Showing posts with label Sloe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sloe. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2025

Blackthorn blossom without a blackthorn winter?

 The first blackthorn aka sloe Prunus spinosa flowers opened in a hedge alongside one of my favourite walks in Weardale last week. This often signals the start of a 'blackthorn winter', a period of intensely cold north-easterly winds, but this year it looks like we might be lucky - the forecast for the next couple of weeks is for milder weather, warm enough for pollinators to be active. Last spring's blackthorn winter led to pollination failure and a very poor crop of sloes locally, and almost complete crop failure for the damson tree in my garden.



The blackthorn in this length of hedgerow is brutally cut back every winter but this is a tree that produces clusters of flower buds on the old wood that survives, that's almost completely coated in lichens. Blackthorn blossom in a carpet of grey and yellow encrusting lichens is a particularly attractive combination.





Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Pocket plum disease

 This summer there have been some spectacular local outbreaks of pocket plum disease, affecting sloes on blackthorn on the Durham coast near Hawthorn dene  and bird cherry fruits in Weardale. It's caused by the fungus Taphrina pruni, which induces the fruits to swell, become spongy and fill with watery fluid. In bird cherry (bottom picture) the normally spherical, shiny black fruits become banana-shaped. No seeds are formed inside these deformed fruits, instead there is an empty 'pocket'.






Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Blossom

From March until July, this has been the best for native tree blossom that I can recall in our part of the North Pennines. It started with sloe and is now coming to an end with elder. Here they are, in chronological sequence

Blackthorn aka Sloe



Wild cherry aka gean



Hawthorn




Bird cherry


















Rowan aka mountain ash


















Elder



















Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Hedges

Thursday's Guardian Country Diary is about hedges - well, about one old, overgrown hedge,  a favourite that has produced a spectacular crop of autumn fruits this year.

























Most old hedges date from the period of the Enclosure Acts, when tracts of common land were enclosed, usually via the planting of hawthorn (aka quickthorn) hedges. The exceptions are much older assarts - remnants of ancient woodland around the edges of fields that were hacked out of the Wildwood by our distant ancestors.

Hawthorn is an ideal hedging plant- fast to establish, tolerant of cutting and forming a thick, stock-proof boundary if it's well maintained. So that it remains densely branched at its base. This was originally achieved by laying, a process that involved a great deal of skilled manual labour. The technique, which is seldom seen these days, is described and illustrated here.

Almost as soon as a new hedge was established it would have attracted birds that arrived to eat the hawthorn fruits and they in turn would have left seeds of other succulent fruited plants in their droppings, including ...

........brambles (this wonderful crop, beyond the reach of bramblers, was cascading down the overgrown hedge that's mentioned in the Country Diary), and also .......



.... elder, which has produced a massive berry crop this year.



Sloe (aka blackthorn) was occasionally used as a hedging plant but has the disadvantage that it spreads laterally into fields, via sharp-pointed suckers that grow from its spreading roots. On the other hand, those sloes are great for flavouring gin.


Like brambles, briar roses scramble up through hedges, using their thorns for support, adding to the autumn berry crop ....


.... along with bird-sown honeysuckle which twines around stems of supporting hedgerow shrubs, producing berries that blackbirds are very fond of .. and ....


..... often producing a few flowers right up until the first frosts.

So gradually planted hedges naturally acquire an ever-richer flora, together with herbaceous plants that used the hedge as a refuge from surrounding cultivation.....



........ along with a wide range of invertebrates, like this snake millipede that we found coiled up and asleep at the top of a tall brome grass stem in the hedge ....














............ and these nettle tap moths. They breed on hedgerow nettles and feed on hogweed flower umbels, that often continue to produce a few flowers and some nectar right up until the first frosts.





Sadly many old hedges have been grubbed out to enlarge fields. Some hedges are still being planted, like these that were planted in mitigation on land that had been opencast mined. They are mainly a double row of hawthorn, with a sprinkling of other shrub species like hazel, with a standard tree - usually ash - at regular intervals.


