REPORT FOR 1902. 
61 
somewhat resembles C. axillaris^ Good, {reniota x vulpina), in habit ; 
but that is usually a coarser plant, having the spikes more bracteate, 
and compound at the base. We saw no remota near. The specimens 
are somewhat miniature. I do not know whether this hybrid has 
been detected on the Continent ; it is apparently new to Britain. — 
Edward S. Marshall. 
Carex axillaris, Good., C. (?) vulpina x divulsa. Damp wood, 
Portskewett, Monmouthshire. We found one or two large tufts of 
this Carex growing near the above supposed parents, between which 
it seems to be just intermediate. — W. A. Shoolbred. 
C. Montana, L. Wyre Forest, county 40, Salop, 27th April 
1902. — J. B. Duncan. “An interesting addition to the Salopian flora 
beyond the records in ‘Top. Botany,’ ed. 2, 1883. These records 
are for East Kent, North Somerset, Derby, and Brecon.” — Ed. 
“ I had a specimen in my herbarium collected by the late Rev. J. H. 
Thompson, 8th April 1876, near Cooper’s Hill, Wyre Forest, which is 
also Mr. Duncan’s habitat. This specimen was named by Mr. 
Thompson C. longifolia (?), Host, and in pencil {niontana, L. ?). 
This specimen, together with specimens from Mr. Duncan, has been 
placed in the Shrewsbury Museum.” — W. H. Painter in ‘ Record of 
Bare Facts,” p. 16, 1903, Caradoc and Severn Valley Field 
Club. “No doubt it has been passed by from the early date it 
flowers ; in cultivation (in Sussex) it has flowered as early as 5th April 
in my garden.” — Ed. 
C. distans, Linn. Very plentiful on the flat sandy expanse between 
the lake at Fairhaven and “The Bungalow,” St. Anne’s-on-the-Sea, 
West Lancashire, 12th July and 2nd August 1902. Not recorded for 
vice-county 60 in ‘Top. Bot.,’ p. 463, but reported for the same 
station in the ‘Journal of Botany’ for August 1902, p. 295. — Charles 
Bailey. “ C. distans, L., is a different plant from that usually so 
named by British botanists.” C. B. Clarke in litt. — Ed. 
Paniam Criis-galli, Beauv. On the large heaps of rubbish 
deposited near the canal, and which have been brought from the 
metropolis, near Drayton, but in Buckinghamshire, October 1902. 
A new county record. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Setaria glauca, Beauv. Rather plentiful on rubbish heaps between 
Drayton and Iver, Buckinghamshire, October 1902. Not previously 
distributed from county 24. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Alopecnrus hybridus, Wimm. {A. pratensis x geniculatus). Trent, 
near Kegworth, Leicestershire, vice-county 55, July 1902.— A. B. 
Jackson. “Not quite intermediate, but nearer A. pratensis, L.” — 
E. Hackel. 
Phleum pratense, L., form. Near Dover, Kent, July 1902. A 
form with slightly swollen base of stem, from a cornfield near Dover, 
