and Bagnes, from 

 1800 to 2 200 m. The plant somewhat suggests a yellow 

 Valerian and is one of the few Cruciferae that delight in 

 moisture. In some damp out-of-the-way corner a place 

 may be found for it. 



Cardamine 



C. resedi folia. A small turf-like herb, 2-6 in. high., 

 radical leaves rounded and oblong, stem-leaves deeply 

 pinnatisect, with 2-3 pair of blunted linear leaflets; the 

 flowers small, white, in erect spikes. July-August. High 

 Alps. C. alpina, from similar habitats, differs in that the 

 leaves are either undivided or exhibit three indistinct lobes. 

 Neither however is really equal to the native "Cuckoo- 

 flower" C. prat ensis ft. pi. 



Arabis 



Eng. : Rockcress ; Fr. ; Arabette ; Ger. : Gansekresse. 



Flowers white, rose, violet or bluish, with erect, equal 

 sepals, and stigma entire or slightly scalloped; siliquas 

 (pods) narrow, linear and compressed. Although the 



