It's just eight weeks since I did the first Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland #GardenWildFlowerHunt. In that time, we have gone from Wood Anemones (
Wood anemone) and the first skinny little bluebells (
Hyacinthoides non-scripta) to swishing grasses and pea flowers of all sorts.
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Swishing grasses on the North slope. |
Many of the long grasses on the North-facing slope can now be identified. The Sweet Vernal Grass (
Anthoxanthum odoratum) that I saw flowering on the second survey (25th April) has been joined by Cocksfoot (
Dactylis glomerata), Tufted Hair Grass (
Deschampsia cespitosa), Red Fescue
(Festuca rubra agg.), Yorkshire Fog (
Holcus lanatus) and Smooth Meadow Grass (
Poa pratensis).
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White Clover (Trifolium repens) |
In the back lawn, the creeping buttercups have been joined by white clovers (
Trifolium repens) and the hum of bumblebees feeding on them.
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Common Bird's-foot Trefoil (Lotus corniculatus). |
Yellow pea flowers of all sorts have been appearing such as tiny Black Medick (
Prunus spinosa) and the much showier Common Bird's-foot Trefoil (
Lotus corniculatus) and Meadow Vetchling (
Lathyrus pratensis).
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Heath Speedwell (Veronica officinalis) |
The early speedwells have given way to the the delicate, lilac Heath Speedwell (
Veronica officinalis).
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Corncockle (Agrostemma githago) flowers towering over modern wheat. |
The flowers and grasses mentioned so far arrived under their own steam. I planted Corncockle (
Agrostemma githago) seeds, given to us by a neighbour some years ago. Every year, I shake the big, heavy seeds into the garden and they have kept going ever since. This year, I added some wheat to make more of a cornfield environment for them and was amused when I realised that modern wheat was much shorter than the old varieties and so, the Corncockles just towered above them.
Combining my four counts, I have recorded 93 wildflowers of which:
- 69 probably occurred naturally in our garden
- 24 were sown or planted.
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