The grassy prairies and low pinewoods between the Sebastian 

 River and the "scrub" were copiously adorned with hundreds 



florescence of a relative of the southern hound "s-tongue or 

 has been used as a substitute (or vanilla, but it apparently 



former paper.' So suffice it to say here that the three most 

 orchid, Habenella Garberi, growing in the o'pen sandy pine woods, 



was the dog-fennel (Eupatorium capillifolium) . It stood out in 

 contrast with the other vegetation on account of its large masses 



two particularly fatal enemies; the one, fire, to which it succumbs 



