84 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
I have been particular about describing the way to the 
Gallop from Windermere Ferry Hotel, because some people 
doubt there being such a place: let anybody ask at the ferry, 
not for the Devil’s Gallop (the ferry people are not natives), 
but for Easthwaite Lake, and anybody near there will point 
out the Gallop; and when once our friends are in it they 
will be sorry for those who ever had to gailop over such 
rough land. 
When at supper at Hawkshead I learned that the lady 
on the gray horse was Miss Aglionby, a daughter of Judge 
Aglionby, a lady who lives near, and is highly beloved in the 
district. 
I need hardly say that I took a good many ordinary Lepi- 
dopterous insects that evening; but the best were Eucosmia 
undularia, anywhere in and near the Gallop where sallows 
grew, and seventeen Sericoris signatana around one tall sloe 
bush. I shall long remember my twelve hours’ ramble over 
the Fells in August, 1871. 
C. S. GrEGson. 
Captures in the New Forest in May and July, 1874. 
. By Bernard Cooper, Esq. 
In company with my friend W. J. Argent, I spent a short 
portion of each of these months entomologising in the New 
Forest. Our object being as much the enjoyment of 
desultory rambles as the capture of rarities, many species 
will be found absent from the appended list, which ought 
otherwise to have been obtained; nevertheless, a few notes 
at this dull season of the year may not be unacceptable to 
some of your readers. 
Leucophasia Sinapis.—Of this species we took both the 
spring and summer broods. It is generally distributed 
throughout the grassy rides of the plantations, but is not 
common. The second brood (the var. Diniensis of Boisduval) 
is easily distinguishable from the first by the isolation of the 
dusky apical blotch. Some three or four females of the 
second brood which we took are pure white, without any 
markings whatever (mentioned in Kirby as the var. Erysimi, 
Bkh.). This, I presume, is the variety referred to by your 
