LEES : ADDITIONS TO WENSLEYDALE FLORA. 



4 Rosa micrantha Sm. L. 



A bush or two only, among hollies in Bear Park, Aysgarth ; 

 first noticed by myself on September 5th. ! 



5 Myriophyllum alterniflorum D.C. H. 



In the river Yore, below Hawes Bridge, 800 ft. alt. ! In 

 Summer Lodge Tarn, Askrigg Moor, 1,500 ft. alt. ! Mr. Baker 

 omits drainage district 7 in outlining its area in North Yorkshire, 

 and remarks that it is ' the rarest of the three species ' — the very 

 opposite of my experience among the hills. With us M. verti- 

 cillatum is unknown, and // is most abundant incomparably in 

 the low ' carr ' country ; whilst M. alter?iiflorit?n ascends to Mal- 

 ham Tarn (1,250 ft.) in West Yorkshire, and to 1,500 ft. in this 

 district. 



6 Pastinaca sativa L. H. 



Sparingly on low scars ' at Shaw Cote, west of Askrigg. 

 Alt. 250 yards. 



7 Galium uliginosum L. Z. 



Rough marshy ground south-west side of Locker Tarn, above 

 Carperby. 



8 Crepis hieracioides W. & K. (C. succissefolia T.) H. 



Among bushes on the west slope of Bain Gill, before the 

 Semer^ale pastures are reached ; J. P. ! 



9 Hieracium amplexicaule L. 



On old garden walls at Gayle, West End ; apparently quite 

 naturalised. One plant on rocks in fields near Burtersett ; and one 

 plant found on a bridge over a beck below West Burton, by 

 Mr. J. Percival. I am at a loss to explain how this can have 

 come, but it appears to have been known to observant Gayle 

 villagers for many years. 



10 Hieracium caesium Angl. Auct. ; var. Smithii Baker. {Vide 



Journ. Bot., N.S., vol viii., p. 360. 1879.) L. 



Below Leyburn ' Shawl'; J.P. ! A very glaucous plant, with 

 deep and acute teeth on lower leaves, and main stem -leaf. 

 Typical ccesium^ less robust than the foregoing, on Penhill and 

 by Gayle beck ! 



11 Linaria ochroleuca Breb. (L. sepium All.? L. italica Angl. 



Auct.) L. 



With yellowish-white, not lilac-striped flowers, growing near 

 Sambucus elniliis L. — the Dane-wort — on a shaly escarpment of 

 flagstone, planted with larches, and over-run with thoroughly- 

 naturalised Sedum alburn^ to the north side of and parallel with 

 the eastern third of Leyburn ' shawl.' This is usually considered 



Jan. 1885. 



