Imagine a tree 80-100 feet high and 50 feet wide full of orchids and you’ll have a good idea what the northern catalpa (Catalpa speciosa) looks like in full bloom. Of course the flowers are not orchids, but they’re very beautiful nevertheless. At 1-2 inches across they are also large, and so are the heart shaped leaves. These trees have long, bean like seed pods and when I was a boy we called them string bean trees. Luckily we were never foolish enough to eat any of the “beans” because they’re toxic. The word catalpa comes from the Native American Cherokee tribe. Other tribes called it Catawba.
Each beautiful catalpa flower is made up of petals that have fused to form one large, frilly petal. Yellow, orange and purple insect guides can be seen in the throat. The opening is quite big; easily big enough for a bumblebee.
If the berries taste anything like the plant smells then I wouldn’t be eating them from a bittersweet nightshade vine (Solanum dulcamara.) It’s a native of Europe and Asia and is in the potato family, just like tomatoes, and the fruit is a red berry which in the fall looks like a soft and juicy, bright red, tiny Roma tomato. The plant climbs up and over other plants and shrubs and often blossoms for most of the summer. Bittersweet nightshade produces solanine which is a narcotic, and all parts of the plant are considered toxic. In medieval times it was used medicinally but these days birds seem to be the only ones getting any use from it. I always find that getting good photos of its small flowers is difficult, but I’m not sure why.
If you see a flat topped flower cluster on a native dogwood it’s either a silky dogwood (Cornus amomum) or red osier dogwood (Cornus sericea.) If the flower cluster is slightly mounded it is most likely a gray dogwood (Cornus racemosa,) as is the one in the above photo. All three shrubs bloom at about the same time and have similar leaves and individual white, four petaled flowers in a cluster and it’s very easy to mix them up. Sometimes silky dogwood will have red stems like red osier, which can make dogwood identification even more difficult. Both gray and red osier dogwoods have white berries. Silky Dogwood has berries that start out blue and white and then turn fully blue.
Native dogwoods are also sometimes confused with viburnums, but viburnum flowers have five petals and dogwoods have four. Its flowers become white, single seeded berries (drupes) on red stems (pedicels) that are much loved by many different birds. Most of our native dogwoods like soil that is constantly moist and can be found along the edges of ponds, rivers, and streams.
Once you get used to seeing both dogwoods and viburnums you can tell them apart immediately. The flowers on our native viburnums like the the maple leaf viburnum (Viburnum acerifolium) shown will almost always have five petals and the leaves, though quite different in shape throughout the viburnum family, are usually dull and not at all glossy. In fact I can’t think of one with shiny leaves. What I like most about this little shrub is how its leaves turn so many colors in fall. They can be pink, purple, red, yellow, and orange and combinations of two or three, and are really beautiful.
Each flattish maple leaved viburnum flower head is made up of many small, quarter inch, not very showy white flowers. If pollinated each flower will become a small deep purple berry (drupe) that birds love to eat. This small shrub doesn’t mind dry shade and that makes it a valuable addition to a native wildflower garden. The Native American Chippewa tribe used the inner bark of this plant to relieve stomach pains.
Heal all (Prunella lanceolata) has tiny hooded flowers that remind me of orchids. The plant is also called self-heal and has been used since ancient times. It is said to cure everything from sore throats to heart disease, and that’s how it got its common name. Some botanists believe that there are two varieties of the species; Prunella vulgaris from Europe, and Prunella lanceolata from North America. Native Americans drank a tea made from the plant before a hunt because they believed that it helped their eyesight.
Brown knapweed (Centaurea jacea) has started to bloom. I’ve always thought that knapweed flowers were very beautiful but unfortunately this plant is also from Europe and according to the U.S. Forest Service is a “highly invasive weed that is capable of forming large infestations under favorable conditions.” The large infestations crowd out native plants including those used for forage on pasture lands, so it is not well liked by ranchers. The brown bracts below the flower are what give the plant its common name. This one had a friend visiting.
Common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) has just started blooming here but I haven’t seen any monarch butterflies in the area. I keep hoping they’ll make a comeback and we’ll once again see them in the numbers we did when I was a boy. I’ve only seen a handful each year for the past several years.
Several times I’ve meant to write about how complicated milkweed flowers are to pollinate but the process is so complicated the task always ends up in my too hard basket. Instead I’ll just ask that you trust me when I say that it’s nearly a miracle that these flowers get pollinated at all. I’ll enjoy their beauty and their wonderful scent while trusting that nature will see to it that they’re pollinated, just as they have been for millennia.
