Natural England
 

Pick List

Here are the items you have selected. You can browse this list or print it. Return to Search to add to the list. Use 'remove' to delete items.

Badger - Meles meles
Bell heather - Erica cinerea
Butterfly bush - Buddleia davidii
Cardoon - Cynara cardunculus
Columbine - Aquilegia vulgaris
Common mallow - Malva sylvestris
Common sea-lavender - Limonium vulgare
Cowslip - Primula veris
Cross-leaved heath - Erica tetralix
Dead-nettle - Lamium orvala
False dittany - Ballota acetabulosa
Harebell - Campanula rotundifolia
Hazel - Corylus avellana
Lesser celandine - Ranunculus ficaria
Monk's-hood - Aconitum napellus
Nectaroscordium siculum - Honey garlic
Onion - Allium christophii
Ragged-robin - Lychnis flos-cuculi
Red-tailed bumble bee - Bombus lapidarius
Sainfoin - Onobrychis viciifolia
Scorpion weed - Phacelia tanacetifolia
Sweet scabious - Scabiosa atropurpurea
Tree-mallow - Lavatera arborea
Virginia creeper - Parthenocissus quinquefolia
Wood mouse - Apodemus sylvaticus
Yellow-necked mouse - Apodemus flavicollis

Columbine - Aquilegia vulgaris

Columbine - Aquilegia vulgarisColumbine - Aquilegia vulgaris
© Dr Chris Gibson/English Nature
UK distribution - East Anglia, Midlands, North, South East, South West

Though columbine is a true wild flower, it is much more commonly seen in gardens than in its natural habitat of wet woodlands, fens and grassland. Unfortunately, many garden varieties of columbine lack nectar, which is a shame for a flower so intricately designed to suit bumble bees! Columbine or aquilegia is a tall perennial, the greyish green, divided leaves forming a clump at the base of the plant. The spurred flowers, which are deep blue in 'wild-type' columbines, appear in loose clusters on tall leafless stems from May onwards. Columbines will grow in sun or semi-shade. They prefer a moist but well-drained soil, but are able to grow in unpromising and very dry conditions. They will self-seed very freely, forming natural looking drifts in flower borders, woodland or orchards.

In heraldry, the columbine flower was used as one of the badges of the House of Lancaster.

Animals

Buff-tailed bumble bee, Common carder bumble bee, Honey bee, Red-tailed bumble bee, White-tailed bumble bee

FoliageGreen
FlowerBlue, May to July
MoistureAverage (Average)
SunlightFull sun to Part-shadeFull sun to Part-shade (Full sun to Part-shade)
OriginNative