May Flowers in the Country

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Last time, I took you on a tour of my garden in May. I thought you might like to see the wild flowers in the surrounding countryside as well. Here are the photos I took last Friday when we cycled along the Loire from opposite Saint Claude sur Diray to Saint-Dyé-sur-Loire, then through the forest to Château de Chambord, a 30 km round trip.

eglantineThe first flowers I noticed were all the dog roses (églantine in French) which are a delicate pink.

sureau

These are elder trees (sureau). The berries are used to make elderberry wine.

faux_acacia

These very tall trees (Jean Michel is on the bike path in front of me) are the Robinia pseudoacacia or false acacias that I mistook for wattle in my last post. It’s a bit confusing as the French actually call them acacias.

water_irisesThese yellow water irises are a little past their prime but I still love seeing them.

buttercupsButtercups are everywhere at the moment. These are on the banks of the Loire at Saint Dyé. When I first came to France, I fell in love with the buttercups and used to take my moped out into the countryside and lie down in the fields feeling very romantic.

geraniums

You see both these flowers on stone walls everywhere. I understand that the lavendar one on the top right is a geranium (what we usually call geraniums are actually pelargoniums). I have no idea what the ones on the left are though.

blue_astersThese pretty little asters are also very common. You can see another geranium at the bottom of the photo.

cornflowersThese cornflowers are next to a field of barley on the path from Saint Dyé to Chambord.

chambord

No flowers in this one but I couldn’t resist posting a photo of one of my favourite châteaux!

 

 

 

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8 thoughts on “May Flowers in the Country”

  1. The mystery geranium is called Herb Robert Geranium robertianum. The other plant in that photo is Ivy-leaved Toadflax Cymbalaria muralis. The ‘aster’ is Hedgerow Cranesbill Geranium pyrenaicum or some similar species.

    1. Thank you Susan! I checked out Ivy-leaved Toadflax and see that it also comes by the name of Kenilworth Ivy. I grew up in Kenilworth Avenue so I am going to adopt that name. I bought two geraniums at the market on Saturday – Rozanne and Striatum. I’m amazed that the Hedgerow Cranesbill is also a geranium. I think I might start a geranium collection. The flowers are so varied.

    1. Magical names, aren’t they? I feel like I’m in a Victorian novel (except for the bike).

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