Friday, September 4, 2020

Field Bindweed, Hedge Bindweed, Large Bindweed

It seems these plants inspire extremes of reactions ranging from those who think them beautiful to those who dislike them intensely. The folk names will show this later but I'll start with the Latin ones.

  • Native Convolvulus arvensis, Field Bindweed
  • Native Calystegia sepium, Hedge Bindweed
  • Calystegia silvatica, Large Bindweed, neophyte-naturalised introduced into cultivation in 1815 and recorded in the wild by 1863.
These are members of the Convolvulaceae family.

Convolvulus arvensis, Field Bindweed

A small white, pink or striped pink and white flowered bindweed which is usually low growing and trailing. It's another common plant I don't see often. These were on the banks of the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal. The corolla is shallowly five lobed and there is one style tipped by two stigmas. 



There is no epicalyx but 2 small narrow bracts on the stem some way below the flower.




The underside of the bloom has 5 dark pink rays. The leaves are variable but generally arrow-shaped.




The roots run long and deep and it is hard to eradicate this plant from field or garden. The names Hell Weed in Northamptonshire  and Devil's Guts in Kent, Lincolnshire and elsewhere perhaps reflect this.  Cornbine in Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and other places reflect its agricultural habitat. However the ever reliable imaginative folk of Somerset also called this Fairies' Wine Cups and Fairies' Umbrella! I'll stick with the fairies I think!

The botanical names come from Latin: Convolvulus means twining and arvensis field. Much more accurate and international but perhaps not as much fun!


Calystegia sepium, Hedge Bindweed

These plants were seen in Berkshire and Gloucestershire. 

The roots travel a great distance and even a small piece will produce a new plant.

Mabey considers this a handsome plant with its large white trumpet-shaped flowers and mats of arrow- shaped leaves. I agree with him. The plant does good service in cloaking wire fences as in first picture. The sepals are enclosed by an epicalyx of 2 pouch-like bracteoles but these do not (or hardly) overlap and sepals remain visible. This is the ID feature that is important in avoiding confusion with Large Bindweed. I try to remember it with this sentence: "Hedges have gaps in them."






A children's game is to sharply pinch the base of the calyx causing the whole corolla to pop out and float to the ground while chanting  "Grandmother, grandmother pop out of bed!". My husband remembers the game but not the chant. A whole series of folk names reflect this theme: Grandmother's Nightcap in Devon, Lady's Shimmy (chemise) and  Our Lady's Nightcap in Somerset. Also in Somerset we have Devil's Nightcap and Fairy Trumpet.

Other names refer to the twisting stems: Bearbind in at least Kent and Surrey and Bellbind in Essex. The Devil gets another shot with Devil's Garter in Pembrokeshire.

Wikipedia says Calystegia is derived from two Greek words 'kalux' a cup and 'stege' a covering obviously referring to the calyx.


Calystegia silvatica, Large Bindweed

The flowers are larger than those of Hedge Bindweed with the bracteoles pouched and strongly overlapping thus hiding the sepals. This one had climbed nearly to the top of of a Leylandii hedge in Gloucestershire.





All these twining climbers twist in an anti-clockwise direction.


Acknowledgements

Harrap's  Wild Flowers
Stace 4
Richard Mabey Flora Britannica
Grigson The Englishman's Flora

Friday, August 28, 2020

Common Toadflax, Purple Toadflax and Ivy-leaved Toadflax


  • Common Toadflax, Linaria vulgaris is the only native here. 
  • Purple Toadflax, Linaria purpurea  was introduced to gardens from Italy and recorded in the wild from around 1830. 
  • Ivy-leaved Toadflax Cymbalaria muralis was probably an accidental introduction on imported marble slabs from Italy and recorded in the wild and spreading by 1640. 
All are in the Veronicaceae family.

Common Toadflax, Linaria vulgaris

This distinctive, showy yellow spike was on a rough grassy track verge near Woolhampton, Berkshire. It is supposedly very common but I rarely see it. There were only two spikes about two feet apart but enough! The blooms are snap dragon-like, 2 lipped, yellow with a large orange-yellow boss on the lower lip; the spur is more or less straight.




The narrow leaves are strap-shaped and grey-green. It was a weed in Flax crops (looking like Flax, Linum, until the flowers developed) and Linnaeus named it after flax. The toad part of the name appears to be linked to the shape of the flower resembling both a small toad and its mouth when wide open.

