Fraoch mór is the Irish name for heather, Calluna vulgaris and it can be found over large parts of the Irish landscape.
It is also known as ling and it prefers acidic, boggy soils that cover the upland areas of Ireland. These are places that often, at first glance, appear barren with vast open tracts of treeless ground with only heath in view as far as the eye can see. But when the heather is flowering the uplands are filled with the sounds of bees busy collecting pollen. From April to August, before the pale purple colour bursts across the Irish countryside, ground nesting birds such as skylarks can be seen and heard hovering overhead.
Sometimes summer in Ireland is just not what you would expect. Well, perhaps it is what you might expect.
Usually our summers are filled with long days, sunshine and cloud with a good deal of rain but much blue sky - like this.
Summer 2017 has so far proved to be a good bit different with many grey days, lingering cloud and reduced sunshine. It has still been warm but all of this provides a challenge to the photographer.