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Tag Archives: yellow flowers

The Yellow challenge

11 Sunday Apr 2021

Posted by sconzani in flowers, spring, wildflowers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#WildflowerHour, British wildflowers, Spring colour, yellow flowers, yellow wildflowers

This week’s Wildflower Hour challenge was to find yellow-flowered wildflowers currently in bloom. Here are my finds – a blast of spring sunshine to enjoy this Sunday evening:

210411 yellow (1)

Colt’s-foot, Dandelion, Gorse

210411 yellow (2)

Lesser celandine, Marsh marigold, Meadow buttercup

210411 yellow (3)

Groundsel, Opposite-leaved golden saxifrage (perhaps a bit of a stretch to say this is yellow, but it does have ‘golden’ in its name), Yellow archangel

210411 yellow (4)

Prickly sow-thistle, Cowslips, Ragwort

210411 yellow (5)

Pushing the envelope on these ones but … Alexanders (greenish-yellow), Primrose (buttery yellow), Pussy willow (not strictly a wildflower, but I’m having it)

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166/366 Wild and yellow

14 Sunday Jun 2020

Posted by sconzani in nature, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Agrimony, British wildflowers, Creeping cinquefoil, Dyer’s greenweed, Evening-primrose, Prickly sow-thistle, Silverweed, Smooth sow-thistle, yellow flowers

It’s grey here in south Wales today, which is not a bad thing as we desperately need the accompanying rain, and it also makes me appreciate even more the days when vibrant, sunshiny, cheery yellow is the dominant colour of my day. Here’s some of the yellow that’s been brightening my walks in recent days.

200614 1 dyers greenweed

Dyer’s greenweed (Genista tinctoria), found at several local sites, and the food plant for the larvae of a couple of rare moths, though I’ve yet to find any.

200614 2 evening primrose

Evening-primrose (Oenothera agg). There are several different species, which can be difficult to differentiate, and they also hybridise with each other, hence the ‘agg’.

200614 3 silverweed

Silverweed (Potentilla anserina). The Plantlife website has some fascinating information about this pretty plant – did you know, for example, that Roman soldiers used to pad their shoes with Silverweed to ease their feet on long marches?

200614 4a prickly sow-thistle
200614 4 prickly sow-thistle

Prickly sow-thistle (Sonchus asper). Most thistles have flowers in shades of pink-lilac-purple but not this one. I’ve included two photos, one to show the structural beauty of the flower, one to show the prickly leaves.

200614 5 smooth sow-thistle

Smooth sow-thistle (Sonchus oleraceus). Another sow-thistle, but without those pesky prickles, and with flowers a more lemon-yellow.

200614 6 agrimony

Agrimony (Agrimonia eupatoria), a plant of hooking-bristle seed heads, as you may remember from my earlier post Hooked, September 2019.

200614 7 creeping cinquefoil

Creeping cinquefoil (Potentilla reptans), a plant that thrives on waste and bare ground.

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48/366 First Coltsfoot

17 Monday Feb 2020

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, spring

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, Coltsfoot, Spring colour, Tussilago farfara, yellow flowers

A new Spring flower has appeared in my local area, this time six bursts of the bright sunshine yellow that is Coltsfoot, the flower that appears before its leaves. I had just been sheltering, rather ineffectively, from a short sharp shower of rain when I spotted the flowers beside the path ahead of me. What a delight!

200217 coltsfoot (1)200217 coltsfoot (2)200217 coltsfoot (3)

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90/365 Marsh merry-golds

31 Sunday Mar 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, flowers, nature, spring, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, marsh marigold, spring flowers, yellow flowers, yellow wildflowers

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Now before you feel the need to correct the spelling of ‘merry-gold’ in my title, let me just say that it was deliberate because I find Marsh marigolds such cheery, merry flowers, and it always makes me smile to see them. I spotted some yesterday in Cardiff’s Heath Park, and they’re also in full flower at the moment in Penarth’s Alexandra Park, where I went for a meander earlier today.

190331 marsh marigolds (3)
190331 marsh marigolds (2)
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12/365 A daffodilly day

12 Saturday Jan 2019

Posted by sconzani in 365DaysWildin2019, flowers, nature, winter

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

#365DaysWild, daffodil, spring in winter, yellow flowers

In truth, there is nothing wild about these gorgeous daffodils – they must’ve been planted several years ago in the wide verges near Cardiff Bay Hospital, but it was such a delight to see their bright and glorious little faces bobbing in the light breeze on a grey day. And they were rather nicer than the thick sticky mud I trudged through as I made a circuit of Grangemoor Park.