Local names seem to reflect the shape in Gaping Jack (Somerset) and Lion's Mouth (Devon) and Rabbit-flower (Devon and USA). Many names like Bacon and Eggs (Wiltshire) refer to the colour.

The apothecaries' name was Urinalis as the colour suggested urine. It was used as a diuretic and  presumably the colour also suggested it as a treatment for jaundice. During its long history in herbal medicine the leaves were used to make a laxative tea and an ointment for skin diseases.


Purple Toadflax, Linaria purpurea

A common garden escape. This one probably is such on a village bank near Monmouth. The tall slender spikes of snapdragon-like flowers are distinctive. There are darker purplish veins on the corolla. The stems are usually purplish and leaves strap shaped. The lower leaves grow in whorls.










Ivy-leaved Toadflax, Cymbalaria muralis

This is likely to have been imported to London in 1640 on Italian marble slabs. As garden walls went up apace in the next 300 years it was a good time for a species that likes growing between rocks and stones. It acquired the name Oxford Weed because it became so well established on the walls of Oxford colleges. It was popular as an ornamental up to the end of the nineteenth century but is no longer deliberately planted. These photographs were taken in Abergavenny and my garden.




The leaves are glossy and usually 5 lobed with palmate veins. Solitary flowers are lilac (I have seen white ones in St David's, Pembrokeshire) with a yellow spot. There is a short curved spur. They are solitary in the leaf axils. 

The flower stalks bend towards the light, but as the fruit develops the stalks gradually recurve towards the growing surface so the seeds can lodge in any likely space or crack and establish a new plant. I hope this can be seen happening below. It certainly explains, along with some rooting at lower nodes, the successful spread of this plant.



The Latin name Cymbalaria refers to the shape of the leaves which were thought to resemble cymbals. Local names include Creeping Jenny, Mother of Millions and Nanny Goat's Mouths in Devon alone. 

It tastes like watercress and has been eaten in salads and the flowers give a clear but not permanent yellow dye.

Thank you for reading. I hope you have found out something new about these common, well known  plants.



Acknowledgements 

Harrap's Wild Flowers

Stace 4

The Englishman's Flora Grigson

Flora Britannica Richard Mabey

https://www.plantlife.org.uk/uk

https://www.first-nature.com/

http://botanical.com/

http://seasonalwildflowers.com/










Thursday, August 20, 2020

Perforate St John's-wort, Hairy St John's-wort, Marsh St John's-wort, Vervain and Yarrow

When I started researching this blog it was to be on the three St John's-worts, Hypericaceae, and I already knew that Perforate had a long history as a plant of magic and medicine. I quickly discovered that there were at least nine herbs of St John and as I had recently seen two of them, Vervain and Yarrow, I decided to include them. I had an amazing journey of discovery ahead. I have had to summarise the lore and history as a lengthy blog could probably be done on each. 

Perforate St John's-wort, Hypericum perforatum

A native, found here in a Gloucestershire car park, is one of the most famous of European plants in white magic but I will deal with the botanical details first.

The bright yellow petals are at least twice as long as the sepals which are narrow and pointed. Stems are round with 2 opposite raised ridges.


Sepals and petals have a few stalkless, black glands.




The abundant translucent dots in the leaves are the main ID feature for me. These are resin glands. The dots were interpreted as this herb being a remedy for wounds. It has been used to ease a wide variety  of physical conditions including dysentery and is now mostly used to prevent depression and to ease burns and wounds. 





This plant, which had been known from pagan times, was later given a name from Christian culture.

It is likely a pagan rite was adopted by Christianity. The plant was picked on the morning of June 23rd, with the other Herbs of St John, before sunrise while still wet with dew. In the evening fires were lit and the flowers smoked to make them more efficacious in medicine and in protecting farm animals, horses and men against all evil. The smoke drifted across the fields and protected all it touched from lightning, drought and field fires.



Hairy St John's-wort, Hypericum hirsutum

Another native, this was growing on a woodland ride near Monmouth.


The stems and leaves are conspicuously hairy. The leaves are strongly veined with many translucent dots.






The petals are a pale yellow with stalked black glands on petals and sepals. These can be seen here.


Marsh St John's-wort, Hypericum elodes

This grows in mats around the lake at Woorgreens Nature Reserve near Coleford, in the Forest of Dean. The leaves are softly and densely hairy. The flowers do not open widely and on my first visit on a grey day they were tightly closed! The stems creep and the flower stems are erect. There are reddish glandular hairs on the flowers but no black glands on the plant.





