NOTES ON CORNISH PLANTS 855 
it is a frequent object by the wayside. This summer I have found 
it by the score quite eight miles north of Falmouth. Around 
Falmouth Docks and railway station it grows in many places to 
the entire exclusion of other plants 
mphalodes he Moench. Has been growing in the woods at 
Pengreep for quite a quarter of a century in wild luxuriance, its 
acres of blue > toe outrivalling the forget-me-not and the alkanet, 
It has also established itself by the Falmouth-Truro turnpike road, 
near Kea Church 
Mimulus Langsdorfii Donn. Grows in great profusion at Tre- 
barwith, on the north coast, and sparingly at Hessenford, on the 
south. But t perhaps it is mo ost at — in a ravine at Zennor, near 
this summer, together with a photo lank of the Mimulus-deckea 
ravine, accompanied by a letter explaining that the plant swarms 
ther e by _tens of thousands. — M. moschatus Dougl. Has been 
Devoran a ‘few Ww wee Pace 
Euphorbia platyphyllos nape which was recorded for Torpoint 
in the early forties by Hor and Johns, but which always eluded 
yn. 
Salix purpurea L. Curiously enough, none of my co rrespondents 
both localities in the Savabs of Gwe 
Allium Ampeloprasum ee perlite (B orr.). In large quantities 
at St. Anthony-in-Roseland.—A. vineale oo — Syme. In 
the neighbourhood of Paani and Falmou 
Zannichellia pedunculata Reichb. Daal urs in large quantities in 
rat upper part of the canal in the East Looe Valley. New t 
all. 
Phalavis aquatica Dest. In June last I found this native of 
South meer on the embankment between — station and 
large group in a rather ill-conditioned garden. It will 
interesting i — “whether the plant shows any signs of per- 
manence in either 
conclusion, i cand ask all who have been working at the 
botany of Cornwall to join us in making ou ur proposed hand ae 
complete as possible. My address is Bunaerscéil, Perranwell 
Station, Cornwall. 
