The flora of Périgord in South-West France is abundant and diverse. In this blog you can find, in pictures, brief encounters with several hundreds of wild flowers and plants as they grow here in French Perigord. Following the seasons other species are added. An index of scientific and English names you find below on the right.

Corine Oosterlee is a botanist and photographer and she offers guided Botanical Walks and other activities around plants and vegetation in nature in Perigord. Do you want to know more? On www.baladebotanique.fr you can find more information. For Corine's photography see www.corineoosterlee.com. Both websites also in English.

Enjoy!




December 23, 2014

Oaks


Every Oak species has its own preferences concerning kind of soil and humidity. In Perigord dry limestone soils and deeper and more humid clay soils are often found side by side, so different kinds of Oaks are often neighbours.

This one is unquestionably a young Pubescent Oak (Quercus pubescens).




The photograph is taken yesterday in the first frost of this winter, on the edge of a wood on limestone soil. It still has living leaves, which is normal for a young tree, especially in a warm and sunny autumn as this year's. Moreover, Pubescent Oaks often keep dead leaves on their branches. The undulated leaves with ear-like lobes at their base are specific for this kind of Oak.

Here below are, among chestnut-leaves, oak-leaves with long lobes and deep incisions. They are fallen from a big Pyrenean Oak (Quercus pyrenaica). It grows ond the same acid soils as the Chestnut and does not like at all calcareous soils.



The Pyrenean Oak is easy to identify because of its leaves. They are deeply indented and often rather big, like the one in the right hand upper corner. Also the leaves are downy, but this you cannot see any longer on the fallen leaves.


The leaves here below have fallen on a deep clayey soil. It looks as if there are more than one species. Pubescent Oak but also leaves that look somehow different. They could be from a Sessile Oak (Quercus petraea).





This Oak you don't find often in Perigord. It has rather long and regularly shaped leaves that are cuneiform at their base, pedunculated. And yes, in the wood there are some big oaks with trunks that continue until high into the slender crown, typical for this species. Not easy to say with oaks, they hybridize easily between each other and there is a lot of variation.



December 22, 2014

Common Maidenhair Spleenwort


A typical Perigordin habitat for this small fern. The Common maidenhair Spleenwort (Asplenium trichomanes subsp. quadrivalens) has chosen as a place to live the ruins of a stone wall of an ancient farmhous, abandoned during rural depopulation in the former century.




It covers part of the wall with its drooping fronds.



Here it grows on an old treetrunk covered in mosses and ivy. The little fronds are glistening from rain.

December 8, 2014

Purple Dragon


Near rivers in Dordogne the soil is often marshy and unfit for agriculture. Farmers planted poplars, to dry out the soil and have some revenue from the fast-growing wood. So, along the Dordogne and the Vézère in some places you find big poplar plantations, the trees planted in neat rows. In this rather monotonous landscape you nevertheless can find a lot of wild plants. If the maintenance is not too scrupulous, even bushes and trees of other species start to grow. Here, the wood floor is carpeted with Purple Dragon (Lamium maculatum), a perennial plant with square stems and very green leaves that can cover very quickly a large surface.








It flowers nearly twelve months a year, at least when winter is mild and summer not too dry. Sometimes the leaves are dappled, the lower lip of the flower always is.