Snowdrops in the garden.
A diary of back garden botany, urban ecology, rural rambles and field trips to the middle of nowhere...
Friday, 28 February 2025
Tuesday, 25 February 2025
Sunday, 23 February 2025
As noted in my previous entry wild plants are frequently those species that co-exist with human habitation/activity. Here is Red Deadnettle (Lamium purpureum), a prolific self-seeding annual that thrives on disturbed or cultivated ground.
There are some niche species that persist because their environment is isolated, for example in crevices on a cliff face. However there is little or no wilderness to speak of in the UK so our flora has long had a symbiotic relationship with human endeavour: hay meadows, coppiced woods, hedgerows etc. As these habitats of an earlier age disappear thoughts turn to conserving or recreating them.
Fortunately certain species like Red Deadnettle are as suited to modern life as times gone by. Lamium purpureum flowers early and flowers long which is a boon for bees.
Friday, 21 February 2025
We worry about habitat loss and seek to "re-wild" certain places but it's worth remembering that we continue to be surrounded by wild plants. For example White Comfrey (Symphytum orientale) has become a widespread wildflower in parts of the UK albeit naturalised rather than native. The handsome specimen seen here has happily wilded itself into a bag of builder's rubble.
The decline of many species is largely due to the fact that farmers, gardeners etc. consider them to be weeds for practical or aesthetic reasons. Those that thrive are the ones most able to co-exist with modern life.
Planting "wild" flowers is in a sense a contradiction in terms. It proceeds from the ethos that there is indeed a practical or aesthetic value to growing them.
Thursday, 20 February 2025
Giving the soil a tickle. The loose soil on the surface of this bed had hardened to a crust which reduces the soil porosity so I gave it a 'tickle'. A lady who happened to be passing said she thought that topsoil shouldn't be disturbed. Interesting that the 'no-dig' approach advocated by Charles Dowding and others has become a commonplace.
There's a lot to be said for it -soil is a self-sustaining ecosystem- but my approach is low-dig on the whole. There is a saying in permaculture that "everything gardens". Soil is constantly"gardened" by micro-organisms, invertebrates, mammals, the weather etc. sometimes quite deeply, for example when the roots of a falling tree lever up a large amount of earth. So I don't think ruffling the soil is disastrous and can be preferable to doing nothing.
In fact we will probably seed this bed with grass seed in the spring to extend the adjacent lawn. But for now the bulbs are coming through so it may as well look like a tended border. And there is no point in sowing seed on a compacted surface because it will not take. A bit more tickling will be appropriate when the time comes.
Sunday, 16 February 2025
Hazel Catkins, the wind pollinated male flower of the Hazel tree. In fact there are 240 flowers on each dangly stem. I can attest to how much pollen they produce because I accidentally bashed a branch recently. I was covered in a cloud of yellow dust.
Hazels have both male and female flowers (which are tiny) but the tree cannot pollinate itself so the pollen must alight on another Hazel. The female flower looks like a bud with a red tassel, just about visible to the right of the Catkins seen here:
Saturday, 15 February 2025
'Galanthophiles' are fascinated by slight variations in the patterns on the petals of the various Galanthus species and cultivars. I can see that's intriguing from the botanical point of view but for me the beauty of Snowdrops is seeing them en masse in a natural setting.
These look to be our Common Snowdrop (G. nivalis) which has been naturalised in Britain for centuries. The characteristic upturned green v is evident at the mouth of the inner petal. No-one really knows when the Common Snowdrop arrived. Was it the Romans, the Normans or sometime in the 1500s? Some say it might be native. Being common G. nivalis is the ancestor of numerous deliberate and accidental hybrids.
When I was a child the ruins of an old cottage were still standing in this pocket of woodland. I have always imagined the Snowdrops were once planted by a cottager and have slowly spread themselves around.
Thursday, 13 February 2025
The Hellebore most commonly planted in gardens is Helleborus argutifolius, sometimes called the Corsican Hellebore or the Holly-Leaved Hellebore. Native to Corsica and Sardinia it is hardy in UK conditions. Easier to establish than H. foetidus which seems to flourish only on well drained chalky soils.
Both species have green flowers (not many plants do) but the flowers of H. argutifolius are more open and bowl-like. Unlike the Stinking Hellebore its foliage has a serrated edge, hence argutifolius meaning sharp-toothed leaves.
Tuesday, 11 February 2025
Pollinators can be seen foraging for pollen and nectar as soon as it becomes available to them- if the weather is mild enough. In fact this photo is from February a couple of years ago. We have become accustomed to warmer winters in the UK but not this year. Snowdrops are in flower as are Winter Aconites, Hellebores etc. but I have yet to see any pollinators on the wing, it's just too cold.
The mean temperature for the UK in January was 3°C which is 0.9°C less than the LTA (long term average) 1990-2020. Actually I rate it as one if not the coldest spells during that period where southern England is concerned. There have been frosts night after night and temperatures not much above freezing day after day. However this would have been considered fairly typical during the previous LTA 1961-1990.
Mysteriously the Met Office has said that January was the fifth sunniest on record. Not in Hertfordshire or London; perhaps other parts of the country bagged all the sunshine??
Sunday, 9 February 2025
The Stinking Hellebore (Helleborus foetidus) can be considered both a native wildflower and a garden escape.
For example I saw it recently around the margins of Hill End Chalk Pit in Hertfordshire. This corresponds to its natural habitat: scrubby, unimproved chalk grassland. The area is far enough away from human habitation that it's reasonable to suppose this might be the survival of a wild population.
Then again it's one of those species that's considered "garden worthy" and has long been propagated for that purpose. It self-seeds readily where it finds the chalky conditions it favours. Gardens are more than likely the source of H. foetidus in the countryside near conurbations.
I often spot the bright green flowers alongside railway lines. No doubt the seeds have been carried in the wake of trains and found a suitable habitat in the limestone clinker. This is a wild species that was domesticated then "re-wilded" itself. So the distinction between 'native' and 'naturalised' is moot.
The one seen above is in the grounds of the music school where Stinking Hellebores pop up all over the place. Probably planted as ornamentals at some point in the garden's history and multiplied of their own accord. Or perhaps they were here already on this chalk hillside when the house was built in 1859?
Thursday, 6 February 2025
Wednesday, 5 February 2025
Three is the magic number for compost bins. This facilitates a three year rotation. One filling up with new cuttings, clippings etc. One full and in the process of composting. One well rotted with lovely loamy compost.
As it happens the music school has two, both enormous. One is almost full of composting matter and the other almost empty of actual compost. Never mind, two is better than one or none. And the fungi, bacteria and invertebrates are hard at work...
Monday, 3 February 2025
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