95 

 Cornaceae 



CoRXUS FLORIDA L. DogWOod. 



Common in woods and preferring the lower places. 



Nyssa biflora Walt. Black Gum. 



Common in swamps and bays. 



Ericaceae* 



Clethra alnifolia L. Sweet Pepperbush. 



Burnt Bay. Edge of Black Creek swamp. Very common in 

 the damper flatwoods and on edges of bays. 



Chimaphela maculata (L.) Pursh. Pipsissewa. 



Along Black Creek, southside. above Captain Cannon's Place. 



Pine grove in front of the Upper Farm Place. In rich, shady 



woods. 

 Monotropa uniflora L. Indian Pipe. 



Black Creek bluffs one mile above Hartsville. Not rare. 



Azalea viscosa L. Swamp Azalea. 



Edges of bay across the lake. Edge of Black Creek Swamp. 

 Common. 



Azalea ntjdiflora L. Wild "Honeysuckle." Pinxter Flower. 

 Common in flatwoods and on the edges of bays and branches. 



Zexobia pulverflexta (Willd.) Pollard. 



Edge of bay across the lake. Causeway of Prestwood's Bridge. 

 Damp, sandy barrens and bays. 



Zexobia cassixifolia (Vent.) Pollard. 



Bay across the lake. Prestwood's Bridge causeway. Damp, 

 sandy barrens and bays. Xot so common as Z. pulverulenta. 



Kalmia cuxeata Michx. 

 Edge of bay on west side of Sheep Pasture Savanna. One of 

 our rarest and most interesting shrubs. 



Kalmia latifolia L. Mountain Laurel. 



Plentiful on the bluffs of Black Creek. 



♦The pretty little evergreen shrub with box-like leaves and white flowers 

 called sand myrtle. (Leiophi/Uum buxifolium (Berg.) Ell.) does not quite 

 reach our territory. The farthest inland that I know of it is on the sandy 

 bluffs of Black Creek at Springville, about sixteen miles below Hartsville. 



