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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: British wildflowers

335/365 Winter 11

01 Sunday Dec 2019

Posted by sconzani in nature, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

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

I found this week’s blooming wildflowers (for #wildflower and the hunt for the #winter10, plus one!) on a circular walk from Penarth through Cosmeston and back along the coastal path, so there was quite a variation in habitats, from urban to meadow to coastal. Here’s what I found: Bramble species, Bristly ox-tongue, Daisy, Hedge woundwort (a lovely surprise to still find one of these in flower), Herb Robert, Ivy-leaved toadflax, Meadow buttercup, Oxeye daisy, a speedwell species, an umbellifer species, and Yellow-wort.

191201 bramble sp
191201 bristly oxtongue
191201 daisy
191201 hedge woundwort
191201 herb robert
191201 ivy-leaved toadflax
191201 meadow buttercup
191201 oxeye daisy
191201 speedwell sp
191201 umbellifer sp
191201 yellow-wort
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334/365 From burdock to velcro

30 Saturday Nov 2019

Posted by sconzani in nature, plants

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, Burdock, burdock seed head, Burdock seed hooks, Lesser burdock, Velcro inspiration

Did you ever wonder who invented velcro? Maybe you already know this story? Here’s what the official VELCRO® website has to say:

It began with a burdock burr, a tiny seed covered in hundreds of ‘hooks’ that naturally catch onto the microscopic loops that cover fur, hair and clothing. The burr was an unassuming marvel of nature and a minor headache for man, until one day in 1941 when the burdock burr, Swiss engineer George de Mestral, and his dog crossed paths on a hunting trip in the Alps. … Inspired by the burr, de Mestral created the world’s first hook-and-loop fastener.

I got snagged by a couple of Burdock burrs when I was out walking today, which is what inspired me to prepare this blog.

191130 burdock

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328/365 Winter 10, 2019

24 Sunday Nov 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, wildflowers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#WildflowerHour, #winter10, British wildflowers, wildflowers in bloom

Now that most insects have morphed in to their over-wintering pupae or are hibernating somewhere warm and dark, my eye naturally turns to whatever else I can find in the natural world around me and one of those things is the wildflower. You might think they, also, have faded away but, depending on the weather, there are usually flowers to be found all year round. If you don’t believe me, try following #wildflowerhour on social media, every Sunday night from 8 to 9pm, to see what folks have managed to find for the weekly #winter10 challenge. Here are my finds from this week’s local walks …

191124 bramble sp
191124 common ragwort
191124 daisy
191124 ivy-leaved toadflax
191124 meadow buttercup
191124 meadow cranesbill
191124 red clover
191124 red valerian
191124 stinging nettle
191124 umbellifer sp
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320/365 Jingling Johnny

16 Saturday Nov 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, plants, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, geranium, Geranium pratense, Meadow crane's-bill

As I made my way down the zigzag path to Cardiff Bay this morning, I was surprised to find not one but three Meadow crane’s-bill (Geranium pratense) plants still flowering. And, though its leaves usually turn ‘a rich red-brown’ in the autumn, these were still looking green and lush. Perhaps they don’t change until the frosts come – although it’s now late autumn, our weather has been very wet but mostly quite mild this year.

191116 meadow crane's-bill (1)

My Flora Britannica says that one of this plant’s vernacular names is Jingling Johnny, though it gives no reason for the name. Plantlife’s website includes that same name but also several others: Blue basins, Gipsy, Grace of God and Loving Andrews. Such a variety of vernacular names just shows how common this plant once was: with the industrialisation of agriculture, sadly it is now much less so.

191116 meadow crane's-bill (2)
191116 meadow crane's-bill (3)
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297/365 Flowering on the zigzag

24 Thursday Oct 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

autumn colour, autumn flowering wildflowers, British wildflowers

191024 zigzag wildflowers (13)

Everything was dripping today as my little bit of south Wales was cloaked in heavy fog. I headed down to Cardiff Bay hoping some interesting birds might be sitting out the murkiness but, if they were, I couldn’t see them. Plants were easier to spot so, as I walked back home up the zigzag path, I kept an eye out for which wildflowers were still in bloom. I was pleasantly surprised with the numbers I found, and the water droplets added a pretty touch to some of my photos, I think.

191024 zigzag wildflowers (1)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (2)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (3)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (4)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (5)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (6)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (7)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (8)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (9)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (10)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (11)
191024 zigzag wildflowers (12)
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295/365 Sweet Honeysuckle

22 Tuesday Oct 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, flowering Honeysuckle, Honeysuckle, Honeysuckle scent, Woodbine

I was surprised, but delighted to find this Honeysuckle plant still in flower today.

