LULÉA. 255 



June 28. 



In the morning we continued our voyage 

 to Storbacken a mile and half distant, from 

 whence we were afterwards obliged to walk 

 five miles to Jockmock. This day indeed 

 we only reached Pajarim*, where we slept 

 all night in a smoky hut, ventilated merely 

 by holes in the roof. 



I found in the woods' the (Erysimiim) 

 Barbarea, with a stem four feet high, but 

 its leaves were neither so broad, nor so 

 much auricled, as in the garden plant. 

 Crooked pine trees were to be seen in se- 

 veral places, the under side of which is al- 

 ways as hard as box-wood, and this part 

 is used for naves of wheels and the bot- 

 toms of sledges. Such wood is called 

 kior. 



* The author in his Flora Lapponica, n. 13, men- 

 tions having found his Pinguicula villosa growing 

 among Bog-moss, Sphagnum, near this place, and 

 in no other. This plant is not noticed in the manu- 

 script Tour, 



