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“No flower teaches patience more gently than heather: it waits seven years for its first bloom after fire, then carpets the ash in violet.” ~ Scottish Wildlife Trust Field Notes, 2004
The "burning" of heather (controlled muirburn) is a traditional management practice in Scotland to encourage young, green growth, which allows the plant to return as a vibrant, violet carpet rather than dying out.
The phrase "seven-year wait" serves as an effective metaphor for patience, ecological evidence highlights that heather's regeneration is a dynamic process that begins almost immediately after a fire, rather than requiring a long, dormant period. ~ Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research
RE_2026-02-14_162849
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