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Tag Archives: British wildflowers

The zigzag winter 10

09 Sunday Dec 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers, winter

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#WildflowerHour, #winter10, British wildflowers, Penarth, wildflowers, wildflowers blooming in winter, winter flowers, Zigzag path

I’ve blogged previously about the wildflower and invertebrate delights of the local zigzag path that leads from Penarth down the cliffs to Penarth Marina. It’s a path I walk at least once a week so, during Friday’s wander, I decided to see what wildflowers were still in bloom there for this week’s Wildflowerhour and its Winter 10 challenge. And here they are …

181209 bramble
181209 common ragwort
181209 daisy
181209 groundsel
181209 knapweed
181209 mallow sp maybe
181209 sow thistle
181209 thistle
181209 white clover
181209 yarrow
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Winter 10 again

02 Sunday Dec 2018

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

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

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

181202 Dove's-foot crane's-bill

Here are this week’s still-flowering wildflowers for Wildflowerhour’s #Winter10 challenge, found during my perambulations around my local patch. These are (I think): Dove’s-foot crane’s-bill (above), Bush vetch, Common chickweed, Daisy, Herb Robert, Ivy-leaved toadflax, Petty spurge, Red campion, a sowthistle (possibly Smooth sowthistle) (must pay more attention to the leaves next time), and Yellow corydalis.

181202 bush vetch
181202 common chickweed
181202 daisy
181202 herb robert
181202 ivy-leaved toadflax
181202 petty spurge
181202 red campion
181202 smooth sowthistle maybe
181202 yellow corydalis
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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

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181125 knapweed maybe
181125 red clover

181125 common ragwort

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Eyecatching blue

05 Friday Oct 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

blue flowers, British wildflowers, Chicory, Cichorium intybus, Penarth Docks, Penarth Marina Park, Succory

There’s just something about a blue-coloured flower that catches my eye and this Chicory grabbed me by the eyeballs as I walked home from Penarth Marina yesterday.

Although Chicory (Cichorium intybus) is a native British wildflower, these particular plants were not truly wild; they’re growing in a series of large wildflower beds planted around the edges of Penarth Marina Park. (Interestingly, the park itself is also artificial – it was once part of the inner basin of Penarth Docks, then became a rubbish dump, before being repurposed as a park in the 1980s – details and photos here.)

Chicory, also known as Succory, used to be widely cultivated. Its spears (buds) and leaves were eaten, and the dried and ground root has been used as a substitute for coffee. I think I’ll stick with my cup of tea, thanks.

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I found a new plant!

03 Wednesday Oct 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Blue fleabane, British flora, British wildflowers, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Erigeron acris

In case you think I’ve made a profoundly important botanical discovery, perhaps I should clarify that title: although I have noticed this plant growing in one particular place at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park during my walks in the past couple of weeks, Monday was the first time I had a close look at it, took some photos and worked out what it was, and it is a plant I had not previously seen.

This is Blue fleabane (Erigeron acris), a member of the daisy family, though why it is called Blue fleabane I have no idea as the flower petals I’ve seen are pink, and both my plant ID guidebook and the various online sites I’ve looked at describe them as lilac or purplish.

181003 blue fleabane (4)
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This is a coastal plant, which usually grows in dry areas of grassland, on sand dunes or on stone walls. That fits with the site at Cosmeston, where it’s growing in a very dry, stony location and it’s probably only a mile to the sea as the crow flies. As you can see from the fluffy seed heads in my photos, it’s actually at the end of its flowering period – usually between July and September – so I have been very remiss in not noticing it before now.

181003 blue fleabane (6)

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Blooming autumn

28 Friday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

British flora, British wildflowers, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, wildflowers

Last week we had our first two named autumn storms, this week we’ve had glorious clear days but rather chilly overnight temperatures, so I think it’s fair to say autumn has well and truly arrived. Amazingly, though, wildflowers are still blooming in large numbers. Here are the species I’ve found during my walks around Cosmeston Lakes Country Park this week.

