I’m kneeling at the edge of a pavement in Forest Hill in south-east London, bent over at the waist with my face close to the surface and squinting through a magnifying lens. “Are you OK?” a passer-by asks. I explain that I’m looking at a plant which has found a roothold between the paving stones.
It’s one of the pearlworts – a group of tiny cushion-forming plants with inconspicuous green flowers – and I’m checking which one this is. “That’s so interesting,” she says. “I’ve never really noticed plants growing there before.”
Walk down a city street and, with the distractions of people, interesting buildings, noisy traffic and brightly lit shop windows, it’s easy to overlook what’s growing beneath your feet. But take the time on the way to work or the shops to notice the gorgeous and fascinating wild plants we share our streets with, and I really believe they’ll brighten your day.
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And given that more than 85% of us in the UK live in urban areas, noticing street plants is a way any of us can connect with nature just outside our front doors.
When I take others on guided pavement plant walks, I’m often asked why I bother looking at street plants when we’d surely find more interesting ones in the ‘countryside’. In fact, the intensively farmed acres around our cities are frequently nature-depleted, whereas urban areas can be surprisingly rich in plant biodiversity because they are a mosaic of different habitats packed into a small space.










