5 
enthusiastic member of the Timpanogos Natural History Club. 
Att 
n . Ea 
flowers of the former and the brilliant ee flowers of the 
latter formed a striking contras 
Av short stop at Soldier Summit proved surprisingly 
Be ee ive. 
Eastward from the foot of the Wasatch lie the high dry pla- 
aus of eastern Utah and western Colorado. As in the like 
t most inte a 
ll wide-panicled woolly- wale pen which I believe 
to be new to science. 
On July 20 at Glenwood Springs I met Mr. Osterhout and 
until the 29th we collected together there, at Grand Junction, 
lorad 
ado. 
The region about Ouray is the most rugged, ae for that 
reason the most magnificent, of any have seen 
Collections were de on several of the mountains ae the 
own est findi ou , in fact 
pei pes include erable number I not pre- 
viously seen. Pentstemon stenosepalus, Besseya alpina, Pedicu- 
laris bracteosa and P. Pa wer ad again on tains 
eastward, but not Pentstemon Harbourti, Pedicularis scopulorum 
nor the abundant and really local Bestiak itteriana. 
Several stops were made in the Gunnison valley, through the 
region where C. F. Baker collected in 1go1, and conse quently. 
through a region rich in type stations for species of Dr. Greene’s 