Vervain, Verbena officinalis

Mabey says this plant of the Verbenaceae family is 'scrawny and nondescript'! I don't see it very often so always enjoy it. I found it in a car park in Gloucestershire and Gerard's note that it is found in 'untilled places, neere unto hedges, highwais and ditches' still holds true.




The stems spread and the flowers open 1 -2 at a time. The corolla is split at the mouth into 5 lobes divided between a 2 lobed upper lip and a 3 lobed lower lip. 




Leaves are opposite (upper without stalks) but have narrow wings.The stems are four angled.

It has been cultivated in the UK since the Stone Age and was extensively grown in the Middle Ages as a medicinal plant. Garlands of it were worn on St John's Eve. It was prescribed for wounds, headaches, stones, eye troubles, childbirth and many other conditions: in fact a cure all. On the Isle of Man a piece of the herb was frequently sewn into clothing for protection. It was traditionally associated with the gods of war and gun flints were sometimes boiled with rue and Vervain to make them more effective. In 1767 a publication on the virtues of Vervain went into 16 editions in 10 years.

Gerard was uneasy about its reputation of magical properties and writes 'Many odde olde wives tales are written of Vervain' and Michael Drayton wrote in 1627  'Therewith her Vervain and her Dill, that hindereth witches of their will...'

The Church said it grew under the Cross at Calvary which could be reflected in the name Holy Herb in Somerset.


Yarrow, Achillea millefolium


The final Herb of St John in this post: a commonplace native much overlooked plant of the Asteraceae family and perhaps the one with the most surprising history. A powerful herb in Anglo-Saxon times associated with divination rituals, used as a charm against bad luck and illness. It was used as a staunching herb and was called Carpenter's Grass in places. It was a wound herb particularly recommended for wounds caused by iron. Gerard's Herbal associates it with Achilles who staunched the bleeding of his warriors' wounds with it and who gave his name to it.

Grigson says the Irish hang it in houses on St John's Eve to avert illness. An old German name was 'Salvation of all damage'. Will you ever look at this plant in the same way again? It is an ingredient in some modern rescue remedies or emergency essences.

The flowers are in dense flat-topped clusters and the anthers are orange. 



The foliage is finely cut and gives rise to 'millefolium'. The stem is angular.



There is so much folklore associated with these plants I have only been able to scratch the surface of traditional and modern beliefs.

More info can be found in my sources and in many other books and webpages. Happy hunting!

According to Grigson Herbs of St John include not just Perforate St John's-wort, Vervain, and Yarrow but Mugwort, Greater Plantain, Corn Marigold, Dwarf Elder, Ivy and Orpine or Stonecrop.



Acknowledgements

Harrap's Wild Flowers
Stace 4
Grigson An Englishman's Flora 
Mabey Flora Britannica

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Tansy, Orange Balsam, Yellow Water-lily, Common Fleabane, Gypsywort and Yellow Loosestrife

On the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal and near Aldermaston on the Kennet and Avon Canal, I found a mixture of aquatic plants and those which just find the canal bank a suitable habitat. The first three entries were found near Sharpness. 

Tansy, Tanacetum vulgare

This member of the Asteraceae family, found on rough grassland often near water, maybe a native or of ancient introduction. Its flat-topped clusters of flowers are distinctive. The yellow disk-florets are tightly packed and button like. There is a small depression in the centre of each. The marginal ray-florets are inconspicuous, though can be seen here. 






The leaves are fern-like, pinnate with toothed leaflets.

The local names reflect the appearance : Bachelor's Buttons in Somerset, Buttons in Yorkshire and Parsley Fern in Devon. 

It has been used medicinally and as a flavouring since at least medieval times. Culpepper thought it both aided conception and prevented miscarriage. The scent and bitter taste were used as repellents: to keep mice away from corn, flies away from meat and even worms away from corpses. This last is how Linnaeus explained tanacetum, the 'deathless plant' from the Greek athanasia. Gerard preferred the explanation that the flowers 'do not speedily wither'. I think I'll go with Gerard!

It was sufficiently important to be taken to New England with the settlers. 


Orange Balsam, Impatiens capensis

In contrast to Tansy which was taken to America this was introduced to British gardens from North America and first recorded in the wild in 1822. Americans call it Kicking Colt and Jewel Weed, and used it against warts and rashes. It spreads through a highly efficient seed dispersal mechanism: seeds are light and corky, floating on water like tiny coracles, Richard Mabey says, until they land on a muddy bank. 

