It's two weeks since I did the first BSBI Garden Wildflower Hunt. Then I found 48 wild flowers (including trees, grasses and ferns). Since then, the weather has been fine and dry, causing the Spring to race forward.
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English Bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta) |
In my first survey, the Bluebells (
Hyacinthoides non-scripta) were just beginning to come out. Now they are fully out and some are beginning to fade before we have even reached May.
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Bugle (Ajuga repans) and Thyme leaved speedwell (Veronica serpyllifolia) |
I haven't been mowing the grass on the slope so the previously inconspicuous wisps of Thyme leaved speedwell (
Veronica serpyllifolia) have filled the grass with tiny white flowers.
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Hairy-footed flower bee on Bugle (Ajuga repans) |
After some indecision, I decided that our Bugle (
Ajuga repans) was a wild plant rather than the darker-leaved garden variety that we introduced. As you can see from the photo is popular with bees.
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Cuckoo flowers (Cardamine pratensis) |
A number of spring flowers such as Cuckoo flowers (
Cardamine pratensis) and Hawthorn (
Crataegus monogyna) had gone from tight buds to full flower.
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Field Forget-me-not (Myosotis arvensis) |
The Field Forget-me-nots (
Myosotis arvensis) had progressed even faster, going from insignificant bunches of leaves to full flower in just a fortnight.
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Welsh Poppy (Meconopsis cambrica) |
Other plants that had made dramatic progress in the two weeks included Welsh Poppies (
Meconopsis cambrica), whose ancestors came from seeds given to us by a neighbour.
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Grasses and Sedges |
I also found a number of grasses including Sweet Vernal Grass (
Anthoxanthum odoratum) and Meadow Foxtail (
Meadow foxtail).
Combining my two counts, I found 65 wildflowers of which:
- 50 probably occurred naturally in our garden
- 15 were sown or planted.
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