Common dandelion

Green-veined White on Common Dandelion

Green-veined White on Dandelion ©Katrina Martin/2020VISION

Common Dandelion

©Katrina Martin/2020VISION

Common dandelion

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Enw gwyddonol: Taraxacum officinale
The common dandelion is a most familiar flower: counting down the 'clock', while blowing the fluffy seeds from its head, is a favourite childhood game. Dandelions are an important early source of food for pollinators - so let them grow!

Top facts

Stats

Height: up to 35cm

Conservation status

Common.

Pryd i'w gweld

January to December

Ynghylch

The seed 'clocks' of the common dandelion can carpet a grassland in fluffy, white pillows straight after the bright yellow, gaudy flowers have coloured it gold. Common dandelions grow in all kinds of grasslands from lawns to roadside verges, pastures to traditional meadows, and can be a weed.

What to look for

The common dandelion is actually a variety of forms or 'microspecies' and there are also a number of other dandelion species, so identification can be tricky. Nevertheless, look for the familiar yellow flower heads displaying closely packed florets (tiny flowers). The leaves of the common dandelion are lobed and spoon-shaped, and the stem exudes a milky white sap if it is broken. When it fruits, the seeds appear with their downy, white parachutes, and form a globular, packed seed head.

Where to find

Widespread.

Roeddech chi yn gwybod?

The common dandelion is the subject of many myths and games, one of which suggests that if you pick it, or even just touch it, you will wet the bed - an idea that forms many of the local common names, including 'Wet-the-bed' and 'Tiddle-beds'.