FIELD MEETINGS FOR 1912 



367 



acquaintance with old friends 

 among them being — 



Menyantkes trifoliata 



Adoxa Moschatellina 



Ckelidonium majus 



Lysimachia nemorum 



Chenopodium 



Bonus Henri ens 



Geum rivale 



Arenaria verna 



Armaria trinervis 



Arum maculatum 



Ranunculus flammula 



Alliaria officinalis 



Allium ursinum 



Cardamine pratensis 



Cardamine amara 



Stellaria nemorum 

 t Chrysosplenium oppositi 'folium 



Myrrhis odorata 

 Lathyrus montanus 

 Primus padus 

 Sarothamnus scoparius 

 Luzula sylvatica 

 Geranium sylvaticum 

 Sanicula Europcea 

 Fraxinus excelsior 



They noted about 50 species, 



Buckbean 



Moschatel 



Greater Celandine 



Loosestrife 



Goose-foot 



Allgood 



Water Avens 



Vernal Sandwort 



Three-nerved Sandwort 



Cuckoo Pint 



Lesser Spearwort 



Hedge Mustard 



Common Garlic 



Cuckoo Flower 



Large Flowered-bittercress 



Wood Stitchwort 



Opposite-leaved Golden 



Saxifrage 

 Sweet Cecily or Wild Anise 

 Bitter Wood Vetch 

 Bird Cherry 

 Broom 

 Wood Rush 

 Wood Cranesbill 

 Sanicle 

 Ash, and others. 



t I looked tor but did not find Chrysosplenium alternifolium, which 

 I used many years ago to find in the neighbourhood. 



Specimens of some of these were taken to replenish the 

 living plants in flower, which are exhibited weekly in the 

 Hancock Museum for the benefit of students in botany. A most 

 pleasant afternoon was terminated by tea at the Wellington 

 Hotel, Riding Mill,. and we returned to Newcastle well pleased. 



Our Second Field Meeting was held at Belford on 

 Saturday, June 1st, Major G. I. T. Leather having given us 

 permission to visit the portion of his estates between Belford 

 and Swinhoe Lake. In the early morning the weather was 



H 



