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Montage of plants spotted in bloom by James, Exeter 1/1/2016
Image: James Faulconbridge Click on images to enlarge them |
Following on from Gus's amazing five New Year Plant Hunts in Scotland, now read about James' five New Year Plant Hunts across England. And
being a five-time Hunter wasn't the only thing these two botanists proved to
have in common! Over to James:
"I missed the boat for the New Year Plant Hunt in 2015,
but managed to squeeze in five Plant Hunts to make up for it in 2016! The Hunts
spanned from Devon to Lincolnshire – I would love to say this was commitment to
the cause but in fact we spent New Year in Exeter and stopped a night in
Bristol on the way back up to the Midlands – the perfect opportunity to explore
new places and see what was in flower on the way!
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Montage of plants spotted in bloom by James, Bristol 2/1/2016 Image: James Faulconbridge |
City-centre Plant Hunts were rather different to the places
where I’m used to botanising – you end up poking around behind bushes and in
tucked-away corners which most people pass by, and subsequently finding things
which people might not expect you to find! I’ll leave your imagination to fill
in the gaps…!
Not knowing either Exeter or Bristol well, I set out and
followed my nose, instinctively heading towards greener spaces such as parks
and churchyards. But the majority of the finds seemed to be in less ‘official’
green space – these were the opportunistic or ephemeral species which found a
niche at the side of pavements or concealed themselves within ornamental
shrubberies.
I found a thriving patch of Annual mercury Mercurialis
annua beside a subway in Bristol, whilst Petty spurge Euphorbia peplus and Annual
meadow grass Poa annua were fairly ubiquitous in both cities. Lawns were
another good source of species with Daisy Bellis perennis flowering
abundantly and other species such as Common mouse-ear Cerastium fontanum and Creeping
buttercup Ranunculus repens also nestled amongst the Perennial rye grass Lolium perenne.
Plants do not constrain themselves to the horizontal either – the delicate
flowers of Ivy-leaved toadflax Cymbalaria muralis were well-naturalised on
city-centre walls including Exeter Castle, where almost every plant seemed to
be in flower. These two Hunts totalled 21 and 22
species respectively.
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Montage of plants spotted in bloom by James, Tyntesfield NT 2/1/2016
Image: James Faulconbridge |
An afternoon walk around Tyntesfield National Trust property
with my partner was another opportunity to tot up species. Luckily she is well
enough used to me by now to get into the spirit of the Hunt with sharp eyes
helping reach another count
of 22 species – something of a trend emerging! Interestingly around a
third of the species over a 2 hour walk came from ten minutes in an area where
the Trust had undertaken some recent clearance works and where the ground was
more disturbed. Here we counted Herb Robert Geranium robertianum, Bramble Rubus
fruticosus agg., Wall lettuce Lactuca muralis, White dead-nettle Lamium
album and Prickly sow-thistle Sonchus asper all in flower. The more
established grassland and woodland edge habitats produced fewer specimens by
contrast. Early spring flowers such as Hazel Corylus avellana catkins, Primrose Primula vulgaris and naturalised Winter heliotrope Petasites fragrans,
Snowdrop Galanthus nivalis and Daffodil Narcissus spp. were another key
component of the count at this site.
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Montage of plants spotted in bloom by James, Stonesby Quarry, Leics 3/1/2016
Image: James Faulconbridge |
Back home on the 3rd Jan, I got out at first light to beat
the mid-morning forecast of rain and headed across the county-border into
Leicestershire for a fourth
Hunt. I went to a Leicestershire Wildlife Trust site – Stonesby Quarry –
thinking that the topography of the site might create more sheltered spots
where flowers would escape the frost. This was not the case however; the
limestone swards yielded very few species with most of my finds occurring at
the ecotones with scrub at the edges – species such as Red campion Silene
dioica, White dead-nettle Lamium album and Wood avens Geum urbanum.
One
particularly productive area however was an area of old tarmac just inside the
entrance which was being colonised slowly – here there were low-growing Thyme-leaved
sandwort Arenaria serpyllifolia, Scarlet pimpernel Anagallis arvensis and Common
mouse-ear Cerastium fontanum. Whether this ephemeral/opportunistic setting
encouraged early flowering or whether they were simply much easier to spot than
within a denser grassland sward, I couldn’t be sure. I called in at the next
village of Branston afterwards - I turned up almost the same number of species
in half the time, with Lesser celandine Ficaria verna, Primrose Primula
vulgaris, Ox-eye daisy Leucanthemum vulgare and Yarrow Achillea millefolium,
amongst others. In all, the count for the Sunday was 26 species.
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Montage of plants spotted in bloom by James, Grantham, Lincs 4/1/2016
Image: James Faulconbridge |
The 4th January was the last date for a New Year Plant Hunt
and I combined a walk to work with a lunchtime meander to count up 44
species in Lincolnshire. This started out in the dark with a few
photographs of species by torchlight, but ended with the much more pleasant
sunshine of a winter’s afternoon. The Grantham Canal yielded a good number of
species including Red and White campion Silene dioica and S. latifolia, Red
and White deadnettle Lamium purpureum and L. album and Yarrow Achillea
millefolium. There were also plenty of Hogweed Heracleum sphondylium flowers
and a single Cow parsley Anthriscus sylvestris head – these were all in the
strip cut beside the towpath in late summer whilst not one of the plants which
had escaped the blade was flowering.
