Here are a few more of the wildflowers that I’ve seen recently.
Blue has always been my favorite color and I can’t think of another flower more blue than chicory (Cichorium intybus.) I’ve read that chicory flowers can also rarely be white or pink, but I’ve never seen them. These plants aren’t real common here but you can find small colonies dotted here and there throughout the countryside. The large, inch and a half diameter flowers on 4 foot tall plants means they’re easy easy to see. The roasted and ground root of chicory makes a passable coffee substitute.
Vervain (Verbena hastata) is described as having reddish blue or violet flowers but I see the same beautiful blue color that I see in the chicory flower in the previous photo. Somebody else must have seen the same thing, because they named the plant blue vervain. Sometimes color blindness isn’t so bad! Vervain flowers are considerably smaller than chicory, but there are usually so many blooming that they’re as easy to spot as that plant is. Vervain can get quite tall and has erect, terminal flower clusters. The bitter roots of this plant were used medicinally by Native Americans.
Common speedwell (Veronica officinalis) is another flower that looks blue to me, but that some books describe as purple. In other books I’ve seen it described as “blue to white.” In any case the flowers are very small, so you usually have to lie on your stomach in the dirt to get a good photo of them. This plant is a European native and its leaves were once used as a substitute for tea there. It has also been used medicinally for centuries.
This bristly sarsaparilla (Aralia hispida) flower head had ants all over it, so I’m assuming that’s how it is pollinated. This plant is a native but it isn’t common and isn’t well known. I find it growing in full sun in very dry, sandy waste areas. It is listed by the USDA as endangered in many states. The stems are covered in short, sharp, bristly hairs and that’s where its common name comes from. The lower part of its stem is woody and persists throughout winter, so technically it is considered a shrub.
Moth mullein (Verbascum blattaria) gets its common name from the way the flowers’ stamens resembled moth antennae to the person who named it. This plant was introduced from Europe and found in Pennsylvania in 1818 and immediately escaped gardens to become a roadside weed now found in every state except Wyoming and Alaska. It isn’t very common in this area however-I only know of one plant. Its flowers can also be white.
In early spring it is easy to confuse tall meadow rue (Thalictrum pubescens) with columbine because their leaves look so much alike, but as you watch the plant grow to sometimes 6 feet in height it is obvious that it isn’t columbine. The flowers of tall meadow rue don’t have any petals-the yellow tipped white parts are male stamens on the example in the photo. Female plants have white pistils that appear much like the male stamens at a glance. It’s appropriate that these plants bloom near the 4th of July because they remind me of “bombs bursting in air.”
Partridge berry (Mitchella repens) flowers have filled the woods this year. This is an evergreen trailing plant that can form dense mats that are quite large. The strange thing about partridgeberry is how its two flowers fuse at the base to form one ovary. In one flower the male stamens are long and the female pistil is short. In the other flower the female pistil is longer than the male stamens. This prevents self-fertilization. The two flowers produce one red berry that bears two dimples, showing where the flowers were. I always try to show the very hairy white petals when I take photos of partridgeberry.
American wintergreen (Gaultheria procumbens) is just starting to open its small white flowers that look a lot like blueberry flowers. Wintergreens get their common name from the way they stay green in the winter-what we call evergreen-and this plant is probably the most well-known among natives because of its shiny green leaves that turn purple when it gets colder. I call the plant teaberry because its red berries taste just like teaberry gum. My grandmother always called it checkerberry.
Shinleaf (Pyrola elliptica) is a common wildflower in the wintergreen family. Many plants in the wintergreen family contain compounds that are very similar to aspirin, and shinleaf was used by Native Americans as a poultice on injured shins and other parts of the body. That’s how this plant gets its common name. Shinleaf leaves form a rosette at the base of the single, 4-5 inch tall flower stalk.
Ten orange tipped, pollen bearing stamens hide under the upper two petals on shinleaf blossoms. Shinleaf is pollinated by flies.
The best way to identify shinleaf is by the long, curved style that hangs down from the center of the flower. It’s easy to see how an insect would use the stigma at the end of the style for a landing pad and leave sticky pollen behind.
Pipsissewa (Chimaphila umbellate or Pyrola umbellata) is also in the wintergreen family and recently I found a large colony of it. This plant likes to grow in groups, but they are usually made up of 10-15 plants. This group had many hundreds of plants and is the largest I’ve seen. The shiny green leaves make this plant easy to find.
Pipsissewa has nodding flowers that grow quite close to the ground and this makes getting a good photo difficult. Luckily I found a plant with a bent flower stalk and was able to get a look at the large center pistil and the 10 odd shaped anthers. It is said that the plant’s common name comes from the Native American word pipsiskeweu which means “it breaks into small pieces.” This refers to their belief that pipsissewa would break up kidney stones.
