PLANTS
The abundance of
wildlife in the Cévennes is breathtaking. The remoteness of the
mountainous terrain has minimised the loss of habitat so prevalent
elsewhere throughout Europe, and the geography, geology and climate
allow us to see an encyclopaediac range of attractive plants and
animals.
In springtime,
dozens of species of orchids are scattered across the countryside,
often forming colourful carpets across the grasslands. Riverside
meadows are alive with the blue of meadow clary and viper's bugloss,
competing against the brash yellows of the dandelion family, the
delicate mauves of scabious and the brilliant white of the ox-eye
daisy. Ragged robin, mignonette, pignut, ramsons, soapwort, star of
Bethlehem; often two to three hundred species of flower will vie for
your attention in a single field.
The damp upland pastures
may be covered in wild daffodils and narcissi, with groups of orange
tulips scattered within. Violet pasque flowers wave in the breeze in
a sea of yellow rattle. This spectacular display gives way to a more
modest offering as the sun ripens the grasses and seed heads, but
autumn sees another burst of colour as the autumn fruits
compete for your admiration with the late-summer flowers. A fortnight
after a heavy rainstorm will see the pastures and woodlands bloom
with a much sought-after crop of mushrooms and fungi. Within days,
the vivid yellows of autumn, driven by the ubiquitous sweet
chestnuts, and interspersed with the reds of the maples, spread like
a blanket from the high causses (limestone plateaus) to the lower
valleys.