MINT FAMILY. Labiatas. 



A rather smooth form with handsome 

 Monarda fistu- . . , ., _ 



Zosavar. 6m crimson-pink or rose red flowers finely 

 Crimson-pink hairy over the tube and upper lip, and thin 



leaves rather smooth. On the borders of 

 moist thickets, Me. and N. H. , south along the mountains 

 to Pa. and Va. The var. media, with deep purple flowers. 

 Alleghany Mts., and west to Minn. The var. rubra is 

 locally plentiful in parts of N. H. , notably south of New- 

 found Lake. It is unfortunately classified as Purple 

 Bergamo t, Monarda media, in Britton and Brown, which 

 is manifestly confusing. Monarda mollis is a less com- 

 mon species ; flowers flesh pink and lilac. 



A woodland species rather similar in 

 Blephilia many respects to Monarda. The small 



Blephilia cili- tubular flowers about J inch long, with a 

 ata three-lobed under lip, light purple or 



Light purple violet and fine _ hairv , The lance-shaped 

 June-August . 



leaves almost toothless (except the lower 



ones), white-downy beneath, and quite stemless, or nearly 

 so. The stem downy and mostly simple. 1-2 feet high. 

 Mass., south to Ga., and west to Minn, and Kan. 

 Catnip An exceedingly common weed to which 



Nepeta Cataria many of the animals of the tribe Fells are 

 Lilac=white greatly attached. A favorite Manx cat of 

 July-October mme WO uld walk a mile every other day 

 or so, from my Campton studio to a spot where it 

 grew in plenty, notwithstanding the way was through 

 the woods and over a hill of no small difficulty ! The 

 stem is densely downy as well as the deeply round-toothed 

 leaves, and both are sage green in color. The pale lilac 

 or lilac- white and spotted flowers are also downy, and 

 gathered in small terminal clusters, which are rarely 4 

 inches long. Leaves strongly aromatic. 2-3 feet high. 

 Common everywhere. Naturalized from Europe. 



A small creeping plant, adventive from 

 Ground Ivy or _ . , , , , 



Gill=over=the= Europe, common in all moist shady places ; 



Ground it takes the place of our Trailing Arbutus, 



Nepeta in the moist fields of England in April. 



hederacea p ne p a j e p ur pi e flowers, spotted darker 



near the throat > and of ten with the cal ^ x 

 magenta-tinged, has two lips, the upper 



400 



