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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: wildflowers

The Winter Seventeen

29 Friday Dec 2017

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

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#TheWinterTen, #WildflowerHour, British wildflowers, Ham Hill, Wildflower Hour, wildflowers, winter wildflowers

171229 Ham Hill

Back in early November I blogged about Wildflower Hour’s winter challenge encouraging us all to try to find ten wildflowers still in bloom each week of winter. Well, I’ve been on holiday in Somerset over Christmas and, when my friend Sarah and I were out walking at Ham Hill on Christmas Eve, we took the challenge and were amazed to find not ten but seventeen wildflowers in bloom. Here (with apologies for the blurry pics – the wind was howling – and the lack of accurate names – I didn’t take my guide book on holiday) they are: ragwort, red campion, white dead nettle, hogweed, bramble, dog’s mercury, possible one of the Hawk’s-beard family, chamomile, cow parsley, ivy, a species of thistle and another of grass, wild parsnip, a variety of speedwell, the ever-reliable daisy, yarrow, and the equally reliable gorse.

p.s. Ham Hill is a fascinating place to explore if you’re ever in that vicinity and I’m already planning another walk there when I visit Sarah again in the summer.

171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (1)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (2)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (3)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (4)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (5)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (6)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (7)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (8)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (9)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (10)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (11)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (12)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (13)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (14)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (15)
171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (16)

171229 Ham Hill wildflowers (17)

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Wildflowers at Barry Docks

21 Tuesday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Barry Docks, British wildflowers, Common toadflax, Daisy, Hemp agrimony, Hoary mustard, Ragwort, Red valerian, scabious, Wild parsnip, wildflowers, Yellow-wort

I caught the train to Barry Docks last Friday, hoping to get a good look at an uncommon bird (a Great northern diver) that had been making itself at home there for the previous week or so.

171121 Barry Docks

Unfortunately, the bird spent most of the two hours I was there happily swimming and diving several hundred yards away on the other side of the dock, but it was a gloriously sunny day and I did find lots of lovely wildflowers still in bloom around the edge of the docks so I was happy.

171121 Wild parsnip
171121 Hoary mustard
171121 Bindweed sp
171121 Yellow-wort
171121 Daisy
171121 Common toadflax
171121 Hemp agrimony
171121 Sow-thistle sp
171121 Scabious sp
171121 Ragwort sp
171121 Red valerian
171121 Cow parsley
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The winter ten

05 Sunday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

#WildflowerHour, British flora, British wildflowers, Cardiff Bay, wildflowers

Do you know about #WildflowerHour? Its aim is to spread the love of plants – not garden plants (though, of course, they are also lovely) but the glorious flowers that grow wild in Britain’s woods and meadows, alongside tracks, beneath hedgerows, beside streams, around buildings, in cracks in pavements. The idea is to take photos of the wildflowers you see, try to identify them (but others will help if you’re not sure), then post your photos on Facebook or Twitter (with the #WildflowerHour tag) every Sunday night between 8 and 9pm.

171105 Lady's bedstraw

On 20 October the folks at WildflowerHour issued a new challenge: ‘our weekly winter challenge is #thewinter10 which is to find ten different wild flowers in bloom each week. Once you’ve found them, work out what they are, and post them for the rest of us to see.’ So, as I walked around Cardiff Bay on a grey, gloomy Friday, I kept an eye out for wild flowers. To be honest, I was amazed to find so many still in bloom (not just 10 but 24!). I have not managed to name them all but I hope you enjoy seeing them as much as I did.

171105 Bramble
171105 Buttercup
171105 Chamomile perhaps
171105 Common stork's-bill
171105 Common toadflax
171105 Creeping thistle
171105 Crown vetch
171105 Daisy
171105 Evening primrose
171105 Hare's-foot clover
171105 Hedge bindweed
171105 Herb-Robert
171105 Hoary mustard
171105 Mugwort perhaps
171105 Pale flax
171105 Red clover
171105 Sea-holly
171105 Sow-thistle
171105 Unknown
171105 Vicia sp
171105 Western gorse
171105 White campion
171105 White clover
171105 Yarrow
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Taking great pleasure …

27 Friday Oct 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#FloralFriday, autumn colour, autumn flowers, British wildflowers, white wildflowers, wildflowers, yellow wildflowers

‘Who would live happily in the country
must be wisely prepared to take great pleasure in little things.’
~ Henry Beston, in Northern Farm: A chronicle of Maine, Reinhart & Co, 1948

171027 Bindweed
171027 Sow thistle
171027 Daisy
171027 Dandelion agg
171027 Yarrow
171027 Buttercup agg

 

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October pinks

06 Friday Oct 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#FloralFriday, autumn flowers, British wildflowers, lilac flowers, pink flowers, purple flowers, wildflowers

‘I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers,’ exclaims Anne one Saturday morning, in L.M. Montgomery’s classic story Anne of Green Gables.

171006 October pinks (1)
171006 October pinks (2)
171006 October pinks (3)
171006 October pinks (4)
171006 October pinks (5)
171006 October pinks (6)
171006 October pinks (7)
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Wildflowers that aren’t

25 Friday Aug 2017

Posted by sconzani in flowers, insects, nature, parks, wildflowers

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

bumblebee, Floral Friday, insects on flowers, ladybird, wildflowers, wildflowers in city parks

170825 flowers & insects (1)

I’m in two minds about the current trend amongst city councils to plant beds of wildflowers in local parks. I’m told that the seed mixes are often imported from Europe because they’re cheaper, so they’re not necessarily flower species that would grow naturally in the local area. It seems a token gesture on the part of councils rather than any kind of commitment to the environment. On the other hand, I can’t help but enjoy the colourful flowers, and the insects also seem to benefit from them. What do you think?

