-
Search
Professor Hedgehog’s Archive
- November 2024 (1)
- August 2024 (1)
- June 2024 (1)
- January 2024 (1)
- October 2023 (2)
- July 2023 (2)
- June 2023 (2)
- May 2023 (1)
- February 2023 (1)
- January 2023 (2)
- October 2022 (2)
- August 2022 (2)
- July 2022 (3)
- June 2022 (1)
- May 2022 (1)
- April 2022 (3)
- March 2022 (2)
- February 2022 (2)
- January 2022 (2)
- November 2021 (2)
- October 2021 (1)
- September 2021 (2)
- August 2021 (1)
- July 2021 (2)
- May 2021 (1)
- April 2021 (1)
- March 2021 (2)
- February 2021 (2)
- January 2021 (2)
- December 2020 (1)
- November 2020 (2)
- October 2020 (2)
- September 2020 (2)
- August 2020 (2)
- July 2020 (3)
- June 2020 (2)
- May 2020 (2)
- April 2020 (3)
- March 2020 (5)
- February 2020 (6)
- January 2020 (4)
- December 2019 (1)
- November 2019 (1)
- October 2019 (5)
- September 2019 (6)
- August 2019 (2)
- July 2019 (4)
- June 2019 (3)
- May 2019 (5)
- April 2019 (3)
- March 2019 (5)
- February 2019 (3)
- January 2019 (4)
- December 2018 (3)
- November 2018 (6)
- October 2018 (3)
- September 2018 (5)
- August 2018 (4)
- July 2018 (3)
- June 2018 (3)
- May 2018 (5)
- April 2018 (6)
- March 2018 (5)
- February 2018 (4)
- January 2018 (4)
- December 2017 (2)
- November 2017 (2)
- October 2017 (3)
- September 2017 (5)
- August 2017 (2)
- July 2017 (5)
- June 2017 (4)
- May 2017 (4)
- April 2017 (6)
- March 2017 (4)
- February 2017 (4)
- January 2017 (5)
- December 2016 (3)
- November 2016 (4)
- October 2016 (4)
- September 2016 (6)
- August 2016 (5)
- July 2016 (6)
- June 2016 (5)
- May 2016 (6)
- April 2016 (8)
- March 2016 (5)
- February 2016 (7)
- January 2016 (7)
- December 2015 (7)
- November 2015 (9)
- October 2015 (9)
- September 2015 (9)
- August 2015 (9)
- July 2015 (13)
- June 2015 (12)
- May 2015 (7)
- April 2015 (6)
- March 2015 (5)
Tags
- abolition
- Apple Day
- Archaeology
- art
- autumn
- botanic gardens
- botany
- British Museum
- cabinet of curiosities
- Cambridge
- Cambridge University Botanic Garden
- Canaletto
- ceramics
- Charles Darwin
- Charles Jones
- Chelsea Physic Garden
- Christmas
- churches
- Daniel Solander
- EdUKaid
- Exploration
- Fitzwilliam Museum
- Florence
- flower painting
- flower paintings
- folklore
- gardening
- Garden Museum
- gardens
- herbals
- herbaria
- Hieronymus Bosch
- holidays
- Italy
- Japan
- John Martyn
- John Ruskin
- knitting
- Linnaeus
- Linnean Society
- London
- London churches
- Lucca
- Mill Road Winter Fair
- mosaics
- Mrs Delany
- Museum of Cambridge
- museums
- Napoleon
- natural history
- painting
- paintings
- Palermo
- plant of the month
- plants
- printing
- retirement
- Royal Society
- Sicily
- Sir Hans Sloane
- Sir J.E. Smith
- Sir Joseph Banks
- slavery
- Spitalfields
- spring
- still life
- taxonomy
- The Gentle Author
- Thomas Bewick
- Titian
- Torcello
- trees
- Venice
- Veronese
- Worcestershire
Categories
Category Archives: Botany
Plant of the Month: April 2020
Greifswald, now in the province of Vorpommern-Mecklenburg in Germany, is one of those coastal cities in the Baltic which have always been part of the Debatable Land of north-central Europe. It is closer to Malmö and Copenhagen than to Berlin, … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Botany, Gardens, History, Natural history, Printing and Publishing
Tagged Christian Ehrenfried Weigel, gardening, Greifswald, plants, Pomerania, Thunberg, Weigela
4 Comments
Jonas Webb, the Southdown Man
I imagine that most people these days, if they have heard of Babraham at all, know it for the Babraham Institute, a research campus at which the nineteenth-century Babraham Hall (it had several antecedents) sits in the centre, and which, … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Botany, Cambridge, London, Natural history
Tagged Adeane family, Babraham, John Ellman, Jonas Webb, sheep breeding, Southdown sheep
4 Comments
Naturalists of the Three Counties
It is an article of (my) faith that the ‘Three Choirs Counties’ – Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire – are the most beautiful and amazing part of England. Imagine my delight, therefore, when I discovered quite by chance all sorts of … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Botany, Gardens, History, Museums and Galleries, Natural history, Printing and Publishing
Tagged Gloucestershire, Hereford, Hereforshire, Joseph Hooker, Lord Brougham, William Huskisson, William Samuel Symonds, Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club, Worcestershire, Worthington G. Smith
5 Comments
Quinquennium
Well, the plan was to be writing from lovely Lucca to mark the fifth anniversary of La Vita Nuova, but fate has decreed otherwise. Instead, I sit contemplating the garden, and will shortly be going with Him Indoors on a … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, Italy, Natural history
Tagged @CUBotanicGarden, anniversary, magnolias, retirement, spring, tulips
2 Comments
Plant of the Month: February 2020
Looking back, I discover that I have never written a ‘Plant of the Month’ piece about clematis, which is very odd, given that they are my favourite plants and by far my worst botanical extravagance. At the present count, I … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Gardens, History, Natural history
Tagged clematis, gardens, plantofthemonth
5 Comments
The Vegetable Lamb of Tartary
I have long been attracted by the above-named beast, which I came across for the first time in my previous existence, when skim-reading John Bell’s two-volume work of 1763, Travels from St Petersburg in Russia, to Diverse Parts of Asia. … Continue reading
The Naming of Plants
Richard Chandler Alexander Prior (1809–1902) does not (yet) appear in the pages of the ODNB, though his day may come. He knew and corresponded with many of the great scientists of the nineteenth century; he was a physician whose health … Continue reading
Posted in Bibliography, Biography, Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, History, Natural history, Printing and Publishing
Tagged botany, English plants, Linnaean system, nomenclature, taxonomics
2 Comments
Plant of the Month: January 2020
One of the most mournful utterances you will hear from a gardener is: ‘I had one, but it died.’ Next up is, ‘I had one, but it doesn’t flower any more.’ This is the case, alas, with me and Iris … Continue reading
Tree of the Year
In 2017 I took monthly photos of a particular tree @CUBotanicGarden, and in 2018 I did the same for a hedge. Neither sequence when laid end to end was in fact particularly inspiring, so in 2019 I went for one … Continue reading
Posted in Botany, Cambridge, Gardens, Natural history
Tagged Acer palmatum 'Osakazuki', Cambridge University Botanic Garden, foliage
2 Comments