Monday, 7 October 2013

Still in flower 6th October

There are still quite a few of our wildflowers in flower. I walked from Inganess up the Wideford Burn yesterday (6th) and the walk was brightened by the following:
Water Forget-me-not, Pink Purslane, Red Campion, Marsh Woundwort, Marsh Ragwort, Daisy, Dandelion, Water-cress, Creeping Buttercup, Creeping Thistle, Bush Vetch, Bell Heather, Tormentil, Catsear, Devil's-bit Scabious, Foxglove, Perennial Sowthistle, Hogweed. Birds included bramblings, Chiffchaff, Blackcap, Grey Wagtail and Buzzard.

Here are a few of the images from yesterday:

Pink Purslane

Water-cress

Bush Vetch

Devil's-bit Scabious

Marsh Ragwort

Dandelion

Foxglove

Red Campion

Daisy

Bell Heather

Marsh Woundwort

                                                               Water Forget-me-not

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Cuckooflower at the Loch of Tankerness








After the dark days of winter the Cuckooflower, like the Marsh Marigold, is a welcome early bloom. It is common on damp verges where it provides a ribbon of colour or in marshes, ditches and damp pastures where on a spring day its four-petalled flowers of lilac are scattered like stars in the firmament. In among the lilac flowers are less numerous ones of rose-pink and white. Its lower leaves are large and kidney-shaped like those of Watercress (a very close relative) while its upper leaves are narrow.
 
This perennial has many local names most of them relating to milkmaids and smocks, cuckoos and virgins. It is a spring flower, coming out with the first calls of the Cuckoo. The Lady’s smock refers to the smock of the Virgin Mary, a relic supposedly found in the cave at Bethlehem. However it also has some undesirable associations; in Austria it was believed to be the favourite flower of adders, those who picked it would be bitten before the year was out and in Germany it was a thunder and storm flower, not to be picked for fear of the house being struck by lightning. It has been little-utilised in medicine but in Scotland it has been gathered as a salad and as a cure for epileptic fits.

Wednesday, 24 April 2013

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

The yellowing of the woodland floor

We are a little way behind 2012's flowerings. My diary for that year tells me that on 12th April there were Wood Anenomes in flower at Binscarth and Bluebells in Gyre. It also mentions baby Rooks in the 'willows' in Kirkwall. I visited Binscarth and Gyre on 15th April 2013 - no sign of Wood Anenomes, no sign of Bluebells and still no sound of baby Rooks in Kirkwall. The Snowdrops in both woodlands had turned but at last the woodland floor was changing colour - the brown earth was now spangled with the chrome yellow Lesser Celandine stars and in Binscarth the more subtle lemon-yellows of the understated Opposite-leaved Golden Saxifrage.

 
 
 
 
 


Thursday, 11 April 2013

An unprepossessing survivor to brighten up the days of spring - Sticky Mousear

It may be that you've never seen this little plant. It's not the most obvious of flowers but it tries its hardest to brighten up the dullest bits of concrete or tarmac at a time when we have a dearth of spring-time flowers. I don't know how it survives in Kirkwall; by July there are the little tell-tale marks on the pavements of the town where the Council spot sprayer has been. Maybe because it's an early flowerer, it can get away with the mid-summer treatment by which time it's flowers and greenery have vanished. I don't think you can find it everywhere in Kirkwall - it seems to be choosy - but try having a look at car parks especially where the kerb meets the tarmac. Arguably the best display I've seen recently has been at the Rendall Doocot car park although there is a bright and vivid line in Great Western Road (see below).


 
 
 
 

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

The locations for Anne's latest plate

For Anne's latest plate we've chosen two mainland localities and three island localities:
Bell heather - on Sanday with West Manse and the Sanday Community School in the background
Cross-leaved Heath - at Bossack, St Andrews in the East Mainland
Ling - at Mor Stein on Shapinsay
Tormentil - ruins above Rushacloust on Eday
Hard Fern - on the track to the Knowes of Trotty, Harray in the West Mainland

Saturday, 16 March 2013

The first Peat Hill species plate

The flowers shown here, from top left going clockwise are.... Bell Heather, Cross-leaved Heath, Ling, Tormentil and Hard Fern.