Yet another plant in the wintergreen family is striped wintergreen (Chimaphila maculata,) but unlike pipsissewa, teaberry, and shinleaf, this plant is rare in this area. In fact, it is considered rare in Canada and all of New England. I’ve only seen two in my lifetime and the plant pictured is one of them. This plant is also called spotted wintergreen or striped pipsissewa. The flowers are very beautiful and I’m hoping that I’ll be able to find this plant again so I can show them to you. Native Americans used striped wintergreen medicinally for a variety of internal and external ailments.
He who is born with a silver spoon in his mouth is generally considered a fortunate person, but his good fortune is small compared to that of the happy mortal who enters this world with a passion for flowers in his soul. ~ Celia Thaxter
Thanks for coming by.
Interesting on the striped wintergreen, we do have a fair bit of it (I can think of four patches) here around the house (so about 8 acres) in NW Ct. But, really, that is not very much, each of those patches are less than a foot square, and are extremely slow growing. In fact, three have neither expanded nor shrunk in several years. They also are only in locations which have been undisturbed for well over fifty years. I can see how it could easily become very rare.
The chicory is also interesting, I had always thought it was only blue; but this year, for the first time, we have lots of pink. odd.
I hope you’ll take care of your striped wintergreen by ignoring it for the most part, because it is rare. Both of the places I have seen it growing have been undisturbed for a very long time and now with what you have said I’m beginning to suspect that it is another plant that refuses to grow where man has been. I saw it flowering for the first time yesterday.
I’ve seen photos of white chicory that had the same blue stamens as blue chicory, so now I’m wondering if the pink flowers have them too.
No fear! It is carefully noted and protected. I suspect that the real problem for many of these plants is that any earth-moving by bulldozer is lethal. Many of the trees have widespread seed dispersal, so theoretically they can recolonize an area that has not only been cut, but has been bulldozed (almost any 20th century building lot). Anything that relies on ants, other non-flying insects, or sheer time (consider Trillium) is going to be out of luck.
This wintergreen is growing in areas that did have major soil disturbance, but that disturbance was between 80 and 130 years ago, and they are close to areas that have remained rough pasture/forest. It is entirely possible that one location was never even ploughed.
I’m glad they are well protected. Have you considered reporting your find to your state rare plant people? That’s what I’m going to do. We have to go through the forestry department which has a New Hampshire Heritage division. Maybe that way in the future people will think twice before disturbing the land they’re on, and maybe they won’t be able to disturb it at all.
Besides being a wealth of gardening information, you are certainly a skilled photographer.
Thank you. I did a lot of photography back in the film days but left it alone for quite awhile until this blog got me re-interested in it. I’ve found that it’s kind of like riding a bicycle-you don’t forget the basics.
Your flowers are so lovely and that quote suits this post so well. Another for my collection of your quotes. Amelia
Thanks Amelia-I’m glad you liked it.
Beautiful, and the top photo is particularly stunning.
Thank you. You don’t have to do much to make wildflowers beautiful-just take their picture.
As always you make it a pleasure to view and read whats happenin’ in the north woods.
Thanks Grampy. Right now we’re having some Kentucky summer weather up here, but it’s supposed to cool off this weekend.
Some lovely shots there, Allen. You always seem to find the most unusual and interesting of plants. Dave
Thanks Dave. I do look for things that most peolpe don’t see. Hopefully seeing them here will make them curious enough to go out and see for themselves.
You captured several of my favorites in this post. Chicory is very thick in VA, but I have never seen it in NH. I’ve seen it in VT and MA, even close to the NH border, but I’ve never seen it here. The USDA says it’s absent from Belknap county, which is pretty close to my house. Maybe that’s why I haven’t seen it – it just isn’t present in my usual stomping grounds.
What a huge pipsissewa colony! That’s way cool!
I’ve been seeing shinleaf here and there, but none have good looking flowers. They are all either misshapen or brown and wilted.
The wintergreen flowers had not opened at my place as of this weekend, and the partridgeberry is all but finished now. I didn’t know they had a stigma/style arrangement like that (there’s a word for that, but it eludes me). Pickerelweed has a similar arrangement.
It’s interesting that some plants will grow in one county but not in the one right next door. It always makes me wonder what they know that we don’t.
I have also seen shinleaf with brown flowers-last year several i saw were like that. I don’t know what causes it, but this year the plants are flowering as they normally would.
I learned that about partridgeberry last year when I was researching a post, but I didn’t know there was a word for the unusual arrangement.
The word is “heterostyly” – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterostyly
Pickerelweed has three morphs.
That’s interesting stuff! I know that I’ve read something similar to the Wikepedia article before-probably in botany class-but I don’t remember the word heterostyly. I probably just didn’t absorb it.
