Seven Sisters in Spring: Wildflower Season Guide
From April through June, the chalk downland covering the Seven Sisters explodes with wildflowers. Here\\'s what blooms when and where to look.
Peak Flowering Times
Early April: Cowslips start appearing, early saxifrage on the cliffs. The grass is still short and bright green.
Late April-May: Peak season. Orchids emerge, harebells appear, horseshoe vetch covers patches in yellow. This is when to come if you\\'re serious about wildflowers.
June: Later species like pyramidal orchids. The grass starts getting longer and golden.
Notable Species
- Early Spider Orchid: Rare, protected. Flowers April-May on shorter grass areas. Don\\'t pick or trample.
- Pyramidal Orchid: Common, purple-pink spikes. June-July. Impossible to miss when in bloom.
- Cowslips: Yellow clusters, April-May. Everywhere on the downs.
- Horseshoe Vetch: Yellow ground cover, food plant for Adonis Blue butterfly.
- Chalk Milkwort: Tiny blue flowers, easy to miss but everywhere.
Best Spots
The clifftop paths are good but the nature reserve areas are better. Seaford Head Nature Reserve has excellent displays. The inland sections near East Dean have orchid-rich grassland.
Walk slowly and look down. Most wildflowers are small - you\\'ll walk past them if you\\'re focused on the distant views.
Photography Tips
Macro lens or phone close-up mode. Get low - photograph at flower level, not standing over them. Early morning light is best. Overcast days actually work better than bright sun for flower photography.
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