FLORA OF JERSEY. 153 



Sands of St. Ouen's Bay, near St. Seller's. 5a6. Occa- 

 sionally in sandy fields on the coast. /. Piquet. 



26. Chichorium L. 

 1. C. Intybus L. 



Colonist. Cultivated fields and waste places. Bare. June 



to August. 



St. Ouen's Bay. Five Oaks. Samares. 



Bare in Guernsey. Alderney and Sark. France. 



27. Lapsana L. 

 1. l. communis l. 



Native. Hedges and roadsides. Common. June to Sep- 

 tember. 

 Guernsey. Alderney (one plant). Sark. France. 



28. HypochjEeis L. 



1. h. glabra l. 



Native. Dry banks and rocky places in the west. May, June. 

 Between St. Aubin's and Portelet Bay. On the cliffs 

 between St. Brelade's and the Corbifere. Near St. Peter's 

 Church. L'Etac. 



Guernsey. Alderney. Normandy (rather rare). W. France. 

 Var. Balbisii (Loisel), which has all the achenes beaked, 

 has been recognised by many authors as a mere figment. 

 Heads representing the type and the variety- may be found on 

 the same plant. Lloyd raised the type from seeds of the 

 variety, and even found starved plants on the sands of the 

 west coast of France which had no beaked fruits at all. 



2. H. RADICATA L. 



Native. Waysides, meadows, sandy fields. Abundant. May 



to September. 



Guernsey. Alderney. Sark. France. 



3. H. MACnLATA L. 



Native. CUffs on the coast. Very rare. July, August. 



Plentiful in a gully leading down to the sea close to 

 Grosnez Castle, where it grows with the Cowshp — the only 

 locality for either plant in the Channel Islands. 



One of the three native Jersey plants not found in either 

 Normandy or Brittany. Bare in W. France, and not north of 

 the Loire (Lloyd). A remarkably local plant throughout TV. 



