Tag: TQ43
Items relating to the hectad TQ43, including: East Grinstead (east); Forest Row; Ashurstwood; Coleman’s Hatch; Hartfield; Withyham; Wych Cross, Ashdown Forest.
Tetrad species lists
TQ43E | TQ43J | TQ43P | TQ43U | TQ43Z |
TQ43D | TQ43I | TQ43N | TQ43T | TQ43Y |
TQ43C | TQ43H | TQ43M | TQ43S | TQ43X |
TQ43B | TQ43G | TQ43L | TQ43R | TQ43W |
TQ43A | TQ43F | TQ43K | TQ43Q | TQ43V |
Ashdown Forest
Meeting date: 11 September 2021 (Leader: Brad Scott) As a party of twelve gathered at Bushy Willows car park I wondered how many of the group realised that my suggestion […]
Local delights
Source: Scott, Brad. “Local delights.” Sussex Botanical Recording Society Newsletter, no. 91 (November 2020). https://www.sussexflora.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Newsletter_nov_20.pdf. The recent months have been scattered with early morning walks with a friend who has […]
Plaw Hatch Farm, Forest Row
Meeting date: 7 July 2019 (Leader: Brad Scott) One of two biodynamic community farms in the parish of Forest Row, Plaw Hatch is a mixed farm on the Ashdown Sandstone […]
After the Flora
I have already lost count of the number of times people have said to me how much they love the Flora, and then follow it with “but the map shows […]
Bryophyte bonanza
I will resist the quite laudable urge to post loads of pictures of mosses and liverworts to the SBRS blog, but there were some requests to see the slides I […]
The New Year Plant Hunt in Sussex
The sixth New Year Plant Hunt organised by the BSBI took place between 1-4 January, and many Sussex botanists were out in force. The objective is to record native and […]
Cherry Garden Farm, Ashurstwood
Meeting date: 18 May 2016 (Leader: Helen Proctor) We returned at the kind invitation of Philip and Pam Glyn, the owners of the estate, in order to add Spring-flowering taxa […]
A blooming bog
Just south of Forest Row there is a nice bit of Molinia bog which has a good range of bryophytes, as I discovered when I visited it with Tom Ottley […]
Bird’s-nest Orchid in Ashdown Forest
Two spikes of this rather beige plant are now visible at the known site on Ashdown Forest. Both its common and scientific names refer to the supposedly nest-like appearance of […]
Midland Hawthorn in Forest Row
Until I read Jean Byatt’s article on hawthorns in a past issue of the Newsletter I hadn’t realised that there were two native hawthorns in the south east, so I […]