Grey willow

Grey Willow

©Brian Eversham

Grey willow

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Enw gwyddonol: Salix cinerea
One of our commonest willows, the Grey willow is a small tree that is found in ditches, reedbeds and wet woodland. It is well-known for its silver, fluffy catkins that give it another name, 'Pussy willow'.

Top facts

Stats

Height: up to 10m

Conservation status

Common.

Pryd i'w gweld

January to December

Ynghylch

The Grey willow, also known as 'Common sallow', is a small willow tree found in ditches, reedbeds and wet woodland, and on urban waste ground. It is one of the UK's commonest willows and is known for the fluffy, silver-grey male catkins - or 'pussy willows' - that appear in January and turn bright yellow in March.

What to look for

The Grey willow is a small, scrub-forming tree. It has blunt-ended, oval leaves, twice as long as they are broad. Its male catkins are silver-grey, roundish and turn yellow when ripe; its female catkins are green.

Where to find

Widespread.

Roeddech chi yn gwybod?

Like Goat willow, sprays of Grey Willow were used to decorate churches at Easter. Tradition also suggested that if girls didn't wear a sprig of pussy willow on Palm Sunday, they would get their hair pulled.