Showing 15 results

Archival description
15 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
LSH/1/1/3/3/25 · Part · 1937-02-27
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
Notes abundant Primula filipes along the path east from the chorten at the south end of the pass, and records a single primula (1147) likely P. Boothii found by the Tsongpen east of Yongpu La among waterfalls, though no more were located. Mentions a badly burned lady in poor condition and hopes Lumsden can help. Also reports shooting a barking deer for meat and enjoying views of the snows.

CONTENT:
10

Prim. filipes The specimens taken here were along the path which leads East from the Chorten at the S. end of the pass. Anywhere along that path where a small nala crosses the path, there is P. filipes. I went along a mile, and found it every few hundred yards. The lady had a very bad night with her burnt legs. I hope Lumsden will manage to do something for her. They were 17 days unattended, so are in an awful state, and the smell is really bad. I went out twice in the afternoon saw a barking deer, which I shot at 40 yards with a .410 lethal bullet. Its flesh will provide a very good change from the everlasting moonghi.

1st March Halt. Saw nothing in the morning, but Tsongpen
Yongpu La went up the hill E of the Yongpu La and came down a side
Prim. gracilipes 1147 nala where he found a beautiful primula (1147) which
Rho. grande 1148 I think must be P. Boothii. I immediately went there, but could find no more. It was only seen in a very small area among waterfalls, on mossy rocks in the shade on a south face. It is heliotrope with a greenish yellow centre and the best flowers were 1 inch across, or more. We have lovely views of the snows each morning awaits

LSH/1/1/6/1/173 · Part · 1938-11-24
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
A catalog of specimens numbered 6517–6616, chiefly Primula with one Omphalogramma entry, noting collected material (seed, roots), sectional attributions, and cross-references to earlier numbers. Includes remarks on identifications and that Primula capitata has seed only with no herbarium specimen.

CONTENT:

  1. Primula Nivalis sect. nov. = (? 5872). Seed. Calliantha
  2. " " Morsheadiana " 210
  3. " " Niv. sect. nov. = 5872. Calliantha
  4. " " Valentiniana = 5856 "
  5. " " aff. glabra "
  6. Omphalogramma brachysiphon? "
  7. Primula Elizabethae. Roots and " 215
  8. " " laeta? roots as well.
  9. " " Roylei. " "
  10. " " subularia " C.S.
  11. " " Dryadifolia = 5865, 5931. "
  12. " " aff. atrodentata = 3636. " 220
  13. " " Boothii. = 3671 Roots.
  14. " " tsariensis = 3873 Roots.
  15. " " Normaniana = 3650 Roots & "
  16. " " Cawdoriana sect. = 3699 Roots.
    aff. bariensis Roots taken. Taken for small yellow Pet. primula which was not seen. 225
  17. " " odontica Kingii = 5570. Seed
  18. " " Pet. sect. yellow = 5573. Roots also.
  19. " " chamaeuthamna = 5589 Roots also
  20. " " prenantha var. Morsheadiana = 5587. Seed.
  21. " " pudibunda? = ? 3982? " 230
  22. " " aff. strumosa = 3983 Roots.
  23. " " Elizabethae = 3985. Roots.
  24. " " capitata. v. good Seed. No Herb. specimen.
  25. " " sikkimensis sect. " " Might be P. weissii.
LSH/1/1/5/1/39 · Part · 1937-05-03
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
During a slippery descent, Tsongpen comments on the path, and men from Naszi report heavy rain that ruined buckwheat crops. The author measures Rhododendron leaves, notes primulas in flower, and records bearings to Naszi and Korkhu with mapping notes for Gali Chu, Okse La, Dunhar La, Bahi Chu, and the Black Mt.

CONTENT:
19

slippery, though of course much easier than on our way up. In fact Tsongpen said 'Rasta pakka hogiya', which certainly was somewhat of an overstatement. Met some men from Naszi who told us they had had awful rain there which just came down solid & has ruined all the buckwheat crops. They wanted rain badly but have got it too heavy now.

