It’s the time of year when our roadsides and meadows turn into Monet paintings and I love to see arrangements like this one even if the purple loosestrife is invasive. Goldenrod, boneset and yarrow are also in this little slice of what we see.
At a glance common boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) looks like white Joe Pye weed. That’s because the two plants are closely related. In fact they can often be found growing side by side, but boneset blossoms a little later than Joe Pye weed here. I find it on river, pond and stream banks; almost always near water.
The perfoliatum part of boneset’s scientific name means “through the foliage” and that’s how its stem appears to grow; as if the leaves have been perorated by it. Joe Pye weed leaves have leaf stems (petioles) and look very different.
Pretty little fringed loosestrife (Lysimachia ciliate) is the last of the native yellow loosestrifes to bloom in this area. Great colonies of the knee high plant can be found along roadsides and wood edges, and along waterways. It might be confused with whorled loosestrife (Lysimachia quadrifolia) if the two plants bloomed at the same time, but in this area fringed loosestrife blooms later. The flowers on fringed loosestrife are about the size of a quarter and nod to face the ground. On whorled loosestrife they face outward. The leaf arrangements on the two plants are also very different.
Fringed loosestrife gets its common name from the fringe of hairs on its leafstalks, but sometimes the flower petals are also fringed like they are on this example. It’s a cheery, pretty plant that often gets overlooked because there is just so much in bloom at this time of year.
Usually the lower lip on a spotted jewelweed blossom (Impatiens capensis) is all one piece but for some reason this one was split in two. That lessens the chances of pollination for this flower because the larger lower petal is used as a landing pad for insects, and the spots help guide them into the interior of the flower.
Each 1 inch long jewelweed blossom dangles at the end of a long filament and can dance in even in the slightest breath of breeze, and this makes getting a good photo always a challenge. I think it took 8 tries for this shot alone, and that meant leaving and returning that many times. Hummingbirds, bees, and butterflies pollinate these little flowers. You need a long tongue to reach all the way into that curved nectar spur. It is said that jewelweed is an important source of food for ruby throated hummingbirds.
Each little basal rosette of leaves on the downy rattlesnake plantain orchid (Goodyera pubescens) is about the diameter of a tennis ball and the gray green leaves can blend in so perfectly with the leaf litter that they sometimes disappear altogether. I’ve had to crawl on my hands and knees to find plants that I knew were there but luckily the large group in the above photo is always easy to find because it grows right behind a road sign. I was happy to see that they had sent up a few foot tall flower spikes in spite of our extreme dryness. The leaves are evergreen and each will last about four seasons. The oak leaf to the right gives a good idea of how small these plants are.
Each small white flower on the downy rattlesnake plantain is no bigger than a pea. The pubescens part of the scientific name means downy or hairy, and all parts of the plant above the leaves fit that description. Even the flowers are hairy. It is thought that a small bee called Augochlorella striata might pollinate them. Though it might not win any prizes at flower shows this little orchid is always a real pleasure to find in the woods. In some ways it reminds me of a tiny lady’s slipper.
My favorite part of the downy rattlesnake plantain orchid is its leaves. They’re very unusual and I can’t think of any other plants besides the rattlesnake plantain family that have foliage like it.
Broadleaf plantain (Plantago major) was cultivated Europe for centuries because of its medicinal value. It is very nutritious and high in calcium and vitamins A, C, and K and it was for these reasons that it crossed the Atlantic with European settlers. It grew well here and went everywhere they did, and Native Americans called it “the white man’s footprint.” The young, tender leaves are loaded with calcium and other minerals and can be eaten raw in salads, and the older, stringier leaves can be boiled in stews. Despite its health benefits many people these days know the plant only as a despised weed.
Broad leaved plantain sends up long, narrow flower spikes toward the end of July but the flowers are so tiny many people don’t even see them. Each plant can produce as many as 20,000 seeds.