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Cow Parsley Image courtesy of JR Crellin/Floral Images www.floralimages.co.uk/page.php? taxon=anthriscus_sylvestris,1 |
Through the town of Grantham itself were a typical
collection of opportunistic and annual species (we don’t encourage the word
‘weed’) including Shepherd’s-purse Capsella bursa-pastoris, Wavy bittercress Cardamine flexuosa and Canadian fleabane Conyza canadensis. The proximity
to gardens also boosted the naturalised ornamentals including Greater
periwinkle Vinca major, Wood spurge Euphorbia amygdaloides and Oregon grape Mahonia sp..
The hedges turned up a couple of surprises as well including Dogwood Cornus sp., Blackthorn Prunus spinosa, Holly Ilex aquifolium and Hazel Corylus avellana all in flower. Up to the Hills and Hollows to the east
of the town at lunchtime ticked off a few more species and finished with Gorse Ulex europaeus which was flowering abundantly on the hillside overlooking the
town. As the phrase goes, ‘when gorse is out of flower, kissing is out of
fashion’!
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Hogweed Image: Claudia Ferguson-Smyth |
The New Year Plant Hunt was a great excuse to get out in the
fresh air after Christmas, and it is cheering to see so many flowers still in
bloom – in all, excluding duplicated, I totalled 64 different species.
Following the progress of others on
social media was a great way to put your finds in context – to get a
feel for what others were finding in flower or otherwise.
It was good to see
what the real
experts were finding too – the lists coming from some luminaries were
very impressive and an inspiration to continue to learn and develop ID skills.
It was great too to see how many people were taking part from an enthusiast or
amateur standpoint, totting up the splashes of colour they were seeing on the
New Year’s Day walk or heading out as a family to see what they could
find.
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Geoffrey Hall, County Recorder for Leics,, refinds Dianthus deltoides on a road verge Image: L. Marsh |
Five hunts across four counties has left me with a strong
impression of what kind of species flower in the dead of winter, and why, but I
am looking forward to the analysis and summaries which the BSBI are undertaking
on the overall results to see whether my hunches are replicated across the
country.
It looks like a bumper year for participation so hats off to Louise
Marsh and Ryan Clark who have undertaken a serious commitment to collate and
compile the results. [ed. Aw thank you James but Ryan is doing the serious stuff while I waffle and tweet about it!] I’m looking forward to taking part again next year!
My three wishes, to be granted by the BSBI genie, would be:
My first wish is one which I have to share with Gus –
hopefully the power of two wishes from the BSBI genie will be irrefutable – and
that is that the ‘Road
Verge Campaign’ run by Plantlife in 2015 reaches more people and gains
traction with local authorities and land managers in 2016.
The space for
wildflowers, and the species which depend upon them, is increasingly being
squeezed and so much of the land in urban and rural areas is managed at great
expense to effectively minimise its ecological functionality through weekly
mowing. The road networks are a natural ‘green corridor’ around the whole of
the UK linking our towns and cities, and ecologically sensitive management
could provide a huge boost to biodiversity as well as an aesthetic and
wellbeing boost to those who use and travel through these spaces.
The positive
effect on wellbeing has been demonstrated where wildflower meadows have been
introduced to urban spaces such as Bristol. Many people respond to reduced
mowing regimes by considering it untidy or unmanaged – there are even counter-campaigns asking
councils to resume their previous management. Education, explanation and
inspiration are needed to succeed and I would wish for success in achieving
progress with this.
Secondly that the excellent #wildflowerhour on Twitter goes from strength to strength. This was initiated by Fennel
& Fern and taken up by BSBI on Twitter. It is an invitation
for people to share images and sightings of wildflowers every Sunday night
between 8pm and 9pm simply by tweeting and using the #wildflowerhour hashtag.
It allows you to share interesting finds, and in turn to get a weekly snapshot
of what is flowering and where across Britain and Ireland. And if nothing else, there is
little more cheering on a Sunday evening than a feed full of wildflowers
as you get ready to go back to a week at work.
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Ros Bennett talks about teaching plant ID. BSBI Training the Trainers workshop 2014 Image: Oli Pescott |
Thirdly, a BSBI-specific wish, I would like to see a BSBI
‘Introduction to the 10 or 15 Commonest Plant Families’. I remember well – a
breakthrough moment when I was first learning botany was an FSC course where
they introduced the 20 most
common wildflower families in the UK. There are certain
characteristics which, when you learn to spot
them, can take you straight to the family – suddenly the 1,600+ possible
IDs could be quickly narrowed to 20 or 30 species in a family.
I’m sure these
are available commercially tucked away in books, and a quick Google finds this
information in disparate forms is available online, but a simple, clear,
friendly and accessible guide targeted at beginners would be excellent to
encourage people with an interest in botany to take an immediate step-up in
their confidence and abilities".
Many thanks to James, who isn't just a great New Year Plant
Hunter, he's also pretty good at guest blogposts! What do you think of James'
third wish? Why not leave a comment below? I bet James would love to hear from
you!