Buxton Heath in early summer - ready to bloom

Buxton Heath is a heatherland - an open habitat of low shrubs dominated by heathers and gorse with scattered trees. In the summer heathlands are a picture of purple, pink and yellow flowers.

Now is early summer. Heathers start to grow and insects start to become active.

The Heathers

Heathers are actually small woody shrubs.  They are the most frequent plants on heaths, covering usually about 30-50cm deep.  Three common heathers can be found in Buxton Heath:

img_4436.JPG ling heather (has a flowering spike of pale pink flowers)

img_4454.JPG bell heather (flowers are deep purple, bell shaped and hang downwards)

img_4510.JPG cross-leaved heather  (leaves are in fours up the stem - if you look down on the stems the leaves look like a cross)

Orchids

img_4135.JPG img_4217.JPG img_4213.JPG Although orchids are commonly used for decorating the home and offices, various species are easily found in heatherlands. Buxton Heath is no exception. 

Sundew

img_4095.JPG Sundew look attractive - bright red, but they eat insects! You cannot blame them - they live in wet bogs which have very little nutrients. Their weapons are their sticky tentacles. When an insect is stuck in their tentacles, they exude digestive enzymes and dissolve the insect.

Ragged Robin

img_4604.JPG Ragged robin has five petals deeply divided into four lobes giving the flower an untidy, ragged appearance.

Cottongrass

img_4094.JPG img_4150.JPG The seed heads of cottongrass are covered in a fluffy mass of cotton which are carried on the wind to aid dispersal.

Yellow rattle

img_4167.JPG The yellow flowers of yellow rattle occur in spikes. After they die, brown seed pods remain. When these pods are shaken, the ripe seeds inside rattle, hence the common name.

Silver-studded blue butterfly

img_4237.JPG img_4254.JPG Silver-stubbed blue butterfly is so named due to the silvery blue metallic spots on the underside hind wings.

Dameselfly

img_4585.JPG img_4583.JPG  Damselflies are resting on the new pond made by us. We have especially added some sticks in the pond to give them more resting place. (Damselflies are similar to dragonflies, but all four wings of damselflies are near enough equal in size and shape whereas the hind wings of draonflies are usually shorter and broader than fore wings. Also, when at rest, most species of damselflies hold their wings along the length of their abdomen whereas dragonflies hold their wings out from the body, often at right angles to it.)

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