I picked up a few leaves from the tree the specimen of Rhododendron (R. falconeri 2883) No. 2983 was taken. The longest, of only a few examined, was 44 cms, the broadest was 19 1/2 cms. Fine today up till 3:00 pm, but looks like rain later. We saw Naszi & Korkhu from the ridge not far from Camp 2nd May & the bearing was 95° to Naszi, 100° to Korkhu & the ridge on which we were & which is the one we crossed from the Gali Chu to Naszi by the Okse La runs at about 110° - 290° Mag. To the south of the Dunhar La is the Bahi Chu. Very roughly the map should be as opposite. It is all wrong just now. The Gali Chu stops a long way short of the Black Mt. & has the ridge running between it & the mountain. We found a few primulas 2984 (Pr. bracteosa 2991, common) in flower.

The flower is very like P. boothii, but I think it may not be that, because of the bracts & the shape of the leaf which is (Rh. keysii 2992)

LSH/1/1/6/1/181 · Part · 1938-11-24
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
List of Primula specimens with numbers, determinations, and notes such as seed-only, sections, and cross-references. Localities recorded include several Himalayan passes and a lake.

CONTENT:
PRIMULA NUMBERS.

3580 ✓ Primula gracilipes. Jelep La. Cunninghamii Craib. 1 P
3583 o " tibetica 2
3585 o " Phasaensis. SEED only. Yamdrok Tso.
3592 ✓ " atrodentata
3602 o " Florindae. " " Kongbo Nga La. S

  1. o " atrodentata " " 3. D
  2. o " pumilio " " 4.
    3611 ✓ " Roylei. Lang La. 5. P
    3612 ✓ " atrodentata " d
    3616 o " macrophylla SEED only " N
    3633 o " glabra. Lo La. 6
    3636 ✓ " atrodentata? " 7 d
    3637 ✓ " vernicosa. " 8 P
    3640 o " sp. nov.? Clutterbuckii?? " 9
    3647 ✓ " Bryocarpum himalaicum -
    3648 ✓ " " Pet. Sect. yellow sp. nov. 10 P
    3649 ✓ " Cortusoides Sect. Pet. lacerata 11 P
    3650 o " Normaniana 12
    3671 ✓ " Boothii. gracilipes Nyng La 13 P
  3. ✓ " sp. Pet. Sect. aff. Griffithii. " 14 P
    3700 o " Normaniana. "
  4. ✓ " Cortusoides sect. " p
  5. ✓ " Boothii = 3671. gracilipes " p
    3745 ✓ " sp. Pet Sect. aff. Griffithii. Lo La p
    3746 ✓ " " " " fruit spec. " p
  6. ✓ " sp. Pet Sect. sp nov. yellow = 3648 " p
    3756 o " sp nov. = 3640. "
LSH/1/1/6/1/170 · Part · 1938-11-24
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
List of Primula entries noting material types (roots or seed) and reference numbers. Includes species such as P. winteri, sikkimensis, sandemaniana, ioessa, tibetica, strumosa (=1300), boothii, and filipes, with a note that no herbarium specimen is present for entry 6630.

CONTENT:

  1. Primula winteri. Roots. 73. 235.
  2. Primula sikkimensis? Seed.
  3. Primula sandemaniana. Seed. 74. No Herbarium Specimen??
  4. Primula ioessa? Seed.
  5. Primula tibetica. Seed.
  6. Primula strumosa = 1300. Roots. 240.
  7. Primula boothii.
  8. Primula filipes. 75.
LSH/1/1/6/1/110 · Part · 1933-07-21
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
Notes record Primula specimens at Kucha La, including forms of P. dryadifolia and an unidentified capitata-like plant with densely hairy, non-farinose leaves. The page lists distribution ranges for several Primula and Omphalogramma taxa across passes from Tum La and Chubumbu La through Kucha La, Lusha La, Tamnyen La, and into Bhutan and China.

CONTENT:
55a Kucha La

  1. = 5865. Primula Dryadifolia Sect. (Tsongpen) Kucha La. Very common here.
  2. " " Jonarduni (Dryadifolia). " " " " , grows close to 5931.
  3. " " macrocarpa (macrophylla true form). Kucha La. White round the eye not prominent as in 3895.
  4. " " aff capitata.? (Concholoba) Kucha La. I don't recognize this. The leaves have no farina, rare, densely
    covered with long hairs. Unfortunately, only these three specimens were seen.

