Since I last posted, I have travelled about more in the last month than I have all year. First was a trip to Inverness to transport a friend who needed an operation at Raigmore hospital. This meant an early start and all day in Inverness until she was able to be discharged. An ideal opportunity to do some botanising in Inverness, rather than rushing around the shops.
I checked the online database of the BSBI to see which areas had not been surveyed much. This database is free to access for anyone and gives a list of the species that people have recorded. As a member of the public, you can look at a 2km square and see what plants occur. As a recorder, I have been granted special access and I looked at the 1 km squares around Inverness. (You need the Grid Reference to search). NH6744 did not have many plants recorded so I decided to go and look there. This is the area to the NW of Raigmore.
NH6744 |
At first sight, I could see why there were not many records. It is a housing area and the pavement edges have all been kept very bare either by weedkiller or neat homeowners. Wildflowers need a bit of neglect to thrive! I found a parking space by some flats which were surrounded by (unweeded!) gravel. The first thing that caught me eye was an ENORMOUS red clover, much bigger than the usual plants I see being about 40 cm tall.
The large red clover |
Checking that it was Red Clover, I looked at the shape of the stipules - this is the name for little leaf-like growths that appear at the base of leaf stalks. You can see them in the above photo if you follow down from the clover leaf to where the leaf stalk joins the main stem.
Stipule - purple veined with a bristle point |
I was happy that it was Red Clover (there is a similar plant called Zigzag Clover) but it still didn't look like the ones I see regularly. A bit more research in the doorstop of a book called "Stace" revealed that there is an agricultural variety that is more vigorous and had hollow stems so I cut the stalk in half.
Hollow stem |
A more promising spot was a bridge over the Mill Burn.
A selection of ferns on the bridge over Mill Burn |
There were at least 4 different ferns in a shady spot over the burn.
Maidenhair Spleenwort (Asplenium trichomanes) |
Wall Rue (Asplenium ruta-muraria) |
Hart's-Tongue (Asplenium scolopendrium) and another fern that I cannot identify |
Interestingly, I saw exactly the same community on my trip to West London (Hampton Hill). This was on a wall over the railway and was very different as it was hot and dry and not where I expected to find ferns. The yellow flower is Yellow Corydalis (Pseudofumaria lutea) which likes growing on walls.
No comments:
Post a Comment