Annual mechanical cutting, with a tractor equipped with a cutter bar or a flail cutter, trims them into neat, uniform, dense stock-proof hedges but severely limits their value as a wildlife resource;the annual trim removesmost of the current year's grow that will bear the following year's flowers and fruit, so the value of hedges that are maintained like this is much less than a hedge like ......

















........... this, which has been allowed to grow, has a broad margin and retains all its flowering potential, so that in summer ......


.......... it will look like this. Dense, overgrown hedges have the potential to act as wildlife refuges and wildlife corridors. 

It is important that hedges are maintained, otherwise they simply develop into lines of trees but cutting hedges rotationally on a three-year cycle, rather than annually, would greatly improve their value as cover for birds and mammals, providing a supply of pollen and nectar for insects and autumn fruits for birds and mammals.

Simply planting more hedges isn't necessarily a particular effective wildlife conservation measure, although it's better than nothing. It's the quality of hedges that really counts, and that depends on how they are maintained.



Saturday, June 1, 2013

Frothy


The first official day of summer, and up at St. John's Chapel in Weardale the banks of the river Wear are fringed with a frothy mass of blossom. 



In the background, bird cherry; on the left of the picture are the umbels of aniseed-scented sweet cicely; at the bottom right, sloe (aka blackthorn blossom). 

This is a picture that sums up the consequences of the cold, late spring for our flora, because although sloe typically flowers in April it's in full bloom here in June. Spring flowers have been held back to such an extent that many have been overtaken by the summer bloomers. 

The upside, as far as blackthorn is concerned, is that there are far more pollinators around now than there would have  been during its normal flowering period, so maybe there will be a much better sloe crop than last year, so it might be a vintage year for sloe gin. Always look on the bright side of life, eh?






















Sloe blossom



































Bird cherry blossom

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Dead, but still looking good....






These carline thistles Carlina vulgaris flowered last summer but their papery seed heads survive the winter and still look decorative in spring. Photographed yesterday on the cliffs south of Seaham in Co.Durham, along with...


..... blackthorn coming into bloom ....


..... dog's mercury ......


.... some magnificent, coconut-scented gorse blossom ...


..... stinking hellebore Helleborus foetidus, almost certainly a garden escape .....


























..... along with some irrepressible daffodils, struggling to flower through a tangle of last year's bramble stems

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Eggleston Burn

























Today's Guardian Country Diary describes a visit to the steep-sided valley cut by Eggleston Burn in Teesdale, as it flows down into the river Tees at Eggleston. Confusingly, there is an Eggleston and an Egglestone in Teesdale, upstream and downstream of Barnard Castle respectively, and this is the view along Eggleston Burn from the old stone bridge that carries a road across it, just north of Eggleston village. You can see the shadow of the photographer about two thirds of the way up the right-hand side of the picture, where the shadow of the bridge cuts across!



The footpath down to the beck is reached by this very narrow stile in the bridge parapet. The path through the woods from here is treacherous in places, with a long, steep drop into the burn on one side....



.... and you can hear the sound of fast-flowing water growing louder as you descend.


At the bottom lies this very sheltered little valley, where sunlight onto penetrates right down to the bottom for about an hour in the middle of the day at this time of year.


You can follow the footpath for about a quarter of a mile before it turns away from the burn and climbs back up through pastures and only the moorland.  




The valley is sheltered from prevailing south-westerly winds and the burn keeps the humidity high all year-round. This provides ideal conditions for growth of mosses and lichens on the ancient hawthorns and blackthorns on the burn-side ........

....... and on the lower slopes of  the pastures above.

This bushy lichen is, I think, a species of Usnea - possibly U. subfloridiana..


.... and I think this may be Evernia prunastri..


So far the redwings and fieldfares haven't got to the hawthorn berries....



...... or the sloes, which have softened and split after last week's frosts. The combination of grey lichens, scarlet berries and blue-black sloes provides festive decorations for bare twigs in the depths of winter.