The Dolomites in mid-June – Day 5: Santa Croce


Jon Evans describes the magnificent meadow flowers encountered on a long downhill walk from Santa Croce back to Badia. ...(more below)

November 28, 2022
AGS Editor





The next day, we planned not to travel too far afield, but to walk across Badia (down and up) and to ascend the two lifts to the church of Santa Croce, some 700m above the village.

The Quick Way Up

The bottom lift was a 4-seat chair lift which we were a little concerned about, but we had learned our lesson from the first day, and the extra seats made space for us to put our backpacks, rather than having them in front of us.

Soon, we were at the top; all we had to do now was climb up to the church, and then come down  by a roundabout way – 700m descent in something like 9km.  After the exertions of the previous day, on the rugged paths of the Falzarego Pass, my wife Helen decided she would rather spend a relaxing morning around Santa Croce with a friend, and then go back the way she had come.

Crepis aurea

However, some new walkers had joined the group, and we were full of enthusiasm, expecting wonderful displays of meadow flowers.  We started with a short uphill stroll to the church and Rifugio.  The meadow beside the path glowed and shimmered with the orange bronze of Crepis aurea.  This was a glorious spectacle and filled my heart with excitement.

Alpine garden society members hiking in mountain landscape with rugged cliffs and lush greenery in the background outdoors nature photography.
Chapel at the base of the Dolomites, surrounded by alpine meadows, illustrating the scenic beauty and serenity of mountain landscapes suitable for alpine garden enthusiasts.
Wildflower meadow with colourful blooms and lush green grass in an alpine garden setting, showcasing diverse alpine plants and flowers.
Wildflower meadow in a mountainous alpine garden setting, featuring a colourful array of native flowers under a partly cloudy sky, perfect for alpine gardening enthusiasts.
Vibrant alpine wildflower meadow featuring colourful blooms like daisies, buttercups, and purple asters in lush green grass, ideal for garden enthusiasts and alpine plant lovers.
Vibrant alpine meadow filled with diverse wildflowers on a sunny day, highlighting colourful flora in a natural setting for alpine gardening enthusiasts.

Santa Croce church

It didn’t take us long to climb up to the little 15th century church at Santa Croce (enlarged and renovated in the 18th century).  Behind it was a welcoming Rifugio.

Rifugio flowers

Around the Rifugio were various planters and hanging baskets containing Petunias, a yellow flower I didn’t recognise, and some rather bloated-looking Edelweiss.

Vivid pink and white petunias flourishing in a rustic window box beneath a wooden eave, showcasing alpine garden charm.
Red geraniums and white Star of Bethlehem flowers in a garden planter, highlighting alpine garden plant varieties and vibrant ornamental flowering plants for garden enthusiasts.
Bright yellow alpine flowers blooming densely on a lush green shrub, ideal for garden enthusiasts interested in alpine plants and garden design.

The Rifugio tempted most of the party to stop for a cup of coffee, but I couldn’t contain my enthusiasm, and rushed to explore the meadow around the Rifugio.  Seductive paths led in all directions.

Rocky mountain trail through lush green alpine forest with conifers and rugged cliffs under partly cloudy sky, perfect for hiking and nature enthusiasts.
Wildflower meadow in alpine garden with colourful native plants and grasses, showcasing biodiversity and natural beauty.
Alpine Garden Society, showcasing lush alpine plants and mountainous scenery perfect for outdoor plant enthusiasts and garden lovers.
Wildflower meadow with colourful native plants and grasses, perfect for alpine gardens and naturalised landscape design. Great for pollinators and enhancing biodiversity.
Wildflower meadow with native plants, attracting pollinators and supporting conservation efforts in the Alpine Garden Society environment.

Arnica montana etc

In amongst the Crepis, I found the golden stars of Arnica montana, the fluffy pink spikes of Plantago media (Hoary Plantain), and deep blue globes of Phyteuma orbiculare (round-headed Rampion).

These grassy areas also boasted big clumps of Onobrychis montana (Mountain Sainfoin), and of a magenta Pedicularis, possibly P. verticillata.  We saw in most meadows we visited, but I took very few portraits of it.

