Poppies On The Downs

By David Marsden @anxiousgardener

A smudge of red has been visible from The Old Forge for over a week.

As I worked,

it drew my eye; I decided to go for a closer look.

I associate field or common poppies (Papaver rhoeas – should you care), with field margins but this huge expanse of rape hadn’t been sprayed with herbicide

and I suppose the wet spring has encouraged them to flourish.

Poppies aren’t a UK native

and were probably introduced in the seed-corn of neolithic settlers.

Each plant can have 60 000 seeds

which may lie dormant for up to 80 years.  They germinate after the soil has been disturbed; either by ploughing

or, perhaps, by artillery shells.

Which is why poppies thrived on the battlefields of NE France during the Great War and became a symbol of war’s horror and a remembrance of loss.

But on a beautiful July morning, I wasn’t thinking of war or mud or death.  I was simply thinking how splendid the South Downs are – and very close to my heart.