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Lords-and-Ladies

Arum maculatum

Lords and ladies plant.

Also often known as the ‘cuckoo pint’, a plant with shiny arrow shaped leaves often with dark spots.

The flower is designed to attract flies for pollination and club shaped spike releases a urine-like odour. Its fruit – a spike of bright orange berries – can be a common sight in woodlands in autumn. Like many wild berries these are toxic to humans so take care around them.

Where to find Lords-and-ladies

Lords-and-ladies are quite common throughout most of the UK.  Mostly in hedgerows and woodland areas. The exception is north and central Scotland.

Best time to see

It flowers in April and May, but is also a striking sight when its bright orange berries are in fruit in autumn.

Lord and ladies plant in a woodland area

Did you know?

The plant’s fascinating shape and form has inspired a wide variety of names.

These include:

  • Jack-in-the-pulpit
  • Soldier-in-a-sentry-box
  • Bloody man’s finger
  • the rather lengthy ‘Kitty-come-down-the-lane-jump-up-and-kiss-me’ (an old Kentish name).

Perhaps not surprisingly, many have rather bawdy associations.

Other Species

Dandelion
A yellow dandelion flower

Dandelion

Taraxacum officinale
Creeping Buttercup

Creeping Buttercup

Ranunculus repens
Mouse-ear Hawkweed
Mouse-ear Hawkweed

Mouse-ear Hawkweed

Pilosella officinarum

Cowslip

Primula Veris

Cowslip Close Up.

An adornment of pastures and banks and a nostalgic symbol of the once flower-rich pastures of rural England.

Cowslips are one of the best known spring flowers. The cup-shaped, yellow flowers grow in nodding clusters on tall stalks. The leaves are oval with relatively wrinkled edges similar to the Primrose, but narrowing more abruptly into the stalk.

Where to find Cowslips.

They can be found in open woods, meadows, pastures and roadsides. They tend to favour rank grasses and scrub rather than amongst large numbers of spring-grazing sheep.

How’s it doing?

Its cultural history suggests that it was once as common as the Buttercup however, it suffered a decline between 1930 and 1980, mainly due to the loss of the grasslands where it grows. It’s dramatic decline in the 1950s was due to the relentless advance of modern farming, particularly the ploughing of old grassland and the extension of the use of chemical herbicides. Fortunately, it is now showing signs of recovery and has begun to return to unsprayed verges and village greens as well as colonising the banks of new roads. It has probably been assisted by the scattering of wild flower seed mixtures. Vast masses have reappeared in Hertfordshire where grazing pressures have eased.

Duke of Burgundy butterfly on cowslip.

Did you know?

  • It is the county flower of Northamptonshire, Worcestershire and Surrey.
  • In the ‘Language of Flowers’ it symbolises comeliness and winning grace
  • Cowslip allegedly means cowpat! Our ancestors noted that they tended to flower where a cow had ‘slupped’.
  • As an early spring flower, it is closely associated with much English folklore and tradition, including being strewn on church paths for weddings and adorning garlands for May Day.
  • In addition to The Tempest, the ‘freckled cowslip’ also appears in Shakespeare’s Henry V as a sign of a well-managed pasture.
  • Its scent is not dissimilar to that of an apricot. Richard Mabey describes the scent as ‘faintly fruity and dill-like.’
  • Tea made from the flowers is meant to be good for insomnia, headaches and nervous tension. The scented flowers also make delicious wines.
  • Some of the many enchanting vernacular names include freckled face, golden drops, bunch of keys, fairies’ flower, lady’s fingers, long legs and milk maidens. Welsh names include dagrau Mair, ‘Mary’s tears’. Paigle is another name used rather indiscriminately for any wild primula.
  • The nodding flowers suggests the bunch of keys which were the badge of St. Peter. One legend is that Peter was told that a duplicate key to Heaven had been made and therefore let his keys drop. The Cowslip broke from the ground where the keys fell.
  • They share their family’s tendency to produce a profusion of variations including the variety known to gardeners as ‘Devon Red’ and orange-flowered forms.

Other Species

Dandelion
A yellow dandelion flower

Dandelion

Taraxacum officinale
Creeping Buttercup

Creeping Buttercup

Ranunculus repens
Mouse-ear Hawkweed
Mouse-ear Hawkweed

Mouse-ear Hawkweed

Pilosella officinarum

Bugle

Ajuga reptans

A close up of a blue bugle plant.

This wild flower’s deep blue flower spikes may be found carpeting damp glades and meadows.

An evergreen perennial, it spreads by means of long, leafy runners. Spikes of purplish-blue flowers grow to from dense mats of dark green leaves with purple highlights. It is sometimes confused with Selfheal, however on this plant the flowers are arranged more tightly at the top of the stem.

Where to find Bugle

In damp woods, hedge banks and meadows throughout the UK.

How’s it doing?

Bugle continues to be common in its preferred habitats.

Did you know?

  • Bugle is much loved by bumblebees.
  • The ‘reptans’ in its Latin name is derived from ‘repto’, meaning ‘creeping, crawling’.
  • It was a popular ingredient in herbal remedies, particularly for stopping bleeding.

Other Species

Dandelion
A yellow dandelion flower

Dandelion

Taraxacum officinale
Creeping Buttercup

Creeping Buttercup

Ranunculus repens
Mouse-ear Hawkweed
Mouse-ear Hawkweed

Mouse-ear Hawkweed

Pilosella officinarum

Bluebell

Hyacinthoides non-scripta

Months

Season

Colour

Habitat

Bluebell close-up.

Its bell-like flowers with up-rolled tips carpet forest floors in the spring and its distinctive scent attracts bees beneath the trees.

The UK is home to about half of the world’s bluebell population. Perhaps its no surprise, then, that they are so popular here: when Plantlife asked the British public to vote for the “Nation’s Favourite Wildflower” it won by a significant margin both in England and the UK as a whole (Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland opted for the Primrose (Primula vulgaris) instead.

Where to find Bluebell

Generally found in shady habitats, but also in more open ones in the damper west. It is associated with woodlands, also grows in hedgerows and grassland. Bluebells are woodland plants but, except perhaps in East Anglia, they do not need woods as much as humidity and continuity of habitat.

How’s it doing?

Although still common in Britain, bluebells are threatened locally by habitat destruction, collection from the wild, and from the escape of the Spanish bluebell from gardens and subsequent cross-breeding and loss of true native populations. The latter is a particular concern – during a survey around one in six bluebells found in broad-leaved woodland was a Spanish rather than native bluebell.

Bluebells are now protected from illegal commercial harvesting.

A bluebell wood

Did you know?

  • In the Language of Flowers it symbolises everlasting love.
  • Its root sap was used to glue feathers onto arrows in the Middle Ages and to stiffen ruffs in Tudor times.
  • It is dedicated to England’s Patron Saint, St George.
  • Vernacular names include Granfer Griggles and Cra’tae, i.e. crow’s toes.
  • According to Richard Mabey (1996) “The traditional ‘non-script’ – meaning ‘unlettered’ – portion of the name is to distinguish the British hyacinth from the classical hyacinth, a mythical flower sprung from the blood of the dying prince Hyacinthus, on whose petals Apollo inscribed the letters AI AI – ‘alas’ – to express his grief.”
  • Bluebells flower in colours ranging from white (quite common), through to grey, pale blue, lilac to dark cobalt.

Other Species