Pseudorchis albida

However, it was only when I explored a small bank leading down to the path we intended to take that I found something really exciting.  The scruffy vegetation looking unpromising, but in the middle of it I found our first specimen of the Small White Orchid, Pseudorchis albida.  Though this specimen was definitely pale green rather than white.  I went straight back to the Rifugio to encourage the others to come and see my discovery.

Soon we set off down the trail, leaving Helen to spend a relaxing day around the Rifugio admiring the views, with a friend who wanted to paint.  Every clearing among the trees revealed a flush of flowers: Globeflowers (Trollius europaeus) and buttercups in the damper places, Dandelions, Horseshoe Vetch (Hippocrepis comosa) and Mountain Sainfoin elsewhere.

One rocky ridge, in semi-shade, was a mass of Dryas octopetala (Mountain Avens), interspersed with the fresh new leaves of Pyrola media (Intermediate Wintergreen), and the blue flowers of the milkwort Polygala alpestris.

Blue forget-me-not flower blooming in alpine garden, close-up of delicate purple blossoms with green foliage and soil background, ideal for alpine plant enthusiasts and garden design keywords.

Daphne striata

Behind the Dryas, as the ridge disappeared into the scrub, there were large plants of Daphne striata in full flower.

Wild alpine plants with small purple and yellow flowers in a natural meadow setting.
Vibrant primula and moss phlox flowers blooming amidst lush green Alpine garden foliage, showcasing diverse low-growing plants suitable for rock gardens and mountainous regions.
Bright purple and lavender alpine flowers among lush green foliage, showcasing vibrant garden blooms perfect for rock gardens and alpine plant enthusiasts.

Homogyne alpina

We had seen the seedheads of Homogyne alpina (Alpine Coltsfoot) elsewhere, but here in the shade there was one flower which was just hanging on.  A very pretty thing I would love to see in better condition earlier in the season.

Occasionally we crossed landslips; between the rocks and bare soil we saw scree plants such as Acinos alpinus (rock thyme) and a little bedstraw I think might be Galium megalospermum (syn helveticum).

Meadows

Between the strips of woodland wide bands of meadow sparkled with flowers.  The flora was much the same as we had seen around the Rifugio, with sheets of Yellow Rattle dotted with Crepis aurea, Horminum pyrenaicum, and Dactylorhiza majalis.

Vibrant alpine meadow with colourful wildflowers under a mountainous backdrop, ideal for Alpine Garden Society enthusiasts and rock gardening experts.
Yellow wildflowers blooming in a lush alpine meadow with a backdrop of green trees, representing alpine gardening and natural beauty for the Alpine Garden Society.
Alpine Garden Society meadow with wildflowers and lush greenery in a scenic outdoor setting.

Clumps of a large yellow daisy, perhaps Hypochaeris uniflora, caught my eye, and occasional Fragrant Orchids (Gymnadenia conopsea).  Where a stream crossed the path we found big clumps of chives (Allium schoenoprasum).

Vanilla Orchids

Elsewhere, we encountered meadows full of the distinctive leaves of Colchicum autumnale.  These were punctuated by occasional flowers of Aster alpinus and the almost black heads of Vanilla orchids (Nigritella nigra subsp rhellicani) with occasional lighter variants (Nigritella miniata ?).

Trifolium montanum

Mountains towered behind us, and across the valley below us.  On some of the drier ridges, masses of the very elegant Trifolium montanum (Mountain clover) caught my attention.

By the rocky edge of the path yellow poppies (Papaver rhaeticum) grew, together with Tormentil (Potentilla erecta).  On the banks, amongst the already familiar meadow community, we found our first Gentianella (Gentianella germanica ?) and the curious little fern Botrychium lunaria (Moonwort).

Dactylorhiza majalis

Where streams crossed our path, running down from the screes above, the meadows would be dotted with the purple spikes of Marsh Orchids (mainly Dactylorhiza majalis).  The leaves of the first of these are wider and fleshier, and unmarked, and I wonder if it is a different species, perhaps a form of Dactylorhiza incarnata.