191022 honeysuckle

Did you know its scent, which is strongest at night, can be detected by pollinating moths a quarter of a mile away (Flora Britannica)? Did you know its vernacular name is woodbine (I know at least one of you did) and the plant is mentioned in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream:

Sleep thou, and I will wind thee in my arms ..
So doth the woodbine, the sweet honeysuckle

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271/365 Wildflowers at Cosmeston

28 Saturday Sep 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

autumnal wildflowers, British wildflowers, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, flowering in September, wildflowers in bloom

Last Monday, on the day of the autumnal equinox, I decided to see how many still-flowering wildflowers I could find during my wander around the east and west paddocks at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park. My total was 33 – though I probably missed a few, I thought that number was impressive for the time of year. Here they are …

190928 wildflowers (1)
190928 wildflowers (2)
190928 wildflowers (3)
190928 wildflowers (4)
190928 wildflowers (5)
190928 wildflowers (6)
190928 wildflowers (7)
190928 wildflowers (8)
190928 wildflowers (9)
190928 wildflowers (10)
190928 wildflowers (11)
190928 wildflowers (12)
190928 wildflowers (13)
190928 wildflowers (14)
190928 wildflowers (15)
190928 wildflowers (16)
190928 wildflowers (17)
190928 wildflowers (18)
190928 wildflowers (19)
190928 wildflowers (20)
190928 wildflowers (21)
190928 wildflowers (22)
190928 wildflowers (23)
190928 wildflowers (24)
190928 wildflowers (25)
190928 wildflowers (26)
190928 wildflowers (27)
190928 wildflowers (28)
190928 wildflowers (29)
190928 wildflowers (30)
190928 wildflowers (31)
190928 wildflowers (32)
190928 wildflowers (33)
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268/365 Hooked

25 Wednesday Sep 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, plants, wildflowers

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Agrimonia eupatoria, Agrimony, Agrimony fruit, Agrimony seed heads, British wildflowers, burred fruit, seed dispersal

In recent weeks, every time I’ve returned from a country-park wander I’ve found my socks and shoes, and my hoodie if I’ve had it tied around my waist, covered in small burrs. These are the seed heads of Agrimony (Agrimonia eupatoria) and this is their ingenious method of spreading themselves around the countryside.

190925 agrimony (1)

Just as some plants have seeds that have adapted to being blown in the wind, so others have devised methods of being transported by small (or, in this case, not so small) mammals. As you can see from my photos below, Agrimony fruit have a fringe of hooked bristles around their lower edge. These enable the fruit to become attached to the hides of cows, the wool of sheep, the fur of dogs, the socks of humans, to name just a few examples. 

190925 agrimony (2)
190925 agrimony (3)

In my case, they mostly end up in the bin, but I’m sure a few will have fallen off during my walk home and, if I notice them on my hoodie, I pull them off as I’m walking along, thus doing my bit to help the plant go forth and multiply!

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259/365 Bumbling around

16 Monday Sep 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects, nature, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

bees, bees on scabious, British wildflowers, Buff-tailed bumble bee, bumblebee, Common carder, Devil's-bit scabious

I keep coming back to the Devil’s-bit scabious, I know, but it’s just so lovely and so full of life now that many of the other wildflowers have gone over. Bumblebees, in particular, seem to love feasting on it. I think these are Buff-tailed bumblebees and Common carders but don’t quote me!

190916 bumbles on scabious (1)
190916 bumbles on scabious (2)
190916 bumbles on scabious (3)
190916 bumbles on scabious (4)
190916 bumbles on scabious (5)
190916 bumbles on scabious (6)
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255/365 Scarlet pimpernel

12 Thursday Sep 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Anagallis arvensis, British wildflowers, Scarlet pimpernel

It occurs to me that I should be posting about the last of the summer flowers before they disappear for another year. So, here’s a pretty little thing I always enjoy seeing – it’s Scarlet pimpernel (Anagallis arvensis).

190912 scarlet pimpernel (3)

According to the First Nature website, ‘The genus name Anagallis comes from Greek and means “to delight again” – a reference to the reopening of the flowers each day when the sun comes out. The specific epithet arvensis means “of cultivated land”, which habitat is indeed commonly graced by these lovely little wildflowers.’

190912 scarlet pimpernel (1)
190912 scarlet pimpernel (2)
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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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