176 
APPENDIX. 
O. albida, White Cluster-rooted Orchis. Cradley Park, 
and Wichbury Hill^ near Hagley.— Mr. Scott. 
O. viridis,Frog Orchis. On Hill Top^ Cotheridge. — Mr. 
Walcot. Meadows near Cowleigh Park^ Malvern. In a wet 
meadow at the northern base of the Round Hill^ Abberley, 
plentifully. — Messrs. Lees and Edmunds. 
O. conopsea, Aromatic Orchis. Abundantly in the mea- 
dows at the northern end of the Malvern range. 
Ophrys musc'ifera, Fly Orchis. Eastham^ near Tenbury, 
according to the Rev. Edward Whitehead. 
O. apifera, Bee Orchis. One of the most beautiful and 
curious of the British Orchidese, and well worthy the closest 
attention. In great abundance at Leigh Sinton^ where 
Messrs. Walcot and Edmunds gathered upwards of 70 plants 
at once, within the compass of a few yards. In almost equal 
abundance on the travertine by the Spout Brook, at East- 
ham. — Mr. Lees. Also at Abberley, Cracombe, and Great 
Comberton, according to xMrs. Gardner, Purton, and Nash. 
Neottia spiralis, Sweet Ladies' Traces. In Kemsey Grove. 
— Dr. Streeten. On the Common near Hunter's Hall, Little 
Malvern, and on the mound of Crookbarrow, near Worcester. 
— Mr. Lees. 
Listera Nidus avis, Bird' s-nest Orchis, In a coppice at 
Kemsey. — Dr. Streeten. 
Epipactis latifolia, Broad-leaved Helleborine. In a place 
called the Dingle, at Pedmore, near Stourbridge, and in the 
deep shades of the Devil's Den, at Clifton-on-Teme. — Mr. 
Lees. 
E. purpurata, Purple-leaved Helleborine. Parasitical on 
the stump of a maple or hazel, in a wood near the Norris 
Farm, at Leigh Sinton, Worcestershire." — Rev. Dr. Abbot, 
iti Smith's English Flora. No other botanist has met with 
it. 
E, palustris, Marsh Helleborine. Marshy meadows, Ro- 
binson's Street, Malvern Chace. — Mr. Ballard, 