Vibrant alpine meadow with colourful wildflowers and lush green grass, part of the Alpine Garden Society's botanical collection in a natural mountainous landscape.
Vibrant alpine meadow filled with colourful wildflowers, including purple orchids and yellow buttercups, showcasing stunning natural flora of alpine gardens.
Violet alpine orchid blooming in grassy wilderness, native to mountain regions, showcasing vibrant purple flowers, a popular species for alpine garden enthusiasts and wildflower lovers.
Purple alpine orchids in a grassy meadow with other wildflowers and greenery.
Violet orchid flower growing among green grass and foliage, vibrant and detailed, suitable for alpine garden photography.

Grass of Parnassus

Also in these damper areas, we found our first plants of Parnassia palustris (Grass of Parnassus), and a pale pink Pedicularis which I think was Pedicularis palustris (it was bigger than Pedicularis sylvestris which we see in the UK).

Alpine flowering plant with white blooms among green grass, perfect for alpine garden enthusiasts and rock garden designs, showcasing hardy alpine flora.
Wild alpine meadow with blooming native plants and grasses, showcasing the beauty of mountainous flora, perfect for alpine garden displays and gardening inspiration.

By now it was time to stop for our picnic lunch, on a grassy ridge above the path, with wonderful views in all directions.  The bank up to the ridge was a mass of yellow rattle and clover.

Vibrant alpine meadow with wildflowers set against towering rocky cliffs and dense evergreen trees, perfect for alpine gardening enthusiasts and nature lovers engaging with the Alpine Garden Society.
Vibrant alpine meadow with colourful wildflowers beneath towering mountain cliffs in the Italian Dolomites, showcasing alpine gardening and landscape beauty.
Vibrant wildflowers blooming in a mountain meadow with hikers, featuring dramatic rocky cliffs in the background, perfect for alpine garden enthusiasts and nature lovers.
Vibrant alpine wildflowers in a mountain meadow, showcasing colourful blooms and lush greenery, with a rugged mountain cliff in the background, ideal for alpine gardening enthusiasts.
Vibrant alpine meadow filled with pink, yellow, and purple wildflowers on a hillside under a partly cloudy sky, showcasing diverse alpine flora perfect for garden enthusiasts.
Alpine garden with wildflowers and mountain scenery, showcasing the beauty of alpine flora and landscapes for gardening and nature enthusiasts.
Vibrant alpine garden meadow with blooming wildflowers, lush green grass, pine trees, mountain backdrop, and a rustic wooden hut, perfect for alpine gardening and nature enthusiasts.

Amongst the flowers were the attractive seedheads of Geum montanum, and spent flowers of one of the trumpet gentians. We ate in the midst of a carpet of flowers, Fragrant Orchids and Small White Orchids (Pseudorchis albida) among them.

We had proceeded very slowly on the first section of this walk and had expected to stop further on.  The ridge made a fabulous picnic site, but it would mean a long afternoon toiling down the mountain.

Pyrola media

As usual, I couldn’t sit still to eat for long; I soon discovered that there were all sorts of interesting flowers in this area of meadow, camouflaged by the carpet of familiar yellow rattle and clover.  As well as the fragrant orchids and Veratrum, there were more vanilla orchids, and cat’s ears (Antennaria dioica).

Most interesting of all, there were Pyrola (probably P. media) flowering here in the open meadow – I had thought they were woodland plants.

Spring

Soon, I had left the picnic group to explore a little spring pool a short distance away, surrounded by cotton grass (Eriophorum angustifolium).  Ox-eye daisies (Leucanthemum vulgare) bloomed where the grass was a little longer.  Here I found a few plants of spotted gentian (Gentiana punctata), though none had open flowers.

Wild alpine flowers and greenery in a natural hillside landscape at an alpine garden.
Vivid alpine wildflower meadow in the mountains, showcasing colourful blooms and lush greenery, ideal for alpine garden enthusiasts and visitors to the Alpine Garden Society.
Unlikely Image not available for direct analysis. Please upload the specific image from https://alpinegardensociety.net for accurate SEO content creation.
Wild daisies and yellow wildflowers in a lush green garden setting, perfect for Alpine gardening enthusiasts.
Alpine Garden Society emblem, focusing on unique alpine plants and gardening tips for high-altitude flora enthusiasts.