This plant was growing in a marina mooring and had obviously settled in nicely!


The blooms are orange, heavily blotched reddish and unique. The pouch-like lower sepal ends in a spur that is bent double. Leaves are 3-9 cm long and are toothed. It is a member of the Balsaminaceae family.



Yellow Water-lily, Nuphar lutea

This native water-lily from the Nymphaeaceae family is better able to cope with damage from water traffic than the White Water-lily, thus it is happy on the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal. It grows from a massive rootstock.


The flowers are 3-6 cm across and held a few cm above the water. The 5-6 sepals form the cup flower, the petals below are not visible here as I would have had to swim to see them. The castle shaped capsule which will contain the seeds can be seen. This flower is well above the water level as it has yet to mature. The central styles radiate from the centre of the disc. Wildflowerfinder website (link below) has great photos of these features. 


The floating leaves are leathery, shiny green and oval.


Local names include Blobs or Waterblobs in Dorset and Brandy Bottle in number of counties including Berkshire probably alluding to the slightly alcoholic smell of the flower and the shape of the capsule.

The rhizomes were steeped in tar and applied against baldness.


Common Fleabane, Pulicaria dysenterica

A native plant and of the Asteraceae family this specimen was growing on the Kennet and Avon Canal bank near Aldermaston. It is patch-forming with cottony-hairy, slightly greyish foliage and large, golden-yellow flowers in loose, flat-topped clusters. Leaves are wrinkled and strap-shaped.



It was believed the smoke from burning Common Fleabane drove away fleas and as it is a comparatively close relative of the species which supply the insecticide pyrethrum there may be good evidence for this. Pulex is Latin word for flea hence pulicaria. Linnaeus called it dysenterica having been told by a Russian general it cured dysentery in his troops. 


Gypsywort, Lycopus europaeus

Dense whorls of tiny white flowers which are spotted purple on an upright angular stem make this native from the Lamiaceae family very noticeable on the canal bank. Two stamens project from the corolla. Leaf margins are cut into large jagged teeth on the upper leaves, becoming narrow pointed lobes at base of lower leaves.



The plant gives a good, fast black dye and the name is reputed to arise from the belief that gypsies used it to dye their skins. There is no evidence for this and the story which became widespread having begun in 1578 is probably apocryphal. 

In the past Gypsywort, also known as Water Horehound, was used as a sedative.



Yellow Loosestrife,  Lysimachia vulgaris

A native, of the Primulaceae family and is no relation to Purple-loosestrife, Lythrum salicara written about in the last blog. They are sometimes found growing together.

The petals are joined together at the base but separate at the top, forming a cup shaped flower. There are 5 stamens with large yellow anthers and one green style. The sepals, the calyx-teeth, have narrow golden fringes and the style becomes more obvious as the anthers fade.




It is a tall plant and had formed here a sizeable patch at least 1.5 m across. It is softly hairy with leaves opposite or in whorls of 3-4 around the stem.  They are oval-lanceolate with tiny yellow gland-dots along the edges just about visible in the above photo.


Local names include Willow-herb and Willow-wort in Somerset. The plant was used to check bleeding.


Acknowledgements

Stace 4
Harrap's Wild Flowers
The Englishman's Flora Grigson
Flora Britannica Richard Mabey

Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Skullcap, Purple-loosestrife, Arrowhead, Marsh Woundwort, Meadowsweet

All these are to be found on the banks of the Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal near Abergavenny.


Skullcap, Scutellaria galericulata

Native and from the Lamiaceae family. The flowers are bright blue with a white spotted inside, in pairs at the base of the leaves. Calyx is two lipped, the upper lip with an erect flange on its back. Both flowers point in the same direction. The corolla is strongly curved up from the base. The upper lip is hooded, the lower flattened. Sprawling on the bank it is easily overlooked, and in fact Grigson says it went unrecorded in England until the sixteenth century. 





It did acquire the names Hoodwort and Helmet Flower. 


Purple-loosestrife, Lythrum salicaria

Native and from the Lythraceae family, this plant is very noticeable and forms extensive patches on the canal bank. Flowers are in whorls in the axils of the leaf-like bracts and the stems are square. Petals are reddish-purple with crimson veins.

The plant is trimorphic - a new word for me and meaning occurring in three forms - referring here to the position of the stamens, and length of the style: short, medium and long. There are 12 stamens divided into 2 groups and which are at the levels not occupied by the stigma. The style on this plant appears to be long. The Seasonal Wild Flowers website (link below) has authoritative photos on this.








