Sadly, the National Wildflower centre has just closed.
Wildflowers
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IVY
I don't think most people would think of ivy as a wildflower. Especially not common or garden ivy. Living in a property whose garden is bounded by a a 9' high 200 year old stone wall, I have a love-hate relationship with it. So established is the ivy that total removal would, in places, damage the wall. But as the years roll by, Mrs A and I have come to appreciate many of the fine qualities of this plant. The foremost of its attributes is its wonderful gift to wildlife. Birds love nesting in it...and perching/hiding in it. Snails seem to like it too along with myriad insects and other creepy- crawlies. And the bees just love the flowers...yes, flowers. Ivy, for reasons best known to itself, seems only to produce flowers and fruits when it gets to the top of a wall...and they last for a very long time, making the food source available at unseasonable times. We have come to a truce with ivy. We deliberately let areas of it run free for environmental reasons. Other areas we control for most unworthy cosmetic reasons. I hope Mother Nature will forgive us this compromise.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIVY So established is the ivy that total removal would, in places, damage the wall.
I have a fondness for cranesbill geraniums in several varieties. So I value the little herb robert whenever it pops up and treat it as a plant rather than a weed as it grows among its cultivated siblings. The fritillaria meleagris is now in flower in the garden, though in fact I've never come across it in the wild. I was interested to see that there is disagreement as to whether it started out in the UK as a garden plant which became naturalised as an escapee, or whether it was a wildflower that became cultivated.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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This Spring has seen, down here in the Southwest anyway, the most profuse and long-lasting show of primroses in my memory. It looks as if bluebells (the genuine UK variety) will be the same. Sometimes campions intermingle with bluebells, but it looks as if they will be later this year...apart from a few ahead of the game. I wonder if the two-metre strip of land left uncultivated around the margins of fields (which I gather farmers are paid for....EU money?) has contributed greatly to the wildflowers thriving in the banks and hedgerows.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThis Spring has seen, down here in the Southwest anyway, the most profuse and long-lasting show of primroses in my memory. It looks as if bluebells (the genuine UK variety) will be the same. Sometimes campions intermingle with bluebells, but it looks as if they will be later this year...apart from a few ahead of the game. I wonder if the two-metre strip of land left uncultivated around the margins of fields (which I gather farmers are paid for....EU money?) has contributed greatly to the wildflowers thriving in the banks and hedgerows.
If landowners plant wildflower meadows and other habitats contracts guaranteeing above-market-price can be theirs
The lack of breeze ensured that the cherry blossom here lasted this year although mostly it is over. The bluebells have also been impressive. Two weeks ago, I walked through a bluebell wood where there were already significant patches of bluebells and I noticed many in the woodland beside quieter roads today. Some wildish flowers are emerging on what I laughingly call my rockery. I am not sure what they are though. I can't say that I have noticed an abundance of primroses etc but may have been looking in the wrong places.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 29-04-17, 22:04.
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Wow, thanks LL. I don't think any farmers in my neck of the woods have actually sown wildflowers. But in effect, their ploughings, fertilisings and (sadly on occasion) herbicidings avoid the margins of fields. This can only enhance the natural spread of wildflowers. Some are very adversely affected by nitrogen-based fertilisers, since coarser things such as grasses tend to overwhelm them.
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Just resurrecting this thread because here in the Southwest primroses have been even more profuse than last year. And the same applies to cowslips in the places they are the more common. Bluebells are a bit later this year but promising to be spectacular. Some of the lanes are so beautiful, with primroses, wood anemones, violets and suggestions of bluebells atop the banks. No campions yet...apart from the odd one ahead of the game. Three cornered leek still going strong, though wild daffodils (real ones) are now well and truly over. Only seen the odd swallow (I know it's the wrong thread) and no swifts at all yet. Sand martins are back though.
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I think ramsons is wild garlic, whereas the three-cornered leek...although related...is different. It used to be described as 'rare but locally abundant', but it has spread north and east and is certainly not 'rare' any more, and is even seen by some as an invasive species. Some locals call them 'white bluebells' though of course they're nothing of the sort. Their name derives from the fact that if you feel the flower stems they are definitely triangular in cross-section.
Maybe even grander in salad?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI think ramsons is wild garlic, whereas the three-cornered leek...although related...is different. It used to be described as 'rare but locally abundant', but it has spread north and east and is certainly not 'rare' any more, and is even seen by some as an invasive species. Some locals call them 'white bluebells' though of course they're nothing of the sort. Their name derives from the fact that if you feel the flower stems they are definitely triangular in cross-section.
Maybe even grander in salad?
Ramsons/wild garlic, although the same family, is quite different in both flowers and leaves, and I think is less tolerant of unsuitable conditions so although abundant in suitable locations doesn't have the same takeover propensities outside its preferred habitat.
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Primroses are out here in the SW, and in our specific locality, genuine wild daffodils are not far off. It has been a bumper year for snowdrops, but someone told me they are not a native species. Is that right? And when does something become a 'native species' on the grounds of sheer persistence?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostPrimroses are out here in the SW, and in our specific locality, genuine wild daffodils are not far off. It has been a bumper year for snowdrops, but someone told me they are not a native species. Is that right?
And when does something become a 'native species' on the grounds of sheer persistence?
From memory "native species" refers to place of origination, as opposed to colonisation; sheer persistence wouldn't come into it.
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