92 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Agrimonia hirsuta {MuhL) JSkknell 



Tall hairy agrimony 



Roadsides and thickets, specially along old lumber roads in woods 

 Common. August. In the Manual included in Agrimonia Eupatoria L. 



Rosa cinnamomea L. 



Cinnamon rose 



Introduced and cultivated for ornament, but sometimes escaping from 



cultivation or spreading by root extension, or lingering in places where 



dwellings once stood. Spreading from the cemetery. By the roadside a 



few rods south of Brewster's sawmill. 



( 



Sorbus Americana Marsh. 

 Pyrus Aniericatia DC. 

 Mountain ash. American mountain ash. 

 Woods and their borders. Common. June and July, 



Sorbus sambucifolia {C. cf S.) Roem. 



Pyrus sambucifolia C. & S. 



Elder leaf mountain ash. Western mountain ash 



Cold woods and mountains. Summit of Mt Mclntyre and at the 

 entrance of Peck pass. June. This species is much less frequent than 

 the preceding, from which it is separated by its more coarsely serrate and 

 less sharply pointed leaves. It also blossoms earlier than that species. 

 A tree standing near the entrance to Peck pass was in full flower when 

 one of the American mountain ash standing a few rods away was in bud 

 and apparently would not be in flower in two weeks. 



Malus Malus (Z.) Britton 



Pyrus Mains L. 



Apple 



Introduced and cultivated for its fruit, but often growing spontaneously 

 by roadsides, along fences and in pastures and clearings. Near Brew- 

 ster's mill, along the road to Epps farm and in several places in the 

 Ausable valley. 



