249 
NOTES ON WEST SURREY PLANTS. 
By rue Rev. E. 8. Marsnauu, M.A., F.L.S. 
Durine the last three seasons I have met with a few local nponies 
or hybrids, which it may be worth while to place on record ; 
of them were ee in the company of Capt. Wolley Dod, R. ree 
or Mr. C. E. Salm 
Trigonella purpurascens Lam. On the edge of Thursley Common, 
close to the village, and west of the cricket-ground ; scarce, but seen 
there two years in succession 
Rubus suberectus Anders. Roadside near Cutt Mill, towards 
Elstead. 
Epilobium hirsutum x obscurum. Boggy meadow between Little 
and Great Enton, Witley. Several plants of H. hirsutwm x parvi- 
eracium ir F, J. Hanb. Roadside bank near the top 
of Warcham 1, Witley, and between Munstead and Bramley. 
A form differing cnnieitaeeel from the type by the shape of its duller 
and deeper green leaves and by its greater hairiness, but placed here 
by Mr. Hanbury, is plentiful near the top of Church Lane, Witley; 
I have failed to find it elsewhere in the neighbourhood, as yet. Var. 
coronopifolium (Bernh.) is, I think, the prevailing form of H. umbel- 
latum hereabouts. 
Wahlenbergia hederacea Reichb. In 1898 Miss M. Phear found a 
single me on the wet heath close to Milford Vicarage—a new 
station for 
Diibalkeks Hedere Duby. Mr. Joseph King, of Lower Birtley, 
Wiitley, sent me a fresh specimen which he had found growing in 
his garden, last August; I suspect that it was of casual occurrence. 
Salix triandra L. The usual, if not the only form of this willow, 
so common by the upper Wey, is var. Hoffmanniana; I have seen 
no female bushes. 
Epipactis media Bab. Near Cosford House, Thursley, and near 
Milford. This is our more frequent plant in 8.W. Surrey; in 1888 
Prof. SEES wrote to me that he batiaved it to be the true media 
of Frie 
iis frtidiss ima L. Two me! in a hedge about a quarter of a 
ile 8. W. of Thursley Church 
Juncus effusus x glaucus ( (J. diffusus Hoppe). Near Hammer 
Pond, ha fr with the parents; almost, if not quite sterile. 
Potamogeton obtusifolius Mert. & Koch. Pond east of the ‘“ Half 
eae Tae | 
aL. Swa wamp below Furzehill Pond, Brookwood; 
plentiful i's assis twenty yards. Capt. Wolley Dod and I aie it 
in Eines on the north side of the railway, not far off. At t . 
r of this pond (by the road to Pirbright) an Elatine was 
Seales, last June, which, from its habit, is almost certainly 
E. Hydropiper ; but I was unable to revisit the spot in autumn for 
verification, 
