317 
at  the  lowest  spikelet,  a  peculiarity  I  could  not  explain _ 
C.  E.  Salmon.  Yes  ;  but  a  form  nearer  to  C.  remota  than 
usual — E.S.M.  (2)  Hedgerow,  near  Bishop’s  Stortford, 
N.  Essex,  v.c.  19,  June,  1910.  Growing  with  the  parents. 
Very  typical,  but  rather  young.^Coll.  A.  H.  Evans 
Comm.— C.  E.  Moss.  Bightly  named— E.S.M. 
C.  trinervis  Degland.  Origin,  Ormesby  Common,  E. 
Norfolk,  v.c.  27.  Cult.  Ledbury,  Oct.  1,  1910 _ S.  H. 
Bickham.  Beautiful  examples,  not  afflicted  with  fungus 
which,  I  understand,  always  caused  the  plants  (orig. 
from  Ormesby)  in  Bev.  E.  P.  Linton’s  garden,  to 
be  barren.  These  plants  of  Mr.  Bickham  and  those 
sent  in  to  the  Club  last  year,  from  the  wild  station,  by 
Miss  A.  M.  Geldart,  show  that  C.  trinervis  may  well  stand 
as  a  British  native,  and  that  the  bracket  of  doubt  in  Mr. 
Druce’s  “List  of  British  Plants”  may  be  removed. 
Specimens  from  Ormesby  have  been  seen  and  passed  by 
Herr  Kukenthal— C.E.S.  The  Ormesby  Common  form 
of  C.  trinervis ,  the  exact  equivalent  of  which  I  have  not 
yet  seen  among  continental  specimens.  A  curious  feature 
is  that  this  Norfolk  plant  is  always  sterile.  This  is  so  in 
Mr.  Bickham’s  specimens;  though  apparently  in  fruit, 
there  is  no  nut — E.P.L.  A  very  interesting  specimen,  as 
the  name  has  been  queried  and  I  have  doubted  it  at  times; 
but  this  specimen  shews  the  creeping  stolons  well,  and 
they  are  very  like  those  figured  in  Drejer’s  “  Symbolae 
Cancologicae,”  t.  7,  1844  ;  they  are  not  like  the  ordinary 
ones  of  Goodenowii.  The  late  Mr.  Beeby  and  I  carefully 
dug  up  many  roots  of  this  latter  sedge  at  Hedge  Court, 
near  Felbridge,  in  Surrey  (where  several  forms  of  it  occur) 
and  traced  the  stolons,  none  of  which  were  like  these. 
Oimesby  Common  was  a  wild  spot,  as  my  late  friend 
Mr.  Glasspoole  told  me,  and  at  one  time  may  have  been 
the  borderland  of  the  sea,  as  many  pans  ( salinae )  for 
evaporating  sea-water  have  been  found  far  inland  in  the 
Flegg  Hundred  (see  Butt’s  “The  Norfolk  Broads,”  (1908) 
p.  284) _ A.B.  ’ 
■  G.  aquatilis  Wahl.,  forma  angustata  Kiikenth.  (Bef. 
No.  8472).  Bog  on  the  east  side  of  Ben  More,  Mid  Perth, 
v.c.  88,  m  the  hollow  between  that  peak  and  Am  Binnein 
(or  Stobinian),  July  16,  1910.  A  slender  form,  or  state, 
