264 WOODRUFFE-PEACOCK : CATALOGUE OF LINCOLNSHIRE PLANTS. 
Ribes Grossularia L.t A bird-sown garden escape. Common 
N. and S. 
Ribes on L.t Planted, I fear. N.—Barrow Wood, 31-3-93; 
Mi 
s E. M. Uppleby (F.A.L.). Along with Ruscus, certainly 
an alee 
Ribes sativum Reichb. Another bird-sown garden escape. N.—6 
I. 
Ribes nigrum L. Like the last. Found in willow trees and 
hedges. N.—3. S.—1. 
CRASSTILACE AY 
Cotyledon Umbilicus L.t N.—‘It grows on the church walls 
of Tattershall in Lincolnshire.’—Blair’s Pharmaco-Botanologia, 
1727, p. 235. It is plentiful on Tattershall Castle still, a 
living memorial of some long since departed lover of our 
native plants. 
SEDUM Ruopiota DC. An escape? Rowland Plantation, Appleby 
Rev. J. E. Cross. 
Sedum Telephium L. ‘Apparently native’—Rev. W. Fowler. 
N.—Broughton Woods; B.R.C., 1875, Herb. Brit. Mus. 
Louth, 1894; Rev. W. W. Mason. 5§.—Elsey Wood, Bourn, 
1838; Rey. J. Dodsworth. 
Sepum atsum 1. Mr. Jas. Britten’s Zzs¢ in White’s Lincolnshire, 
1872. No information. 
Sedum anglicum Huds.t An escape. N.—Mablethorpe, 1883 5 
Miss Mackinder and Miss Rosa J. Owston, 8-’93. 
Sedum acre L. Native. Not uncommon on sandy warrens, and > 
as an escape N, and 
Sedum reflexum L.t Alien ete N.—z2z. S.—Swineshead, 
1838; Rev. J. Dodsworth. 
Sedum rupestre Huds. An escape. N.—Mablethorpe; Mr. J- 
Burtt Davy. Vaz, 1891, p. 66. Herb. Brit. Mus 
Sempervivum tectorum vas A planted and eine. sown alien. 
Not very uncomnion N. and §., 
DROSERACE. 
Drosera rotundifolia L.t Native, but dying out. N.—9. S.—?: 
Drosera anglica Huds.t Like the last. N.—4. Whether it is 
still with us or extinct I cannot say. It has not been recorded 
for S. 
Drosera intermedia —— Like the last two, but still with 
N.—9. No S. reco: 
Naturalist, 
