If I have time when I'm at Ards, I take a slight detour from the trees and wander down to the grassland area near the sea and have a look at plants which I rarely see.
The Harebell is the 'Bluebell' of my youth in west Scotland:
Harebell |
Lady's Bedstraw is closely related to Cleavers ('Sticky Willie') and the other Galium species, but is the only one with yellow flowers:
Lady's Bedstraw |
Thyme grows at the fringes of the grassland and on the dunes. I'm always tempted to take some home for the kitchen, but I find its smell is very muted when compared to the cultivated versions:
Wild Thyme |
Hygrocybe langei |
It's worth mentioning that this wide, flat area of grassland between the forest and the sand dunes is a particularly defined habitat known as Machair: a habitat type unique to western Ireland and Scotland.
As I was walking back to the car park, I noticed this larva of the White Ermine moth digging in a depression in the sand. It appeared to be making no effort to leave the shallow hole and actually appeared to be making the hole larger. Most odd.
Larva of White Ermine moth |
This was above the high water mark, so perhaps it was simply looking for somewhere to pupate.
3 comments:
thankyou for all of this wonderful information of this magic place!
I wasn't aware that Lady's Bedstraw was related to Cleavers, thank you for educating me.
More great pictures, especially as most of these are difficult plants to photograph well.
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