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Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog

The wonder of plants and fungi.

Jeremy Bartlett's Let It Grow Blog
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"People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us." - Iris Murdoch

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Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 29 March, 2026 by Jeremy Bartlett29 March, 2026

Last month I had a pleasant surprise when I watered a plant in our conservatory. Three fungal fruitbodies were emerging from the compost of some rooted cuttings I had potted up in peat free compost late last summer (note 1).

The caps were pale buff or ochre at the centre, fading to white around the edges, and were only just above the level of the compost (although they grew a bit taller after a few days). In both colour and build they looked rather like fieldcaps (Agrocybe sp.).

Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa

Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa. Three fruitbodies in a Begonia maculata pot.

I picked one of the fruitbodies to look at its underside.

The gills were crowded and pale brown and the stem was white and pruinose (note 2). The fruitbody had a faint, earthy smell.

Conocybe intrusa

Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa.

I looked at the spores. They were ellipsoid-ovoid in shape, thick-walled and lacked an obvious germ pore (note 3).

Agrocybe spores have a distinct central germ pore. In addition, the spore size just didn’t fit with any of the species of Agrocybe I was aware of.

Spores of Conocybe intrusa

Spores of Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa, x1000 (in water).

I took a look at the cheilocystidia, the cells that project from the gill edge.

They had the distinctive lecythiform form (described as “skittle-shaped” or “bobble-capped”) found in the genus Conocybe.

Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa. Cheilocystidia.

Cheilocystidia of Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa  (x 1000, stained in Congo red).

The caulocystidia (cells projecting from the stem) were of a similar shape.

The fungus matched pictures and descriptions of Conocybe intrusa in my books (note 4) and on various websites, such as www.pharmanatur.com and in the gallery on the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) website. The English name of the fungus is Hothouse Conecap, which is very appropriate, given where it is usually found.

The only other known occurrence of Conocybe intrusa in Norfolk was at Gresham’s School in Holt in North Norfolk, when Tony Leech found the fungus growing in a pot of Angel’s Trumpets (Brugmansia) in a greenhouse.

Tony collected his first specimens of Conocybe intrusa on 21st April 2002 and kept them to show to Alick Henrici at the spring conference of the British Mycological Society (BMS). Alick had seen a single fruitbody of the same species (an “outwardly featureless brown-spored agaric”) growing in a temperate ferns bed in the Princess of Wales Conservatory at Kew on 27th April 2002. Both examples had the very characteristic lecythiform cheilocystidia of Conocybe. Alick subsequently wrote about Conocybe intrusa in “Notes and Queries” in the BMS journal Field Mycology (note 5). More fruitbodies appeared with the Gresham’s School Brugmansia in June 2005 and Tony recorded them on the Norfolk Mycota.

Watling (note 4) describes Conocybe intrusa as “obviously introduced” and Alick Henrici says it is an alien from North America, which is where it was first found. The GBIF website lists 187 occurrences of the fungus from North America and Europe.

Concocybe intrusa has a much chunkier build than other British species of Conocybe (such as Golden Conecap, Conocybe aurea, that I wrote about last November). It’s not surprising that it was originally named Cortinarius intrusus by the American mycologist Charles Horton Peck (1833 – 1917). It was one of 2,700 new species Peck identified in the course of a 48 year career. (Like me, Tony Leech initially thought “Agrocybe?”.)

Alick Henrici cites “an excellent illustrated write-up recently in Mycologist” but unfortunately this is behind a paywall, out of reach to mere mortals (note 6). The write-up lists finds in Surrey in 2000 (plant pots in a cold greenhouse and indoors on Arthur Bowers ‘New Horizon’ peat-free compost), at Edinburgh Botanic Gardens (1958), at Kew (1967, 1978), in Somerset (1980 in manured garden soil) and in Shropshire (1997 in pots). Alick Henrici concludes “That adds up to four records in 40 years followed by four more in the last five. Either it or our awareness of it is on the increase. Nearly all these records were in spring.”

At the time of writing twenty records are listed on the Fungal Records Database of Britain and ireland (FRDBI) and the fungus has been found in many months of the year. Geoffrey Kibby says it is “widespread and frequent” but presumably most finders don’t identify and record it.

