Sunday, October 8, 2023

Stubble field annual wild flowers

 Some common annual wild flowers that flourish along field margins, in the few weeks between a cereal crop harvest and the arrival of the plough.


Common poppy, rejuvenated by warm sunshine, after the very wet weather during this summer's harvest in Teesdale


The tiny, pale blue flowers of field forget-me-not. Many  arable weeds have small flowers but are well worth a closer look.


Scarlet pimpernel has a long flowering period that often extends until the end of October. The flowers always close in mid-afternoon, unless rain clouds cover the sun, when they close quickly to protect their pollen -  behaviour that has earned the plant the reputation as 'the poor man's weather glass'.






Field pansy, a tiny but beautiful flower that has contributed to the parentage of garden pansy






Sky-blue flowers of common field speedwell, a native of the Caucasus that was first recorded in the wild in England in 1826 and has since spread throughout Britain. Like many arable weeds, its seeds are transported far and wide in mud on shoes, hooves and agricultural vehicle wheels. 













Common cudweed, with silvery leaves and tiny yellow flowers.


Common sowthistle whose light seeds, supported by a parachute of hairs, are carried long distances on the breeze

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