PRIMULAS. Primula Elizabethae. Extent from TUM LA to CHUBUMBU LA. Its place in the East seems to be taken by
" 5872 Calliantha " " TUM LA to KUCHA LA + Lusha La + Tamnyen La.
" Valentiniana " " China to CHUBUMBU LA.
" odontica " " Tsari Sama (not seen on Chining La or Chubumbu La) to TAKAR LA.
" tsariensis " " LO LA to Tsari Chikchar and then in Bhutan.
" Dryadifolia sect. 5865 (Tsongpen) " " TSANANG LA to KUCHA LA + LO LA
" Chamaethauma " " LUSHA LA to PA LA
Omphalogramma minus " " CHUBUMBU LA to TUM LA. + TAMNYEN LA.
" brachysiphon " " " " " " " " 186-2 57 2.6pm 140.7 = 148.5
Primula Boothii " " HA, Bhutan to NYUG LA PACHAKSHIRI.
" Whitei " " Central Bhutan to DOSHONG LA. (replaced by P. sonchifolia?)

LSH/1/1/3/3/230 · Part · 1936-07-01
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
Page lists collecting notes for Primula (including erythrocarpa, filipes, boothii, and denticulata forms), with localities and dates in February–April. Routes and sites include passes and rivers, with an elevation note of 12000' and a remark on commonness at Paka gao.

CONTENT:
1202 Primula erythrocarpa? Sanden to Takhtoo 9.3 - 14.3. Changpu 21.3. Gyipu 22.3.
Sakti 25.3. Pangchen 31.3. Trimo.

(Whitei)
1166 Blue Primula. Mera 9.3. Nyaksung La 13.3. Sanden 13.3. Gyipu 22.3. Lepo 7.4. (1291)
Lung. 1388. 12000' 29.4. Kyimpu. Choram - Migyitun. (Paka gao - 12500' common). Kingkor.

(Boothii)

  1. Pink Primula. Mera 9.3. Sanden 13.3. Nyam Jang Chu to Lepo.

1126 Primula filipes. Chungkar 26.2. Yonpu La 1.3. Takhtoo 15.3.

1197: P. Boothii Yonpu La 1.3. Choling La 3.3. Takhtoo 15.3. Pangchen 31.3. Le.
Lepo. 8.4. (1292)

1278 Primula (Denticulata) white eye. Le - Lepo.

LSH/1/1/5/1/95 · Part · 1928-05-31 - 1928-06-02
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
Entries describe travel from Phobsikha toward Lao La with mostly fine weather, strong valley winds, and plant collecting, including Primula boothii in seed and other alpine flora. Plans are made to head toward wet Ridang, and route notes describe the path toward Gangte Gompa across a swampy valley with measurements taken at Lao La.

CONTENT:
31st May. Phobsikha ( ) 8½ miles.

It was fine nearly all yesterday; even in the evening there were only a few short showers. Nearly fine today. We came across a lot of Primula Boothii(?) 3162 on the way, in seed, so collected & I have packed in a bottle with CO2. Otherwise nothing seen.

1st June. Halt. Fine. This is a very windy valley, all day from 7.0 am onwards, wind blows very strongly up the valley. The hills are still very dry here. Pinbo & I went up to the W of camp, but saw little. There was a lot of Bryocarpum himalaicum whose flower is now practically over. Rhod Keysii & cinnabarinum & triflorum all very common. As Ridang is always a very wet place, we are going off in that direction tomorrow, but not as low as Ridang itself.

2nd June. LAO LA. 7 miles BP. 1928 Temp. 57° Time 2.0 pm Ht.

Rained hard yesterday evening. Fine all day today. Path leaves the junction of the two main streams of Phobsikha & lies at a bearing of 330° M. direct to Gangte Gompa, which can be seen on top of a round pine clad hill at the head of the valley. The middle of the broad open valley is nearly all swamp & the path bad. At m 2½ a valley enters from the north, & at its junction, is a village called

LSH/1/1/4/1/183 · Part · 1933-11-09
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
At Nyingsang La the party gathered several rhododendrons between the north and south passes, noted Primula boothii in bud, and faced difficulties with a pony while traveling from Tsona via Tawang. Sanders felt cold compared to October 1934, and Pimbo ensured rapid travel; on the 14th November halt they dried rhododendron seed and briefly collected a small epiphytic rhododendron.

