wordsfromanneli

Thoughts, ideas, photos, and stories.

Flowers at the Beach

32 Comments

Today we spent a few hours on a nearby island beach that sees little use because it is only accessible by boat.

I was surprised to see the sandy fields blooming with tiny wildflowers.

I don’t know the names of all these flowers but the blue ones (below) look like tiny violas. I’m sure they have a proper name but I don’t know what it is. The little white flowers on the reddish stems might be saxifraga.

 

But this one I know. It is Oregon grape (berberis aquifolium, or holly-leaved barberry). Those yellow flowers turn into blue berries that look like a cluster of tiny grapes. I’ve read that the berries also have many health benefits, but they should be washed before eating. I’ve never enjoyed eating them raw. They are very tarty, but they make an excellent Oregon grape jelly.

Notice the dry moss all around the flowers. Even the moss has tiny blooms. The island has a rather dry climate so it makes its own unique, messy, but very pretty, flower garden.

More flowers will bloom here in the next weeks. I recognized leaves of lupins, and many other new shoots from various plants coming up from last year’s stock that has gone to seed.

Tiny but precious and ever so frail,

Bravely we bloom though the chill may prevail,

Few eyes will see us, and fewer admire,

We’ll  stand courageously ’til we expire.

 

Unknown's avatar

Author: wordsfromanneli

Writing, travel, photography, nature, more writing....

32 thoughts on “Flowers at the Beach

  1. Lynette d'Arty-Cross's avatar

    The little wild flowers are beautiful. It’s amazing what nature does when left to itself. Recent medical studies show that barberry has fantastic health benefits. In some cases it can lower cholesterol and control type 2 diabetes to the point where prescription medications aren’t required.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Ursula's avatar

    Lovely little flowers. Does someone live on this little island? Probably not because there is no water I guess.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. shoreacres's avatar

    Every sort of environment produces its own sort of life. When I first began visiting salt marshes, I was astonished by the ‘weird’ and highly adaped plants there — and eventually learned to ‘look small’ for the flowers.

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  4. V.M.Sang's avatar

    beautiful flowers. I love the poem, too.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Writing to Freedom's avatar

    Cute flowers and very different than what I know. thanks Anneli.

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  6. Jacqui Murray's avatar

    I recently read something else about flowers growing in sand. Amazing!

    Liked by 1 person

  7. belindagroverphotography's avatar

    What a lovely place to wander through with few others around!

    Liked by 1 person

  8. D. Wallace Peach's avatar

    Lovely, Anneli. I also enjoy the flowers I find near the beach. I have to slow down and pay attention because they’re easy to miss. Sounds like you had a beautiful walk. 🙂

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  9. Lori's avatar

    I just took some photos of those same blue ones popping up here. Isn’t nature magical?

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  10. Dawn Minott's avatar

    Flowers will grow wherever —that’s the tenacity of Mother Nature!!! Great share.

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  11. Adele Brand's avatar

    Interesting. Coastal flowers are special. We have wildflowers on sandy beaches too, but even more prized here is ‘vegetated shingle’, a very rare habitat internationally – the UK has a substantial part of the world’s total. On some beaches made of shingle, a select variety of species grow in an impossibly harsh environment. Shingle is obviously pretty easy to disturb so this is a very fragile ecosystem and has to be protected from trampling.

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  12. Jennie's avatar

    I haven’t seen wildflowers on sandy beaches. So pretty!

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