Heartsease (Viola tricolour) has been used medicinally for a very long time as an expectorant, diuretic, and anti-inflammatory. Used both internally and externally, the violet is said to be helpful for cystitis, rheumatic complaints, eczema, psoriasis, and acne. Though Viola tricolor, the parent of today’s pansy, is native to Europe the medicinal qualities have been found to be the same for all of the species. Native Americans used our native blue violets for cancer treatment. American pioneers thought that a handful of violets taken into the farmhouse in the spring ensured prosperity, and to neglect this ceremony brought harm to baby chicks and ducklings.
June is when our native mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia) blooms and you can see certain roads that are lined with the glossy leaved, white flowering shrubs. They seem fussy about where they grow but when they find a spot that they like they can form dense thickets that are nearly impossible to get through. In this spot they grow to about 10 feet tall.
The pentagonal flowers of mountain laurel are very unusual because each has ten pockets in which the male anthers rest under tension. When a heavy enough insect lands on a blossom the anthers spring from their pockets and dust it with pollen. I saw several bumblebees working these flowers and you can see some relaxed anthers in this photo. Once the anthers are released from their pockets they don’t return to them.
What once may have been five petals are now fused into a single, cup shaped blossom. A side view of a single mountain laurel blossom shows the unusual pockets that the anthers rest in. Another old name for mountain laurel is spoon wood, because Native Americans used the tough wood to make spoons and other small utensils.
I find mallow plants (Malvaceae) growing in strange places like roadsides but I think most are escapees from someone’s garden. The flowers on this example look a lot like those of vervain mallow (Malva alcea), which is a European import. Like all plants in the mallow family its flowers were large and beautiful. Other well-known plants in this family include hibiscus, hollyhocks, and rose of Sharon.
I found this white mallow looking for all the world like a white hibiscus.
I sample the fragrance of roses every chance I get because they take me back to my childhood and our hedge full of gloriously scented cabbage roses. Those poor roses attracted rose chafers by the billions it seemed, but if you sat out on the porch and closed your eyes on a warm summer evening you didn’t have to imagine what heaven would smell like. You knew that you were smelling it right here on this earth.
A very special guest flower for this week is the rare (here) and beautiful ragged robin (Lychnis flos-cuculi), a plant that I’ve searched for for many years and could never find. Where I finally found it was amazing; one of the lawns where I work had construction going on near it and couldn’t be mowed for two weeks, and in those two weeks up popped several ragged robin plants. It is said to prefer disturbed habitats like meadows and fields and I guess the fact that it grew in a lawn proves it.
Though there are native plants called ragged robin in the U.S., like the very beautiful Clarkia pulchella shown recently on Montucky’s blog, this particular plant was introduced from Europe into New England. It might have come as a garden ornamental, but when ships arrived from foreign lands it was once common practice to dump their ballast of gravel and stones on our shores so they could take on cargo, and this plant was reported growing in ship’s ballast in 1880. However it got here I was very happy to see it. This is the kind of thing that makes my pulse quicken and my breath catch in my throat and is what can take me out of myself to a higher place, much like art or music might do for you. The chance of seeing something so beautiful is part of what keeps me going back to nature day after day, year after year.
Let yourself be silently drawn by the strange pull of what you really love. It will not lead you astray. ~Rumi
Thanks for coming by.
The ragged robin and mountain laurel both have an interesting shape to them, but I suppose you could say that about all flowers. They’re all beautiful in one way or another, and most are beautiful in many ways. Somehow, I missed the catalpa in bloom again this year, so it was especially nice to see it here. The flowers must not last very long though.
Thanks Jerry! I agree; I’ve never seen a flower that didn’t have it’s own kind of beauty.
Catalpa flowers seem to start falling off the trees almost as soon as they open; probably right after they’re pollinated. Quite often from a distance it looks like it has snowed under them because there are so many white blossoms on the ground.
So many ways to grow beautifully. Thank you for talking us through a refreshing walk.
You’re welcome Ben, and thank you.
All beautiful photos, Allen! I do miss mountain laurel for sure. If I remember right, aren’t the blossoms somewhat sticky?
Thank you Lavinia. The blossoms aren’t sticky but the seed heads can be sometimes, much like rhododendron seed heads.
Lovely shots of the wildflowers. I’m always amazed at the beauty of the catalpa flower. The fragile flower doesn’t seem to hang around long.
Thanks! I know what you mean. Catalpa flowers seem to start falling almost as soon as they open. Sometimes it looks like it snowed under them.
Always enjoy your twice weekly documented wanderings.
Ostrya is currently lovely in northern Connecticut – hophornbeam female flowers dangle beautifully. Is it found in the Keene area?
Peggy Stanwood
Thank you Peggy. I can’t say we don’t have hop hornbeam but I never seem to see them. What I do see a lot of are American hornbeam (Carpinus caroliniana.) They also have dangling flowers that are quite showy.
