Valentines’ day is around the corner and love is in the air. One of the most popular gifts at this time of the year is a beautiful floral bouquet that has been created by a professional like this florist Gloucestershire based business https://flowershedtewkesbury.co.uk/wedding-flowers-tewkesbury-gloucestershire, however, the natural world is starting to put on its own display of flowers and plants too.
In February, the earth starts to wake up from its long winter sleep and now is a great time of the year to enjoy a walk in the countryside and look out for all of those early signs of life from the plants in the natural world.
Here are some of the things to look out for…
Wild Garlic
– You will probably smell this before you see it, but this is the month that the favourite of the forager, wild garlic begins to arrive! If you are going to pick some to eat, make sure that you are aware of how to identify it so that you don’t get it mixed up with anything that is poisonous.
Snowdrops
– One of the most popular symbols of the arrival of spring, these often appear around a month before other spring flowers arrive, and their hardy little white heads can be seen arriving as early as just after Christmas in some parts of the UK! There are many places in the UK where you can go to enjoy the spectacle of a snowdrop walk, where the snowdrops carpet the ground at this time of the year.
Wood Anemones
– These sweet little flowers are a very special sight – they often mean that you are in ancient woodland when you come across them. Small and white, wood anemones have long been associated with the faery folk, and it is said that faery use them to hide in when it rains – this is because the flowers will close when it starts raining, so look out for them on a dry day if you want to see them open.
Primroses
– One of the signs that spring is on the way is the sight of these sunshine yellow flowers that can be found in woodlands and along grass verges all over the UK countryside. Primroses are a favourite flower of nature lovers, adding that first splash of colour to a woodland that is slowly coming out of a winter of sleep.