620 MR. ARTHUR BENNETT ON LIPARIS LiESELlI IN NORFOLK. 
IY. 
A NEW STATION FOR LIPARIS LCESELII, RICH. 
IN NORFOLK. 
By Arthur Bennett, F.L.S. 
Read 27 Ik October, 1903. 
In the ‘ Morning Herald ’ for August 29th, 1900, there appeared 
the following note : 
“Rare Orchids in Norfolk. — A visitor to Norfolk (Mr. A. 
E. Buckhurst, M.A.) has found in a spongy hog near the east 
coast several specimens of the rare orchid Liparis Loeselii, or two- 
leaved Liparis. Authorities state the plant is very rare, and is 
found only in Norfolk, Suffolk, and Cambridgeshire. As there is 
no Norfolk specimen in the Herbarium at Kew, Mr. Buckhurst 
has sent the plants there, and they are to be cultivated.” 
My attention was called to this at the time, but the finder 
wisely withheld the locality, and so one could not notice ft. But 
last July Mr. Buckhurst wrote to me saying he had seen my Notes 
in the Society’s Transactions,* and kindly gave the locality. It 
is one that takes it farther north in the county than any recorded 
habitat. He saw about thirty to forty specimens on a very boggy 
part of Honing Common, near the railway. In a later letter he 
mentions that he intended to visit the place again in August. 
This he did, and kindly sent me two small specimens (three inches 
high), but each had the flower stalk remaining of last year. It 
grew with Drosera intermedia(\\o D. rotund, if olid), Epipadis palustris 
(very abundant), and Parnassia palustris. 
This station is in a new watershed, i.e., that of the Ant. It 
has now occurred in the Bure, Tliurne, Ant and Waveney (Eoydon) 
watersheds. The old station St. Faith’s Newton, will, I suppose, 
also belong to the Bure. 
It does not seem to have been recorded from the Yare or its 
tributaries. 
* Trans, vol. vii. part iii. J902, p. 333. 
