11 March 2015
This trip was not
so much a "walk" as a visit to several disparate sites in London
using the excellent train service (under- and over-ground) as well as
stretching our legs at the end of winter.
The intention was to celebrate the rebirth of spring and see some of the
bulb offerings other than those at Kew
(visited in 2014). The crocuses were out
at home (Chilterns) and some daffodils just beginning to open, so we felt the
timing might be right, but it was soon evident that we were none too early,
London having its own micro-climate about 5ºC above anywhere else and spring was
already well advanced.
We arrived at Marylebone, so our first
port of call was Regents
Park by a short walk
towards Baker Street
station and then directly north (past the Sherlock Holmes museum, which stood
out because of the huge amount of greenery hanging from its crowded
window-boxes). Coming in at the south
end of the park we immediately encountered the long lake, a Mecca for water-birds of all kinds. The park is famous for its large heronry,
whose nests were evident in the tall willows, so along with the usual Canada
geese, coots, feral pigeons, and black-headed gulls at the lake edge attracted
by bread scraps which people were regularly bringing them, stood several tall
grey herons equally inured to human contact, although why they should be when
they had no interest in anything other than fish and frogs was a mystery.
We crossed the
lake and headed for Queen Mary's Gardens, a circular area at the south end of
the park. We passed a small area that
had been saved from the scalping that most green spaces regularly endure, where
there was a fine display of Spring Crocus Crocus
vernus and some clumps of daffodils, both the "wild" species Narcissus pseudonarcissus and 'Jetfire',
a smaller species with narrow orange trumpet and swept-back yellow
"petals" (Cyclamineus group). Honey bees were
active among these flowers.
'Jetfire'
All the common
plants with long seasons such as daisies, red dead-nettle, groundsel and hairy
bittercress were all in flower, as they probably had been all through what had
been quite a mild winter. Cherry-plum Prunus cerasifera in various cultivated
forms was in full bloom and so were Winter Aconites Eranthis hyemalis, and, among the aerial roots of Swamp Cypress Taxodium distichum by the garden lake a
colony of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob Trachystemon
orientalis.
Cherry-plum
|
Abraham, Isaac &
Jacob
|
Winter aconite
|
We circled round
the gardens, finding disappointingly few bulb plants, but just past a large
London plane Platanus x hispanica
(that icon of London parks) we encountered a few naturalised Lesser
Glory-of-the-snow Scilla (formerly Chionodoxa) sardensis that we had heard were here.
Lesser Glory-of-the-snow
Having completed
our tour of this garden we returned to Baker Street station, to take the
underground to Oxford Circus and change to the Victoria Line, where we went
almost to the end to Tottenham Hale. It
was still a good walk, at least a mile, from here to our next destination close
to Tottenham Cemetery , not far from White Hart Lane
stadium. Church Lane leads up to the gates of the
Cemetery and on the right-hand side is a wide verge neighbouring Bruce Castle
Park . We had hardly seen a plant since we left the
station, but here we saw one of the great flower sights of London, a vast
colony of crocuses, predominantly the common Spring Crocus Crocus vernus, in its various purple, white and purple-striped
white forms.
North end of Church Lane ; the
cemetery gates are on the far right
Spring Crocus
This site had been
described by Brian Wurzell (Tottenham resident) in The Botanical Society of
Britain and Ireland 's
newsletter of April 1992. Apparently
no-one knows who originally planted the bulbs here or how long ago, but a
confusing range of varieties is covered, seeding themselves and probably
hybridising! Most striking were
scattered golden yellow ones which we thought to be Ankara Crocus Crocus ancyrensis, although they might
possibly have been C. chrysanthus in
a variety lacking the usual external purple stripes. Without removing the bulbs from the ground we
could not check the form of the covering of the corm, an essential component of
Stace's key.
Other scattered
forms had yellow throats darker than rest of the petals and were marked by dark
purple stripes on the outside, which could have been Silvery Crocus C. biflorus (those with white to pale
purple petals), Golden Crocus C.
chrysanthus (those with yellow petals - confusingly, Stace has "creamy-white
to yellow" in his key but "deep yellow" in his species account),
or hybrids of these two (C. x hybridus)
that form the basis of many cultivars that combine the purple and yellow
colours. Hybridisation could also be
occurring in situ, with honey bees
and Meadow Bumble-bees both active.
Silvery crocus
Golden crocus
Possible C. x hybridus (note purple colouring
just visible on outside of petals at tips)
What appeared to
be Wych Elms Ulmus glabra had been
planted along the verge and were in full flower too.
Presumed wych elm
While here we took
a peek into Tottenham
Cemetery itself. This was established in 1858 after a prior
cemetery had become full. This new one
was very crowded with graves itself, but we were impressed by a fine old Cherry
(presumed Prunus avium) which must
have been planted at about the time the cemetery was created.
Trunk of old cherry
We returned to
Tottenham Hale and took the underground one stop further to Blackhorse Road to change to the
overground as far as Woodgrange
Park . Trains are very frequent (every ten minutes),
so that this journey is very quick. From
this station it was only a short walk to the southern entrance into the City of
London Cemetery, our final destination, where there was again a variety of
spring bulb plants contributing to our theme of death and rebirth.
Many of these
again were spring crocus, with numbers of Siberian Squill Scilla sibirica, heads bowed modestly downward, clumps of the
double daffodil 'Golden Ducat' and very dark purple flowers of a Sweet Violet Viola odorata that probably represented
a garden variety.
Siberian squill
'Golden Ducat' daffodils
Sweet violet
The now common Bilbao 's fleabane Conyza floribunda was in flower
unseasonably and Lumpy Brackets Trametes
gibbosa were prominent on a tree-stump.
Lumpy brackets in prime
lumpiness
Our prime target
were more Glory-of-the-snow, this time recorded as Chionodoxa [now Scilla] forbesii (luciliae). There was a large dense patch on the eastern
side of Limes Avenue
on the eastern side of the cemetery in the southern half. The white ring on the petals that
differentiates these two species from S.
sardensis was mostly not evident, with only vaguely pale bases to the
petals, and hardly ever the one-third distance stipulated in Stace. These therefore seemed to be closer to sardensis. Possibly a hybrid was again
involved (which may have been introduced as such, as a garden cultivar). Most specimens had over two flowers per stem,
as both forbesii and sardensis.
Confusing Scilla - forbesii or sardensis?
As we left we were
pleased to see a fox (without brush!) cross the path in front of us and stop to
observe us passing. Presumably these
urban foxes are well accustomed to human presence. We had seen diggings under various old graves
where they made their homes.
A word of warning to would-be visitors: we arrived back at the South Gate to leave just
before 4pm, only to find it locked, so that we forced to make a long diversion
to the Eastern Gate and back to the station from there. There are no notices saying when the gates
are locked.
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