170825 flowers & insects (2)
170825 flowers & insects (3)
170825 flowers & insects (4)
170825 flowers & insects (5)
170825 flowers & insects (6)
170825 flowers & insects (7)
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The almost inedible parsnip

11 Friday Aug 2017

Posted by sconzani in flowers, insects, nature, wildflowers

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Tags

British flora, British wildflowers, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, parsnip, Pastinaca sativa, umbellifers, Wild parsnip, wildflowers

While we’re on the subject of wild vegetables (see yesterday’s Wild carrot post), I must mention the other umbellifer that’s currently in full bloom, the Wild parsnip (Pastinaca sativa). Unlike the Wild carrot, the root of the Wild parsnip is, in fact, edible, though it’s described as hard and wiry so doesn’t sound worth the bother to me. I’ve also read that the sap of the plants can cause severe rashes and burns in some people so handling doesn’t seem advisable. And, anyway, who would want to deprive the insects of their tasty feast or spoil the glorious sight of a field of parsnip in full bloom?

 

170810 Wild parsnip (2)
170810 Wild parsnip (3)
170810 Wild parsnip (4)

The Wild parsnip is the ancestor of the cultivated parsnip, which is one of my favourite winter vegetables – roasted, in soup, stir-fried, yum! – and its culinary use probably dates from the early Middle Ages. The wild variety can be found growing, often in large groupings, on the chalky grasslands of southern England and Wales. In Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, one particular field is like a forest of yellow, some plants taller than my 168cm, and you can smell the scent of parsnips as you walk along the tracks through the field. Delicious!

170810 Wild parsnip (1)

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The inedible carrot

10 Thursday Aug 2017

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

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Tags

British flora, British wildflowers, carrot, Daucus carota, umbel, umbellifer, Wild carrot, wildflowers

I’m finally starting to get a handle on the various umbellifers to be found in this land and the progression of their flowering through the seasons. Here in Wales, one of those currently in full flower is the Wild carrot (Daucus carota).

wild carrot (1)

Its leaves smell of the edible carrot but I’ve read that the roots of this wild variety are ‘thin and wiry and bear little resemblance to the thick, orange tap-roots of the cultivated vegetable’ so that firmly rules out any foraging! I also read, in my copy of Richard Mabey’s trusty Flora Britannica, that edible carrots ‘were developed from a distinct subspecies, ssp.sativa, probably native to the Mediterranean, and brought to Britain in the 15th century’. Fascinating!

wild carrot (3)
wild carrot (4)
wild carrot (5)
wild carrot (6)
wild carrot (7)

Meanwhile, the Wild carrots continue to grow straight and about 3 feet tall in my local wild places, to the delight of the hoverflies, sawflies, soldier beetles and other assorted insects that seem particularly to enjoy them. They have quite distinctive feathery leaves and often, but not always, a very tiny pinkish-red flower in the exact centre of their umbel. Also, when they’ve finished flowering, the umbels contract to a nest-like shape, which is why one of their common names is Bird’s-nest.

wild carrot (2)

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Purr-plish

07 Friday Jul 2017

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#FloralFriday, British flora, British wildflowers, lilac flowers, pink wildflowers, purple flowers, wildflowers

For those of you who are not overly fond of yellow flowers – you know who you are! – I’ve been out and about looking for other hues, and the result this Floral Friday is a selection of blooms in shades of pink, lilac and purple. The flowers include Betony (Stachys officinalis), Bush vetch (Vicia sepium), Centaury (Centaurium erythraea), Devil’s-bit scabious (Succisa pratensis), Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea), Hedge woundwort (Stachys sylvatica), Herb-Robert (Geranium robertianum), Red clover (Trifolium pratense), Common restharrow (Ononis repens), Rosebay willowherb (Chamerion angustifolium), Tufted vetch (Vicia cracca) and a couple of thistley thingies. Enjoy!

170707 another thistle
170707 Betony
170707 Bush vetch
170707 Centaury
170707 Devil's-bit scabious
170707 Foxglove
170707 Hedge woundwort
170707 Herb-Robert
170707 Red clover
170707 Restharrow
170707 Rosebay willowherb
170707 thistle
170707 Tufted vetch
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Yellow

23 Friday Jun 2017

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Agrimonia eupatoria, Agrimony, Bird’s-foot trefoil, Blackstonia perfoliata, Dyer’s greenweed, Genista tinctoria, Lotus corniculata, Rhinanthus minor, wildflowers, Yellow rattle, yellow wildflowers, Yellow-wort

Yellow is the colour of the week as far as the wildflowers are concerned.

170623 Bird's-foot trefoil (1)

These are some I’ve seen: Bird’s-foot trefoil (Lotus corniculata), Yellow rattle (Rhinanthus minor), Agrimony (Agrimonia eupatoria), Dyer’s greenweed (Genista tinctoria), and Yellow-wort (Blackstonia perfoliata).

170623 Dyer's greenweed (1)
170623 Yellow-wort
170623 Dyer's greenweed
170623 Bird's-foot trefoil
170623 Agrimony
170623 Yellow rattle
170623 Agrimony (2)
170623 Bird's-foot trefoil (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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