10 
within twenty miles of Liley Wood, yet it is perfectly naturalized, and 
there is not the slightest clue to its origin in our district. There is a 
garden at a small farmhouse above the edge of the wood, removed some 
forty yards from the exact localities of the plant, but the garden contains 
not a single root of it, and was never known to do so ; indeed it is solely 
devoted to growing potatoes, cabbages, gooseberry- bushes, etc., but 
without any flower-root culture.” — C. P. Hobkirk. 
Vapaver Lecoqii , Lamotte. “Near Burntisland, Fife.” — J. Boswell 
Syme. The true plant, with orange-yellow juice. The root is yellow, 
from the colour of the juice showing through the thin epidermis. That 
of P. Lamollii, in which the juice is white, is of this latter colour. 
Meconopsis cambrica , Vig. “ I send a specimen of this plant, which 1 
picked last summer in the neighbourhood of Llanthony Abbey, Mon- 
mouthshire. The spot where it was growing was close to the borders of 
Monmouthshire and Breconshire, and I do not know precisely to which 
county it belonged ; if, however, to the former, it is new to the province, 
according to the ‘ Compendium of the Cybele Britannica.’ It was evi- 
dently in a perfectly wild state, growing in several small tufts in the 
middle of a precipice on the mountain side.” — A. Ley. 
Fumaria pallid jlora, Jord. “Waste ground, Mount Stewart, Co. 
Down.” — S. A. Stewart. This is the most northern station I am - 
acquainted with for this form of F. capreolata. Mr. J. Harbord Lewis 
sends it from the Mersey ballast hills. 
Fumaria Vaillaniii , Lois. “ Plentifully in several cornfields on the 
chalk down called ‘Iiog’s Back,’ near Guildford. From F. par vi/lor a, 
which occurs in fields on the same down, the true Vaillaniii is distin- 
guishable at a glance by the darker tints of the whole plant.” — H. C. 
Watson. I believe I gathered a small specimen of F. Vaillaniii in a 
field on the south slope of the ‘ Hog’s Back,’ about twenty years ago. 
(See c Flora of Surrey,’ p. 13.) 
Cochlearia anglica. “ Salt marsh, Bidston, Cheshire.” — J. Harbord 
Lewis. Very different from the South-England form, being much 
smaller, with the leaves more abrupt at the base, often ovate or rhombic- 
ovate ; the pods smaller and shorter in proportion, and apparently 
without any constriction between the valves. The southern form is, no 
doubt, the var. gemina , Hort., and appears to be as different from the form 
described above, as C. officinalis is from C. alpina and C. danica. 
Camelina sglcestris, Wallr. “ Among Trifolium incarnatum, near Penny 
