The bridleway running steeply uphill to the Ridgeway by way of Ewelease Dairy must surely be the winner in the botany stakes at the moment. Species noted on a walk yesterday were:-
Cow Parsely, Hogweed, Meadow Buttercup, Cleavers, White Dead Nettle, Red Campion, Herb Robert, Lesser Celandine, Dandelion, Groundsel, Ground Ivy, Germander Speedwell, Herb Bennet, Nettle, Great Dock, Lords and Ladies, Burdock, Hart's Tongue Fern, Male Fern, and Soft Shield Fern.
It is rather puzzling that the three species of ferns grow in profusion, but mainly on the bank at the eastern side of the path. This bank shows signs, particularly as it nears the Ridgeway, of having once been a Celtic type stone hedge, and thus its age may be in the thousands of years rather then hundreds. Does it take that long for ferns to establish themselves? This path, incidently, was the Waymouth Road before the Turnpike was constructed along the valley.
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