180928 Cosmeston flowers (1)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (2)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (3)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (4)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (5)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (6)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (7)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (8)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (9)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (10)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (11)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (12)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (13)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (14)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (15)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (16)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (17)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (18)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (19)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (20)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (21)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (22)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (23)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (24)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (27)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (26)
180928 Cosmeston flowers (25)

 

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A Mallow

14 Friday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

#FloralFriday, British wildflowers, Mallow, Malva species, Penarth Rail Trail

This beauty is definitely a Mallow (Malva sp.) but it seems paler than the Common mallow (Malva sylvestris), whose flowers are usually a much deeper pinkish-lilac with even darker stripes.

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I found it growing on Penarth’s rail trail, a railway line to Barry that fell foul of the Beeching cuts in the 1960s and has since been converted, in part, to a much-used walking and cycle path. The trail is edged on both sides by houses so this plant could very easily have flitted over a back fence or been dropped as seeds by birds. Whichever, its flowers are a very pretty addition to the foliage that lines the trail.

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Rocking the samphire

11 Tuesday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, plants, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, Crithmum maritimum, Lavernock Nature Reserve, Rock pipit, Rock samphire, samphire

This lovely blast of botannical sunshine I found flowering on the clifftops at Lavernock is Rock samphire (Crithmum maritimum).

180914 Rock samphire (1)

I’ve never eaten it – apart from the occasional blackberry at this time of year, I’m not a forager – I like to leave things to be appreciated by everyone and eaten by the wildlife that needs it more than me (anti-foraging mini-rant over!) – but I believe it can be eaten as a vegetable and is also used in pickling.

180914 Rock samphire (2)

In fact, according to the Oxford Dictionary, the word samphire was once sampiere, from the French (herbe de) Saint Pierre or ‘St Peter(‘s herb)’. And in my trusty Flora Britannica, Richard Mabey writes

In the nineteenth century rock samphire from Dover and the Isle of Wight was sent in casks of brine to London, where wholesalers would pay up to four shillings a bushel for it. Shakespeare knew the plant from the south coast, and in King Lear, in a scene near Dover, has Edgar say to Gloucester, ‘half way down / Hangs one that gathers samphire, dreadful trade!’

180914 Rock samphire (3)

Even if I did want to try this particular Rock samphire, its location is completely inaccessible to all but the most foolhardy. But one huge bonus of photographing a plant that grows along cliff edges is that sometimes, if you’re really lucky, a cute and curious little Rock pipit will pop up to see what’s happening.

180914 Rock samphire and Rock pipit

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Eyebrights

07 Friday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#FloralFriday, British wildflowers, Euphrasia, Eyebright

I’m not even going to try to put a name to this little flower except to say it’s an Eyebright, one of around 20 very similar (and 60-plus hybrid) species of Euphrasia. They’re pretty and very dainty little plants, though easily overlooked as they’re don’t grow very tall and so are often obscured by surrounding grasses and overwhelmed by other wildflowers.

180907 eyebright (1)

According to Richard Mabey’s Flora Britannica: ‘Their name and old medicinal use are a classic example of the Doctrine of Signatures. The flowers, like tiny violets in shape, are mottled with purple and yellow blotches and stripes, not unlike the colours of a bruised eye, and compresses and tinctures made from them were prescribed for all manner of eye disorders.’

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On the scabious

31 Friday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, insects, nature, wildflowers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#FloralFriday, bees, British insects, British wildflowers, bumblebees, Devil's-bit scabious, flies, hoverflies, insects on scabious, Lavernock Nature Reserve, Succisa pratensis

180831 devil's-bit scabious (1)

Devil’s-bit scabious (Succisa pratensis) has a beautiful flower that paints the wildflower meadows at Lavernock Nature Reserve in shades of purple lusciousness and provides some very welcome late summer nectar and pollen to a host of insects, particularly bees, flies and butterflies.

180831 devil's-bit scabious (2)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (6)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (3)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (4)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (5)

And that name? Well, the story goes that the devil was not pleased that the plant’s medicinal properties were healing the skin conditions of people suffering from bubonic plague and scabies so, in a fit of rage, he tried to kill off the plant by biting off the ends of the plant’s roots. Ever the party pooper!

180831 devil's-bit scabious (9)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (10)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (7)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (11)
180831 devil's-bit scabious (8)
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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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