Flora (photo album 3)
There's a map and list of wild plants that may be found around Stratford sub Castle on the Botany webpage..
 Striped hedgeBlackthorn produces blossom before its leaves and is named for its darker bark. Hawthorn produces leaves before its blossom and is named for its fruits, the haws. Both are used in hedging as they can be pleached. Where used together they can give, for a few weeks in spring, green and white striped hedges. Stratford Road.
Kerry O'Connor. April 2021 |  Orange Slime MouldOrange Slime Mould Cryptococcus macerans, felled Heale Estate tree, Beech Walk roadside.
April 2021 Kerry O'Connor |  Dog's MercuryThis whole carpet of Dog’s mercury (Mercuralis perennis) alongside the Avenue to Keeper’s Cottage is comprised of male plants.
It is a spurge and is poisonous.
March 2021 Image: Kerry O’Connor |
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 Dog's Mercury Close upMarch 2021 Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Lords and LadiesNine out of ten Lords and Ladies plants are “immaculate”, without spots or blemishes on their leaves, inherited dominantly, as the plant on the left here on The Avenue to Keeper’s Cottage.
But is the minority WITH the spots on the leaves, inherited recessively, as here on the right
that give this lily its specific epithet
Arum maculatum.
March 2021 Image: Kerry O’Connor |  Glory of the Snow(Chionodoxa, a section of Scilla, probably luciliae) in bloom in mid-March on a bank south of Salterton.
15 March 2021
Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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 A lone, early, Spanish bluebellHyacinthoides hispanica, is flowering at the gateway to the gas substation on Gradidge Lane. Perhaps it arrived in some fly-tipped garden waste and has confused a microclimate warmed by the gas station and sheltered by the old pit with some Iberian idyll. 14 March 2021
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Winter Heliotrope (Petasites fragrans)There's a bank of Winter Heliotrope (Petasites fragrans) at the end of Mill Lane and the footpath from it to the bridge. It can be distinguished from the related Butterbur by flowering now and not in spring. (1 of 2)
Image: Kerry O'Connor
December 2020 |  Winter Heliotrope (Petasites fragrans)They don’t spread by fertile seeds, rhizomes creep underground often along river or road banks. There aren’t many sunny hours now either and the flowers follow what sun there is, giving it the name Heliotrope. (2 of 2)
Image: Kerry O'Connor
December 2020 |
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 Lawyer's Wig, Shaggy Ink Cap, Coprinus comatusEdible at the stage before it turns to ink but can interact with alcohol. Coprinus means living on dung but in fact C comatus doesn’t. Comatus means hairy, the scales curl up like a lawyer’s wig. The ink can be used as such.
Avon Farm November 2020
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Cyclamen (Sowbread)In dappled autumn sunlight in St Lawrence graveyard (both pink & white flowers).
Image: Kerry O'Connor
September 2020 |  Spindle (Euonymus europaea)Unspectacular tiny white flowers turn into attractive pink fruit capsules containing bright orange seeds.
Image 3 of 3: Rosemary Winson
24 Aug 2020 |
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 Spindle tree (Euonymus europaea)In the past the spindle wood was used to make spindles for spinning and holding wool (hence its common name), also used for skewers, toothpicks, pegs, and knitting needles.
Image 2 of 3: Rosemary Winson
24 Aug 2020 |  Gradidge Lane spindle treesSpindle (Euonymus europaea) is a native deciduous tree, often an indicator of Ancient Woodland but these specimens were planted fairly recently.
Image 1 of 3: Rosemary Winson
24 Aug 2020 |  Chicken of the WoodsLaetiporis sulphureus - between river and track from Mill Bridge to Avon Farm
June 2020 Kerry O'Connor |
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 Robin's PincushionRobin's Pincushion is chemically induced on the dog rose, Rosa canina, and contains many larvae, each wintering in its own chamber, of the Bedeguar Gall Wasp, Diplolepis rosae. The adults, 99% females, emerge in the spring.
Stratford Nature Reserve, Sept 2019.
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  RedlegRedleg or Redshank, Persicaria maculosa, has red lower stems and dark chevrons on the leaves.
By the footbridge over the Avon, Sept 2019
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  KnotgrassKnotgrass, Polygonum aviculare, is not grass. It is a weed but it is not knotweed. (Is that not clear?)
Stratford Nature Reserve, Sept 2019
Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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 White BryonyWhite Bryony, Bryonia dioica, though related to the cucumber, is poisonous. The southern slopes of Old Sarum, Sept 2019.
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  London Plane (collage)The London plane, Platanus × acerifolia, is a non native hybrid and the commonest tree in London. Above ground it copes well with air pollution, below ground with root compaction and concreting over.
The shade it offers and the beautifully patterned trunk left as older non-stretchy brown outer bark that scales off to reveal the greener stretchier inner bark, are bonuses.
Verge by Avon Farm, Sept 2019
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Ganoderma applanatumGanoderma applanatum, along the boardwalk in Avon Valley Nature reserve. This rots the heartwood of trees and is known as the artist’s bracket as sepia images can be drawn on the white underside, scratching revealing the brown beneath. August 2019
Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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 Turnip, Brassica rapaTurnip, Brassica rapa, footpath to allotments, Aug 2019 . Turnips have been cultivated for 4000 years.
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Bitter Vetchling Lathyrus linifoliusBitter Vetchling, Lathyrus linifolius. Avon Valley Nature reserve Aug 2019. The tubers were eaten in Scotland before potatoes and are supposed to reduce hunger. It is related to the sweet pea.
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Horse Mint, Mentha longifloliaHorse mint, Mentha longifolia, road to Little Durnford Aug 2019 Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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 Fat Hen, Chenopodium albumFat Hen, Chenopodium album, footpath up to Devizes Road, Cathedral on horizon,
Aug 2019 Image: Kerry O'Connor |  FleabaneFleabane, Pulicaria dysenterica, Mill Lane, Aug 2019 Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Dryad's saddle fungusCommon Garden Snail (Cornu aspersum) inspecting a Dryad's saddle (Polyporus squamosus) fungus on western slopes of Old Sarum Aug 2019. Both are edible!
Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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 Shepherd's Purse and Pineapple weedShepherd's Purse, Capsella bursa-pastoris, with heart shaped seed pods and Pineapple weed, Matricaria discoidea, with yellow green flowers devoid of petals (crush and sniff to see why pineapple weed) near Avon Farm.
Aug 2019 Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Wild parsnip, Pastinaca sativa,Wild parsnip, Pastinaca sativa, eastern approach to Old Sarum. Aug 2019.
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Vervain, Verbena officinalis,Vervain, Verbena officinalis,
on Gradidge Lane Aug 2019
Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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 Red BartsiaThe semi-parasitic Red Bartsia, Odontites vernus, near footbridge across the Avon Aug 2019 Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Mugwort, Artemisia vulgarisMugwort, Artemisia vulgaris, on eastern slopes of Old Sarum with cathedral spire on horizon,
August 2019
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Marsh Woundwort, Stachys palustrisMarsh Woundwort, Stachys palustris, on the village side of footbridge over Avon. Aug 2019 Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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 Lesser Burdock, Arctium minus. (1)Lesser Burdock, Arctium minus. With leaves like velvet (VELour), seeds with hooks (CROchets) it inspired a Swiss engineer to invent and name Velcro. Near Avon Farm. Aug 2019
Image: Kerry O'Connor |  Coprinus cinereus, an ink capCoprinus cinereus, an ink cap that grows on dung. Pastures beneath Devizes Rd. Aug 2019. Inedible but even if it was edible, would you? Image: Kerry O'Connor |
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