Campanula barbata

On the way back, I stopped to photograph the bank between me and the picnic, which was a mass of Geum montanum seedheads and Campanula barbata flowers.  I love these pale blue, hairy-throated bells, particularly when backlit by the sun.

Campanula barbata
Campanula barbata
Campanula barbata
Campanula barbata
Campanula barbata
Campanula barbata

Trifolium badium

Before long, we needed to set off again, crossing the ridge, through the clover and rattle, and past clumps of the yellow and brown Trifolium badium (Brown Clover) which we had admired on previous walks.

Wildflower meadow with alpine plants in the mountains, showcasing diverse flora and natural beauty, ideal for alpine gardening enthusiasts and nature lovers.
A vibrant alpine meadow filled with wildflowers, surrounded by towering mountains and dense pine forests, under a partly cloudy sky in the Alps.
Wildflower meadow in the Alps surrounded by fir trees, under a partly cloudy sky, highlighting alpine flora and mountain scenery.
Trifolium badium
Pano of alpine meadow filled with colourful wildflowers, with pine trees, mountains and cloudy sky in the background, showcasing the beauty of alpine gardens and mountain flora.
Vivid alpine wildflower meadow with colourful blossoms including pink, yellow, and purple flowers, showcasing diverse flora in a natural mountain landscape.
Trifolium badium

Woodland

The vegetation changed as we entered a wooded section, and the path began to descend more steeply.  Here we encountered Geranium sylvaticum, Adenostyles alliariae, Twayblade (Neottia ovata (formerly Listera)) and the beautiful alpine rose (Rosa pendulina).

Alpine Garden Society botanical landscape with mountain scenery and lush coniferous forest in the background.
Neottia ovata
Geranium sylvaticum
Adenostyles alliariae
Rosa pendulina

Vicia sylvatica

After a while, the path levelled off again, passing through an open woodland.  The meadows on either side held large clumps of the beautiful Vicia sylvatica (Wood Vetch).

Vicia sylvatica
Vicia sylvatica
Vicia sylvatica
Vicia sylvatica

Scabiosa lucida (?)

The scabious here had tall straight stems with quite pink flowers.  Again, this could equally well be the Field Scabious, Knautia arvensis.  I have found it more or less impossible to identify these plants with any confidence.

Hieracium

There were a number of hawkweeds here with primrose yellow flowers.  I think the small ones, with small flowers, are probably Hieracium pilosella.  But there were also plants with much larger flowers which I have not been able to identify.

Hieracium pilosella

Gentianella germanica

After this, our path ran out onto a gently undulating, but basically level plateau.  I have seen photographs this area covered in sheets of colour from the flowers.  So it was a little disappointing to find that we had not caught it quite at its best; you could see the mass of flowers, but many were buds or in seed.  Nevertheless, there were some lovely plants, including Campanula scheuchzeri, and better plants of Gentianella germanica.

mountain meadows
mountain meadows
Gentianella germanica
Campanula scheuchzeri
Gentianella germanica
Gentianella germanica

As the path descended further, there were seedheads of Pulsatilla alpina on the bank beside us.

Silene flos-cuculi

Moving on, we entered a little valley where the ground was a little damper; the meadows became flushed with yellow buttercups, and the pink of Silene flos-cuculi (Ragged Robin).  In the dampest areas, we saw again large patches of Dactylorhiza majalis, and the white fluffy heads of cotton grass.

Wildflower meadow in the Alps with mountains, trees, and a small wooden hut, ideal for Alpine Garden Society enthusiasts and mountain garden lovers.
Wildflower meadow with alpine plants and rustic wooden cabins in a scenic mountain landscape, ideal for alpine garden enthusiasts and garden society members.
Silene flos-cuculi
Silene flos-cuculi

A short climb

Here we turned left, and climbed a short rise towards the Ranch Hut Rifugio.  An element of haste crept into proceedings, as a passing shower made its presence felt.  Beside the path, I photographed Golden Rod (Solidago virgaurea) and good plants of Veratrum lobelianum.

