I love the patches of pale lilac ones.
@naturelark
Fae Dundee π΄σ §σ ’σ ³σ £σ ΄σ Ώ but now in South London. Choral singing, botany, butterflies, birds, wee beasties, cups of tea, G&T. Larking about in nature. Ooh look, there's a thing... π€ #WildflowerHour I've brought all my posts from X with me. https://linktr.ee/naturelark
I love the patches of pale lilac ones.
Some cup fungi spotted at the base of a wall in Waddon. I think it is a Peziza species, but I can't get further than that.
My local road verges are looking absolutely Sweet Violetastic at the moment. π
Every day is better when you see a Hairy-footed Flower Bee.
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Congratulations @warrenfarmnr.bsky.social!
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
@bsbibotany.bsky.social You may already know this, but I've just spotted that the 100 Plants in 2026 Challenge was featured last month in @mzharrison.bsky.social's Encounter app.
bsbi.org/take-part/ac...
It was such a pleasure to spend a few hours with Guardian Country Diarist Susie White, admiring #pavementplants and other urban treasures in Newcastleβs Ouseburn Valley πΏ
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Ooh, this looks interesting.
In Bloom Exhibition | Ashmolean Museum share.google/eCOswFWVZ5ll...
Ooh, was this in a park or somewhere like that? I'm wondering if it is perhaps an Acer, maybe Red Maple or Silver Maple? The absence of male catkins and the number of flowers make me think it's not Hazel.
That looks like a Scilla I think, but I'm not sure which species. Perhaps Siberian Squill, Scilla siberica, but I think you might be in the US, and I'm not familiar with the US flora.
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π Yes! I do in fact have a little moiramobile that I zoom around it, but sometimes I like to let the bus or the train take the strain!
Yes! Took me a minute to work out what it was!
So impatient!
Very precocious!
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It really is looking splendid atm.
I have to jump on the SL5 then the SL3!
Lovely! The bottom one looks like Hairy Violet, Viola hirta. It likes chalk downland.
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Your wavering is correct!
Very impressive!
Lovely photo.
Fabulous! ππ€
Ooh, that actually looks more like a Common Dog Violet to me. Do you happen to have any side on photos showing the spur and sepals?
Yes, that's right, with the violet coloured spurs it is Viola odorata var. dumentorum. There's another white-flowered form with pink spurs, and that one is var. imberbis.
I've got similar pics of it growing on the walls of Lesnes Abbey!
How glorious.
Ooh, yes they are (rounded ends to the sepals visible). That's a very pretty coloured form.