Bloody Crane's-bill - Geranium sanguineum
Short medium hairy plant with a stout horizontal rhizome. Stems much branched, erect or spreading. Leaves are rounded in outline but split into 5 to 7 pinnately divided lobes. Flowers usually deep reddish purple, 25 to 30 mm across, usually solitary the petals slightly notched and the stalks with a pair of small bracts near the centre.
Grassland or woodland, usually on limestone, and often coastal. Sometimes occurs as a garden escape.
Flowering June to August.
Perennial.
Widespread in most of Britain, but often local.
Uncommon in Leicestershire and Rutland where it is most likely to occur as a garden escape. In the 1979 Flora survey of Leicestershire it was found in 2 of the 617 tetrads.
Leicestershire & Rutland Map
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Species profile
- Common names
- Bloody Crane's-bill
- Species group:
- flowering plant
- Kingdom:
- Plantae
- Order:
- Geraniales
- Family:
- Geraniaceae
- Records on NatureSpot:
- 12
- First record:
- 26/06/2013 (Ellison, Lorraine)
- Last record:
- 12/05/2025 (Pugh, Dylan)
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% of records within its species group
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