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Foxglove - Western Isles - Wild Flowers - Wildflowers & Flora - Hebrides Flowers
Western Isles Wildflowers - Foxglove. This spectacular plant can be seen in the woodland around the Stornoway Castle and is spectacular from June to August with its single stems holding up to 75 flowers on the one stem. Lovely pink, purple or white tubular shaped flowers


Western Isles Wildflowers - Wild flowers of The Hebrides
Foxgloves - Western Isles Wildflowers
Foxglove -Digitalis purpurea
Stornoway Castle Grounds
 
Western Isles Wildflowers - Foxgloves
This tall graceful plant is a biennial plant which thrives in woodlands, moors, mountains and sea cliffs. It likes acidic soils and so is suited to the Western Isles. It can have up to 75 flowers on one stem .In the first year the plant develops its roots and forms a rosette of leaves and in the second year it produces the lovely pink, purple or white flowers.

Flowers
The Foxglove flowers from June to August Numerous and has tubular flowers blooming on a spike, ranging in colour from purple to white with spots. The lovely flowers are 1.25" inches long and grow on the single spike that the plant sends up in the summer of it's second year and are tubular shaped.

As the blossoms on the main stem gradually fall away, smaller lateral shoots are often thrown out from its lower parts, which remain in flower after the principal stem has shed its blossoms

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Pink Wildflowers Western Isles - Foxgloves   Pink Wildflowers - Foxgloves - Western Isles Flora
Foxglove - Pink Wildflowers
 
Foxglove Digitalis Purpurea


The Flower marks Entice Bees
The flowers have dark browny-purple spots which are actual markings which are honey guides for bees. The bees are enticed into the flowers as the spots show up vividly in ultra-violet light. The bees see in ultra violet light which explains why these flowers are so popular with them.- The bees actually crawl right inside the flowers. The bee travels from flower to flower and rubs pollen thus from one flower to another and this is how the flower is fertilised and seeds are produced



Millions of Seeds
A single Foxglove plant can give one or two million seeds which is why these flowers spread so well.

 

Stem and Leaves
It's stem is stout, simple and softly downy and grows to 2 - 4 feet in height. The leaves are alternate - arranged on opposite sides of the stem. The leaves are, rounded but quite narrow and long

The Foxglove Name Derivation
The Foxglove gets its common name from the shape of the flowers being shaped like a finger of a glove.

It was originally Folksglove (not foxglove) - the glove of the 'good folk' or fairies who frequented the places where this flowers grows in the woodlands


Folklore - Elves - Fairies - Witches
Some say that the spots on the flowers are evidence of elves or fairies having placed their fingers on the flowers. Witches used foxgloves in ointment rubbed on their thighs to help them fly.

Foxglove juice was believed to ward off fairies who tried to kidnap children. It is s
aid that it brings bad luck if the flow the flows are brought into the house


Anglo Saxon Name

Another derivative for the name is that the plants Anglo-Saxon name "foxes glofa" (the glove of the fox) is derived from a northern legend that bad fairies gave the blossoms to the fox to put on his toes, so that he might soften his tread while he hunted for prey
.

Other names for the foxglove are fairy thimble, fairy caps, bee catchers, lion's mouth.

Medicinal Uses and Poisons
The use of foxglove for it's medical properties dates back to the Romans.

The Romans used foxglove as both a rat poison and a heart tonic. In the Middle Ages, the plant was used to treat external ulcers and also as a cough medicine or expectorant. The whole plant is toxic so has earned itself sinister nicknames such as ‘dead man’s bells’ or dead mens fingers


Digitalis

Foxgloves are the pharmaceutical source of the heart drug digitalis, which is poisonous in overdose

Scotland Tradition

There is a tradition in the Scotland where the foxglove leaves are popped into a new born baby's cradle and this is said to protect the baby from being bewitched

 



 

Western Isles Wildflowers - Flora & Flowers of The Outer Hebrides - Hebridean Wild Flowers
Foxgloves - Wildflowers - Isle of Lewis - Isle of Harris