WalkwithTrees.com
  • Home
    • Devoted to plants!
    • About
    • Brighton Woodland Bard
  • Plant Folklore
    • Woodland Bard Foundation
    • Woodland Bard Course
  • Tree Folklore
    • Deeply rooted in Story
  • Woodland Bard LIVE
    • Blog
  • Recordings
    • Meditation Recordings
  • Contact

6/11/2022

A concrete mecca

0 Comments

Read Now
 
Left to Right - Daisy   - Sow thistle  - Yarrow

INTRODUCING URBAN PLANT FRIENDS.

Delicate blooms of tenacious power, soft lush growth produced wherever it can flower.
Over rubble and concrete, plastic and glass, nature regenerates, cares not if you've asked.
Green fresh growth encapsulates beauty, every tiny flower tells a story.
Showing no fear it grows where it can, covering up the waste produced by man. '

​J.Huet 


​As I walk to the local shop I stop to admire the beauty of a dandelion peeping out from the pavement. The ray florets spreading out around a golden centre capturing the sun and inviting winged delights to pollinate them. Other native asters (members of the daisy family Asteraceae the largest plant family in the UK) also peeping out of cracks in the pavement included the common sow-thistle who's luxuriant growth dominated the grey landscape and although considered a garden nuisance the poet Patrick Kavanagh claims it took him to a place beyond desire.

I discovered other asters like our common daisy spreading their petals and hugging the floor whilst groundsels drooped under the weight of yellow buds and the little white stars shone up from the green foliage of chickweed.

Clambering over walls the deceptively delicate lilac and yellow flowers of the ivy leaved toadflax grew amongst the duller foliage of  the plant called pellitory of the wall. Bittercresses and shepherds purse grew through the tinniest of spaces with hedge mustard and eastern rocket beside them. Germander speedwell finished the pavement design with sky blue flowers on the small patches of soil exposed to plant street trees.

Luscious abundant foliage of the green alkanet, red valerian and jack by the hedge painted the pavement green and in the grass verges clovers, yarrows, nettle, and dock created a green oasis under blossoming early cherries and plums. 

​On the way back a single yellow flower of sorrel delighted my keen eye, common mouse ear stood proud and the red dead nettle lifted my spirits. I marvelled at over twenty common species decorating my urban neighbourhood from dainty and spiky to upright and sprawling to tiny and majestic to dull and shiny. As  John Muir has written  'my eyes never closed on the plant glory I had seen.'

Share

0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

Details

    Archives

    July 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    December 2020

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

We Would Love to Have You Visit Soon!


Picture

Email : [email protected]

  • Home
    • Devoted to plants!
    • About
    • Brighton Woodland Bard
  • Plant Folklore
    • Woodland Bard Foundation
    • Woodland Bard Course
  • Tree Folklore
    • Deeply rooted in Story
  • Woodland Bard LIVE
    • Blog
  • Recordings
    • Meditation Recordings
  • Contact