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Tag Archives: British trees

The Wayfarer

06 Thursday May 2021

Posted by sconzani in plants, spring, trees

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Tags

British shrubs, British trees, bud burst, leaf burst, Viburnum lantana, Wayfaring tree

As part of this spring’s project to watch trees and shrubs come to life, I’ve been keeping a close eye on Wayfaring trees during my local walks. Viburnum lantana is a tree – or shrub, if the potential to grow 5 metres tall means it can still be called a shrub – I’ve mostly ignored in the past but now I have a much better appreciation of its beauty.

210506 wayfaring tree (3)

The leaf buds when they first begin to develop are brown and furry and very sculptural.

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And the flowers are equally lovely. The first of these photos was taken on 23 March, the most recent just two days ago, on 4 May.

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You can read more about the Wayfaring tree on the Woodland Trust website, where the entry includes the fascinating information that arrows made from stems of this tree were found on the frozen body of ‘Ötzi the Iceman’, the man from 4000-3500BC whose body was found in the Austrian Alps in 1991.

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Ash burst

25 Sunday Apr 2021

Posted by sconzani in flowers, spring, trees

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Ash flowers, Ash tree, British trees, flowers on trees, Fraxinus excelsior, tree flowers

First, the black buds split open to reveal their furry brown inner parts.

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Next, those brown furry parts burst open to reveal luscious purple ‘berries’.

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And finally, those purple berries transform – they’re not berries at all, of course, they’re the tips of the anthers of the spiky flowers that grow at the end of the twigs and branches.

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This is an Ash tree (Fraxinus excelsior), and they have a very complicated but fascinating reproduction system, which I didn’t know about when I took my photos – you can read all about it on the Tree Guide UK website here.

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The Blackthorn is buzzing

23 Friday Apr 2021

Posted by sconzani in insects, spring, trees

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Tags

blackthorn, Blackthorn blossom, British insects, British trees, insects on Blackthorn blossom, Spring colour

210420 8 bee sp

Flies and hoverflies, bumbles, bees and butterflies – all love feasting on Blackthorn blossom as much as I love watching them enjoying its bounty. And the blossom itself is so blindingly white it’s like a springtime snowfall when the petals fall to the ground.

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210420 4 hoverfly episyrphus balteatus
210420 5 hoverfly Criorhina ranunculi
210420 6 butterfly peacock
210420 7 bumblebee

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Leaf burst: Field maple

06 Tuesday Apr 2021

Posted by sconzani in leaves, spring, trees

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British trees, bud burst, Field maple, Field maple bud burst, Field maple leaf burst, leaf burst

Field maple leaves are now bursting out wherever I walk, and they speak truth to the old saying that ‘good things come in small packages’. The tiny buds are exquisitely fashioned, covered in a soft furry outer skin that splits open to reveal the sculptural beauty of the prominent lime-green veins and much-folded pinkish-red blade.

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Landscape

11 Thursday Mar 2021

Posted by sconzani in trees, walks

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British trees, farm landscape, landscape photos, local landscape, tall trees, tree silhouettes

I don’t often take landscape photos these days but the combination of sunny spring weather, fabulous trees, and what looked to my inexpert eye as good land management, plus the colours and leading lines, prompted me to start clicking during a recent walk.

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This piece of countryside, about an hour’s walk from home, is a combination of farm and woodland. Perhaps a hedgerow would be better than a fence alongside this field (happily, there are a lot of hedgerows in this area) but at least there’s a wide area of ‘set aside’ where, hopefully, wildflowers will be allowed to grow. And there are some magnificent towering old trees in the surrounding landscape, to which my photos really do not do justice.

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Alder flowers

07 Sunday Mar 2021

Posted by sconzani in flowers, spring, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Alder, Alder catkins, Alder cones, Alnus glutinosa, British trees, catkins, female Alder flowers, male Alder flowers

I’m off on a flower tangent this week. With no new wildflowers to add to last week’s collection and because I’ve been seeing lots of nice birds (especially Siskin) in Alder trees this week, I thought I’d focus on Alder for my Sunday flower post.

210307 alder flowers (1)

As the Alder (Alnus glutinosa) is monoecious, you can find both the male and female flowers on the same tree. I’ve frequently noticed the male flowers (commonly known as catkins), as they’re the most obvious and are very similar to Hazel catkins. Give them a flick at this time of year and you’re sure to see a shower of yellow ‘dust’ released into the air: that’s the pollen.

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However, I hadn’t really paid any attention to the female flowers before and, I admit, I hadn’t really made the connection between the female flowers and the little woody cones they grow in to once fertilised. The female flowers are much smaller and found in little bunches on the stem, usually above the male catkins.

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Interestingly, the Woodland Trust website says that ‘The green dye from the flowers was used to colour and camouflage the clothes of outlaws like Robin Hood, and was thought to also colour the clothes of fairies.’ And, of course, in the winter months the seeds from the cones provide essential nourishment to the Siskin, the Goldfinch and the Redpoll. What a bountiful tree the Alder is!

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Holly flowers

24 Sunday Jan 2021

Posted by sconzani in flowers, plants, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British trees, Holly, Holly flowers, Ilex aquifolium, male Holly flowers, winter flowers

Holly flowers are tiny, tucked away in the crooks of branches, inconspicuous behind the mass of glossy evergreen leaves. And that’s my excuse for not having noticed them until quite recently.

210124 holly flowers (1)

I’ve since read that Holly (Ilex aquifolium) is dioecious, which, if you’ve been following this blog for a while, you might remember from my March 2020 post, Wild word : dioecious, means that Holly’s male and female flowers occur on separate trees. I think the flowers I found are male, as the female flowers have small green spheres in their centres, which, if pollinated, would grow in to the red berries we all associate with the Holly tree.

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New year, new hope

01 Friday Jan 2021

Posted by sconzani in trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British trees, Hazel, Hazel female flowers, Hazel flowers, Hazel tree

A new day, a new year, new life, new hope! One of the first things I noticed during today’s long New Year’s Day walk was these Hazel flowers, the tiny pink female flower and, nearby, the long droopy male catkin. And it made me feel hopeful. Though we humans enter 2021 beset by the devastation and grief of a global pandemic, the looming disasters of climate change and environmental destruction, and, in the UK, the self-inflicted damage of Brexit, yet Nature continues its cycles of life, shining a little glimmer of light in the darkness and gloom. Let’s cling to that light and let it inspire us to make 2021 a greener, more environmentally friendly year, for the future of our planet and ourselves.

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335/366 In praise of Beech

30 Monday Nov 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, leaves, nature, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn colour, autumn leaves, beech, British trees

In his ‘Ode to a Nightingale’, Keats wrote of a ‘light-winged Dryad of the trees’ singing of summer in ‘some melodious plot of beechen green’. The beechen green has now become beechen gold and brown, but I can still imagine Dryads singing of the beauty of mighty Beech trees, in all their autumnal finery, and even performing paeans in praise of their statuesque forms once those golden leaves have fallen.

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289/366 Spectacular Spindle

15 Thursday Oct 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, plants, trees

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autumn colour, autumn fruit, British trees, Euonymus europaeus, fruit, Spindle

Spectacular. Flamboyant. Ostentatious. Garish. There are so many adjectives you could use to describe the fruit of the Spindle tree (Euonymus europaeus). If I had a garden, this is one tree I would definitely plant in it, for the fruit alone.

201015 spindle

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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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