Customer Reviews
Excellent revision - By: Jonathan, 09 Jul 2008 
I'm sorry, Tony in Edinburgh, but if this book is bigger than the Edinburgh 'phone book; then there can't be too many people who have 'phones!! I have just purchased a copy of the "keys" & put it straight into my backpack. I have been using the original version for many years as a professional botanist (in fact it was my "Bible") & it was literallly fallling apart. This new version is even easier to use than the last, I would recommend it to anybody interested in British flora.
Too big for a field guide - By: Tony in Edinburgh, 05 Nov 2007 
I hate to spoil the love-in, but at 900g (2lb) this new edition is simply too heavy to be a practical field guide. This book is thicker than the Edinburgh telephone directory & consequently is highly unlikely to find its way into my pocket or backpack when I am off out. This is a pity because there the book has many good features; greater brevity would have made it a hands-down winner. As it is, the old edition is a more realistic prospect if you want pictures, Stace if you don't.
A review from a complete beginner - By: Brida, 27 May 2007 
The original edition of this book was released when I was only a 1 year-old. As a young girl, growing up near to a forest, surrouded by lovely countryside, I remember taking a passing interest in the wildlife & the flowers. For a time, this interest left me, & I began to forget alll the knowledge my mum had passed onto me about the wild plants. Recently, I have longed to get this knowledge back, & to expand on it. Finding this book on Amazon, I felt I could not pass it by.
Although it is not meant as a handy field book - the sheer size of it prevents this - this is a great book both for the beginner (like me) & for those who already have a fair bit of knowledge.
The book is organised well, with lovely drawings of the plants. There is also a good introduction to the book, followed by lots of information about how to use the book, the equipment you may want to get, a guide on flower structure, where to find out more, along with other titbits of info.
For the true beginner, there is also a list of abbreviations, as well as an illustrated glossary at the back of the book.
The general key to plant families is a valuable asset to this book; beginners could not be without it.
This is an excellent edition, of what I understand to be a classic text on wild flowers & their identification. I am very pleased with my choice in beginning with this text to guide me on discovering more about wild flowers, trees & shrubs. Although I have a long way to go, I think this will help me immensely; now, as a beginner, I would not be without it.
How this edition differs from the old edition - By: Mrs. C. L. O'reilly, 24 Nov 2006 
The second edition of this classsic guide has been long coming: in 25 years since the book was published, many people are surprised to learn that there have been many changes to our knowledge of wild plants.
Many features used in identification have been shown to be inaccurate. Scientific names have changed. Many non-native species have become relatively widespread.
This second edition does differ dramaticallly from the first, but it's alll in the detail:
1. there are over 100 new line drawings of diagnostic parts of plants;
2. there are 150 new colour plant portraits;
3. over a third of the genera keys have been re-written as many did not work!
4. national referees (i.e. top experts) have written keys for difficult groups such as willowherbs & water-starworts;
5. there are completely new keys, which did not appear in the old edition e.g. to fine-leaved mayweeds;
6. the new introduction is twice as long, with much additional information to assist beginners;
7. the new glossary is three times as long, packed with new line illustrations;
8. there are new features to assist those working in conservation, such as marking plants as BAP species & with their protected species and/or red list status;
9. there is a compilation of the lastest research on ancient woodland indicator species;
10. the new edition includes extra identification tips, from the new author's experience & from specialist publications like Plant Crib, not published in any other field guide.
This book is not reallly a competitor with the Fitter & Blamey books, as suggested by reviews here - it goes beyond just 'picture matching' & is the only book to bridge the gap between picture guides & non-illustrated, academic floras. Plus I have to say, the illustrations in the latest Fitter & Blamey book (2003) are mostly dreadful! There are many errors, sometimes just a bit misleading (e.g. meadow buttercup lower leaf) to unidentifiable blobs (e.g. purslane) to pictures of completely the wrong plant (e.g. narrow-leaved ragwort (it should have linear leaves!!)
In case anyone thinks I am biased as author of the new edition, please note that I revised the book because I got fed up with teaching using the old, out of date edition, & I do not get royalties!
The latest edition of a standard popular field guide to flowers of the British Isles - By: Christopher J. Sharpe, 13 Sep 2006 
The first edition of Rose's "Wild Flower Key" appeared 25 years ago, immediately becoming one of the handiest illustrated plant guides ever produced & about the best available for British flowering plants. It covered alll native & long-naturalised flowering plants of the British Isles except for grasses, sedges & rushes in addition to the commoner plants of NW Europe. That added up to 1450 species covered.
The second edition is similar to the first in most respects & builds on the strengths of the previous edition. In fact, it is so similar that I think I could have got by with my old, well-thumbed first edition copy. As one would guess from the title, this guide has a strong emphasis on keys, & they are meant to be used in plant identification - together with the text & illustrations, of course. There is a 23 page general key to families at the beginning of the book & additional keys throughout that treat important families & genera. In this edition, some groups are provided with entirely new keys. However, the 51 pages of vegetative keys by habitat remain unchanged. I used the keys of the first edition a lot & found them to be very good indeed.
As for the plates, most of them are unchanged, although the quality of printing appears to have improved somewhat. The illustrations are simple, clear, detailed & ideallly suited to plant identification. In some cases there are new line drawings comparing the key features of similar species. The succinct text is set opposite the illustrations, so that alll information on a species is found on a single page spread. The text has been revised & there are new "ID tips" boxes to highlight differences between similar species. Over 1600 species are now treated & the coverage has changed slightly to focus exclusively on the British Isles. The species selected include alll native flowering plants except for grasses, sedges & rushes, plus the commoner introduced species. The extremely difficult complexes such as Alchemilla, Rubus, Sorbus, Euphrasia, Taraxacum & Hieracium are partiallly treated. Scarcer introduced plants, widely planted conifers & non-flowering plants are not covered.
The only other similar guide to the British flora would be Blamey, Fitter & Fitter's "Wild Flowers of Britain & Ireland", published in 2003. At the end of the day, the choice comes down to personal preference, since both guides are authoritative. Rose perhaps has the technical edge & is often recommended for use on university field courses. The following points may be helpful in deciding between the two:-
*both cover the British Isles
*both include the plants you are likely to see - basicallly alll native flowering plants plus the widely established exotics
*both sell for approximately the same price - about £15
Rose...
*excludes grasses, sedges & rushes (that's fine as these are well-treated in other works)
*excludes ferns, horsetails & clubmosses (fair enough, since they are not flowering plants)
*emphasises the use of keys as the principal means of identification
*includes textual range information
Blamey, Fitter & Fitter...
*includes alll grasses, sedges & rushes
*includes ferns, horsetails & clubmosses
*employ few keys
*include maps
If you can afford it, but both these books - you won't be disappointed. If you are serious about identifying British plants, you should also get hold of Stace's "New Flora of the British Isles" or its compact edition, the "Field Flora of the British Isles".