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Showing posts with label peacock butterfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peacock butterfly. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 April 2016

A-Z Challenge 2016 - Wildflowers 'K'

My theme this year is wild flowers. Most of us will be aware of the flowers that grow in our gardens but what surprises me is how few wild flowers that I know.

I pass them every day but rarely look at them. Well this year will be different - even if many of them may fall under the letter 'X' for unknown.

'K' - Kingcup, Knapweed

In Ireland bunches of the first of my flowers were hung over doors on May Day to protect cattle from witches and fairies. Not bad for what may be one of the longest established native plants in Britain, one which would have thrived in the melt waters of the ice age. One of the buttercup family it grows in marshy places, damp meadows and riversides.


Kingcup or Marsh Marigold
It's a plant that is known by a plethora of names - Mollyblobs, Horse Blob, Gollins and the Publican; in Scotland it's the water gowan or water gowland. But I've always known it as the Kingcup.

The large, golden, cup-shaped flowers can hardly be missed.

Kingcups
While the whole plant is poisonous its buds were once used as a substitute for capers.


My second flower resembles a thistle without prickles.

Common Knapweed
There is a marvellous story about this plant.

If a woman puts its open florets inside her blouse and any open into the flower, then a lover will come her way.

Its knob-like heads are sometimes called hard-heads. Knap is another name for knob.

Medicinal uses include relieving sore throats and healing wounds and scabs.

There is no doubt that knapweed is a favourite with bees and butterflies.

Peacock butterfly on knapweed
Attributions:
  • Kingcup or Marsh Marigold - 14 April 2009, ex geograph.org.uk, by Keith Edkins in Byron's Pool Nature reserve - CC BY-SA 2.0 generic
  • Kingcups - 20 May 2008, ex geograph.org.uk, by M J Richardson - CC BY-SA 2.0 generic
  • Common Knapweed - 3 July 2013, by Natalie S - CC BY-SA 4.0

Thursday, 18 April 2013

A-Z Challenge 2013 - 'P' - Passion Flower



My A-Z posts this year are based on my garden – flowers, animals, the birds and the bees, butterflies - with a bit of poetry thrown in. For some letters I am expecting to cheat somewhat – wishing they were here.

Please note that I have been/still am ill. Also I have had a computer failure that has not yet been resolved completely causing me to post late. I have been unable to reply to comments and to visit other A- Z participants for the past week. Will do my best to catch up as soon as I can; please accept my apologies in the meantime.

P – Passion Flower, Pheasant, Petunia, Peacock, Peony

Lay down on your pillow
And turn the lights down low
Let me take you to the garden
Where the passion flower grows.
 
Passion Flower
Roman Catholic priests (late 1500's) named it for the Passion (suffering and death) of Jesus Christ. The parts of the plant symbolised features of the Passion. The flower's petals and sepals represented the apostles who remained faithful to Jesus throughout the Passion. The circle of hair-like rays above the petals suggested the crown of thorns that Jesus wore the day he died.

Each day since late February, when it’s just light enough to see, we have heard, not the crowing of a cockerel, but the call of one of these magnificent birds:-
 
Cock Pheasant (on Tresco)
Gilded with leaf-thick paint; a steady
Eye fixed like a ruby rock;
Across the cidrous banks of autumn
Swaggers the stamping pheasant-cock.

At different times during the day it takes a stroll around two or three gardens before it returns to shelter under the bushes next door.
 
Cock Pheasant crossing drive next door
When it comes to flowers there are so many beginning with a ‘P,’ so I have to be careful which ones I choose to show.

These have been successful in the border and in tubs.
 
Petunias
There is no chance for any one of them to claim, "I'm a lonely little petunia in an onion patch,"  (see video link)

 Butterflies take a fancy to them too, but the Buddleia bush is a particular favourite for some.
 
Peacock Butterflies
Issa, a Japanese poet, is said to have written  up to 20,000 haiku, with around 84 about the peony, a flower which has a reputation for bringing prosperity:


Peonies
The god of fortune
and luck dwells here
a peony
 Poems:
  • Where the Passion Flower Grows – Charles M Moore
  • Cock-Pheasant – Laurie Lee
  • Peony – Issa; Japanese peony haiku
Photos/Video