Each wind pollinated broadleaf plantain flower is only 1/8 inch long, and has 4 green sepals, a pistil with a single white style, 4 stamens with pale purple anthers, and a papery corolla with 4 spreading lobes. At the base of each flower there is an oval green bract. They are a real challenge to photograph.
Virgin’s bower (Clematis virginiana) is a late summer blooming native clematis vine that drapes itself over shrubs so it can get all of the sunshine that it wants. I’ve also seen it climbing into trees. An extract made from the plant is hallucinogenic (and dangerous) and was used by Native Americans to induce dreams. Mixed with other plants like milkweed, it was also used medicinally. It is a very toxic plant that can cause painful sores in the mouth if eaten.
On this day there were tiny black or brown insects chewing on just the tips of the virgin bower’s petals.
If a plant with pointy leaves and a club shaped flower head towers over your head chances are it’s one of the wild lettuces that can sometimes reach 8-10 feet tall. I’ve wondered for years why a plant with such tiny flowers would have to grow so tall and this year it finally hit me. The seeds are much like dandelion seeds and are dispersed by the wind, so the taller the plant the more likely its windblown seeds will be blown further than they would if they grew down among all the other plants and grasses.
The pale yellow flowers of tall or Canada lettuce (Lactuca canadensis) are often tinted red or pink on their edges like the above example. This is a native lettuce that can occasionally reach 10 feet tall with clusters of small, 1/4 inch flowers at the top of the stalks. The leaves of this plant can be highly variable in their shape, with even leaves on the same plant looking different from each other. The milky white sap contains a compound called lactucarium and has been used for centuries in medicines for its antispasmodic, diuretic, hypnotic, narcotic and sedative properties.
Tall blue lettuce (Lactuca biennis) can also get very tall in some cases, with a cluster of small, pencil eraser sized, blue flowers at the tip of the long stem. The flowers can be white, deep blue, or ice blue as this example was. The deep blue ones are always the hardest to find but also the most beautiful and worth the effort. This plant is very similar to the wild lettuce (Lactuca canadensis) which bears yellow flowers. Both plants were used medicinally by Native Americans but they should only be used by those who know them well, because it is said that they can cause death by cardiac paralysis.
White rattlesnake root (Prenanthes alba) is sometimes called white lettuce but it isn’t a lettuce, though they are in the same aster family that the lettuces are in. It’s probably thought to be another lettuce because it blooms at the same time and in the same locations as the wild lettuces do, but instead of the daisy like petals of lettuce flowers these look more bell shaped and lily like. The Native American Choctaw tribe used the tops of the plant in tea that they used to relieve pain.
It is said that the common name comes from the way that some Native American tribes used the plant to treat snakebite. William Byrd of Virginia wrote in 1728 that “the rattlesnake has an utter antipathy to this plant, in-so-much that if you smear your hand with the juice of it, you may handle the viper safely. Thus much can I say of my own experience, that once in July, when these snakes are in their greatest vigor, I besmear’ed a dog’s nose with the powder of this root and made him trample on a large snake several times, which however, was so far from biting him that it perfectly sicken’d at the dog’s approach and turn’d its head from him with the utmost aversion.”
This is the first time that native Culver’s root (Veronicastrum virginicum) has appeared on this blog because I rarely see it. I found these examples on a moist, wooded roadside recently. It’s a tall, pretty plant with leaves that grow in whorls up the stem and long, pointed white flower heads. It can be found at many nurseries and is said to do well in gardens growing alongside other moisture loving natives like Joe Pye weed and turtlehead. It is useful for attracting bees and butterflies. It’s common name comes from a mister or doctor Culver (nobody seems to know for sure) who used it as a purgative to cure various ailments in the early 1800s. Native Americans used the plant medicinally to treat backaches, colic, typhus, and as an antiseptic and it is still used by herbalists today in much the same way. Because it is foolishly collected from the wild it is listed in several northeastern states as endangered or threatened and the United States Department of Agriculture lists it as absent and / or unreported in New Hampshire.