This is the current distribution map for the British Isles (which doesn’t include my record):

Distribution map of Concoybe intrusa.

Distribution map of Concoybe intrusa from The British Mycological Society Fungal Records Database of Britain and Ireland. [Accessed on 8th March 2026]

I was very pleased to find my Hothouse Conecaps and delighted to have identified them.

The fruitbodies lasted several weeks but have now gone but I hope, like the ones at Gresham’s School, the fungi will fruit again some day.

Notes

Note 1 – The plant was a Begonia maculata, an attractive houseplant with white-spotted leaves and pink flowers, which my former next door neighbour, Jean, gave me about twenty-five years ago. The plant is easy to grow and propagate. I take cuttings every few years, root them in a vase of water and pot them up once they’ve formed roots. I use them to replace the parent plant when it has grown too big.

Last summer I used two types of peat-free compost: several bags of Sylvagrow multi-purpose peat-free compost and a small bag of RocketGro seed and cutting compost with John Innes. Annoyingly, I didn’t make a note of which compost I used for the Begonia cuttings, but I’m pretty sure it was the “Sylvagrow”. It seems to be a good medium for fungi – I’ve previously seen pots of it growing the lovely Wrinkled Conecap, Pholiotina rugosa at Natural Surroundings in North Norfolk.

Note 2 – Pruinose: “covered with a bloom (like a fine layer of chalk dust), similar to that seen on black dates”. (Definition from the books “Mushrooms and Toadstools of Britain and Europe”, by Geoffrey Kibby.)

Note 3 – The spore size ranges from 5.0 – 8.0 x 3.5 – 5.5 micrometres.

Ellipsoid = like a collapsed sphere; ovoid = egg-shaped.

The germ pore is a small pore in the outer wall of a fungal spore through which the germ tube exits upon germination.

Note 4 – The books I consulted were:

  1. Kibby, G. (2023). “Mushrooms and Toadstools of Britain and Europe, Volume 4”.
  2.  Watling, R. (1982). “British Fungus Flora Vol. 3: Bolbitiaceae”. Edinburgh, HMSO. Page 81 and figures 85 – 90.
  3. Pages 104 and 105 in Buczacki, S., Shields, S. and Ovenden, D. (2012). “Collins Fungi Guide”, Harper Collins, London.

The latter illustrates the fungus growing on compost beside a plant label and open packet of tomato seeds, which is a nice touch.

I didn’t think the smell was distinctive (faint, earthy). Watling describes it as “slightly radishy or earthy, almost of earth-balls (Scleroderma); Kibby calls it “slightly raphanoid” (radish-like).

Note 5 – Field Mycology, Volume 3 (3), July 2002, page 105. Available online on the Science Direct website.

Note 6 – Moss, M.O. & Jackson, R.M. (2001). “Conocybe intrusa in Godalming, Surrey.” Mycologist 15(4), pages 155-156.

Posted in Fungi | Tagged Conocybe intrusa, Cortinarius intrusus, Hothouse Conecap

Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 27 February, 2026 by Jeremy Bartlett27 February, 2026

Spring is on its way! And one of its many delights is Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus.

Erinus alpinus grows in sunny places in the crevices of old walls and on rock outcrops, often forming large colonies. An individual Fairy Foxglove plant is small and pretty but a mass of Fairy Foxgloves in full flower (usually peaking in May), is beautiful and spectacular.

I still remember my first sighting of Fairy Foxgloves, in late May 2010. Vanna and I were cycling home through the village of Cawston and spotted a mass of pink flowers on an old brick wall near the church. We stopped to admire them and take photographs.

Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus

Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus, on a wall at Cawston, Norfolk. 24th May 2010.

Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus

Closer up: Fairy Foxgloves, Erinus alpinus

Erinus alpinus is a member of the family Plantaginaceae (or Veronicaceae, according to Stace’s Flora (note 1)), a relative of the true Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea, that I wrote about in June 2024.

