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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: plants

54/365 The lion’s tooth

23 Saturday Feb 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, flowers, nature, plants, wildflowers

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, dandelion, dent-de-lion, lion's tooth, yellow wildflowers

The French dent-de-lion, lion’s tooth (from the shape of its leaves), became, in English, Dandelion, that wonderful burst of wildflower yellow that lights up grassy meadows and roadside verges, and provides an important early source of pollen to emerging insects. I couldn’t go past this particularly lush flower as I stomped down the zigzag path this afternoon.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

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23/365 Blackbird heaven

23 Wednesday Jan 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, birds, nature, plants

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, blackbird, blackbird eating berries, British birds, Penarth marina, Pyracantha berries

Four Blackbirds, three males and a female, are currently sharing the colourful and obviously delicious (to Blackbirds) bounty of these Pyracantha bushes in Penarth Marina. Nom, nom, nom!

190123 blackbird heaven

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4/365 Reeds and their buntings

04 Friday Jan 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, birds, nature, plants, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, birding, birds in reed beds, birdwatching, British birds, common reed, Phragmites australis, Reed bunting

Today I was entertained for about two hours watching these little cuties, Reed buntings, swaying back and forth on bendy reeds, stuffing their beaks full of seeds and spitting out the fluff. When the sun finally peeked through the cloud layer, both the handsomely streaked buntings (this is a female) and the tall feather-plumed reeds shone golden, a feast for the eyes and welcome compensation for the hoped-for Bearded tits that failed to show today.

190104 reed bunting

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New Year Plant Hunt

30 Sunday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, plants, wildflowers, winter

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

#7DaysofWildChristmas, #NewYearPlantHunt, British flora, New Year Plant Hunt, wildflowers in bloom, winter-blooming wildflowers

From 29 December to 1 January don’t be surprised if you see people taking photos of blooming wildflowers, puzzling over pictures in ID books, scratching their heads over the differences between one plant species and another. We are the New Year Plant Hunters, doing our best to find and identify as many wildflowers in bloom as possible throughout Britain to help the BSBI (Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland) keep track of what’s happening in the botanical world around us. And you can join in. Go for a walk, list what you find and submit your list on the BSBI website. So, for day 6 of my #7DaysofWildChristmas, I took myself on a walk around Penarth and was delighted to find these 27 species in bloom.

181230 bittercress sp
181230 black nightshade
181230 bramble
181230 buttercup sp
181230 cat's-ear
181230 common knapweed
181230 common ragwort
181230 daisy
181230 dove's-foot crane's-bill
181230 forget-me-not
181230 gorse
181230 groundsel
181230 herb robert
181230 ivy-leaved crowfoot
181230 mallow sp
181230 mayweed maybe
181230 radish sp
181230 red clover
181230 red dead-nettle
181230 red valerian
181230 shepherd's purse
181230 sow thistle
181230 spurge sp
181230 thistle sp
181230 unknown umbellifer
181230 winter heliotrope
181230 yarrow
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On the bramble

26 Wednesday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in fungi, insects, nature, plants, walks, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

bramble, Grooved bonnet, leafhopper, leafmine on bramble, Mycena fungi, Penarth to Lavernock coastal path, south Wales coastal path, Stigmella aurella, Wales Coastal Path

I took myself on a meander along the south Wales coastal path from Penarth to Lavernock and back again today. The weather was still quite gloomy, as it’s been for several days now, but at least there was no rain. I often have this trail to myself but not today – every man, woman, child and their dog had obviously decided this was a good way to walk off their festive feasting. As I had made it today’s mission to look for the little, I got a lot of strange looks, and I heard one or two ‘What was that lady doing?’ comments after people had passed. To their credit a couple of folk were brave enough to ask me directly but their eyes glazed over when I began to extol the beauty of the many leafhoppers I was seeing.

181226 on the bramble (1)

I saw lots of lovely things but thought, for the purposes of this blog, I’d focus on the Bramble (Rubus fruticosus agg.), which grows in abundance along the coastal path and, with this year’s mild weather, is still very green, and even flowering in places.

181226 on the bramble (2)

I haven’t yet had a chance to identify my finds but I think I have photos of three different species of leafhoppers (though it’s possible number 3 is just a yellower version of number 1). I was amazed to see so many of these little critters still flying and hopping around the bushes, though the winter has been very mild here so far and I think some species over-winter as adults.

181226 on the bramble (3)181226 on the bramble (4)181226 on the bramble (5)

I also spotted a couple of other tiny mini-beasties lurking amongst the leaves. I’m not sure what these are.

181226 on the bramble (6)
181226 on the bramble (7)

Lots of the leaves had leaf mines, though their makers have now left the leaves. I think most of the mines I saw would have been made by the larvae of Stigmella aurella, a moth.

181226 on the bramble (8)

And my last find was on an old, decaying Bramble branch, where these beautiful little bonnet fungi were growing. Though you can’t see the details in this photo, the caps were striated and the stems grooved so I think these might be Grooved bonnets (Mycena polygramma).

181226 on the bramble (9)

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Christmas baubles

24 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in nature, plants, winter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

berries, fruit, hips, Nature's decorations, winter colour

Here are more of the beautiful ‘Christmas decorations’ currently adorning the otherwise-dreary December countryside, courtesy of Ma Nature, and some of these are even edible, by birds and animals if not necessarily by humans.

