There are a lot of celandines around my way – not every patch looks good every year, but there’s always a gorgeous little patch somewhere: Celandines – Ficaria verna – Alfriston Rd Seaford – March 2020 There are always interesting insects on the alexanders, be they bees, hoverflies, flies or ladybirds: Insects on Alexanders – Smyrnium olusatrum – Landsdown Rd Seaford – Mar 2020 If you look back through my blog, you will see I’ve visited some of these plants repeatedly. I think this is useful for identification, because it means I’m more likely to be able to identify a species when it’s not in flower. White comfrey – Symphytum orientale – Blatchington Hill Seaford – Feb 2020 Revisiting wild plants throughout their life cycleīecause I repeat the same walk at least once a week, I see the different stages of a plants life. Snowdrops – Galanthus nivalis – Managed area at Blatchington pond Seaford – Feb 2020 Primrose – Primula vulgaris – Blatchington Hill Seaford – Feb 2020
It has been very mild though and I don’t think there has been any frost round here for a few weeks. S2CID 5432523.Seaford walks in early Spring Health walks around town spotting wild flowersįebruary was a very wet month and there wasn’t much to see, after all the early bloomers in January, so I’ve lumped it together with March. "Efficacy and safety of comfrey root extract ointment in the treatment of acute upper or lower back pain: results of a double-blind, randomised, placebo controlled, multicentre trial". Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. "Hepatic veno-occlusive disease associated with comfrey ingestion".
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link) University of Wisconsin, Extension, Cooperative-Extension.