Foxglove flowers are zygomorphic (they have only one plane of symmetry) but Fairy Foxglove flowers are only slightly zygomorphic (hemi-zygomorphic). The Fairy Foxglove is also much smaller plant, reaching between five and 20 centimetres tall. Foxgloves are biennial; Fairy Foxglove is a short-lived semi-evergreen perennial, usually living for five years or less.

Fairy Foxgloves form clusters of small rosettes of narrowly oblong leaves and ascending leafy stems bearing terminal clusters of flowers. The flowers are usually pink but white forms also occur (note 2).

Erinus alpinus is a neophyte, introduced in 1739 as a garden plant and was known from the wild by 1867 (at Tanfield in North-west Yorkshire). It is very hardy but needs a sunny, well-drained site. It will cope with acid, alkaline or neutral soils but it does need sunshine and good drainage and a rockery would be a good site for it. I grew a Fairy Foxglove plant for a couple of years in an alpine sink in the back garden, where it loved the summer sunshine but ultimately it didn’t cope with shade from the house in winter and I lost it after a couple of years.

Erinus alpinus is native to Algeria, Austria, France, Italy (including Sardinia), Morocco,, Spain (the Balearic Islands) and Switzerland. It grows as an introduced plant in Germany, Great Britain, Ireland and Sweden. (Wikipedia also mentions Algeria.) The plant has several other English names, including Starflower, Alpine Balsam, Jewel Flower and Liver Balsam.

The BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020 notes that Erinus alpinus has shown “a considerable spread since the 1960s, continuing in the 21st century, perhaps in part a result of the greater propensity of botanists to record plants on garden walls“. Here is the current distribution map:

Distribution map of Erinus alpinus from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020.

Distribution map of Erinus alpinus from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020.

Fairy Foxglove in Scotland

John Grace wrote an excellent account of Fairy Foxglove on the Botany in Scotland blog in January 2023 and he mentions the furthest north British populations of the plant at Invernaver, near Bettyhill in Sutherland (note 3).

I associate Fairy Foxglove with Scotland, particularly our trip to Oban in 2018. We took the bus to the island Seil, crossing the Clachan Bridge (the Bridge over the Atlantic) to reach the island. The bridge was pink with Fairy Foxgloves and would have made a very fine photograph if we’d been able to stop (note 4).

However, we did manage to see Fairy Foxglove in flower on walls on Oban and, later in the week, when we walked on the beautiful island of Lismore.

Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus

Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus, growing on a wall. Island of Lismore, May 2018.

Erinus alpinus on a wall.

Erinus alpinus growing on a wall in Oban, May 2018.

John Grace also notes Fairy Foxglove’s presence at the village of Wall in Northumberland. This has led to the romanticised view that the plant came on the boots of Roman centurions stationed along Hadrian’s Wall, having been accidentally picked up during their long march across the Pyrenees en route to Britain. But the dates are completely wrong and “like most really good stories this is almost certainly untrue, in fact a sort of Fairy Story“.

The Wild Flower Finder website has some good photos of Erinus alpinus, as does John Grace’s blog post.

Notes

Note 1 – Page 618, “New Flora of the British Isles“ by Clive Stace, Fourth Edition, 2019.

Note 2 – See the Ontario Rock Garden and Hardy Plant Society website for photos of Erinus alpinus with white flowers – and some useful growing tips.

Note 3 – My first Botany field trip when I was a student at aberdeen University was in late June 1982, when we stayed at Bettyhill. We visited Invernaver, though I don’t remember Fairy Foxglove. My flora at the time was the definitely not pocket sized Keble Martin’s Concise British Flora in Colour. I carried it around with me all week and its pages are still marked with where they got wet in a rain shower as I walked downhill from Invernaver Broch.

Note 4 – See https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/clachan-bridge-known-as-bridge-over-the-atlantic-built-in-late-eighteenth-century-gm840599520-136987609 for a stock photo of the bridge, complete with flowering Erinus alpinus.

Posted in Ornamental | Tagged Erinus alpinus, Fairy Foxglove

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 10 January, 2026 by Jeremy Bartlett10 January, 2026

On a cold day in January my thoughts turn to summer flowers. One of my favourites is the Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule.

