Our Organisation Search Quick Links
Toggle: Topics

Growing Wild: Charlock and Lady’s Smock

Growing Wild: Charlock and Lady’s Smock


Catherine Keena, Teagasc Countryside Management Specialist, takes a closer look at some of our native Irish biodiversity, focusing this time on Charlock and Lady’s Smock.

Charlock

Charlock

Look out for charlock growing on recently disturbed ground on roadsides or new house sites where the seed gets a chance to germinate, as it is an annual plant. Charlock is an annual weed of tillage crops. It is similar to brassicas like oilseed rape with bright yellow flowers with four petals. Nectar is easily accessible by insects. Branched stems grow up to a half a metre with variable lobed leaves, the upper ones stalkless. Its name as Ghaeilge as praiseach bhuí appears in placenames such as Cloonprask in Galway and Trafrask in Cork. Valued as a food during the famine, charlock is part of our native Irish biodiversity.

Lady’s Smock

Ladys smock

Look out for Lady’s smock also called cuckooflower and cuckoo spit, with four petalled pale lilac flowers in a spike. It is one of the few flowers that can persist in ryegrass fields as it tolerates moderately fertile soil, and flowers before grass growth takes off. It grows in wetter areas. It is the main larval foodplant and source of nectar for orange-tip butterflies. The male is distinctively coloured white with bright orange tips on forewings. The female is less conspicuous with black tips on forewings. Lady’s smock and orange-tip butterflies are a good example of plants and invertebrates co-existing for the past ten thousand years – part of our native Irish biodiversity.

Previous Growing Wild articles