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winter. He also sent me the same autumn, what appeared to be 
an identical form from Truro. As the plant was subsequently 
lost sight of, I revisited the locality in September, 1922, and 
succeeded in refinding it, still with F. Martinii Clav., in or very 
close to the original station. On this second occasion it was 
much less rare than F. Martinii. — H. W. Pugsley. 
Matthiola sinuata L. S. Ouen’s Bay, Jersey, June 16, 1923. 
— W. C. Barton. 
Alyssum incanum L. Quarry, Dartford Heath, Kent, v.c. 16, 
June, 1923. — St. J. Marriott. 
Brassica Cheiranthus Vill. Bel Royal, Jersey, June 13, 1923. 
Sent for sake of finely developed root-leaves, otherwise too 
young. — W. C. Barton. 
Coronopus clidimus Sm. Under a wall near Walton-by- 
Clevedon, Somerset, July 7, 1903. — J. W. White. 
Thlaspi alpestre L. Broken ground, Winterhead, N. Somerset, 
v.c. 6, May 15, June 1, 1922. — H. S. T. This has much the 
habit of the Winch Bridge Thlaspi which Baker stated had been 
confirmed by Boreau as sylvestre. It has the same ± entire long 
petioled root-leaves and long lax fruiting spike, but in both Mr. 
Thompson’s plant, and in my own Winch Bridge gathering, the 
ripe silicic is not like that described and figured by Jordan as 
his sylvestre. It is, however, at any rate, not occitanicum, which is a 
glaucous plant, with a shorter more denser fruiting raceme. — C.E.S. 
Many of the plants, particularly in the higher ground about 
Shipham, are very glaucous, and these are usually with a shorter 
fruiting raceme. It is probably merely an ecological state. T. 
alpestre in this interesting Somerset outlier appears more 
abundant than formerly. — H.S.T. 
Viola canina L. alba - V. nemoralis Jordan. Shapwick Peat 
Moor, Somerset, v.c. 6, May 20, 1923.- — H. S. Thompson. Forma 
alba of var. ericetonm of V. canina. It has been reported to me 
from two localities near Clevedon, and I have found it in some 
plenty on the peat at Shapwick. It was also sent me some years 
ago, by Mr. Stuart Thompson from the collection of the late 
Mr. T. Clark. It is noticed on p. 77 of “British Violets,” and 
there is a good sheet of it in my collection at South Kensington. 
— E. S. Gregory. It would be interesting to know what Mrs. 
Gregory makes of V. nemoralis Jordan, not mentioned in her 
“ Brit. Violets.” Mr. White (“Flora of Bristol,” 177) refers to 
this pure white form on Walton Moor, near Glastonbury, men- 