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

Cirsium acaule is a member of the Daisy family, Asteraceae (formerly known as the Compositae). It is one of nine species of Cirsium growing in the wild in the British Isles (note 1).

Our other species of Cirsium have an upright growth habit. Marsh Thistle (Cirsium palustre) can reach two metres in height, Spear Thistle (Cirsium vulgare) 1.5 metres and Creeping Thistle (Cirsium arvense) 1.2 metres. But the Dwarf Thistle usually just reaches 10 centimetres tall. Because of its short growth form, Cirsium acaule is sometimes known as the Stemless Thistle. (There also is a long-stemmed form, Cirsium acaule var. caulescens, that reaches up to 30 centimetres tall when growing in longer grass.)

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

A slightly taller specimen of Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule.

Like its taller relatives, Dwarf Thistle has purple composite flowers. These some 20 to 40 mm across and are produced from June to September. The flowers are followed by masses of fluffy, wind-borne seeds in late summer. Cirsium acaule is a perennial plant and its basal rosette of leaves persists throughout the year, blending in with the surrounding grass. The leaves are deeply lobed and spiny (Stace describes them as “strongly spiny”).

It is easy to sit on a Dwarf Thistle by accident, especially when it isn’t in flower, leading to a painful encounter. The thistles “look just like a nice flat patch of grass to sit on whilst you eat your butties. But automatic ejection is painful and abrupt!” In “Flora Britannica” Richard Mabey writes that Cirsium acaule is “widely known as ‘picnic thistle’ because of its fondness for favourite beauty spots on calcareous grassland and for giving no warning of its lurking spininess even when the flowers are out (note 2).”

Do look carefully at the ground (or take a foam mat to sit on) when picnicking or botanising, just in case.

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

I see Dwarf Thistle most years but I have to travel west because it’s a plant of short chalk grassland and that is scarce in my part of Norfolk (note 3).

The photographs on this blog post were all taken at Warham Camp, an Iron Age hillfort not far from Wells-next-the-Sea in North Norfolk. Here, chalk is at the surface and it’s a good place to see chalk-loving flowers and their associated insects, such as an introduced colony of Chalkhill Blue butterflies (Polyommatus coridon) whose caterpillars feed on Horseshoe Vetch (Hippocrepis comosa). The site is grazed by sheep, which keeps the grass short and rich in flowers, including Dwarf Thistle.

At Warham Camp, the Dwarf Thistles are usually growing amongst grass but this one is on nearly bare ground. You can clearly see the white of the hillfort’s chalk ramparts.

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule

Thistle flowers are a rich source of food for insects and I’ve photographed several visitors, such as this Red-tailed Bumblebee (Bombus lapidarius).

Dwarf Thistle and Bombus lapidarius

Dwarf Thistle and Red-tailed Bumblebee (Bombus lapidarius).

Butterflies and moths appreciate the flowers too.

Dwarf Thistle and Essex Skipper

Dwarf Thistle and Essex Skipper butterfly

Dwarf Thistle and Six-spot Burnet

Dwarf Thistle and Six-spot Burnet moth

Cirsium acaule is a British native. It grows as far north as Yorkshire and Derbyshire, with outlying colonies in the Arnside and Silverdale area of north-west England. On the northern edges of its range it is almost wholly confined to south-west-facing slopes. Dwarf Thistle benefits from grazing reducing sward heights to less than 10 –15 cm, or frequent mowing.

Dwarf Thistle’s distribution in the British Isles is determined by the occurrence of short, heavily grazed chalk or limestone grassland, though the plants can occasionally be found on mesotrophic grasslands on deeper soils as well (note 3). Its habitat requirements mean it is absent Scotland, Ireland, most of south-west England and much of Wales (note 4).

Distribution map of Cirsium acaule

Distribution map of Cirsium acaule from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020.

Outside the British Isles, Cirsium acaule is native in much of Europe, from Spain, Italy and the north-west Balkans in the south, to Norway and Sweden in the north and Romania and  the Baltic States in the east.

