At this time of year the Sussex Botanical Recording Society (SBRS) holds its AGM at Staplefield.
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The Victory Pub, which does very nice lunches. |
My first priority when I got to Staplefield, was lunch.
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Dicranoweisia cirrata (Common Pincushion) |
As there was a few minutes before the pub opened, I photographed a moss just outside, in the hope of identifying it later. Two of the more intrepid members of the Society were busy recording the plants on the village green. They joined me and we had a lovely lunch in the pub.
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Treasure! |
I was helping to arrange chairs in the Village Hall when treasure appeared in the form of books. I selected a few including Walley Dod's Sussex Flora of 1937 and a big book of mosses. When I looked through Wolley Dod in the evening, the Uckfield I know was suddenly filled with the ghosts of long-gone cornfields, ponds and other places where wild plants once thrived. After the usual formalities, there were interesting and informative presentations.
- There a just a few churchyards to go for the New Church Yard survey. The records are at the Biological Record Centre.
- The Village Greens and Recreation Grounds survey is under way.
- There was a tour of the field meetings.
- In March 2019, I took part in the Henfield moss field trip and have been struggling to learn more about mosses ever since!
- Later in the year, I took part in the Plaw Hatch visit. It was here that I first met Sonchus arvensis (Perennial Sow Thistle) - and kept on seeing it for the rest of the year. I do wonder how I failed to notice it before.
- This year, I hope to go to the Ashdown Forest one in August.
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I hope to go looking for roses this year. |
It has been suggested that we look out for roses as many of those listed in Wolley Dod have not been re-found. We don't get that many wild roses round Uckfield and my "new" Wolley Dod doesn't mention Uckfield or the nearby villages much in this section.
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Notes from Charlotte Smith talk. |
Brad Scott gave a splendid talk about one of Sussex's earliest women botanists, Charlotte Smith, who was a successful writer in the 1700s. Her poetry and books give such vivid descriptions of wild plants and the places where she encountered them that I half expect to catch a glimpse of a bonnet and a long dress, the next time I go botanising.
There will be the usual photo competition:
- close up
- wild plant in churchyard habitat
All that remains is for me to dust off my recording sheets and get going again because "I aint afraid of no ghost!"
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