Ranch Hut

Fortunately, we arrived at the Ranch Hut in time to shelter from the worst of the rain.  This stands at 1850m, so we had descended about 200m from Santa Croce.  However, we had walked only about 3.5km of our route (possibly 5km as the botanist rambles).  This meant we still had about 6km to go, and another 500m of descent.

The party had already had to wait for me several times, when I was lagging behind, sometimes because I had stopped to photograph a plant, sometimes simply because I tend to walk slowly.  Perhaps it would have been sensible to retrace my steps to Santa Croce.  But the party was going on, and the lure of the unexplored was strong.

Our stop didn’t last long.  We had coffee and strudel around a table with a simple, charming flower arrangement; the sugar came in individual packets with wildly patterned exteriors, which fascinated us all.

Many rifugios have sculptures and models around them made by local craftsmen.  Here there is

  • a crucifix,
  • what looks like a bird nesting box, but seems to be a weather station,
  • a carved eagle on a post.

Once the rain had passed, the views across the valley from the terrace were magnificent.

Goats

Near the Rifugio is a small enclosure containing goats.  I had to photograph these for Helen.

Ranunculus aconitifolius

The path downhill from the Ranch Hut ran through a band of trees. In their shade, we found some interesting woodland plants:

  • The little Maianthemum bifolium with its heart-shaped leaves
  • Vaccinium vitis-idaea, the Cowberry, which we saw on Day 2
  • The lovely white flowers of Ranunculus aconitifolius.

Soon we were back out in the open, crossing meadows packed with flowers, including large numbers of spent trumpet gentian flowers.

Salvia pratensis

From here, as they say, it was all downhill.  The deep blue flowers of Salvia pratensis were starting to appear among the ox-eye daisies.  The scabious here seemed to be lilac rather than pink, and I am not convinced that they are the same species we saw earlier.

Scabiosa lucida (?)

Our way now ran down a valley, past a succession of small pools.

Damper meadows

Near the pools we found plants preferring a damper habitat:

  • Euphrasia rostkoviana – I was surprised to see that this little eyebright seemed to prefer a damp situation
  • Eriophorum angustifolium – cotton grass
  • Parnassia palustris – here we found plants with more flowers on, but they seem to stagger out, rather than opening in a single flush
  • Dactylorhiza majalis
  • Veratrum lobelianum – without flowers, the Veratrum leaves make lovely patterns.

Campanula glomerata

As we descended into the valley, the mountains across the valley became steadily more striking.  The gradient of the descent had slackened again now, and we entered a landscape of smoothly undulating meadows.  Presumably this unusual billowing terrain is a result of glaciation – these look a lot like drumlins.  Good plants of Campanula glomerata were flowering in these taller meadows, along with Vicia sylvatica.

Salvia pratensis

Everywhere the meadow flowers were taller and more robust. The lovely blue Salvia pratensis were more prevalent, and particularly striking with the hills behind them.  Along with them we saw:

  • A rather tall Erigeron with small very pale lilac flowers. I think this might be Erigeron acris
  • An Achillea – probably millefolium (Tansy)
  • Silene vulgaris – Bladder Campion
  • Silene nutans – Nottingham Catch-fly
Salvia pratensis
Salvia pratensis
Erigeron acris (?)
Achillea millefolium
Salvia pratensis
Salvia pratensis
Silene vulgaris
Silene nutans

Down and Down we go

Soon we rounded a corner, and the path dropped over the edge of a steeper slope.  The light and clouds across the valley were becoming more and more dramatic.

Cirsium helenioides

Cirsium helenioides (the Melancholy Thistle) looked rather glamorous against this dramatic lighting, and not at all melancholy.  Likewise the scabious, whichever species it is.

Pimpinella major rosea

The ‘pink cow parsley’, Pimpinella major rosea, looked spectacular amongst the taller meadow grasses.

Lilium bulbiferum

These meadows had orange highlights, where the orange stars of Lilium bulbiferum glowed at us.  The species name ‘bulbiferum’ means bearing bulbs, and you can see tiny bulbils in the leaf axils in this picture.

Lilium bulbiferum
Lilium bulbiferum

Sunbeams

As we followed the path down and across these rolling green meadows, sunbeams shone down among the clouds, picking out patches of green, giving the trees long shadows.