In Britain, Dwarf Thistle has declined since the 1960s, in spite of some new discoveries in Carmarthenshire and Glamorganshire. This is partly because of agricultural “improvement” involving the ploughing-up of grassland or its degradation through the addition of artificial fertilisers. The relaxation of grazing can also harm Cirsium acaule and other plants of short grassland, if tall grasses and scrub take over.

Cirsium acaule is also destroyed by heavy trampling. And, as Eeyore wisely observes: “It don’t do them any Good, you know, sitting on them… Takes all the Life out of them. Remember that another time, all of you. A little Consideration, a little Thought for Others, makes all the difference.” (note 5).

Wise words indeed. The world would be a better place with a little Consideration, a little Thought for Others.

Notes

Note 1 – Clive Stace (2019). “New Flora of the British Isles“.  Fourth Edition.

Stace lists two hybrids between Cirsium acaule and other thistles:

C. x kirschlegeri (C. acaule x C. palustre). This hybrid with Marsh Thistle has shortly spiny-winged stems to 40cm and intermediate leaves and capitula. Found rarely with the parents in southern England but not since 1951.

C. x boulayi (C. acaule x C. arvense). This scarce hybrid with Creeping Thistle has branched stems up to 60cm tall and leaves like C. arvense but with intermediate leaves and capitula.

Note 2 – Richard Mabey (1996). “Flora Britannica”. Sinclair-Stevenson, 1996.

Note 3 – Mesotrophic soils are soils with moderate fertility.

Note 4 – The author of the Wild Flower Finder website, Roger Darlington, wrote that he “has never knowingly seen it in flower, although he may have attempted to sit on a basal rosette of it in his youth whilst walking the hills”. Peter Llewellyn wrote on his UK Wildflowers website: “This is not an uncommon thistle but it prefers basic soils and so until this occasion [5th September 2010] I had never seen it in flower.”

Note 5 – A.A. Milne (1926) “Winnie-the-Pooh“. (From chapter VIII: “In Which Christopher Robin Leads an Expotition to the North Pole”.)

Posted in General | Tagged Cirsium acaule, Dwarf Thistle, Stemless Thistle

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Thirty latest posts

  • Hothouse Conecap, Conocybe intrusa 29 March, 2026
  • Fairy Foxglove, Erinus alpinus 27 February, 2026
  • Dwarf Thistle, Cirsium acaule 10 January, 2026
  • Zythia resinae (aka Sarea resinae) 30 December, 2025
  • Golden Conecap, Conocybe aurea 20 November, 2025
  • Five Fungi from Sweet Briar Marshes 23 October, 2025
  • Steccherinum oreophilum (aka Irpex oreophilus) – new for Norfolk 27 September, 2025
  • Orpine, Hylotelephium telephium 29 August, 2025
  • Wild Marjoram, Origanum vulgare 19 July, 2025
  • Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus 5 June, 2025
  • Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus 28 May, 2025
  • American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus 21 April, 2025
  • Cedar Cup, Geopora sumneriana 16 March, 2025
  • Cinnamon Bracket, Hapalopilus nidulans 13 February, 2025
  • Common Ragwort, Jacobaea vulgaris 13 January, 2025
  • Holly, Ilex aquifolium 7 December, 2024
  • Yellow Bird’s-nest, Hypopitys monotropa 24 November, 2024
  • Whiskery Milkcap, Lactarius mairei 8 November, 2024
  • Shaggy Bracket, Inonotus hispidus 25 September, 2024
  • Small Teasel, Dipsacus pilosus 24 August, 2024
  • Rothole Inkcap, Coprinopsis alnivora 1 August, 2024
  • Twinflower, Linnaea borealis 20 July, 2024
  • Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea 10 June, 2024
  • Beaked Hawk’s-beard, Crepis vesicaria 15 May, 2024
  • Thrift, Armeria maritima 17 April, 2024
  • Japanese Kerria, Kerria japonica 29 March, 2024
  • Golden Bootleg, Phaeolepiota aurea 12 March, 2024
  • Arched Earthstar, Geastrum fornicatum 22 February, 2024
  • Basil Thyme, Clinopodium acinos 3 January, 2024
  • Five Fungi from the Lanes of Norfolk 9 December, 2023


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