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The many hay meadows are filled with buttercup and wood cranesbill.
Adult beetle feeds on flowers of wood cranesbill.
Not to be confused with Wood Cranesbill or Woodland Geranium, G. sylvaticum.
Geranium sylvaticum (wood cranesbill) All the above species are perennials and generally winter-hardy plants, grown for their attractive flowers and foliage.
Common herbs include common sorrel, Rumex acetosa, wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, and great burnet, Sanguisorba officinalis.
Geranium sylvaticum (wood cranesbill, woodland geranium) is a species of hardy flowering herbaceous perennial plant in the genus Geranium, Geraniaceae family.
Much later, toward mid-June, appear the celebrated "Midsummer flowers," or wood cranesbill, whose blue-violet petals are delicately veined with scarlet and seem to reflect the blue of the sky.
The ground cover includes great bell-flower, Campanula latifolia, globeflower, Trollius europaeus, wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, and marsh hawk's-beard, Crepis paludosa.
Hay meadows in the valley above High Force, some now carefully cultivated to ensure this, contain an extremely rich variety of flowering plants including globe flower, wood cranesbill and Early Purple Orchid.
A wide variety of flowering plants is found, many in abundance, such as wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, meadow saxifrage, Saxifraga granulata, melancholy thistle, Cirsium helenioides, and great burnet, Sanguisorba officinalis.
It is known as Spotted Cranesbill or Wild Cranesbill in Europe, but the Wood Cranesbill is another plant, the related G. sylvatium (a European native called "Woodland Geranium" in North America).
A wide variety of flowering plants is found, with some, such as wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, great burnet, Sanguisorba officinalis, and cat's ear, Hypochaeris radicata, present in such abundance as to be locally dominant in different fields.
Not to be confused with Wood Cranesbill or Woodland Geranium, G. sylvaticum.
Geranium sylvaticum (wood cranesbill, woodland geranium) is a species of hardy flowering herbaceous perennial plant in the genus Geranium, Geraniaceae family.
It is known as Spotted Cranesbill or Wild Cranesbill in Europe, but the Wood Cranesbill is another plant, the related G. sylvatium (a European native called "Woodland Geranium" in North America).
Geranium sylvaticum (wood cranesbill) All the above species are perennials and generally winter-hardy plants, grown for their attractive flowers and foliage.
Wood Crane's-bill (Geranium sylvaticum)
Common herbs include common sorrel, Rumex acetosa, wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, and great burnet, Sanguisorba officinalis.
The pale blooms of Geranium sylvaticum Album dominate the foreground in this shady nook; background plants include penstemon, iris, and Rodgersia tabularis.
Geranium sylvaticum (wood cranesbill, woodland geranium) is a species of hardy flowering herbaceous perennial plant in the genus Geranium, Geraniaceae family.
And what I thought was the prettiest sight in Hannah's meadows was the Geranium sylvaticum, or hay sward, which is a beautiful blue with a tinge of violet.
The ground cover includes great bell-flower, Campanula latifolia, globeflower, Trollius europaeus, wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, and marsh hawk's-beard, Crepis paludosa.
The adults feed on nectar and pollen (mainly on Valeriana officinalis, Geranium sylvaticum, Centaurea jacea, Cirsium palustre, Epilobium angustifolium, etc), with preference for blue flowers.
British NVC community MG3 (Anthoxanthum odoratum - Geranium sylvaticum grassland) is one of the mesotrophic grassland communities in the British National Vegetation Classification system.
A wide variety of flowering plants is found, many in abundance, such as wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, meadow saxifrage, Saxifraga granulata, melancholy thistle, Cirsium helenioides, and great burnet, Sanguisorba officinalis.
A wide variety of flowering plants is found, with some, such as wood cranesbill, Geranium sylvaticum, great burnet, Sanguisorba officinalis, and cat's ear, Hypochaeris radicata, present in such abundance as to be locally dominant in different fields.
Species that are present in abundance include great burnet, Sanguisorba officinalis, wood crane's-bill, Geranium sylvaticum, and meadowsweet, Filipendula ulmaria, while common spotted orchid, Dactylorhiza fuchsii, and early purple orchid, Orchis mascula, are among the species found on the steeper, uncut banks within the meadows.