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FLOllA OF WARWICKSHIRE. 
II. Chesterton ! Y. and B.; near Henley-in-Arden ; near Stratford-on- 
Avon ; near Binton Bridges ; Bardon Hill ; Newbold-on-Avon. 
CYNOSURTJS. 
C. cristatus, Linn. Crested Dog's-tail Grass. 
Native: In meadows, pastures, by roadsides, Ac. Very common. 
June, July. Area general. 
Occasionally I have found it with proliferous spikes. 
DACTYLIS. 
D. glomerata, Linn. Bough ('ock's-foot Grass. 
Native : In meadows, pastures, and on roadsides and banks. Very 
common. June to September. Area general. 
FESTUCA. 
F. Pseudo-myurus, Soger. Mouse-tail Fescue Grass. 
Native: On wall tops and sandy roadsides. Rather rare. June, 
July. 
I. Slade Lane, Witton, on sandy roadsides; on banks near 
Erdington. 
II. Emscote, II.B., Herb. Brit. Mas.; Warwick, old walls! Herb. Perry; 
Milverton, Y. and B. 
F. sciuroides, Both. Barren Fescue Grass. 
Native : In pastures, on grassy roadsides, and on walls. Locally 
common. May, June. 
I. Sutton Park; Middleton Heath; Coleshill Heath; lanes near 
Hampton-in-Arden ; Solihull, Ac. 
II. (Festuca bromoides) King’s Cougliton ; Cougliton Court! Burt., i., 83 ; 
Kenilworth, Y. and B.; Honington, Newb.; near Oversley ; in 
hilly pastures near Great Alne. 
F. ovina, Linn. Sheep's Fescue Grass. 
Native: On heaths, heathy roadsides, and woods. Locally 
abundant. June, July. 
I. Sutton Park, on the common land near Four Oaks; Middleton 
Heath ; Baddesley Common ; Bannersley, near Coleshill; 
Coleshill Heath : Bentley Heath, Ac. 
II. Milverton, Y. and B.; Armscote, Neivb. 
b. tenuifolia, Sibth. Local and rare. 
I. Hilly pastures near Gravelly Hill Station; very abundant on 
heaths and in woods at Sutton Park ; near Middleton Hall; 
Middleton Heath ; Spinney, near Bannersley Rough; Baddesley 
Common ; Marston Green ; Earl’s Wood ; Balsall Common ; 
Forsliaw Heath. 
II. Armscote, Newb. 
F. rubra, Linn. Linn. Sin. Hard Fescue Grass. 
Native: In damp pastures, and on sandy banks and roadsides. 
Very common. June, July. Area general. 
A very variable grass both as to its habit of growth and colour, 
many of the forms being so distinct as to be at once recognised, and the 
varieties require, I think, more careful investigation than I have been 
able to bestow upon them. 
