Showing posts with label wild thyme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wild thyme. Show all posts
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Quarry life in early autumn
Today's Guardian Country Diary is about autumn gentians and heather bees in a Weardale quarry.
Weardale is a valley full of old mines and quarries, mostly legacies of the lead industry and quarrying of the Great Limestone. Most of these are now worked-out or abandoned, like this one near Hill End at Frosterley.
From a distance it looks a bleak place, but when you take a close look there are some fascinating plants and animals here.
The bottom of the quarry is flooded, with a shallow lake and islands in the centre, surrounded on the north side with weathered rock spoil tips ...
..... and the vertical rock walls are being colonised with plants and even rowan trees.
In autumn the thin turf that covers the weathered spoil tips is covered with a tapestry of small flowers, like this eyebright and ground ivy .....
.... and this wonderfully fragrant wild thyme. Everything that's more than about one inch high is grazed off by rabbits, except for ....
... a fabulous display of autumn gentians Gentianella amarella.
Rabbits must find these distasteful because in late August there are thousands of them in flower, unmolested.
The short calcareous turf, well-drained and with most of its nutrients leached away by rain, seems to suit this delightful little plant.
The quarry's other autumn speciality is its colony of heather bees Colletes succincta. These little bees are slightly smaller than a honey bee and each digs its own nest tunnel in the terraces of earth that build up where sheep make regular tracks across the spoil heaps. The bees excavate individual tunnels, where they lay their eggs and provision them with heather pollen, but they nest colonially.
This colony has several hundred individuals, whose nest tunnels are sometimes just a few inches apart.
Smart-looking little bees, with their ginger furry thoraxes and striped abdomens.
These bees are only around for about 3-4 weeks in late summer, when the heather comes into bloom. Their first priority is to mate and the males patrol just a few inches above the ground, intercepting the females when they come within reach. Sometimes several fall to the ground, locked together in a ball of wings and legs.
After mating the bees shuttle backwards and forwards to the heather moorland, in this case several hundred metres distant, to collect food to feed their brood when they hatch from the eggs, then cap the tunnels. Autumn rain washes away their little spoil heaps of excavated soil and all trace of them disappears.
Just a few weeks in the sun, then the rest of their life cycle is spent underground.
Monday, July 1, 2013
A butterfly bank: second visit
About a month ago I posted some pictures of a beautiful magnesian limestone embankment along an old disused railway line at Trimdon near Durham city. This weekend we went back for another look and the flora was even better.
The viper's bugloss, which was only rosettes of leaves on our last visit, had now produced tall spires of flowers.
At the moment, this is just about the most flowery spot I know, with ....
...... bladder campion .......
...growing here with viper's bugloss ....
..... intensely fragrant burnet rose ......
..... eyebright, a plant that's partially parasitic on the roots of other plants....
..... greater knapweed .........
....... rock-rose .....
... and common spotted orchids that were too many to count, with numerous variations: this is an albino form.
Twayblade orchids, that are well hidden amongst the background vegetation..........
... and drifts of viper's bugloss, which bees can't resist.
Wild strawberries ..........
....... and wild thyme.
Magnesian limestone flora at its best!
The viper's bugloss, which was only rosettes of leaves on our last visit, had now produced tall spires of flowers.
At the moment, this is just about the most flowery spot I know, with ....
...... bladder campion .......
...growing here with viper's bugloss ....
..... intensely fragrant burnet rose ......
..... eyebright, a plant that's partially parasitic on the roots of other plants....
..... greater knapweed .........
....... rock-rose .....
... and common spotted orchids that were too many to count, with numerous variations: this is an albino form.
Twayblade orchids, that are well hidden amongst the background vegetation..........
... and drifts of viper's bugloss, which bees can't resist.
Wild strawberries ..........
....... and wild thyme.
Magnesian limestone flora at its best!
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
Monday, June 22, 2009
Warkworth Sand Dune Flora





The sand dune system at Warkworth hosts a fine flora in early summer. The top picture shows biting stonecrop Sedum acre, whose succulent leaves allow it to thrive on bare sand in drought conditions. Below this is wild thyme Thymus serpyllum, which releases a wonderful herbal fragrance on hot days and hums with bumblebees visiting it flowers. The next flower down is viper’s bugloss Echium vulgare, whose bristly leaves prevent rabbits from grazing it. This too is a magnet for bees and makes an excellent plant for a bee-friendly wildlife garden. It’s a biennial, producing a rosette of leaves in its first year and a flower spike in the second. The seeds persist for a long time in the soil – I introduced some into my garden about 20 years ago and occasional seeds still germinate, without me ever having sown it again. Behind the dunes at Warkworth there’s a remarkable freshwater swamp, filled with the largest population of yellow flag Iris pseudacorus that I’ve ever seen – it must cover the best part of an acre and just now there are hundreds of plants in full bloom.
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