Woman on the verge

cowparsley2

I have a new hobby – driving along country lanes having mood swings. I can go from elation to despondency in a few hundred metres, depending on what is growing or not growing at the side of the road. Round here we’ve gone from bluebells studded with white starry stitchwort to big lolloping globs of cow parsley, purple vetch, red campion and herb robert (Look who’s eaten the Collins Nature Guide to Wild Flowers of Britain & Europe).

bluebellsbracken

It is no exaggeration to say that my little heart sings when I see these teeming billowy borders and they make the seemingly endless driving and diesel consumption of my new country lifestyle all the easier to swallow.

vetch

honesty

cowparsley1

But all too often this loveliness is cut to the ground, mown down by the councils. I get it when it’s a safety issue, like a junction. Or if pedestrians need access. But most of the scalped verges round here aren’t areas people walk on or need to see over. All those lovely flowers, vital to pollinating insects (and we all know they’re a precious thing) are toppled before they can set seed for next year.

If they would just wait till mid-July, an even more lovely diversity of flowers would come up next year, and the insects would get another month and a half of nectar and pollen. Last week I drove past a particularly pretty mass of wild flowers on the way to the shops. On the way back, nothing remained of them but the smell of grass cuttings (see picture below). Why oh why etc ad infinitum. Ranting ensued. Small children in the back quaked.

mown

SEED:Ball and River of Flowers are doing a #nomow campaign on Twitter, encouraging people to send in before and after shots of brutally scalped verges. Taking photos from a moving car, of course, isn’t easy but you could always pull over on the, er, verge. On second thoughts maybe find a nice layby.

 

 

4 thoughts on “Woman on the verge”

  1. Hi Alex! Hope you’re well. I was driving to Wetherby this weekend and was amazed by the verges round there too. They’re really got the idea that it’s not good to cut them back! Don’t they just look awesome when they’re left. Really nice to see a post about this! Glad you’re enjoying them as much as I am 🙂

  2. It’s not just councils to blame – round our way we have some fantastic flowery road verges, then whoever lives behind the hedge next to the verge suddenly feels the need to mow it… just in case their neighbours think they’re being slack and not keeping things ‘neat and tidy’. What can you do?

  3. This year has been a wonderful one for verges. I’ve spent time in Dorset driving down country lanes overwhelmed by the colour and beauty of them. Even Sussex, which is generally more manicured, is doing well. Such a pleasure. It breaks my heart that things I took for granted as a child hedgerows, meadows and blossoming verges, are now disappearing. A ‘meadow’ is now a tourist/ wildlife attraction not just what used to be synonymous, to me, with fields,

    1. I know! I really hope councils will start adapting their mowing regimes when they realise the strength of public opinion and the sense of it for bees. I know what you mean about meadows – they’re the swimming pool of the early 21st century – house for sale, has own wildflower meadow. In the south-west of France they still have acres of cornfield annuals cos they farm less intensively – it’s like Britain in the 50s – lovely.
      x

Comments are closed.