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Rye Nature Reserve 16th August 2016

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I'm well behind (again) with my blogs, so I apologise for that. Having had 34.4 degrees over the last few days and now down to low teens in temperature, the seasons are topsy turvy. Most wildflowers have gone over in the SE of England now, thanks to weeks of hot, dry weather. So I hope this and the following blogs rekindle the flame for finding unusual (or plain usual) wildflowers in your area. Of course, if you are from the North it's been raining a lot so I guess your wildflowers are still going strong! Rye Nature Reserve is in East Sussex, just West of Rye and Camber Sands. It's mostly a shingle habitat, which can make for interesting species. Most people visit in the Autumn and Winter for the birds, but I go there for the flowers. As you leave the car park, you walk along the edge of the River Rother, a tidal estuary with limited salt marsh. Here you can find Common Sea Lavender and other salt marsh loving species. Limonium vulgare Here'

Botanical Recording near Farthing Corner, Medway, Kent - 14th August 2016

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The M2 Farthing Corner services near Gillingham sit within a botanically under recorded OS square. To the South is an area of countryside allowing access to this square via a footpath. I haven't taken many photos as most plants were common, but exploring new areas is always interesting as I never know what I might find. Common Fleabane was present, as it is in many places now. Pulicaria dysenterica This is Lucerne, a Pea Family member. It is often found on road verges and wasteground and is also planted as a fodder crop. The yellow flowered form of this is Alfalfa. Medicago sativa subsp sativa This is another Pea, the Tall Melilot, another common road verge wildflower. It's long spikes of yellow flowers dominated this area, so I suspect they may have been sown as a fodder crop at some time in the past, though the area now looked ike it had been untouched for many years. This is an unusual view in that it is upside down, thanks t

Littlestone and Dungeness, Kent - 13th August 2016

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Littlestone is a small non descript town on the coast on the South West corner of Kent. It has a shingle beach and when the tide goes out there's more mud than sand, so it isn't popular with day trippers. However, just North of the town there is a golf course and between this and the sea wall there is a great habitat for wildflowers and insects, comprising of stabilised old sand dunes, now pretty much flattened over decades and grassed over.  In 2013 I found here a small colony of the last Kent wild orchid of the season to flower, the Autumn Ladies Tresses. These are quite small, with single spikes around 4-8" tall poking up with  tiny white and yellow centered flowers spiralling up it. In 2015, I didn't find any on two visits here, so was rather concerned they had gone for good. This area behind the sea wall is a good habitat for Sea Holly, a Kent RPR species due to habitat loss. This time though, the habitat loss isn't through intensive farming or build

Seasalter, Kent - 6th August 2016

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I only have a few photos from this day out. We diverted to Seasalter to have a look around. I had found nothing of note along the sea front and beach areas, so I had a look around along a dyke behind the sea wall (that's a ditch in Kentish lingo for those unfamiliar with the term)  I finally found a wildflower that I have been looking for, for the last 3 years. I've never found it in West Kent and though I was told they could be found in East Kent, I had completely forgotten about them, until now. Doesn't look much does it! It was about 4" tall and looked like a Red Dead-Nettle which it isn't. It was a Cut-leaved Dead-Nettle These are rather like Red Dead-Nettles with cut leaves. When said like that it completely fails to communicate to you the excitement I felt when I realised what it was, a new species for me. The leaves are cut to 3-4mm deep, much deeper than Red Dead-Nettles and the flowers are smaller and few in number. Lamium hybridum 

Shorne Country Park, Kent - 9th August 2016

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This is only a short blog where I revisited this venue to see some rare plants. Though I had seen them in previous years, I like to revisit to see how they're getting on or not as the case may be. This country park is quite large, comprising mainly of woodland with some small lakes and overgrown quarry areas. As I parked the car I was very pleased to see this Purple Emperor on a car boot sunning itself. I'd not seen one here before. Last year I was treated to an odd coloured Silver Washed Fritillary, it's a good butterfly venue. Apatura iris I came across the first Ploughmans Spikenard I'd seen flowering this year. They flower in late Summer and the flowers completely lack ray florets. They are a tall, bushy plant so are easy to spot. Inula conzae   I then came to the small lakes, one of which was dotted with the flowers of Greater Bladderwort, an insect eating species! Its underwater leaves have bladders which implode on touch, su