Just in time for the 4th, tall meadow rue (Thalictrum pubescens) puts on its own fireworks display. Flowers on both male and female plants lack petals and have only anthers (male) or pistils (female). These are male flowers in this photo. This plant grows in moist places along stream and pond banks and gets quite tall. I’ve seen it reach 6 or 7 feet.
Northern catalpa trees (Catalpa speciosa) are loaded with beautiful orchid like blossoms right now. Soon long, thin seed pods will dangle from the branches. When I was a boy we always called catalpas string bean trees.
Native spreading dogbane (Apocynum androsaemifolium) is a perennial wildflower that looks like a shrub. It spreads by both seeds and underground stems and is considered a weed in some places. I find large colonies of it growing in sandy soil along sunny forest edges. The plant in related to milkweed and many species of butterflies rely on it.
Spreading dogbane has small, light pink, bell shaped flowers that have deeper pink stripes on their insides. They are fragrant but their scent is hard to describe. Spicy maybe. This plant is pollinated by butterflies and the flowers have barbs inside that trap short tongued insects. That’s how it gets another of its common names: flytrap dogbane. Each flower is just big enough to hold a pea.
Most people seeing this flower would say that it is yellow hawkweed and they would be half right. This is the blossom of rattlesnake weed (Hieracium venosum,) which is in the hawkweed family and is sometimes called rattlesnake hawkweed. The flower clusters grow at the tops of long, wiry stems and that makes getting a photo of the flowers and leaves together just about impossible. I’ve been trying for quite a while.
The foliage of rattlesnake weed changes as the season progresses. The leaves shown here started out very purple in the spring, with deep purple veins. They were also very hairy, but now they are smooth and green with reddish veins. The plant’s common name comes from the thought that it grew where there were rattlesnakes. Because of the very unusual foliage I think it is one of our most beautiful native plants, but unfortunately it is also extremely rare. This is the only one I’ve ever seen.
Our meadows are spangled with maiden pinks and yellow cinquefoil right now. The two colors go very well together. If you didn’t know better you’d think it had been planned.
Maiden pinks (Dianthus deltoids) originally hail from Europe and Asia and were imported to use in gardens. Of course they immediately escaped and can now be seen just about everywhere. The name “pinks” comes from the way the petal edges look like they were cut by pinking shears. Butterflies love them.
The ox-eye daisies and lupines along the riverbank have been beautiful this year. The spot in this photo is where I have always found chicory (Cichorium intybus) growing as well, but there is no sign of it this year and I wonder if our harsh winter has killed it.
I found a small pond in the woods that was surrounded by yellow flag iris (Iris pseudacorus). This iris is a native of Europe and was introduced in the mid-1800s as a garden plant. Of course it escaped and began to naturalize and was reported near Poughkeepsie, New York in 1868 and in Concord, Massachusetts in 1884. Today it considered highly invasive and its sale and distribution is banned in New Hampshire, though in my experience it is a rarity in this part of the state. This is one of just a very few times I have seen it and it was quite beautiful. Even though I jumped from hummock to hummock to get this photo, I couldn’t get any closer without waders.
One of the great delights of wandering the New Hampshire woods in late spring is the amazing fragrance of wild grape flowers that wafts on the breeze. Their perfume can be detected from quite a distance so I let my nose lead me to this vine, which was growing over some sumacs. I’m always surprised that such a big scent comes from such tiny flowers, each no bigger than the head of a match. We have a few varieties of wild grape here in New Hampshire including fox grapes (Vitis labrusca).
Another native food found here in New Hampshire is the cranberry. Though I usually find them in wet, boggy areas these grew high on an embankment quite far from the water of a pond. We have two kinds here, the common cranberry (Vaccinium oxycoccos) and the small cranberry (Vaccinium microcarpum.) I think the plants pictured are the common cranberry.
Early European settlers thought cranberry flowers resembled the neck, head, and bill of a crane so they called them crane berries. The flower petals do have an unusual habit of curving backwards, but I’m not seeing cranes when I look at them. Cranberries were an important ingredient of Native American pemmican, which was made of dried meat, berries, and fat. Pemmican saved the life of many an early settler.
Elderberry (Sambucus nigra) bushes are common and seen everywhere here in this part of New Hampshire; common enough to be largely ignored, in fact. But, if you take the time to stop and really look at them you find that the large, flat flower heads are made up of hundreds of tiny, uncommonly beautiful flowers. Later in August each flower will have become a small purple berry so dark it is almost black.
Flowers have spoken to me more than I can tell in written words. They are the hieroglyphics of angels, loved by all men for the beauty of their character, though few can decipher even fragments of their meaning. ~ Lydia M. Child
Thanks for coming by. I hope everyone has a safe and happy 4th of July.
I live in the city and on our occasional trips to local parks and scenic drives I did not find any elderberry shrubs.Where can we see some in the southern parts of NH?
Thank you!
You’re welcome Alma. You can see elderberries blooming right now along streams, rivers, lakes and ponds. They like being near water and are blooming here by the thousands. Look for very large, flat, white to off white flower heads. They won’t last much longer though, because I saw berries forming the other day.
So many of the plants you find are mysterious to me here in the UK but then some that you find unusual and rare are everywhere here, like the yellow iris. Our riverbanks and water meadows are filled with them. They really are beautiful too, what a shame you couldn’t get a closer look. 🙂
It’s too bad that they’re so invasive. I think if they weren’t they’d have a better time of it here. Being dug up and destroyed probably why I’ve rarely seen them.
An informative and interesting post. thank you.
You’re welcome Cynthia, and thank you.
