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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: wildflowers

Name that rosette, 2

03 Sunday Mar 2024

Posted by sconzani in plants, spring, wildflowers

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British wildflowers, identifying early plant growth, plant identification, plant rosettes

I dipped my toe in to the ‘name that rosette’ waters very briefly back in February 2022 (Name that rosette, 1, 13 February 2022), very quickly realised it was much more difficult than I had anticipated, and yanked my toe rapidly back out again. However, this week’s challenge for #WildflowerHour on social media is about identifying plant rosettes, so I thought I’d have another try. I admit I chose plant’s that are relatively easy and cheated a bit by finding flower-less rosettes next to those with more advanced growth and flowers already beginning to bloom, which helped tremendously. So, I’m fairly confident that these rosettes are Bittercress (Cardamine sp) – not sure if it’s possible to tell at this stage which species this will become; Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale agg.); Lesser celandine (Ficaria verna); and Woolly thistle (Cirsium eriophorum).

240303 rosettes

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Celandine Day

25 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in wildflowers

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British wildflowers, Celandine Day, Lesser Celandine

I’m a bit late to the party but last Wednesday, 21 February, was Celandine Day, so named, according to the PlantLife website, ‘since 1795, when the renowned naturalist Gilbert White noted that the first celandines usually appeared in his Hampshire village of Selborne’. The date for the appearance of the first blooms has changed rather a lot in the intervening 229 years but these gorgeous wildflowers are still worth celebrating, I think.

240225 lesser celandine

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First Coltsfoot

18 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in wildflowers

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British wildflowers, Coltsfoot, spring flowers, Tussilago farfara, yellow flowers

240218 coltsfoot (2)

I’ve been checking this little area each time I’ve passed in recent weeks, looking for early signs of growth. It’s very overgrown with straggly brambles and long grass but, last Friday, after poking about the area with a stick, I found what I was hoping to see, my first Coltsfoot flower of the season.

240218 coltsfoot (3)

This spot, on the edge of a local park, is where I’ve seen my first Coltsfoots in bloom in the past but, as seems to be the case with most flora and fauna, this flower is at least a week earlier than my sightings in previous years.

240218 coltsfoot (1)

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Heartsease

14 Wednesday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in wildflowers

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British wildflowers, Heartsease, Merthyr Mawr NNR, Viola tricolor, Wild pansy

This photograph was taken several years ago, at Merthyr Mawr National Nature Reserve, but I’ve not shared it before and, though I don’t personally celebrate Valentine’s Day, I was looking for something appropriate to today’s love theme for those of you who do. Heartsease (Viola tricolor), a delicate and delightful little pansy, grows wild on the edges of the dunes at Merthyr Mawr.

240214 heartsease

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Mid-February winter 10

11 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in flowers, trees, wildflowers

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British wildflowers, tree flowers, winter colour, winter wildflowers in bloom

Despite this having been a very wet week, the temperatures have been quite mild and, in some cases – as with the ornamental Cherry tree outside my flat, for example – I’ve felt like I could almost see the buds fattening. So, it comes as no surprise to me that, this week, I’ve managed to find ten species of wildflower and tree in flower: Alder, Field speedwell, Dandelion, Lesser celandine, Primrose, Wild strawberry, Sweet violet, Common fumitory, Three-cornered leek, and Red dead-nettle.

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First Crocuses

04 Sunday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in flowers, plants, wildflowers

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British wildflowers, croci, crocus, Crocuses

Or should that be Croci, like Hippopotamuses becomes Hippopotami? On a grey damp day, these were a sublime sight.

240204 crocuses

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Alexanders rust and springtails

02 Friday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects, plants, wildflowers, winter

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Alexanders, Alexanders rust, Collembola, Puccinia smyrnii, Smyrnium olusatrum, springtail, springtail feeding on Alexanders rust, springtails on Alexanders

One of the most abundant plants along the South Wales Coastal Path, even in the depths of winter, is Alexanders (Smyrnium olusatrum), and, almost as soon as it breaks ground, it seems to have rust on its stems and leaves. This rust, Alexanders rust (Puccinia smyrnii), is only ever found on this plant species, and when I was examining the rust recently, I noticed it was providing a meal for some tiny springtails. I’m not sure which springtail species these are – they can be tricky to identify, but many species are known to snack on fungi, fungal spores, mould and bacteria so I guess they find the rust spores a tasty meal.

240202 springtail eating alexanders rust

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Winter 18

28 Sunday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in wildflowers, winter

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Tags

British wildflowers, winter wildflowers, winter wildflowers in bloom

January’s weather has been all over the place. First, we shivered through a week of colder than average temperatures, then two wild and windy named storms blew away what few flowers had survived the cold, and now our weather is milder than usual. As a result, our flora (and fauna) seem confused about whether it’s winter or spring, and finding wildflowers in bloom has been hard work this week. However, after walking my patch for several years, I know where the more sheltered places are and so have managed to find 18 wildflowers in bloom.

240128 wildflowers (1)

Just in case you don’t recognise them, these are: Daisy, Dandelion, Field speedwell, Gorse, both the female and male flowers of Hazel, Hoary mustard, Ivy-leaved toadflax, Lesser celandine, Mayweed, the white-flowered version of Pink campion, Primrose, Sea radish, Snowdrop, Sweet violet, Three-cornered leek, Wild strawberry, and Winter heliotrope.

240128 wildflowers (2)

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Bulrushes

25 Thursday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in plants, wildflowers, winter

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Bulrushes, Great reedmace, plants in freshwater, Typha latifoli

As the weather has now turned unseasonally mild, I had hoped to find a Water vole when I meandered past the dipping pond at Cosmeston but none had ventured out of their holes. So, instead, you get bulrushes – not quite the same, I admit, but I’ve always liked their flowerheads, particularly when, like these, they’re shedding their fluffy seeds.

240124 bulrushes

Though other plants are also called bulrushes, the ones shown here are what most of us recognise when we hear that word. This is Great reedmace (Typha latifoli), a tall, long-leaved plant that typically grows on the margins of freshwater ponds and ditches.

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Snowdrops are go

21 Sunday Jan 2024

Posted by sconzani in wildflowers, winter

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British wildflowers, cemetery wildflowers, First snowdrops, Snowdrops

A detour through the local cemetery produced my first Snowdrops of the year today, just a few and looking a little blurry in my image as Storm Isha was already beginning to blow and shake the landscape, but a delicious sign of botanical treats to come.

240121 snowdrops

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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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