A short walk on The Long Fork


RICHARD LUTZ wanders through lanes of early summer

I must have taken this path a thousand times. It’s always the same. It always differs. It’s called The Long Fork.

It has been a late cool spring and now, during a patch of heat, everything is popping up. In these woods, called the Culzean Woods south of Glasgow, the hedges and pathways are waking up. This lane may look all green but look down and around. It’s full of emerging colour.

Here’s a new arrival. And one with the simplest of names.

It’s somewhat dismissively called a Common Spotted Orchid. You’d think the plant namers could have come up with something a titch more exotic for this fragile violet flower. Maybe they opted for the above mundane name rather than what it’s also known as: Fuch’s orchid.

And here ‘s a little yellow perennial with a great name: Bird’s-foot trefoil. A bit grand for an ever present woodland plant. It’s also called ground honeysuckle too if you don’t want to go all posh.

Beware, though of this little flower, it does come with a kick. It contains traces of cyanide. So munch away with care. One wag said trefoil is so easy to grow and so resilient that it’s perfect for any brown fingered gardener.

Yellow gets a good show. There’s Scottish broom:

And wild radish that grows shoulder high:

Along the lanes are clumps of ragged robin..messy, untidy, blousy:

And a carpet of red campion:


But standing out is this, the flower of the Chilean fire tree:

It usually is pollinated by South American hummingbirds. But that’s unlikely here where it sits near Culzean Castle, an 18thc bastion that overlooks the sea. The tree has a short fiery show where it’s tucked in a grove called Happy Valley. Then it fades and summer begins.

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9 Comments

  1. Pogus Ceasar
    21 June 2022 at 7:02 am

    Summer reveals itself!!

    Reply
  2. Nick Dent
    21 June 2022 at 8:22 am

    we get the same hereabouts in Sussex but a good few weeks earlier it seems ( not surprisingly)

    Reply
  3. Lorna Terry
    21 June 2022 at 9:01 am

    Learnt some new names

    Reply
  4. Sue Rae
    21 June 2022 at 3:39 pm

    This was my favourite name and flower: Maidenhair spleenwort

    Reply
  5. Bob B from Seattle
    21 June 2022 at 6:49 pm

    Evocative

    Reply
  6. Joel Mandelbaum
    21 June 2022 at 11:31 pm

    Really pretty pix
    Good work

    Reply
  7. Jake Reilly
    22 June 2022 at 2:13 pm

    Culzean flowers!!!!

    Reply
  8. Robin Goodfellow
    24 June 2022 at 7:54 am

    surrounded by beauty

    Reply
  9. Di McKenzie
    25 June 2022 at 7:17 am

    Where are the blue flowers? the speedwell, the cranebill?

    Reply

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