Showing posts with label Green-flowered Helleborine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green-flowered Helleborine. Show all posts

Monday, 29 July 2019

Green-flowered Helleborines





Getting bored with reading about Orchids? So am I. It's been an interesting diversion during a very quiet summer but I am getting to a tipping point. Any further and I am into the realms of hybrids and variants and I will need to seek support from experts. They often seem to have their own conflicting views. Given the confusion I am experiencing from variation within species, purely based on location and growing conditions, I don't think I want to get in any deeper.

I still have Orchids on my to see list but they all require significant travelling:- 

Coral Root
Lesser Twayblade
Lesser Butterfly
Lady's Slipper
Lindisfarne Helleborine
Creeping Lady's Tresses
Small White Orchid

and I suppose if I ever come across a Ghost Orchid or a Summer Lady's Tresses, I will be happy to add it to the list. But, its like any addiction, get out before you get in too deep and it takes over your life!

Today was a trip out to look for Green-flowered and Broad-leaved Helleborines closer to home. Research on the web had given us a couple of locations although the information was mostly eight to ten years old. The Green-flowered site looked particularly suspect when viewed on Google Earth whilst the Broad-leaved site had produced one specimen in bud when I had visited it a few weeks ago. Still we had nothing better so it was worth giving it a go.


Green-flowered Helleborine


The location for the Green-flowered Helleborine was a lay-by on the busy A225 just south of Eynsford. As we pulled into the lay-by it looked less than encouraging. The grass verge had been strimmed, there was litter and deposits of various liquids including engine oil on the verge. Yet as Dave stepped out of the car the first thing he saw was the Helleborines. Small and weedy looking examples perhaps, but great to see them surviving in such a harsh environment.



Green-flowered Helleborines


Green-flowered Helleborine


Next stop was Target Hill Nature Reserve just south of Crawley. The reference I found on the web was for the north facing slope of Target Hill and three weeks ago I spent a couple of hours searching that area on the south side of the A264. I found nothing but before leaving I had a quick walk along the footpath on the north side of the road. Just one specimen found in bud but it was reason enough to go back.

I had my doubts, the one I found would have gone over, would there be any more? In fact there were hundreds, or at least well over a hundred along the path and in the adjacent woods.



Broad-leaved Helleborine





There was quite a variation in size and colour even between plants growing side by side. Some of the plants with very pale flowers and seeming to lack the purple colours start to make you think about var. vidiflora which lacks the anthocyanins that produce the purple but I think I will just settle for the standard Broad-leaved.



Broad-leaved Helleborine - very pale flowers


Broad-leaved Helleborine

Broad-leaved Helleborine


Broad-leaved Helleborine


Broad-leaved Helleborine


Broad-leaved Helleborine



Broad-leaved Helleborine


A tip for photographers. Both sites were in heavy shade. I prefer to use natural light so again I was struggling with slow shutter speeds and narrow depth of field. The Green-flowered site would have been better visited in the afternoon when the sun would have been on the helleborines. For the Target Hill site there is no escaping the shadows. I suggest you take along some form of lighting as a back up.


Other than the Autumn Lady's Tresses this is probably my last orchid trip this year. I will be making the effort to pick up the missing ones, as per my list above, but this will be on an "as and when in the right area" basis, rather than setting out to finish the list in the shortest possible time. However, I will also be revisiting some of the sites we have seen this year. There is no doubt that finding a field covered in orchids or just a single plant in an otherwise barren area can really raise the spirits.






Friday, 19 July 2019

Dune Helleborine





On Wednesday I found myself up in Liverpool with Sue, sightseeing and watching the Netball World Championships! I had no choice - you make these rash promises when the consequences of the decision are off the radar. All you want is a quiet life and it's easier to go along with the idea. The consequences, four hours sat amongst a bunch of screaming school girls watching a game you don't really understand, is not the quiet life I was looking for.

The architecture and engineering of the Anglican Cathedral was some consolation but my real reward was squeezing in a day at Southport giving me access to Ainsdale NNR and its Dune Helleborines Epipactis dunensis. It all looked good until I saw the weather forecast showing heavy rain all day.

Only one chance though, so we had to give it a go and 7am Friday morning found us searching the reserve and dodging the frequent heavy showers. The edges of the Pine plantations proved to be the most productive areas and we soon had a good number of sightings.



Dune Helleborine



Dune Helleborine - some flowers not opening much



Dune Helleborine


We eventually found a few in a more sheltered spot including a couple of much larger specimens.



Dune Helleborine



Dune Helleborine



Dune Helleborine


It was nice to get my first sighting of Dune Helleborines but getting the pictures was a lot harder. The lighting was poor, the camera was wet, I couldn't see through my glasses, my shoes and trousers were soaked and I knew that heavier rain was on its way. Can't complain though, the pictures aren't perfect but I got my record shots and a bonus in what I think are Green-flowered Helleborines - Epipactis phyllanthes var pendula.



Green-flowered Helleborine



Green-flowered Helleborine



Green-flowered Helleborine



Not a particularly good picture but hopefully proof of the Green-flowered Helleborines above.


There were also Pyramidal Orchids growing close by but we had seen enough and headed back to the hotel. A quick dry and change of clothes and we were just in time for breakfast, which was all the better for the early morning exercise.

I did try to get into Martin Mere in the afternoon but we didn't get past the Visitors Centre. The rain came on heavy and Sue didn't want to get wet again. Bit of a mistake going there really as she then got loose in the gift shop and it turned out to be an expensive afternoon.