Oooh! I love that ragged robin. Seeing one of those would certainly make my day too.
Thank you Pat. There don’t seem to be too many of them around.
I know that wonderful heart-stopping, breath-catching moment when we see the plant that has eluded us for years! I have only ever seen Ragged Robin two or three times as it is quite rare here too. I am intrigued by those mountain laurel flowers! There is one growing in a front garden of a house I pass by quite regularly and I have to stop and admire it.
Thank you Clare. It can be exciting, especially when it’s an orchid!
That’s interesting about the ragged robin being so scarce. For some reason I thought it was everywhere there, like ox-eye daisies are here.
Mountain laurel is an interesting shrub but it’s a very slow grower that demands just the kind of soil, moisture and nutrients that it needs or it just won’t grow. In nature it grows in what is basically leaf mold, but thousands of years of it.
I had no idea! Either the people who have the mountain laurel have got the conditions just right or I have mistaken the plant! I will have to go and have another look and see if I can take a picture of it.
I’m guessing that it is a mountain laurel. It’s hard to mistake it for any other shrub.
I’ve seen mountain laurels just sit and sulk for years. They live and even bloom, but don’t seem to show much sign of growth.
On the other hand if it likes where it is it will grow into a beautiful shrub with a tiny bit of pruning.
They’re also relatively expensive because they grow so slowly.
I always like to see a ragged robin too. We have some round here but not a great many. You had some lovely pictures in today’s post. I have said it before but you must have a very steady hand.
I think I’ve seen your photos of them. They’re a pretty flower.
I don’t use a tripod hardly at all out of laziness and my hands really aren’t that steady, but there is almost always a handy rock or tree or even the ground itself to help steady the camera.
Once again you have identified a puzzling flower for me. This time it was the Ragged Robin. I have just returned from 2 months in Sherbrooke, QC, and these were everywhere. I have never seen them in Ontario and thought they looked a bit like a knapweed. Thanks again!
You’re welcome Cathy, and thank you. I’m so glad you got to meet them in person!
Difficult, among so much beauty, to choose a favourite flower. I think heartsease wins it for me.
Thank you Susan. They’re pretty little things!
The Catalpa flowers are remarkably beautiful. I grew up calling Viola tricolor “Johnny-Jump-Up”. I hope the Monarchs start showing up in your neck of the woods.
Catalpas are beautiful, for sure. Such a messy tree though. Not one for over a lawn.
We call them Johnny jump us too, but they have so many names I thought I’d try something different. The name I don’t understand is “3 faces in a hood.”
I hope the monarchs come too!
Wonderfully informative post, as always. Thanks!
You’re welcome, and thank you!
Your exceptionally hard winter does not seem to have perturbed the flowers. There are Catalapa trees in gardens near me and the flowers are very popular with all sorts of bees. They are beautiful trees but I think they need a lot of space to be fully appreciated. Amelia
Thank you Amelia. No, in fact I’ve never seen plants and shrubs bloom like they are this year. It’s amazing.
I agree, catalpas do need a lot of space and they’re actually quite messy trees. I see a lot of people make the mistake of planting them too close to their house. They’ll be sorry before long, I’m afraid.
I share your enthusiasm for the scent of the old cabbage roses. As a small child I had a neighbor who played piano with the Boston Symphony. At the back of the house was a huge expanse of the old roses clambering over a stone wall. On summer evenings I would sit on the front porch smelling the roses, listening to ‘live’ music, and watching fireflies waltz through the garden. The scent of the roses brings it all back..
Thank you Carol. I had the same experience, without the live music. I wouldn’t trade those memories for anything!
Yesterday I found my first bittersweet nightshade vine, growing in one of my gardens (really a rocky and steep bank I am slowly reclaiming from bittersweet et al.). I took a picture so I could look it up to identify today. Glad I stopped by your blog this morning – job done! Thanks 🙂
I’m happy that I could help, Quinn!
Once again I enjoyed seeing all of the beautiful flowers that bloom in your area. I’m glad that you finally found the Ragged Robin! That’s how I felt when I first saw one here and when I found found the first one it was just one blossom. Since then I have found a place where they grow in abundance, only a few miles from where I found that first one. Beautiful flowers!
Thanks Montucky! I searched a long time for that little beauty and it was worth searching for.
I wish everyone could experience what it’s like to find something they’ve only seen in books. There isn’t anything else quite like it.
I’m hoping these ones will somehow spread to areas that don’t get mowed. I’m going to be looking for seeds, maybe I can help them out.
Beautiful reasons for getting out and taking a walk!
I hope everybody will!