Tuesday, 6 January 2026

New Year Plant Hunts - Cornwall, January 2026

 Each year, across a set of days around New Year, botanists of all ages and abilities set out to record which wild plants they can find in bloom. You can read all about them here - https://bsbi.org/take-part/activities/new-year-plant-hunt You can record flowers found in a group or solo anywhere in the UK and Ireland.

Cornwall had several plant hunts and this is a summary of those I attended. 

 

1st January 2026 - Mevagissey

This was organised by the Three Bays Wildlife Group and starts off in a town car park, circles the town, down to the harbour and then up towards Portmellon and some arable fields. As a group we found 83 species of plants in flower in the wild. Here a few of them.

 

Hybrid Pansy - Viola x contempta


Field Pansy - Viola arvensis

Intermediate Periwinkle - Vinca difformis

 

Hedge Hebe (widelt naturalised) - Veronica x franciscana 

Hedge Woundwort - Stachys sylvatica
Red Campion- Silene dioica
Field Madder - Sherardia arvensis

Pink-headed Persicaria - Persicaria capitata


Pellitory of the Wall - Parietaria judaica
Wood Forget-me-not - Myosotis sylvatica

Lovely views on the walk.


Musk Mallow - Malva moschata



Atlantic Ivy - Hedera hibernica


Wild Fennel - Foeniculum vulgare




Ivy-leaved Toadflax - Cymbalaria muralis
Danish Scurvygrass - Cochlearia danica
Red Valerian - Centranthus ruber


Thrift - Armeria maritima



2nd January 2026 - Rock and Porthilly
 
There was a group meeting at Hayle which recorded a massive 86 species in flower, however, I couldn't attend. As such, I did a short solo walk in the afternoon at Rock, where I found 39 species in flower.
 

Guernsey Fleabane - Erigeron sumatrensis

Herb Robert - Geranium robertianum


A strange find of an Algerian Iris on a road verge (new to VC2, East Cornwall) - Iris unguicularis





Sweet Alison (alyssum) - Lobularia maritimum

Winter Heliotrope - Petasites pyrenaicus


Sea Mayweed - Tripleurospermum maritimum


Sweet Violet - Viola odorata var. praecox


3rd January 2026 - Seaton to Downderry

A group hunt this time where we found 54 species in flower.

 

Ivy-leaved Speedwell - Veronica hederifolia subsp lucorum  

Sea Campion - Silene uniflora
Rosemary, naturalised on a cliff - Rosmarinus officinalis
An Osteospermum - Osteospermum "Tresco Purple" on a wall.
A garden escaped Bloody Cranesbill on a cliff - Geranium sanguineum
One of many atypical White Ramping Fumitories - Fumaria capreolata subsp babingtonii
Wild Strawberry - Fragaria vesca
A garden escaped Wallflower - Erysimum cheiri
Sea Carrot - Daucus carota subsp gummifer
An invasive Hottentot Fig on a cliff - Carpobrotus edulis
A self seeded Pot Marigold on a kerb - Calendula officinalis
An out of season alien grass, frequent on pavements here, Greater Quaking Grass - Briza maxima
The invasive Three Cornered Leek - Allium triquetrum


4th January 2026 - Padstow and Egloshayle

There was another group hunt at Par Sands where they found 62 species in flower, but again I couldn't make it, so I had an hour or so in Padstow where I found 18 species and another hour locally where I found  34 species flowering. Unfortunately, I only had my phone, so the photos aren't that good. Here's a small selection.

Greater Periwinkle (naturalised) - Vinca major

A surprise Rough Chervil - Chaerophyllum temulum
A scruffy Lesser Celandine - Ficaria verna
Creeping Comfrey (naturalised) - Symphytum grandiflorum
A Black Medick on a road verge - Medicago lupulina
Bulbous Buttercup - Ranunculus bulbosus
Common Knapweed - Centaurea nigra
Yarrow - Achillea millefolium

That rounds up the New Year Plant Hunts I attended in Cornwall. It goes to show that even in winter and in this case, in bitterly cold weather, there are still plenty of flowers to see. There's lots more if you included garden plants in gardens of course! I hope you all have a great new year.

Regards Dave 

 

 

 

 


 

 

Wednesday, 31 December 2025

New Species (for me) of Vascular Plants Found in Southern England in 2025

 I hope you liked the last blog instalment of new species of plants I found in Cornwall over the last year. Here's a selection of new species for me that I found (often with help) mostly in Devon, but with a smattering of species in Kent and one from VC9, Dorset.

 

On a trip to Kent last June, I stopped off at several locations to record plants; including Somerset, Dorset, South Wiltshire and Hampshire. This is made so much easier now there is a BSBI Recording app that the relevant VCR can access and check from a holding area on the app. Previously, I would have had to email a spreadsheet to each VCR separately, so that's a step forward for recorders. You can access it here - https://recording.bsbi.app/app/home

The only new species for me that I found was Hairy Sedge in Dorset. I've probably seen it before but hadn't previously recognised it. For several years I ignored sedges as I found them too difficult. but now I am slowly getting to grips with the genus and building up some useful knowledge about them for the future.

Carex hirta


 There are three more sedges new to me to feature. The next was Pill Sedge at Dunsdon NNR in North Devon, just across the border from Cornwall. Again, I had probably seen this before but not put a name to it. It has a distinctive look about it, so is easy to remember.