Mountain landscape with hikers walking through lush green meadows and forested hills in the Alps, showcasing outdoor adventure and scenic beauty in alpine regions, ideal for gardening and nature enthusiasts.

Dactylorhiza fuchsii

The path turned back left again, across the face of the slope, and into an area of woodland.  In the dappled shade there were small clumps of Common Spotted Orchids (Dactylorhiza fuchsii).

Alpine landscape with mountain peaks, lush green valleys, and small alpine villages, perfect for gardening and outdoor enthusiasts.
Nestled deciduous trees in a lush green alpine garden, perfect for plant enthusiasts and nature lovers.
Dactylorhiza fuchsii

Saponaria ocymoides

At the top of a tall clay slope on the left, just as we were about to turn back down the hill, a flash of pink caught my eye.  This was Saponaria ocymoides, or Tumbling Ted, which used to grow over the wall in our front garden when I was young.  These photos don’t show the muddy, slippery scramble needed to get close enough to take them.

Saponaria ocymoides

Our path now led down a stream valley, but the valley bottom still seemed an awfully long way away.  On the other side of our little valley, a young woman was cutting hay on a steep slope with a rather impressive mowing machine.

Valley bottom meadow flowers

The plant community down this last, lowest section of our walk was quite different.  Here we saw:

  • Fine specimens of Orobanche gracilis (Slender Broomrape). Admittedly we had seen these in the turf higher up, but not in such good condition.
  • The lovely pink and white vetch Coronilla varia (Crownvetch) – be wary of it in gardens, it is regarded as an invasive alien in the USA.
  • White spikes of the tall Campanula trachelium (Nettle-leaved Bell-flower) on the banks of the stream – we only saw the white form.
  • The nodding yellow heads of Cirsium erisithales (yellow melancholy thistle). This definitely did look melancholy, and rather bedraggled.

More valley bottom meadow flowers

  • Lathyrus pratensis (Meadow Vetchling) – with scrambling stems and yellow flowers. This is an invasive weed in my garden.
  • Melilotus officinalis (?) – Yellow honey clover. This is an annual/biennial which tends to appear on disturbed soil, on so building sites etc.  I photographed some magnificent specimens on a new bypass in the UK this summer.
  • Filipendula ulmaria (Meadowsweet) – again on the banks of the stream.

Buphthalmum salicifolium

On the banks which rose higher, away from the stream, it was a pleasure to photograph the yellow daisies of Buphthalmum salicifolium, growing with Stachys alopecuros (Yellow Betony).  We had seen this several times on roadsides, but not where we could stop.

Buphthalmum salicifolium
Buphthalmum salicifolium
Stachys alopecuros
Buphthalmum salicifolium
Buphthalmum salicifolium

Reaching the Bottom

Finally we came into sight of the church at the top of Badia, and stumbled slowly down the hill towards the lower cable car station, where you could see our hotel across the river.  The others were in a hurry, and left me to make my own snail’s progress.

Alpine Garden Society headquarters nestled in scenic mountain landscape with traditional buildings, lush green meadows, and surrounding coniferous forests, perfect for alpine plant enthusiasts.

Here there were garden plants to admire – Pelargoniums, a fine Spiraea (S. japonica ?), and a lovely very pale pink rose.

Pelargoniums
Spiraea japonica (?)
Rose

Valeriana officinalis

A little further, and I was crossing the river, with Valeriana officinalis on its banks.  Just a couple of hundred yards more, up a steep slope, to the hotel.

By this time I was walking like a zombie, struggling to place one foot in front of the other.  When I arrived back at the hotel, the ladies were sitting with drinks on the veranda, and leapt up to find me a seat.  I have seldom encountered such concern for my well-being.  After a welcome rest, a glass of water and then a cold beer, the colour was coming back into my face, and we all enjoyed a well-earned evening meal.

What a marvellous day!  I was utterly exhausted by the end of it, but I enjoyed it enormously.  This entry may seem far too long, but I took over 1200 pictures that day – I could not restrain myself with the carpets of flowers, and then the wonderful light later on – and there are only about a quarter of them included here.