48 ON THE RUBI OF CAPEL CURIG, 
Dr. Focke does not identify it with anything that bears a name in 
5. Another form receding from rhammifolius in the direction of 
umbrosus, with fully-developed leaves of the barren stem with only 
three leaflets. Barren stem angled; prickles many, small, rather 
irregular. Leaves green, with very little hair beneath; end-leaflet 
cordate-ovate. Panicle-rachis with few prickles, shortly hairy. 
Petals pinkish. This form also I have not seen els sewhete, and 
o Fo ay does not match it with anything that is named in 
erman 
Hotel, and in many other places; the leaves are always softly 
hairy beneath and the petals - Capel Curig is the place to 
Subspecies villicaulis. 
6. This is represented by a robust form with a lax slightly- 
ompound panicle, with a very hairy rachis. Dr. Focke regards it 
ned a form allied to R. sylvaticus W. & N., but not typical. 
Subspecies umbrosus. 
7. One of the commonest brambles of the neighbourhood is our 
ordinary English —? made rather more luxuriant than usual 
by the damp clim Dr. Focke now i entifies our common 
English plant with re Scandinavian R. moe. pontine of Lindberg 
and the German R. pulcherrimus of Neumann. It is R. Maasii of 
Lond, Cat. ed. 8, but I do not think ied identification can stand. 
Subspecies Sprengelii. 
8. I saw ——— typical Sprengelit in one place only, by the 
side of cr ee adh Manatee the Tan-y-bwlch Bridge and the 
Swallow 
Subspecies Radula. 
10. This is represented by a plant I had not seen before, which 
Dr. Focke identifies with R. macrothyrsos Lange, in Flora Danica, 
= conga It has a slightly angled barren diac armed with 
mall rather irregular prickles, quinate leaves green and 
Geinly softly hairy baie, the end-leaflets cordate-orbicular, with 
shallow broad baer and a very compound open panicle with 
1as 
also been foun nd i in the same district by Mr. J. E. Griffith and Mr. 
Charles Bailey. 
I did not see about Capel Curig any discolor, leucostachys, casius, 
corylifolius, Koehlert, or horridus. 
I noted a Koehleri form (pallidus Bab., non W. & N.) at 1000 ft. 
above sea-level, by the side of the path going up Snowdon from 
Llanberis. 
