This is a companion piece to Lying in the Grass. That slideshow was shot in May three years ago, all the photos taken in my own garden within the previous week, and all native wildflowers.

This time, all the shots were captured in one day, July 18th, on a visit to Barley Cove with my friend and fellow nature-lover, artist Damaris Lysaght. The purpose of our visit was to monitor a rare plant, Dodder (below). This is one of the very few places in Ireland in which it grows, parasitising on the roots of the Wild Thyme, and mainly visible as a twisted mass of reddish stems. We were not sure if the tiny flowers, looking like miniature cauliflower heads, were about to flower or had flowered already.

At this time of year the dunes at Barley Cove are a carpet of wildflowers. Many of them are tiny so you have to get up close to make their acquaintance. Photo taken by Damaris.

Damaris had another reason for getting closer. We were lucky to catch a Dark Green Fritillary flitting from spot to spot and Damaris, a butterfly expert, figured it was probably laying eggs on the basal rosettes of the Common Dog Violets that flourish on the dunes. In the last photograph of the slideshow she is trying to see butterfly eggs – a task that defeated even her!

The music I have chosen is Ave Maria Stella from Templum by Micheal O’Suilleabhain.
Here is a list of the flowers in the order in which you are seeing them.
Title Slide: Lady’s Bedstraw, Wild Thyme, Oxeye Daisy
Dodder X2
Wild Thyme, Eyebright
Lady’s Bedstraw, Wild Thyme, Oxeye Daisy, Oxeye Daisy
Rough Hawkbit (I think), Oxeye Daisy X2
Oxeye Daisy, Sea Holly
Wild Thyme, Rough Hawkbit X2
Sand Pansy X4
Common Centaury X4
Fairy Flax
Bee on Wild Thyme
Lady’s Bedstraw, Wild Thyme
Wild Thyme X2
Lady’s Bedstraw X3
Rough Hawkbit, Lady’s Bedstraw, Wild Thyme X4
Damaris searching for Dodder
Wild Thyme and Cat’s-ear X3
Wild Thyme, Eyebright X4
Cinnabar Moth caterpillars on Ragwort (their food plant)
Bulbous Buttercup
Dove’s-foot Crane’s-bill X3
Pyramidal Orchard X5
Six-Spot Burnet Moth(s) on Wood-rush X10
Dark Green Fritillary X3
Damaris looking for butterfly eggs X2
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Perfect combination of visual and aural. Thanks Finola.
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This is wonderful, thank you so much!
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Yes, absolutely great to have the Journal up and running again, and what a treat that was – and an education ! Well done you Finola, and Damaris of course ( an excellent hat !)
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Wonderful video and thanks for the identifications
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What a delight on Sunday morning in Vancouver to enjoy your post and these wonderful photos! Thank you!
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Thank you Finola. At this time of year West Cork excels for its wildflowers. I go between Cork and Offaly, Cork wins for variety I think. Lovely to see you back on the RWJournal!
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Thank you for the beautiful slide show, Finola. What a wonderful pairing of music and nature photos.
Christy and Aodh Óg
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So nice to have you back with Roaring Water Journal, Finola, and such a lovely slide show! Tromping around through the heather and the wild areas near Ballydehob as a kid, I never appreciated the delicate and colorful flora revealed by your macro lens – a tiny but spectacular little world right at our feet! Thank you, and Happy Sunday!
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Truly beautiful.
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It was Damaris who first showed my grand daughter and me large of numbers of Green Fritillaries on East Skeam. The butterflies laid and hatched their eggs on the violets which were everywhere. Unforgettable.
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What a beautiful slide show to enjoy over morning coffee – such a rich and abundant covering of tiny and colourful plants, so easily missed. So pleased to see this. Well done.
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What an amazing, beautiful, colourful carpet of flowers and insect life!
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Stunningly beautiful-thank you.
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