ON THE FLOWERING PLANTS, FERNS, AND MOSSES OF WINDERMERE AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
Summary
The banks of Windermere afford many objects of interest to the lover of British wild flowers; so numerous and various, indeed, are the more or less rare plants to be found in the lake itself—in the mountain tarns, streams, woods and bogs, and on the fells and heath, that it is difficult to give a satisfactory account of them in the space of a short chapter. A general description of the Flora of the district may, however, be of some use to the tourist who, in passing through the country, wishes to secure anything which may be worthy of a place in his herbarium or garden. The writer proposes to enumerate the least common plants which have been found within about three miles of the lake, occasionally noticing objects of peculiar interest which are found at a greater distance.
Of the order Ranunculacæe, Thalictrum flavum is not uncommon about the margin of the lake; T. minus is also found. The beautiful globe-flower Trollius europœus is abundant in various situations. Helleborus virdis occurs in two situations near the Windermere terminus, and H. fœtidus grows near the road between Bowness and Kendal: it is very probable that both these are introduced. Aquilegia vulgaris is found in numerous places.—Of the order Nymphœaceœ, Nymphœa alba and Nuphar lutea are frequent in the lake and many of the mountain tarns.
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- Guide to WindermereWith Tours to the Neighboring Lakes and Other Interesting Places, pp. 77 - 88Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1854