190112 daffodils

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‘Daffodowndilly’

26 Friday Jan 2018

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, spring

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

A A Milne, daffodil, daffodowndilly, signs of spring, spring flowers, yellow flowers

180126 daffodils (1)

She wore her yellow sun-bonnet,
She wore her greenest gown;
She turned to the south wind
And curtsied up and down.
She turned to the sunlight
And shook her yellow head,
And whispered to her neighbour:
“Winter is dead.”
~ A.A. Milne, When We Were Very Young

180126 daffodils (2)
180126 daffodils (4)

180126 daffodils (3)

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Daffs by the Taff

18 Saturday Mar 2017

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, parks, spring

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bute Park, Cardiff, Cardiff parks, daffodil, spring flowers, springtime flowers, yellow flowers

From a springtime wander in Cardiff’s magnificent Bute Park…. These make my heart sing!

170318 Spring in Bute Park (7)170318 Spring in Bute Park (1)

170318 Spring in Bute Park (4)
170318 Spring in Bute Park (5)

170318 Spring in Bute Park (3)170318 Spring in Bute Park (6)

 

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Mellow yellow

14 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

autumn colour, autumn flowers, dandelion, Fox and cubs, Rudbeckia, yellow flowers

161014-mellow-yellow-7

It’s a rather grey and gloomy Friday evening here in Cardiff so I think we need some brightening up. There aren’t a lot of flowers around now that autumn is well and truly here but the dandelions and their lookalikes continue to provide little bursts of sunshine on grassy swards, the rudbeckias (at least, I think that’s what they were) have just finished a magnificent show at my local park and, at the cemetery, the Fox and cubs blooms are adding wonderful spots of orange to the autumnal landscape. Happy weekend, everyone!

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161014-mellow-yellow-3
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161014-mellow-yellow-5
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Floral Friday: The yellowing

03 Friday Jun 2016

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

spring flowers, summer flowers, yellow flowers, yellow wildflowers

Yellow is the colour of happiness, optimism, enlightenment, creativity, hope, cheerfulness, sunshine … and the quintessential colour of Spring.

160603 yellow wildflowers (1)

Yellow is also the most luminous in the colour spectrum – the colour that most easily catches the human eye but, more importantly, the eyes of bees, so it’s no surprise that yellow is the most common flower colour. Here in Wales, after experiencing only my second British winter in thirty-odd years, I have been delighted by the coming of Spring, and both charmed and uplifted by the yellow wildflowers everywhere. First came the Dandelion and Daffodil, the Lesser celandine and the paler shade of the Primrose and, in boggy places, the Marsh marigold.

Now, as spring becomes summer, the succession of yellow continues with fields and meadows carpeted in yellow. We have the many varieties of Buttercup, vibrant Bird’s foot trefoil and Yellow archangel, the Dandelion look-alike Cat’s ear and Nipplewort, and in boggy places, Yellow flag iris. It is truly glorious.

160603 yellow wildflowers (2)
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160603 yellow wildflowers (3)
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160603 yellow wildflowers (4)
160603 yellow wildflowers (12)
160603 yellow wildflowers (9)
160603 yellow wildflowers (5)
160603 yellow wildflowers (8)
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The lion’s tooth: Dandelion

25 Friday Dec 2015

Posted by sconzani in nature, nature photography, wildflowers

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Tags

dandelion, medicinal plant, wildflowers, yellow flowers

One of my favourite wildflowers is the humble dandelion. On grey winter days it provides a welcome burst of cheery yellow, and seeing the fluffy seed heads brings me fond childhood memories, of dandelion clocks to tell the time from the number of blows it takes to remove the seeds, and of making a wish when the last of the seeds blows away.

151224 dandelion (1)

Officially labelled Taraxacum officinale agg., the common name dandelion comes from the French dent de lion, lion’s tooth, a reference to its deeply toothed leaves. In England, it is also commonly called ‘wet-the-bed’ and ‘pissy-beds’, from the idea that just touching a dandelion causes bed-wetting. Luckily, that’s not true, though the dandelion is a scientifically proven diuretic.

151224 dandelion (2)

In fact, the dandelion is an extremely useful plant. It’s a good source of beta-carotene, is rich in Vitamin C and the B-complex vitamins and also high in protein, so has been used for thousands of years to improve the functioning of the liver, gallbladder, and urinary and digestive systems. And, though I’ve never tried it, dandelion is also widely used to make wine. So, the next time you’re tempted to eradicate these ‘weeds’ from your garden, think again and, instead, make use of Nature’s bounty.

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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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