The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Let kids pick primroses, urges author

- By Chris Hastings

CHILDREN should be encouraged to pick wild primroses as earlier generation­s did to help foster a love of the outdoors, says one of Britain’s leading nature writers.

Richard Mabey says the countrysid­e is so awash with the distinctiv­e flower that children should be able to pick it just as they did decades ago.

Speaking from his Norfolk cottage garden on Primrose Day on Friday, the awardwinni­ng author said that there was now a huge number of the distinctiv­e yellow flowers, beloved by Benjamin Disraeli.

‘Each year seems to be better than the last for primroses,’ he said. ‘It’s slightly sad that children can’t pick a bunch from time to time. I’d say, “OK, let kids have a few bunches, get their hands around a flower, give a present to their mums.”’

Conservati­onists are opposed to the picking of any wild flowers, but Mr Mabey said he could see no environmen­tal reason why the primrose needed continued protection.

‘It is the time of year when children used to pick primroses for their mums or to deck out the local church,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

‘But all that stopped in the 1980s when a much more conservati­on-minded public felt that it was improper for children to go on plundering the hedgerows. I think it’s one of the flowers that I would move from the list of needing extreme and total protection.’

Britain’s fondness for the primrose, whose name is synonymous with the arrival of spring, stretches back centuries. Disraeli was such a fan that Queen Victoria would send him bunches from the gardens at Windsor.

Such was the former Prime Minister’s passion that the date of his death in 1881 – April 19 – is now celebrated as Primrose Day.

 ??  ?? FLOWER GIRL: A child with a primrose posy
FLOWER GIRL: A child with a primrose posy

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