Skip to content

Engage with Nature

  • Home
  • Nature & Gardening Resources
  • ESD
  • Paddy’s Blog
  • Biodiversity
Contact Us
Engage with Nature

Wild Rose and Woodbine

Wild Rose and Woodbine

Two More Beauties of the June Hedgerow

Bypamadden 13 June 20204 July 2024

There are several wild rose species growing on Irish hedgerows but the commonest is the Dog rose (Rosa canina) or Feirdhris in Irish. (1a:1b;1c) This rose which bears pale pink or white flowers suddenly appears in June to brighten our spirits but for the rest of the year remains unseen.  These flowers with their five…

Read More Two More Beauties of the June HedgerowContinue

RECENT POSTS

  • Bee Favourites in the Mint Family
  • Plants for the May Pot
  • Rose-Pink Magnet for Insects
  • Stars of the Hedgerow
  • Survivor from Dinosaur Days

CATEGORIES

  • Alder
  • An Amazing Weed
  • Autumn Leaves
  • Bees
  • Bindweeds
  • Biodiversity Banks
  • Buddleia
  • Bugle
  • Butterflies
  • Caring for Potatoes
  • Common Grasses
  • Common Horsetail or Field Horsetail
  • Common Yew
  • Daisy Days
  • Dandelions
  • Dragonflies and Damselflies
  • Elderberries
  • Feeding Birds
  • Field Scabious and Devil’s Bit Scabious
  • Flowers
  • Foxgloves
  • Garlic, onions, peas, beans
  • Goat Willow
  • Greater Stitchwort
  • Guelder rose
  • Hazel Catkins
  • Hedgerow
  • Herb Robert, Snowberry, Red Campion and Corncockle
  • Holly
  • Ivy
  • Knapweed, Loosestrife and Nightshades
  • Legumes
  • May Blossoms
  • Native Hedgerow
  • Nature
  • Needles of Gold
  • Nettles and Plantains
  • New Potatoes
  • Pea-Flower Lookalikes
  • Prickly Customers
  • Primrose
  • Ragwort, Lady’s bedstraw, Yellow rattle
  • Red Campion
  • Rose Hips
  • Rowan, Beech, Sycamore
  • Scots Pine
  • Shamrock
  • Sloe
  • Snowdrops
  • Solitary Bees
  • Spawning Time
  • Spectacular Leaf Displays in October
  • The Farmers’ Nightmare
  • Umbellifers
  • Uncategorized
  • Vegetable Gardening
  • Wild Garlic and Three-Cornered Garlic
  • Wild privet
  • Wild privet and Snowberry
  • Wild Rose and Woodbine
  • Wildflowers
  • Woundworts

Construction of this website has been funded by the Blackrock Education Centre

Engage with Nature
What is important is that children have the opportunity to bond with the natural world, to learn to love it, before being asked to heal its wounds.
(David Sobel)

  • Home
  • Nature & Gardening Resources
  • ESD
  • Paddy’s Blog
  • Biodiversity

© 2025 Engage with Nature
Designed & created by Des Murtagh (des@murtaghgs.com)

  • Home
  • Nature & Gardening Resources
  • ESD
  • Paddy’s Blog
  • Biodiversity