It was given the name Purple Loosestrife in 1548 by William Turner. As ever there is some combining of theories of the original naming of the plant. Pliny describes a lysimachia with purple flowers, taken to be Lythrum salicaria. He says it was named after Lysimachos, a king of Thrace, Macedonia and Asia Minor who is said to have calmed a mad ox by feeding it a member of the genus. Lusimachos, however, also means 'dissolving strife' and Turner called this plant Purple Loosestrife. (I hope to have Yellow Loosestrife in my next blog.)

Herbalists used it to alleviate diarrhoea, dysentery, fevers, sore throats, ulcers and sores.


Arrowhead, Sagittaria sagittfolia

Gerard called this Water Archer and it has the name Adder's Tongue in Devon. The upper, aerial leaves are arrow shaped, prominently veined. Stems are angular. The flowers are three petalled and petals have a purple wash at their base. They are held in erect spikes on short stalks. Anthers are purple and numerous.



In Devon a strengthening tea was made, always out of nine leaves.

It is from the Alismataceae family, Water-plantains.


Marsh Woundwort, Stachys palustris

This native is from the Lamiaceae family. Gerard praises with some wonder the power of this Wound Herb. He witnessed the recovery of a severely injured man who cut his leg to the bone when using a scythe.  The man lost much blood but healed the wound with leaves he crushed and applied to himself. Richard Mabey says it was the most highly regarded of all the Wound Herbs.





The flowers are pinkish-purple and the leaves on the central and upper stem stalkless and narrowly spear-shaped. The leaves, for me, are the main feature to separate this from Hedge Woundwort.





Meadowsweet, Filipendula ulmaria

A very familiar plant from the Rosaceae family ends the blog: a native plant of damp places. The flowers are, of course, in frothy creamy-white clusters and are heavily scented. Stamens are very prominent. Leaves are cut into pairs of oval, toothed leaflets and alternate with several tiny leaflets which can just be seen here. Stems are reddish.







Meadowsweet was a plant once used to flavour mead (Culpepper thought a leaf of Meadowsweet also gave a fine relish to a cup of claret) and it is possible that the association with meadow in the name came from confusion over the words in OE for mead the drink, and meadow. 

As a herbal remedy it was used against haemorrhage and malaria, a disease once common in England. It was also much used as a strewing herb to freshen the floors of homes. It may have been both the smell of the flowers and the antiseptic aroma of the crushed leaves that made it so popular.


This completes the look at the native plants on a short stretch of the Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal near Abergavenny.


Acknowledgements:

Harrap's Wild Flowers
Stace 4
Grigson The Englishman's Flora 
Richard Mabey Flora Britannica

Thursday, July 30, 2020

White Campion and Soapwort

These two members of the Caryophyllaceae family White Campion, Silene latifolia and Soapwort, Saponaria officinalis are both of ancient introduction though it is possible Soapwort is native in the south-west of England. 

When I photographed the White Campion I only took quick snaps as I did not intend to blog about it and then I got interested......

White Campion, Silene latifolia

This was introduced to Britain by Neolithic farmers and remains have been found on these and Bronze Age sites. It has a number of attractive names such as Summer Saucers in Somerset and Granny's Nightcap in Buckinghamshire. It has, however, a very dark side: pick it and your mother dies hence the name Mother-die in Cumbria. (Pick Red Campion, a native plant, not introduced, and your father will die.)

Its root can be used as a soap substitute for washing clothes and hair. It was also one of the ingredients in sixteenth century potpourri.
 
I saw this plant on the towpath of the Kennet and Avon Canal near Aldermaston.

It is dioecious with male and female flowers on separate plants. I think this is probably a female flower with 5 styles beginning to develop at the centre. 



I think below is probably the male flower with 10 stamens, a few of which are visible here. Male plants also have more flowers which also makes it likely in this small colony this is the male.






The male calyx is 10 veined, the female 20 but it's not possible to use these photos to identify those. The plant is softly hairy, leaves lanceolate and opposite. 

Petals are deeply cleft and there is a sweet scent in the evening attracting pollinating moths.

In the course of this post I have discovered a superb website English Wild Flowers, A Seasonal Guide by Ken Jones which has excellent photos of this and other plants. Link at the bottom. On this site you can find the definitive ID of the male/ female plants through photographs. 


