From the back terrace down to the boggy bottom (otherwise known as the Boat Bog because Toad's Wayfarer dinghy sat there unused for nearly a decade; he has freecycled it now and only has the wee Topaz) of the Boggy Brae it's buttercups all the way down – a little over 40 metres. You might be able to make out some sticks and black string (made out of Toadlet's old school tights! Re-use, recycle and all that jazz). I've marked where Whorled Caraway is growing there and in two other places so Toad doesn't mow them down by mistake.
Buttercups all the way across from the Boat Bog (which is less boggy right now than I've ever seen it in ten years; we've had a good, long-for-here dry spell) and diagonally across the front lawn too:
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from bottom to where the hedge appears to end (it doesn't!) is about 30 metres |
There are no mow areas in here too, marking patches of wild angelica and primroses. Both are spreading because I leave them to seed each year. The flag irises are doing well. I counted eighty flowers the other day. I've stopped counting. The sort of effect I'm after is like this field of wild angelica and purple loosestrife that I saw on my way to Oban a couple of years ago in August. We haven't any purple loosestrife yet but there's knapweed and Devil's-bit Scabious aplenty. Marsh thistles too if I let them; I do rather discourage them as they are a bit imperialistic in their march for dominance.
The
Libertaria grandiflora that appeared in the Boat Bog last year under grey sallow is doing well as you can see. I hope it spreads.
Beside the hedge (see above), while I was pacing the buttercups' spread, I found a Northern Marsh Orchid.
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Northern Marsh Orchid |
At the top of the front bank there is one Southern Marsh Orchid as well. It pops up in the same place every year, whereas the Northerns pop up randomly and never in the same place twice. I'm guessing they spread more easily by seed and the single Southern grows from its rhizome or tuber each year. I've found a good web page to read:
Laneside Hardy Orchid Nursery. I'd like to encourage more marsh orchids. Below is a pic of 'Southern' at the moment (well, two days ago) and in late June 2014.
Another spreader is Reflexed Stonecrop. It grows on the dry stone wall at the top of the front bank. Last year there was, unusually, only one flowering shoot. This year there are five and I found some non-flowering bits on the ground below the wall in among the primroses. When I took a step down the bank to get that shot to the left, a little bird flew out from a hole in the gorund nearby. I was very excited to find what I think is a Willow Warbler nest. I scarpered pretty fast and hope the bird returned to sit on her clutch.
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Willow Warbler eggs, I think |
Elsewhere foxgloves and honeysuckle are getting going and the azalea that I call the Salmon Azalea is blooming beautifully.
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