Carex piluifera


 

My last sedge was from a marsh in North Kent, Cyperus Sedge. Not helpful was that it was growing in shade so it was taller and thinner in stature than usual. I asked the Kent VCR for a determination of this one as it was not one I even remotely recognised.

Carex pseudocyperus


 

My final new sedge of the year was from Braunton Burrows in North Devon and was the delightful Small-fruited Yellow Sedge, a local speciality there. Its fruits were superficially similar to Common Yellow Sedge (Carex demissa) but the leaves were different and the tiny pineapple fruits were all unstalked, forming a cluster in the centre of the plant. The tiny pink flowers are Bog Pimpernel (Lysimachia tenella) and the red stemmed plants are Creeping Willow (Salix repens).

Carex viridula


 I was kindly shown around Braunton Burrows by Bob Kirby, the VCR for North Devon. I found a host of new species there thanks to his help. The next plant was one that is tricky to identify, Sticky Storksbill. I had looked for this many times but never found a convincing specimen until now. I did cover what you need to look for in the original blog it was featured in, see 

https://sylvatica2022.blogspot.com/2025/06/ 

which shows you how to identify it.

Erodium lebelii

 

Sand Toadflax was the next amazing plant found there. It was likely introduced by military vehicles many years ago, but it certainly thrives on the sandy soils and dunes. Nearby were hundreds of beautiful Dune Pansies, but I had seen those before in Anglesey, so they are not featured here.

Linaria arenaria


 

On the strand line we found Sea Stock, a plant I'd often wondered about but had never found. It is still extant here in North Devon and across the Bristol Channel on the south coast of Wales. There are old records from Cornwall (north and south coasts), two of which date back to the 1930s and one from 1930-1969, so it could turn up on a Cornish beach in the future.

Matthiola sinuata


 

My last new species from Braunton Burrows was the weird looking Round-headed Club-rush, which was quite abundant in parts of the dunes.

Scirpoides holoschoenus 


 

On a trip to Kent, as previously mentioned, I visited the wonderful Plantlife's Ranscombe Farm reserve near Strood and Rochester. I had walked its paths many times when I lived nearby as it is home to many amazing and rare arable plants, such as Venus Looking glass, Blue Pimpernels, Ground-pine, native Meadow Clary and a host of wild orchids too. I took a different route around parts of the reserve not often visited to see if I could find some new plants and I was rewarded with a fine display of Rough Poppies in an arable field edge. These are a lot taller than I thought they'd be and the petals were like scrunched up normal Poppies. I've included a seedpod too in case you spot one on a chalky farm near you.

Roemeria sicula 


 

Whilst I very much enjoyed a few days in Kent, it meant I missed a Devon Botany Group trip to Berry Head to see some amazing plants. As such, I went there solo two weeks later hoping to find some of the rare plants there. Unfortunately, those two weeks were hot, dry and sunny and most plants had burnt off and shrivelled up, so I failed to find Slender Hare's-ear, but here's what I did find that was new to me.

The easiest plant to find was White Rock-rose, a cousin of the familiar Common Rockrose so often adorning the chalk slopes back in Kent. As the name suggests, the petals were white and the flowers were quite a bit larger than those of Common Rockrose too. They covered many areas where the soil was thin over limestone outcrops on the clifftops. Most were in seed, but a few still managed to flower despite the drought. The clump of white flowers left of it was White Stonecrop, a non native that escaped gardens in much of the UK but is widely naturalised (especially in Cornwall). Interestingly, those at Berry Head are considered probably native, which might explain why there was so many of them growing here. Of note, was that English Stonecrop (Sedum anglicum) was noticeably absent, perhaps that species needs a less alkaline base rock to grow.

Helianthemum appeninum


 

Another rare plant that was easy to find was Small Restharrow. The flowers look the same as those of Common Restharrow, but are considerably smaller. Both may grow together (and did), but that made it easier to see which was which. 

Common Restharrow: is a perennial, so is larger and bushier; it's flowers are much larger than Small Restharrow;  its leaves are widest at the middle of the leaf; pods contain 1 or 2 seeds; common, grows in almost all soil types except very acidic ones.

Small Restharrow is an annual; is thus small, diminuitive, usually 1-2" tall and not sprawling or procumbent; Flowers are quite small; its leaves are widest at the tip (below the teeth though); pods contain typically 10 or more seeds; rare and only grows on limestone. 

The trifoliate leaves just above my hand lens belong to Common Birdsfoot Trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) and the hairy edged leaf is Mouse-ear Hawkweed (Pilosella officinarum). 

Ononis reclinata


 

Honewort is a small umbellifer with white flowers, only found on dry limestone rocks at Berry Head and in North Somersert in similar conditions. Unfortunately, I was too late to find any in flower after the drought and could only find one plant in seed, looking in rather a sorry state. However, you can see it's an umbellifer from the flower stalk arrangement.

Trinia glauca


 

My final plant was from a walk along cliffs near Plymouth on a day out from Cornwall where I found Dwarf Elder, a low growing shrub with elder like flowers.

Sambucus ebulus


That rounds off 2025, it was an interesting year for sure. I wonder what botanical surprises 2026 will bring? My next blog will be about the BSBI New Year Plant Hunts in Cornwall. Have a great Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Dave 

 

 

 

 

Some Botanical Highlights from Cornwall Botany in 2025

 I thought a review of the year might be intersting to read, though I've kept it brief, with just one or two species per month. Some are...