Oxalis acetosella
One of the most graceful and charming of our native plants. It abounds in moist, shady woods. A favourite position for it is the rotten centre of some old beech stump from which it will spread in a loose cluster, or growing on the ground, often in great abundance.
Flowering April and May
The Observer’s Book of Wild Flowers, compiled by W. J. Stokoe (1957)