We live only to discover beauty. All else is a form of waiting. ~Kahlil Gibran
Thanks for stopping in.
“It’s the time of year when our roadsides and meadows turn into Monet paintings” Nicely said.The jewelweed blossom took my fancy in particular.
Thank you Ben. The drought is making the flowers wilt quicker than normal but I think Monet could still find some inspiration here.
I like jewelweed too, but it’s a hard one to get a good photo of. The slightest breath makes the flowers dance for joy.
I spent most of yesterday pulling weeds from my lawn. Quite a few were broadleaf plantain. Maybe I should have kept them and put them in a salad. If only I’d known you could!
It would have been a healthy meal!
It’s a pleasure seeing your August wildflowers! Here we are in the hot days of summer and most of the valley plants are suffering from the heat and a fire in the area has closed many of the closest trails into the high country. Good to know there are still flowers blooming in your region!
Thanks Montucky! That’s too bad that the fire is still burning and that you can’t use the trails. Maybe you’ll get a little rain that will help.
We’re very hot and dry here too, and I’ve noticed that flowers aren’t lasting long at all. Ox-eye daisy, which usually blooms for 10 days or so, now blooms for about 3 days.
I remember jewelweed well! We lived on the edge of a swap when I was very young, and the explosive ripe seed caps were fascinating. And such beautiful flowers. If I am remembering the same plant, one could even taste the nectar by by biting off the tubular end of the blooms. As a child I was curious as to what the bees were enjoying.
I used to do the same with lilac blossoms.
The jewelweed seed pods still explode!
Nature’s own garden!
Yes, and it’s lush!
I’ve used broadleaf plantain for bee stings. It also diffuses the pheramones the bees give off when they sting you so others don’t follow suit! Great post!
Thank you Martha. Imagine so many despising such a helpful plant!
It must be very exciting and satisfying to find a new flower that you’ve never seen before as in the case of the Culver’s root, much like a lifer for a birder.
You’re doing wonders with the new camera, I know how tall some of the flowers that you’ve photographed so well are, beyond the capabilities of a DSLR with a macro lens.
I didn’t know that there were so many varieties of wild lettuce, but that’s why I read your blog, to learn these things, even if I forget half of it. 😉
I’m trying to pay more attention to the size of flowers in your descriptions, I think that I’m always looking for flowers that are much smaller than I think that they are. Sometimes the smallest flowers are the most intricate and beautiful, and most people, myself included, miss them.
Thanks Jerry! Finding a new flower is exciting but it’s a double edged sword because then you have to identify it, and that is sometimes hard work that can literally take years. Luckily there aren’t many that look like Culver’s root. Those small yellow or white flowers on the other hand, can make you crazy.
When I shoot tall plants with flowers on the top like wild lettuce I usually bend them down to eye level with one hand and take the shot with the other. Most plants are plenty flexible enough to do this with. That’s when I’m most thankful for image stabilization, but this new camera doesn’t stabilize like that Lumix did and it has a tricky depth of field when it’s in macro mode, so it’s a little more work. How I miss that Lumix!
I’m also trying to explain flower size better because I know it’s hard to get any sense of size from a photo. One good thing about the really small ones is they tend to grow in large colonies and that makes then easier to find. And as you say, they’re worth searching for because they’re often incredibly beautiful. I hope to find some today!
Fascinating about the broadleaf plantain, I have often seen it growing in the wild but had no idea it could be eaten and was so nutritious.
Thank you Emily. I never knew much about it either. I pulled more than I paid attention.
Whoa…the new macro lens is amazing…I love love love the close-ups, esp the rattlesnake plantain flower. I’m studying the wildflowers in CT and really enjoy your posts. Walk in Beauty, Sonya
Thank you Sonya. No camera is perfect and I do have to coax it at times, especially due to shallow depth of field, but I’m happy with the new camera. I’m glad you’re enjoying the posts. I think we probably have most of the same wildflowers.
