The results are in! After a concerted effort to check as many different local habitats as possible, walking 31.5 miles over 5 days, I managed to find 29 different wildflowers in bloom this week. Two (Ragwort and Smooth sow-thistle) were too distant for good photos; the other 27 feature in this week’s little video. I hope you’re also seeing plenty of flowers in your areas now too.
The 27 are: Alexanders, Barren strawberry, Colt’s-foot, Cow parsley, Cowslip, Creeping buttercup, Daisy, Dandelion, Dog’s mercury, Field speedwell, Forget-me-not, Gorse, Groundsel, Ivy-leaved toadflax, Lesser celandine, Opposite-leaved golden-saxifrage, Petty spurge (with little yellow spots of the rust Melampsora euphorbiae), Primrose, Red dead-nettle, Red valerian, Shepherd’s-purse, Snowdrop, Spurge laurel (a shrub really but I’m including it), Sweet violet, Three-cornered leek, Wavy bitter-cress, and Winter heliotrope.
That’s a surprisingly good collection. I walked over 4 miles today and was excited to find a really good patch of wild snowdrops, but I didn’t see a fraction of these. Either you are further on in the season than we are in Lancashire, or else I’m not looking well enough!
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It’s always lovely to see Snowdrops, Susan. 🙂
I think that being coastal helps, though we do still get heavy frosts locally, and bitterly cold winds at times too.
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That’s amazing that so many spring flowers are out already. I saw snowdrops, celandines and primroses today, maybe the others aren’t far behind.
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I think that, after that week of cold weather, the flowers (and the birds) decided it was spring as soon as the sun came out. 🙂
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