181222 christmas baubles (1)
181222 christmas baubles (2)
181222 christmas baubles (3)
181222 christmas baubles (4)
181222 christmas baubles (5)
181222 christmas baubles (6)
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Winter 21!

23 Sunday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, plants, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#WildflowerHour, #winter10, blooming wildflowers, British flora, wildflowers, winter flowers, winter-blooming wildflowers

Well, I have to say I’m really rather pleased, and surprised, with this week’s blooming wildflower finds. I certainly didn’t expect to find Dove’s-foot crane’s-bill (Geranium molle) still flowering at Christmastime, and the Mallow and Red dead nettle were also nice surprises. So, this week I don’t just have Winter 10 for Wildflowerhour, I have Winter 21.

 

Dandelion species
Dandelion species
Daisy
Daisy
Germander speedwell
Germander speedwell
Ivy-leaved crowfoot
Ivy-leaved crowfoot
Common ragwort
Common ragwort
Dove's-foot crane's-bill
Dove’s-foot crane’s-bill
Common knpaweed
Common knpaweed
Buttercup species
Buttercup species
Shepherd's purse
Shepherd’s purse
Bramble species
Bramble species
Red dead nettle
Red dead nettle
Gorse species
Gorse species
Sow thistle
Sow thistle
Mallow species
Mallow species
Red clover
Red clover
Winter heliotrope
Winter heliotrope
Red valerian
Red valerian
Large bindweed
Large bindweed
Thistle species
Thistle species
Spurge species
Spurge species
Yarrow
Yarrow
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The marina sparrows

08 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, plants

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, house sparrow, pampas grass, Penarth marina, sparrow, toetoe

At one end of my regular walk along the embankment of the Ely River where it flows in to Cardiff Bay, near the entrance to Penarth Marina, is a huge stand of what I presume is a type of pampas grass. I always look at it, partly because it reminds me of my New Zealand home (where we would call this by the Maori name Toetoe) and partly because it is often covered in House sparrows.

181208 marina sparrows (1)

The birds seem to adore this grass. The sturdy stems provide convenient perches on which to sit and cheep their continuous sparrow conversations, and they pluck away at the fluffy plumes, presumably extracting edible seeds to munch on. And, when threatened by the local ginger-and-white cat, which is frequently to be seen staring hungrily in their direction, the sparrows can easily flit into the dense vegetation of the grass clump to escape the cat’s clutches.

181208 marina sparrows (2)
181208 marina sparrows (3a)
181208 marina sparrows (4)
181208 marina sparrows (5)
181208 marina sparrows (6)
181208 marina sparrows (7)
181208 marina sparrows (8)
181208 marina sparrows (9)
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Green fingers?

06 Thursday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, plants

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

cyclamen, flowering cyclamen, green fingers, growing cyclamen from seed, growing houseplants, growing seeds, pink flowers

It seems constantly to be raining here at the moment, which is limiting my opportunities to get outdoors with the camera. Luckily, lovely little things are happening indoors and so I’m taking this opportunity to show off my green fingers … though, in truth, I didn’t actually get this process right and it’s all happening in spite of my efforts rather than because of them.

181206 cyclamen (1)

I bought these beautiful cyclamen plants almost two years ago, to add some colour to my new flat and, except for a short rest period each year during the heat of summer, they’ve flowered almost constantly ever since. (I really must re-pot them next time they rest.)

181206 cyclamen (4)

When I noticed a couple of the expired flowers had developed into seed heads, I thought I’d have a go at growing more plants. I googled for instructions, extracted the seeds, popped them in some potting mix and waited.

181206 cyclamen (2)

Initially, nothing happened and I had actually given up on them but, it seems they need the cold to trigger their growth as, since the cooler weather has arrived, they have begun popping up.

181206 cyclamen (3)

The earliest sprouters are now about thumb height, with tiny second and third leaves just coming through. On yet another grey day, I sit here imagining a whole windowsill of pink lusciousness!

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Winter 10

25 Sunday Nov 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, plants, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#WildflowerHour, #winter10, British wildflowers, wildflowers, winter wildflower challenge

If you’ve been following for a while, you’ll know I’ve been trying on and off to learn the names of, and a bit more about, the British wildflowers I find on my meanderings. And, to that end, I follow a weekly happening on Twitter called #wildflowerhour. You can read more about that in my previous blog here. During winter they run a challenge to find and name at least 10 wildflowers each week and share them on social media using the hashtag #winter10.

Blue fleabane

Earlier this week, I decided to see what I could find as I walked firstly through Lavernock Nature Reserve and then homeward through Cosmeston Lakes Country Park. And, er, actually, for this week my hashtag needs to be #winter11. These are they: Blue fleabane, Bramble species, maybe a Hawkbit species, some kind of Buttercup, a Dandelion species, a Daisy and Devil’s-bit scabious, Yellow-wort, a thistley thing and Red clover, and Common ragwort. You can see I’ve still got some learning to do!

Bramble species

181125 some kind of chickweed
181125 some kind of buttercup

181125 dandelion sp

181125 daisy
181125 devils-bit scabious

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

181125 knapweed maybe
181125 red clover

181125 common ragwort

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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