346 PLANTS OF TUNBRIDGE WELLS. 
Hieracium. A fine set of the commoner lowland forms may be 
collected at Tunbridge Wells, the genus being well repre- 
sented, both on the open heaths, and also in the woods. I 
noticed that H. murorum, the earliest flowerer, was in bloom 
first at the end of June, and then, after a considerable in- 
terval, again flowered much less abundantly in the late 
autumn. 
B. Cichorium Intybus. A few plants by the roadside at Ford- 
combe Green. 
Carduus acaulis. Sparingly close to Southborough. 
[Pyrethrum Parthenium.| Onuly in hedges, and by roadsides 
close to, and evidently derived from, cottage gardens. 
Habenaria chlorantha. Morant’s-court Hill (chalk). 
Habenaria bifolia. Common on the forests (sand). . 
Listera Nidus-avis. In the Twenty-acre Wood near to Camden 
Park. . 
B. Epipactis latifolia. Hurst Wood. Wood near Powder-mill 
Lane, and in other places. . 
Euphorbia platyphylla. Near Southborough, but very small in 
size. 
A. Carex benninghauseniana. Very sparingly, and stunted, in a 
single station a little north of Tunbridge Wells. 
Carex levigata. Quite frequent in wet copses and shady marshy 
hollows. 
Carex pendula. Near the pond in Camden Park ; also very fine 
near Tunbridge, etc. 
Carex Pseudo-cyperus. Plentiful and of great size m the pond 
in Camden Park. 
Carex vesicaria. Border of the mill-pond at Broomhill. Also in 
the pond in Camden Park. 
I could not find Carex fulva, C. intermedia, C. stricta, nor 
Schenus nigricans. 
Bryonia dioica. In some plenty on Morant’s-court Hill. Not 
observed nearer to Tunbridge Wells. 
Has this plant any affinity for a calcareous soil ? 
[ Castanea vulgaris.| This is a favourite for hop-poles, and there- 
fore quite frequent in copses and hedges. 
Carpinus Betulus. Near the tollgate at the foot of Riverhill. 
Wild ? 
a. Anacharis Alsinastrum is now to be seen in great profusion 