Soapwort, Saponaria officinalis

I know of two sites near where I live in the Wye Valley for this. One is near gardens in Tintern but this colony is much more in the wild on the bank of the Wye between Bigsweir and Llandogo and a mile or so from houses. The patch is at least twice as big this year as last, stretching for more than 3 metres. I suspect it may have originally arrived on floodwater.


There are dense clusters of pale pink flowers.There are 2 styles, 10 stamens and the calyx tube is long and split into 5 triangular teeth at the tip. It is often reddish.


Leaves are opposite, long-oval, near-stalkless and slightly bluish-green. There are 3-5 bold parallel veins. Most of these features can be seen here in these three photos- which were taken with the blog in mind and are I hope more useful!



This plant's English name, Soapwort, was given by the naturalist William Turner, who took it from Saponaria and Herba Fullonum the 'fullers' herb'. Possibly it was used in the manufacture of cloth in medieval times and certainly it was one of the ancient washing plants before soap was invented or generally used. A solution made from it was used as a disinfectant wash in thirteenth century Italy. Leaves were crushed, boiled in water and the liquid after straining gave an appreciable if not long lasting lather. Interestingly, Gerard regards it only as a garden ornamental but Culpepper describes the leaves laid on cuts and bruises. Bruisewort is a Somerset name for it.

Settlers took it with them to New England in the seventeenth century where the solution of water made  soapy with leaves and roots was used against the unpleasant rash caused by Poison Ivy. It became naturalised in USA. Americans still give it the West Country name of Bouncing Bett.



I hope you have found this interesting and were not too frustrated by the lack of useful photos for White Campion. If you look at the recommended website for ID photos you won't be disappointed.

 Exploring two members of the Caryophyllaceae family was key for me here. 


Acknowledgements: 

Stace 4
Harrap's Wild Flowers
Grigson The Englishman's Flora 

Friday, July 24, 2020

Wood Sage and Giant Bellflower

These are to be found in hedgerows near Monmouth. Wood Sage is a member of the Lamiaceae family and Giant Bellflower the Campanulaceae. Both are natives.

Wood Sage, Teucrium scorodonia

Linnaeus gave this plant the generic name Teucrium either after an ancient king of Troy, Teucer, or a medieval medical botanist, Dr Teucer. The specific name scorodonia is derived from the Greek word for garlic of which however it does not smell! Some of the folknames are more transparent like Gipsy's Sage in Dorset and Rock Mint in Somerset. The hedge-bottom it grows on here is on a steep hillside, so dry and stony.

Herbalists collected the flowers in July and used them to combat blood diseases, rheumatism and fever.




The leafless spikes of small, pale greenish-cream flowers face to one side and are the most noticeable ID feature. There is no upper lip to the corolla. The lower lip is five lobed. The lowest lobe of the flower is a shallow spoon shape and has two tiny nicks near the bottom; above that are two curved short lobes like arms and a further pair just above those. The stamens are dark purple-brown and the anthers orange- brown. The style is pale green and forked. I think all these can be seen here.

The flowers are oppositely-paired on the square stem but curve around to face in the same direction. In the UK they face south, the direction the midday sun is located.

Leaves are opposite and have a deep network of veins perhaps suggesting sage leaves.


Giant Bellflower, Campanula latifolia

The hedgerow here is shady but on less steep ground. The patch is very noticeable being about a metre tall. The short stalked purplish-blue flowers open from the top of the leafy spikes and initially, at least, point upwards. They are solitary and at intervals.



The flowers are star-shaped; the petals cut to half way and hairy with 3-5 veins.


The key ID features come in the leaves: the upper leaves are stalkless  but the lower leaves have a winged stalk.

Gerard says the leaves of Giant Throatwort (as he knew this plant) "hath very large leaves of an overworn green colour, hollowed in the middle like the Muscovites' spoon, and (are) very rough, slightly indented about the edges". That made me smile more than the "finely toothed" and "hairy" of the modern field guide!

Gerard also says this plant was a remedy for disorders of the throat and mouth.




Grigson adds Wild Spinach as a name used in Yorkshire. The shoots can be peeled, cooked and eaten like spinach.

I know of two sites for Giant Bellflower: one at Pentwyn Farm NR near Monmouth and the other this hedgerow. I think I got better photographs in the hedgerow as the weather was duller and calmer.



Acknowledgements: Harrap's Wild Flowers, Stace 4, Grigson The Englishman's Flora,  http://wildflowerfinder.org.uk/   http://botanical.com/ websites and a new one for me  https://exclassics.com/  which contains Volumes 1-4 of Gerard's Herbal. I think I will be using it a lot!