An ancient sheepfold en route to Loch Spey with th…
The rough track through the Monadhliaths in the up…
A first glimpse of the drought-stricken Loch Spey…
A much reduced Loch Spey
A much reduced Loch Spey, source of the River Spey…
Loch Spey
Drought stricken Loch Spey with reeds growing at i…
Thunder storm clouds gathering on our way back dow…
The Monadhliath mountains (pronounced Mona Lisa, w…
Bound back for the bothy before the rains start
Does anyone know how many bridges General Wade con…
The Spey Dam built in 1943
Young Robin fending for itself
Lunching in the rain
Anagach Wood, Grantown on Spey
The heather is beginning to bloom
To prevent tourists becoming lost in the woods!
The River Spey at Grantown
Salmon fisher in the Spey at Grantown
So what is this do you think?
River bank of the Spey at Grantown
The old bridge at Grantown no longer open to road…
The "new" bridge across the Spey at Grantown
Leaving Shesgnan behind us on route for Loch Spey
The Spey by now barely a stream in its upper reach…
The Spey by now barely a stream in its upper reach…
The upper reaches of the Spey and Loch Spey itself…
The old farm at Melgarve
The old bothy at Melgarve
Someone with a sense of humour in the old bothy at…
Yet another of General Wade's old bridges with the…
Yet another of General Wade's old bridges
The track along the upper reaches of the Spey vall…
You have been warned!
View upstream from the Double Garva Bridge
It may still carry traffic but my walking buddy wa…
The Double Garva Bridge across the River Spey. Com…
The old farm at Garvamore
Catching the photographer photographing the photog…
A small herd of Fallow Deer at Garvamore.
Where has the River Spey gone since the bridge was…
Will this 1730 bridge take my weight?
One of the many bridges built by General Wade in t…
OS map showing where the ford across the Findhorn…
The abandoned croft at Quilichan on a bend of the…
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Narthecium Ossifragum


Narthecium ossifragum, commonly known as bog asphodel,[1] Lancashire asphodel or bastard asphodel,[2] is a species of flowering plant in the family Nartheciaceae. It is native to Western Europe, found on wet, boggy moorlands up to about 1,000 m (3,300 ft) in elevation. It produces spikes of bright yellow flowers in summer. The bright orange fruits have been used as a colourant to replace saffron by Shetland Islanders.[3] Despite the plant's English name "bog asphodel", it is not particularly closely related to the true asphodels. In addition to other forms of pollination, this plant is adapted to rain-pollination.[4] The Latin specific name ossifragum means "bone-breaker", and refers to a traditional belief that eating the plant caused sheep to develop brittle bones. The probable origin of this story is that sheep eating a calcium-poor diet are likely to develop bone weakness, and N. ossifragum favours acidic low-calcium soils.
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