Daffodils

Wild Daffodils

Ross Hoddinott/2020VISION

Wild daffodils

Wild daffodils

Whether pushing through the grass of a damp meadow or forming rippling rivers of gold in the dappled shade of ancient woodland, the sight of wild daffodils is a true spring-time treat. Daffodils are also known as the Lent lily since they often flower and die away between Ash Wednesday and Easter. An indicator of undisturbed habitat, including ancient woodlands and old meadows, the once abundant wild daffodil became increasingly rare during the 19th century due to habitat loss, woodland neglect, illegal uprooting and hybridisation.

What to look for

The sight of a wild daffodil trumpets the arrival of spring, and whether you’re in a meadow or woodland there will be plenty of other things to see and hear at this time too. Look out for primrose and newly arrived migrant bird species like the blackcap, wood warbler, nightingale and chiffchaff. The wonder of daffodils isn’t just about the colour, try lowering yourself to their level and watch them bob and shimmy in the breeze.

If you can't get to a wild daffodil site

If there isn’t a place where wild daffodils grow in profusion near you, look out for them on rural roadsides. Wild daffodils have narrow, grey-green leaves and the familiar daffodil-shaped flower: pale yellow petals surrounding a darker yellow trumpet. This two-tone look is one way to tell them apart from their garden relatives. Wild daffodils are also relatively short and form clumps, carpeting the ground.