With so many species in stark decline in the
countryside, the urban environment is increasingly becoming a refuge for certain
species. Most plant species that inhabit the urban landscape are generalists, easy propagators, speedy developers or heat and drought tolerant. For some plants
the urban landscape has become a growing place because of a specific growing
environment combined with a favourable management regime.
The Broad-leaved Helloborine (Epipactis helleborine) is a woodland
orchid found all over Europe and Asia. I saw large clumps (left) growing in the
garden of a home for the elderly beneath some hollies. The Perennial Pea (Lathyrus
sp.) used to grow in grassland and in cornfields. These plants (middle)
with their odourless bright pink flowers were growing in the grass verge along
a gyratory road. The Common Centaury (Centaurium erythraea) is a biannual
or short-lived plant that grows on moist sandy soils on the edges of woodland
or along hedges. I encountered this rare plant growing next to a path in a
1920s park with large trees and shrubs.
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