Western Isles Wildflowers
Western Isles wildflowers is a collection of information about our Hebridean wildflowers including identification hints, traditional herbal uses and general plant lore.
Buck's-horn Plantain
Plantago coronopus
Gaelic: Adhairc Fèidh
Sea plantain likes growing in salty places - that includes in crevices of rocks and cliffs by the sea, strips along the roadside (when roads are salted against ice, the salt is washed off forming the high-salt habitat that sea plantain favours).
Sea plantain prefers the saltmarsh above all, to the extent that in early June the green grass-like areas beside the shore which get frequently completely covered by the incoming tide on close inspection often consist not of grass, but of sea plantain and thrift.
We get four of the five UK species of plantain growing in the Western Isles:
Sea plantain, ribwort plantain, buck's horn plantain and great plantain.
They are easy to tell apart.
Ribwort plantain has stongly ribbed leaves which are finger shaped.
Great plantain has big flat and wide egg-shaped leaves (ribbed)
Sea plantain has yellow flowers and long leaves, narrow like grass.
Buck's horn plantain has leaves that look like minature`antlers!
Photography © Suzanne Harris
Dail Beag - Isle of Lewis - Outer Hebrides (Western Isles)
24th June, 2006
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