It’s hard not to walk in beauty at this time of year. It’s everywhere I go!
That first shot is really lovely and our roadsides should all be looking similar to this with bright wild flowers if they hadn’t been cut already.
I spent some time this afternoon trying to dig a broad-leaved plantain out from between two paving slabs – in the wrong place they are real pests! Your macro shots of the flowers are a wonder!
Thank-you for another beautiful post, Allen.
You’re welcome, and thank you Clare. They’ve started cutting our roadsides now since that was taken and many roadsides would no longer interest Monet. I always wonder why they can’t wait until the flowers are done blooming.
I feel your pain. I’ve spent many hours and maybe days pulling out plantain over the years. It’s a tough plant!
Thanks Allen! If I could have noticed it earlier it would have been much easier but somehow it had grown massive and was flowering too!
Distilled vinegar might take care of it. It works on a few different weeds.
Thank-you – I’ll give it a go.
Love the Monet like photo. So many lovely flowers. When I was little, we used the leaves of broad leaved plantain to cover cuts or grazes.
Yes, some of the roadsides fill with flowers at this time of year.
I’ve read that plantain contains a natural antiseptic, so you were doing exactly the right thing. They are a plant that is rich in healthy benefits apparently, none of which I ever knew until I did this post.
It was interesting about the blue and yellow flowered lettuce. The cultivated varieties of lettuce might be derived from different natural varieties. I had not thought of lettuce as being so varied but I suppose most plants are. Amelia
Thank you Amelia. There is believed to be at least 50-75 different lettuce varieties around the world and some even grow in shrub form. We have one here called prickly lettuce with sharp thorns along the midrib of the leaves. Many have beautiful flowers in green, yellow, blue and white. I think that cultivated lettuce must have come from the wild originally.
I love taking walks with you! I learn so much… Thank you for sharing your discoveries. I am learning how to look again.
You’re welcome Kim, and thank you. All it really takes to see what I see is a willingness to walk as slowly as a toddler and a little curiosity. I’m glad you’re on the path; there’s a lot of beauty out there!
A wonderful walk with you once again, Allen. Thank you for pointing out the differences between the two loosestrifes… I have been waltzing past the abundance of “fringed” thinking they were simply more “whorled,” but now I see the fallaciousness of my assumption. If only I had stopped to look. Have a great day!
Thank you Rich. I’ve made the same mistake. In fact this year I even thought boy the whorled loosestrife sure is blooming late! I’m getting forgetful, I guess. Enjoy your weekend!
Reblogged this on Strafford County Master Gardener Association and commented:
This blog is written by a gentleman who lives in Cheshire County. I thought his observations about August flowers he encounters on his outdoor adventures might be of interest to you. 🙂
Thanks very much.
Beautiful! Thank you for this. I just discovered your big and I’m so glad I did. My family and I moved here two years ago and I am learning the rhythms slowly. This is a great companion!
You’re welcome. I’m glad you found it, and welcome to New Hampshire. There are a lot of beautiful things to be seen here!
The leaves of the downy rattlesnake plantain are one of my favorite things to look for this time of year. In the early spring Virginia Waterleaf has the same effect on me.
I wish we had Virginia waterleaf here. It looks like a real interesting plant.
The tall blue lettuce flower sure is pretty. I have broad leaf plantains all over my yard. The weed and feed takes care of them in my lawn, but they seem to thrive in the dirt driveway.
Thanks Laura. I like those blue lettuce flowers too. They close in the afternoon so I gad a time finding them open!
Yes, broadleaf plantain thrives even in sand and gravel and they’re hard plants to beat.
Reblogged this on Poltrack Pix and commented:
It’s August already
Thank you John. August came quickly!
That spotted jewelweed was my favourite, thanks for taking two pictures of it.
Thank you Susan, I’m glad you liked it. It’s a tough one to get.
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