All your pictures are great Allen, I really like the Northern catalpa tree flower and the Maiden Pinks. The Maiden Pink is really beautiful. I don’t believe I have ever seen the Northern catalpa tree flower.
Thanks Michael. There is also a southern catalpa (Catalpa bignonioides) which is often called cigar tree. Those maiden pinks are quite small but they usually grow in clumps, so they’re easy to see.
Really interesting post and the flower photos wonderful. We have lots of yellow flag iris in our garden – in the ditches surrounding the property and in the large pond. The do tend to take over and many have to be hacked out every few years.
Thank you Clare. Yes, the problem we have with them is how they choke out the native species.
Your photos as always are quite special and the information is always greatly appreciated. I learn a lot from your posts.
Thank you Charlie. I’m glad that you do.
Somehow so strange to see some of these so common around here too so far away.
It is odd how plants choose where to grow. Some don’t even grow in the state right next door.
Beautiful photos! I even recognized a few of these for a change!
Thanks Montucky!
Reblogged this on Dawn of Divine Rays.
Ok, I need to get out and get smelling and looking!! A friend I walk with says Yankee Candle needs to make “June” and now “July”, each month having a distinct and beautiful fragrance. How have I not noticed the flowers on grapevine? They are all over, climbing all through our woods. Perfect quote you found!!!
Thank you Jocelyn. You might have smelled grape blossoms and nit known it was them you were smelling. They’re so small that you have to be right on top of them to see them. They would make a good candle scent!
Such beautiful wildflowers! It’s always fun to see what is blooming in your area that is so different from here.
Thanks Sue!
I’m not sure I’ve ever seen cranberries in bloom. I found a bog where they grow, but I’ve only been there in early spring (when I found them), and in late autumn (when I went there to pick some).
It’s hard to think of cranberries on the 4th of July but that’s just about the time that they bloom. They grow very low to the ground and the flowers are very small, but usually numerous.
The rattlesnake weed shot was a triumph.
Thanks!
Thanks for the wildflower tour, very informative. There were quite a few that I had never heard of. And I liked the story about the origins of the name “cranberry.” I am jealous of your lupines, they are rare in our region.
Thanks! We have lupines lining the roadsides here at about this time each year. Many of them are escapees from gardens, but there are native wild lupines too.
I hate to sound like a broken record, but I do really enjoy your posts, and some of them are starting to sink into my thick skull. I read this post three times before I remembered where I had seen cranberries here in Michigan. Of course I couldn’t identify them then, but I will remember the next time I see them. Hopefully this weekend.
I hope that you have a safe and happy Fourth of July, and that “our” humidity doesn’t make it unbearable there like it had been here. 😉
Thanks Jerry! I think you’ve been doing pretty good with identifications this year. Cranberry flowers aren’t something you see every day so I think most people would have a hard time with those.
Yes, your humidity made it here on Monday and has been building since. We’re getting pounding thunderstorms right now though, so maybe that will ease it some. The 4th is supposed to be great weather, if you can believe the forecasts.
Beautiful pictures. Do you have the catalpa sphinx moth? I haven’t seen any here yet and wonder about extreme winter impacting their numbers.
Thanks! We’re supposed to have that moth here but I can’t remember ever seeing one. I’ll have to keep a closer eye on those trees.
The eggs are laid in small mass. So if they are there, they’re at least easy to find when they get bigger.
I’ll have to take a look.
forgot — they’re laid on the underside of the leaf.
I thought that was where they’d be. I looked at the underside of a catalpa leaf this morning and there was a bunch of black dots along its vein, but they were really small.
They’d be in a mass and whitish. One leaf on my tree has a line of brown barrel shaped eggs. I can’t remember what they are. One year the tree had so many caterpillars they ate probably 75% of the leaves!
I never knew that they went for catalpa like that.
Glad it’s not often. The caterpillars can be so fascinating. They have prey after them, have parasitic wasps problems. I should blog them, even though I haven’t seen any yet. I do have a kazillion pictures.
I’d certainly read it if you did.
It’s on my list.
Wonderful posting. I especially enjoyed the information and photos of the cranberries. I always learn so much from your postings!
Thanks Mike. I’m glad that you are getting something from these posts. I know that I don’t have to urge you to get out there and see for yourself!
Beautiful collection. So many plants have escaped gardens. I didn’t know yellow flag iris sales were banned. Love the cranberry flowers! I have lots of wild grapes in my yard, but have never paid attention to their scent. I’ll have to check it out. Thanks for the wonderful post. Happy and safe 4th to you too!
Thanks Laura. Yes, yellow irises are one of an ever longer list of banned invasive plants. I’m surprised that those grapes don’t smell up your whole yard. It could be that some varieties aren’t fragrant. Have a great 4th!
As always, I enjoyed your interesting post this morning and the close up detail of text and photograph, over here the yellow flag iris is a native, my sister has a huge natural pond awash with yellow flag and they look spectacular. I really like the quote you have chosen too.
Thank you Julie. I like the yellow irises too but they choke out our native blue flag iris and other plants like cattails, which are very important to the wildlife.
Beautiful…..I enjoyed the ‘virtual ‘ walk ,it’s set me up for the day. I too have Thalictrum in the garden and most of them reach 5 to 6 foot. Have some specials that are due to flower soon so I may post photos….
Thank you Sue. I have a purple flowered meadow rue that also gets quite tall. I’m looking forward to your photos!
Lovely – splendid pictures, interesting commentary and an apposite quotation to conclude the post.
Thank you Susan. Those are the things I strive for and I’m glad that I hit the mark with this one.