Forget M&S orchids, manicured to within an inch of their pampered lives and head instead to the nearest Chilterns summer meadow.
The footpath glistens underfoot as it cuts through the drooping wild grasses, my wet boots and trouser legs a magnet for seed dispersal. The daisy petals are splayed under the relentless June rain, which would explain the lack of butterflies and birdsong. Even the ubiquitous slugs are sheltering.
The orchids however, shrug off the rain, the vivid pyramidal purple orchid easy to spot in the rain-rinsed meadow.

Forget M&S orchids, these delicate, yet ruggered Chilterns’ varieties are so small, they can be difficult to spot. But once you know where to look, you will see them everywhere. The lilacs, browns, pinks, white and purple plants can be solitary or growing in busy clusters of up to 30-or more plants.
According to the Berks, Bucks & Oxon Wildlife Trust, chalk grassland develops on shallow, lime-rich soils that are poor in nutrients. Some of these grasslands now cover once thriving Chilterns’ quarries, the chalk by-products destined for London’s building trade as mortar and cement. In spring and summer these special habitats come to life, as swathes of amazing wild flowers and orchids, attract hordes of insects and tiny butterflies including the chalkhill blue, small blue and common blue amongst others – I need a zoom lens to capture those!
Further Information
Head over to the new Chilterns blog, ‘A Year in the Chilterns’ to enjoy more of this amazing place and it’s many stories including; Peter the Wild Boy, a Chilterns Desert or perhaps you have been to the sweetest stretch of the river?
To find out more about exploring the naturally outstanding Chilterns, or if you need help identifying the local fauna and flora.
It is always amazing the small things out there if you care to look, those ones in the last picture remind me of the type we had in the garden in Newlands
I don’t recall those, but then I wasn’t looking. Agreed, the smaller stuff is worth the effort.