8 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
blade of upper leaf 7-12 cm. 1., 4-6-5 em. br. Seape 7-13 em. 1. 
Raceme 2-5:5 em. 1. Flowers usually from 15 to 10. Bracts 
4-5 mm. 1. Pedicels without ovary 8-10 mm. L. Sepals 9 mm. L., 
. br., greenish margined with purple. Petals equal in 
length to sepals, purplish. Lip 13 mm. 1., 8:5 mm. br., greenish, 
veined and tinged with purple or brown. Column 4:5 mm 
Hab.—In spongy peat and leaf-mould in damp, shady places, 
in fl. and fr., Oct.—Dec., near John Crow Peak, 5500 ft., 7737: 
John Crow Peak, 6000 ft., 9786; wooded eastern slope of John 
Crow Peak, 5300 ft., 9795; Harris! 
ied to L. Sawndersiana Reichenb. f., but a larger plant with 
evident stem and leaves and flowers twice as large. 
SEE ERECT 
BRECON AND WEST YORKSHIRE HAWKWEEDS. 
By tum Rey. Aveustin Ley, M.A. 
I nave been asked by Dr. F. Arnold Lees to contribute a list 
of hawkweeds for a reissue of the West Yorkshire Flora; and T 
sufficient interest to the readers of the Journal ; and that a place 
may also be obtained where several forms, previously undescribed 
forms of the genus by a botanist possessing the requisite know- 
ledge, and that I may have the Opportunity of publishing notes on 
Lakeland. 
_~ ne present paper is limited to two districts with which I can 
claim better PS, sot With regard to West 
xperi ctly limited to the Settle district, includin r 
Ribblesdale, the Ingleton district, and the heads of Where 
gained in summer holidays of no great duration in 1900 and four 
subsequent years in company with W, - Linton, in which flying 
visits were also paid to Dent Dale and the Rothay Valley above 
Sedbergh. With Breconshire I have a more thorough acquain- 
