228 Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa. 
seedlings already mentioned), and the only additions to the previous lists 
were : — 
Eriospermum laneeifolium (o). 
Lobostemon fruticosus (o). 
* Eragrostis brizoides (r). 
* Disa tenuis (r). 
* Chenopodium ambrosioides (r). 
Watsonia rosea (r). 
Cotyledon grandinora (r). 
The winter rains this year were exceptionally heavy, and at one point 
on the southern slope of valley A there was a small landslide (fig. 6) which 
caused a large amount of debris to be washed down the water-course, 
altering this considerably (fig. 7). In several places a deep channel was 
cut by the rush of mud and stones. 
The spring flora, though in composition the same, was by no means as 
rich as in the previous year, and as elsewhere on the Peninsula the season 
was considered a good one, one is forced to conclude that the previous year's 
display was an effect of the fire. 
In October records were made of a few plants that had not been noted 
the previous year, viz. : — 
Indigofera incana (f). 
Gnaphalium parvulum (f). 
Lessertia pulchella (o). 
Silene anglica (o). 
Lessertia excisa (o). 
Hypochoeris glabra (o). 
Carduus pycnocephalus (o). 
Avenastrum sp. (o). 
Aizoon sarmentosum (o). 
Hermannia prismatocarpus (o). 
Poly gala bracteolata (r). 
Urospermum picroides (r). 
Pelargonium hirsutum (r). 
During the winter months several water-holes for cattle were dug on 
the ridge between valleys A and B. In October these holes were nearly 
dry, and the plants growing in them were interesting in that they were 
totally distinct from any growing elsewhere on the area. The following 
were seen : — 
Cyperus tenellus. 
Crassula brevifolia. 
