Showing posts with label ragged robin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ragged robin. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

In the mire

The ruins of the old lead mine workings at the top of Slitt wood, along Middlehope burn at Westgate in Weardale have a lovely flora at this time of year.















Most of the green area that you can see in the photograph above is a mire, full of moisture-loving plants and .....







































..... this area, where water constantly trickles out of the mine levels and across the old lead ore washing floor is home to some interesting species. Here are a few that were at their best this morning:





























Marsh lousewort Pedicularis palustris, a partial parasite on the roots of grasses.
















Ragged robin Lychnis flos-cuculi

























Common butterwort Pinguicula vulgaris - for more on this carnivorous plant click here 























Northern marsh orchid Dactylorhiza purpurella








































Marsh horsetail Equisetum palustre spore-bearing cone

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Grass of Parnassus

Thursday's Guardian Country Diary is an account of a walk along the river Nent, between Alston and Blagill in Cumbria, taking in some lovely hay meadows and also a rather special wild flower.


This attractive little bridge is at the Alston end of the walk, where the river ......















... drops over this low waterfall. Downstream it flows into the South Tyne.



















The first part of the walk leads over these high pastures towards Blagill. This is curlew and oystercatcher country in summer and their calls followed us all the way.


















The return leg of the walk drops down from Blagill to a footpath that follows the southern bank of the river, through some wonderful hay meadows that had many more spotted orchids in flower than we could possibly count. The patch of purple you can see in the picture above, just below the centre, is ....















........ melancholy thistle, once thought to be a herbal cure for said affliction. Finding it thriving in damp hollows in the meadow certainly lifted our spirits because this characteristic hay meadow species is declining in many of its North Pennine strongholds, although there's still plenty of it along the uncultivated road verges that are themselves remnants of meadows. It's a thistle that has no prickles and the undersides of the leaves are almost pure white, thanks to a dense covering of fine hairs. The flower heads are as big as shaving brishes (for those who can remember using these implements).


The wet gulleys that run down the escarpment in the haymeadow were full of ragged robin ....














.... looking suitably ragged in the blustery wind. 


















Downstream from the meadows there were .....



















.... mountain pansies still  in flower .....






















.... in several colour forms, but the plant we'd really come to see was .....


...... grass of Parnassus, which isn't related to grasses at all but usually grows amongst them. It looked like we were too early - the flower buds, like little pearls, were still clasped in their sepals ...... 



...... but eventually we found just one in bloom ......














...... allowing us to examine its most unusual feature. It produces nectar to reward visiting pollinators but it first catches their attention with false nectaries - they're the yellowy-green finger like projections with droplet-like spheres at their tips that you can see between the stamens and the petals.

The other notable feature of grass of Parnassus is that it is the county flower of Cumbria, featuring on the county's coat-of-arms.


Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Northumbrian coastal flora

The coastal flora was particularly beautiful during our stay in Northumberland in early July. These are some of the highlights.




































Pyramidal orchids on the sand dunes at Embleton.



































Agrimony on the coastal path south of Howick.



































Bloody cranesbill (above and below) at Low Newton.




































Common mallow on the coastal path between Low Newton and Football Hole.


















Hawkweeds and quaking grass at Football Hole




































Lady's bedstraw at Low Newton.
























Meadow cranesbill growing close to the beach at Howick (typically crowded Northumbrian beach!) and ..























..... just above the high water mark at Low Newton




































A magnificent display of ragged robin on the coastal path south of Howick.



















Rest harrow at Low Newton.















Sea mayweed at Budle Bay (top) and on the black dolerite boulders at Dunstanburgh.






















Sea pink at Cullernose Point (top) and at Dunstanburgh (above).



































Silverweed (showing silvery underside leaves) on the shingle at Budle Bay























Wild carrot at Low Newton






















White stonecrop and ....


















.... yellow stonecrop, both at Budle Bay


Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Mull of Galloway 2


The cliff top wild flowers on the Mull of Galloway are exquisite in late June and early July. Here bell heather. the first of the three common heather species to flower, mingles with heath bedstraw.


Carpets of wild thyme form part of a natural rock garden, shared with ....

...yellow lady's bedstraw ....


...... and the powder blue flowers of sheepsbit ....


... a member of of the campanula family.


The short, dry turf is also home to the pink and yellow flowers of centaury...


... and English stonecrop survives in tiny pockets of soil ....


... alongside rock sea spurrey


... with its pink, star-shaped flowers.


In a patch of boggy grass, in the shade of a wall, we found this ragged robin and...

.. this unusual double-flowered version of lady's smock