For the first time ever, a flower supplants a butterfly or moth as my opening photo for a post, but it is at least named after an insect. I have wanted to see a Fly Orchid for years and now I have and it was, as they say or rather as T S Eliot says in The Coming of the Magi, satisfactory.
The circumstances are sad. Penny and I had a knowledgable friend, Christopher Hoskin, a gentle and modest lover of the natural world who gave a memorable lecture on orchids last year to Woodstock's natural history society. He also gave us one of the Common Spotted orchids which he bred from seed in a laborious and painstaking process at home. Here it is:
He had the eye and patience needed for a naturalist and used both to discover a completely unexpected Lizard orchid, an exceedingly strange-looking, beribboned plant which popped up on a humdrum road verge less than half-a-mile from our house five years ago. We went to check on it it this week and there is now a second one flourishing on the other side of the road. The original is left on the combined photo below. We think there may be more but without Chris and with limited time we were unable to find them.
We had a long chat with him after his talk and invited him to join us this year on a tour of some of the sites he mentioned, for his good company but also selfishly because we knew how much his presence would increase our chance of sightings. It was not to be, because he died of a heart attack far too young at the end of the Autumn. The Guardian published an obituary of him here.
Preciously however, he had given us the information we needed to find most of the plants, particularly the only colony of Giant Orchids in the UK which I described in an earlier post and the likeliest places in the Chilterns to find Fly orchids, which I like especially, because they are so delicate and have a very small dot of blue, unusually compared to the usual pinks and maiden blushes of wild orchids in the UK.
Thanks to this privileged information, we have so far seen the Giants as well as the Monkey, Lady and hybrid orchids at Hartslock nature reserve near Goring and Streatley, a wonderful day out on my birthday in May which I also posted about here. When we were there, chatting to a knowledgable couple - we always hope for company at a site because most visitors are more expert than us - we mentioned the Fly orchids at Homefield Wood, another nature reserve run by the excellent local wildlife trust , and they were just heading off to have a look there.
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| Hartslock haul |
We couldn't join them because of the scale and complication of my birthday arrangements followed by a visit to the US to see our younger son end a memorable year as a Loeb Fellow in the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. But as soon as we were back, we diaried in a visit, hoping that the heatwave in our absence had not caused early flowering.
We like to combine an orchid hunt with a good walk which was easy at Hartslock because you take the Thames path through the Goring Gap, a particularly lovely stretch. Homefield Wood lies conveniently on the Chiltern Way above Medmenham, scene of 18th century Hellfire Club frolics, so we parked a mile or so away - the narrow lane from Rotten Row has lay-bys in the woods which don't cause obstruction - and wandered steeply downhill through the beech woods. En route we first met a family group who knew the reserve and helpfully lowered our expectations by saying that the orchids were not very good this year because of the early heat. Then a kind South African couple gave us specific directions to the swarm, or colony, of Military orchids which are the main reason for Homefield Wood’s fame.



And so we arrived at a classic Chilterns woodland meadow, steeply running uphill and bathed in sunshine after earlier dull weather. We spotted the Pyramidal and Common Spotted orchids above immediately and then the Military clumps were exactly where we had been told to look. This orchid used to be widespread in the Chilterns until afforestation plunged its habitats into shade. It was rediscovered on a family picnic here in 1947 by Ted Lousely, a London banker who was a natural history expert and the first person to clock the arrival of American Rosebay Willowherb on London blitz sites. Imagine England without willowherb! What did the Elephant Hawk moth caterpillars eat?
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| The first Military were found were indeed past their best |
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| But this paler one (because in shaded I think) was still flowering well |
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| This more typically coloured one had a good show of bloom too |
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| And there are the 'buttons' |
I am sure that Lousely’s choice of picnic site was not random. He must have been aware of the chance that wartime tree felling might bring the Military back. Yet Homefield Wood is still one of only two places in the Chilterns were the orchid is known, and there is only one other site in the UK, in Cambridgeshire.
It was now our turn to be helpful to others, a delightful couple from Sherwood in Nottinghamshire whom we directed to the Military which still had flowering pink petals with the double row of crimson ‘buttons’ which account for the name. We told them that our Holy Grail was really the Flies and shortly afterwards, the wife directed us to a solitary Bee orchid, another delicate species which is seldom obvious to see.
We parted company but then, as I was photographing some unrelated budding plant a little disconsolately, there was a distant shout of “We’ve found them!” Our kind new friends had walked a good quarter of a mile uphill to another small meadow with coppiced trees, where I don’t think we would have ventured, and come back specially to tell us and lead us to the spot.
If you visit in the next few days, both types of orchid can be found relatively easily provided you comb the meadows as the excellent wildlife trust has put discreet wire cages round some plants, as above. This is primarily to protect them against rabbits but there is constant concern about other threats. The orchids were kept secret for over 30 years and we are privileged indeed to be allowed to see them and need to treat them with great respect.
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| Pic courtesy of Google AI |
I have gone on long enough and you can read more knowledgeably online about the Fly’s extraordinary success as a decoy for the Digger Wasp which attempts to mate with it and thus achieves the vital pollination. The flower even emits the necessary pheromones as well as using its appearance to attract its flying swain. After all this, I will simply list the latest flying arrivals in the moth trap, all delightful but all expected at this busy time of the year.