Thanks for the guide to the wildflowers in your area. Chicory is very common here, some consider it invasive, but the flower is pretty. I like the speedwell. Blue is a favorite color of mine as well, though which flowers are really blue seems to be a subject of some debate!
You’re welcome. I know what you mean-I’ve been doing the blue / purple thing for years now.
What interesting flowers you’ve chosen or this post. Some really cool reproductive adaptations. I don’t think that I have seen most of these plants. Perhaps they are found only in the eastern US?
Thanks Sue. According to the USDA all of these grow in Minnesota except the tall meadow rue, moth mullein and striped wintergreen. The moth mullein grows in every state but three, and Minnesota is one of them.
This is going to sound like spam, but you’ll know that it isn’t. I return to your blog archives often while trying to ID the plants and flowers that I find. Your blog is as good or better than a book to me.
Now here’s the rub. I hate to offer suggestions to other bloggers, but have you considered doing more with categories?
I like scrolling through your old posts, but it isn’t very efficient when I’m looking for a particular flower. I can limit my search by time of year, which helps.
But, if you were to add categories for say, wildflowers, fungi, lichens, plants, etc., it would be much easier for me, and any others who may use your blog the same way, to find what we are looking for. Tags are fine, but there’s not a way to limit the posts that I see by tags.
You’re amassing a wealth of information here, whether you realize it of not, and it’s becoming a great source of information, like I say, better than some books that I’ve tried. Keep up the great work!
Thanks Jerry. Actually I have thought about that a lot and intend to do something about it as soon as I find a little more free time. The problem for me is how to set it up so it is easy to find the flower you’re looking for. I could do “yellow flowers,” “blue flowers,” etc. but I’ve been to sites that do it that way it it always seems to me that there has to be an easier way. Unfortunately I haven’t thought of what that easier way is yet. Doing it by month would also create problems because something the blooms here in April might not bloom until June in high places like Colorado.
Anyhow to answer you question, yes-it’s in the works.
I subscribe to the KISS formula, keep it simple stupid, sorry to use that one, but it’s the best I could come up with quickly. You don’t have to do colors, or even time of the year, if I could just scroll through just posts with wildflowers, that would be a huge help. Or, scroll through posts with fungi. I don’t mind a little work, as I know what you’re trying to do is a daunting task. Just a few simple categories would go a long way in making your posts more easily navigated. That’s my opinion anyway.
Oh-I see what you mean. Instead of lumping everything together under nature, have categories for mushrooms, etc. That’s easy and I’ll do it on the next post it applies to.
Meanwhile I still want to do some kind of database that will be easy to search. Thanks for the nudge. Since I’m a mechanical engineer the “kiss principle” is well known, but is also sometimes forgotten.
Whew! I was afraid that I was a little too curt in my last comment, I was in a hurry to get going on my walk before the heat became unbearable.
Yeah, you got it, your last post could have a simple category of wildflowers. Then, when some one like myself goes through your past posts, I can use the drop down category widget you have already there on your blog, to scroll through all of your future posts that have wildflowers in them.
Some posts may end up with more than one category, but it would still be easier than selecting the nature category as it is now. You generally do posts that are somewhat specific anyway, I think that it would work very well.
I agree Jerry. It’s a good idea that for some reason, I never thought of.
Awesome stroll
Thanks!
🙂
I grew up in Maryland and there chicory is (or was) very common. I’ve often seen pink and white flowers mixed in with the beautiful clear blue.
Also, there was pipsissewa in those woods, but only the stripe-leafed kind. I wonder if they are still there. I’ve never seen the other more common kind that you show.
That’s interesting that you saw so much striped leaved pipsissewa. It’s very rare here. Maybe it likes warmer temperatures.
Great list. I know where to find some of these around here… But I’d like to find the Pipsissewa! That’s a cool one!
Thanks Jennifer. According to the USDA pipsissewa grows throughout New York but like here, it might not be easy to find there. I find it in old, dry pine forests that haven’t been disturbed for a century or more. It doesn’t seem to like growing where man is active.
I’ve looked over your post several times, tying to pick a favorite photo. I love them all. You really have found a beautiful set of wildflowers for July!
Thanks Laura. At this time of year choosing which ones don’t make it into the post is the hardest part of the process because so many are blooming. I’m glad you like the ones that made it in!
Beautiful shots of a wonderful variety of plants and flowers. I especially like the shot of the Vervain and the close-up of the Pipsissewa. The word “Pipsissewa” sounds so cool to me and I am glad that you explained where its origin.
Thanks Mike. Everyone seems to like the word pipsissewa. It is kind of fun to say once you get your tongue wrapped around it.