80 FLORA OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



above Dockray. — (W. Hodgson.) Cliffs of Great End above 

 Sprinkling Tarn, 800 yards. — (Watson.) Banks of Aira Beck. 

 — (Whitehaven Cat.) 



W. Cliffs of the east face of Helvellyn. — (Balfour.) In a 

 few places round Windermere. — (F. Clowes.) Cunswick 

 Wood and other places near Kendal. — (T. Gough.) Abun- 

 dant with Convallaria majalis in Middlebarrow Wood, Arn- 

 side. — (B.) Barrowfield Wood and Caldkale Scroggs near 

 Kendal. — (Wilson.) Lowther Park. — (Rev. A. Ley.) Under- 

 barrow Scar, Kendal, and by the stream descending from 

 Scandale to Patterdale.— (J. Ball.) 



L. Humphrey Head. — (Dr. Windsor.) Rowdsey Wood 

 near Haverthwaite. — (Miss Hodgson.) 



339. Rubus Idmus, L. (Raspberry). Native. British 

 type. Range 1-2. Woods and thickets. Common ; ascend- 

 ing to 400 yards in Great Langdale ; 500 yards by the 

 waterfall on the south-west slope of Saddleback (Watson) ; 

 and as high as the hills round Ullswater. 



Var. Leesit, Bab., was found by Mr. Edwin Lees, after whom 

 it is named, on the banks of the stream that runs into Winder- 

 mere between Bowness and Troutbeck. I sought for it there 

 without success in 1883. 



340 — 3. Rubus suberedus, And. (Bramble, as are named 

 the other sub-species of fruticosus). Native. British type. 

 Range 1. A widely-spread Lake species. Frequent about 

 Keswick and Ambleside, ascending into Great Langdale 

 and the Watendlath valleys, and seen also at Coniston, 

 Grange-over-Sands, Meathop Moss, in the Duddon valley at 

 Seathwaite, the Troutbeck valley, the Vale of St. John, 

 Haweswater, etc. The three varieties, suberedus, fissus, and 

 plicatus, all occur in the district. 



340 — 6. Rubus affinis, Bab. A universally distributed 