CONTENT:
Nyingsang La. 2850, 2849. Rh. camelliiflorum 2845, fulgens 2846, Thomsonii 2847, Rh. 2848, campanulatum 2851 (203)

Nyingsang La. 2850g.
La. we got another 3 or 4 rhododendrons & several more between the N pass & the S one, none epiphytic shrubs from this side. No flowers seen. I started to ride, but gave up after one hour as the pony could not carry me & barely go on itself. Sanders feels pretty cold, but not nearly so cold as in Oct. 1934. On the way up the north side, we saw a lot of Prim. Boothii, but just small buds very densely covered with thick yellowish farina. Pimbo has done well to get us here in 5 days from Tsona, and with no later arrival than 4.30 at Tawang & here. These are both long marches, with a lot of climbing in them.

14th November. Halt. A beautiful morning, clouds coming up by midday, mist low in the evening. Spent the day drying yesterday's rhododendron seed, and only out a short time, getting one small epiphytic rhod (2853) [R. camelliiflorum 2853, 2852], the flower of which we collected in March, & a

LSH/1/1/6/1/43 · Part · 1936-06-22
Part of The Ludlow & Sherriff Collection

SUMMARY:
Notes at Lo La include plant collections and a notable new Primula, with complaints about a soaked camp; David remarks on heavy rain. The following day details a march from Nyugda La to Karchung La through dense forest with rhododendrons and primulas, a hazardous descent on notched logs, late and unhappy coolies, a hut taken by Molo people, and unsuccessful attempts to obtain monal and tragopan despite sightings.

CONTENT:
Lo La. April 25. R. hookeri 3652 & 3655, ciliatum 3654, Phaeodopum 3656, megeratum 3657, Stachyurus himalaicus 3661. Daphne bholua 3658.

Chenogone wretched. The best find was a new petiolarid primula, No. 3648. But P. Normaniana is, when seen at this time, a most beautiful thing. Both are however easily beaten by P. cortusoides Sech, No. 3649 (P. laciniata), which is really a most beautiful one; other flowers, though like P. Normaniana, are much bigger.

Camping ground awful, everything soaking wet too. David is having his eyes opened. Today (27th) he was saying "what an awful place for rain". I agreed, but had to tell him that the rain would not start till after another month or a half.

Nyugda La to Karchung La
26th April. Camp near Karchung La. 8 miles. Fine morning, clouded by 10 am. Rain at 2.0 pm & most of the evening. After crossing the Chudi Chu, the ascent is steep. The hills are covered with dense forest the whole way. Tsuga (Brunoniana?) is a common tree here, & grows to a great size. Rhododendrons abound, but are yet not in full bloom mostly. Two primulas found, P. Boothii, No. 3671 (P. gracilipes), a really magnificent one, 3673 (Primula porecta?). The latter is a grand sight when growing in close clumps as we saw it about 1000 ft below the Nyugda. Over the La the descent is at first easy, then worse than ever, very steep indeed, & down notched logs the whole way. A good deal of repairing to the road had been done to these, but even so they were awful, the path is most tiring. The coolies however are very sad, many were not in camp till after 5.0 pm. We went on further than the coolies expected & they did not like having to come on. They are a very independent lot, more than once muttering of dropping the loads & refusing to go further, as they did yesterday. A Maddenii rhododendron, R. lindleyi 3667 (R. Nuttallii?) was the finest we saw. It really is a most magnificent sight when in full bloom, & like many others of the section, it has a wonderful scent. Ludlow saw some tragopan but failed to get one. Ramzana shot one yesterday, but it was never found. We have had very bad luck with monal & tragopan, having seen quite a number now, but not having got one of either yet. We had a late evening & a perfectly awful camp. My tent was in a bog, Ludlow's on a most uneven bit of ground, with just room for his bed to be put up more or less evenly. A hut had been built here on the only even good bit of ground, but this was pinched by some Molo people, & our own servants used the half we kept clean for them. A tiring day. We could have been in by 2.0 pm, & so saved the coolies, but they were almost pushed up the last mile of 1000 ft ascent, & came in very late.

Nyugda. Ludlow 44. "We are unlucky with monal & tragopan; the net result of 2 years pursuit of them so far is one monal & one tragopan."