It has been so hot and dry here lately some of the lawns have gone crisp and make a crunching sound when you walk on them, but there was a single dandelion blooming on one of them all the same. I was surprised to see it because dandelions rest through the hottest part of the summer and don’t usually bloom until it gets cooler in fall. I hope this isn’t the last one I see this year. It’s a cool rainy day as I type this, so maybe that will convince more of them to blossom.
Heal all (Prunella lanceolata) is still blooming in lawns everywhere I go. This plant is also called self-heal and has been used medicinally for centuries. It is said to cure everything from sore throats to heart disease, and that’s how it comes by its common name. Native Americans drank tea made from the plant before a hunt because they believed it improved their eyesight. The tiny orchid like flowers look like a bunch of little mouths, cheering on life.
Bluestem goldenrod (Solidago caesia) grows in the shade away from the hot sun but it has still been hot enough even there to melt all of the wax crystals from its stems. It is this natural wax coating, the same “bloom” found on plums and blueberries, that makes the stems blue and without it this looks like many other goldenrods, and that makes them a little harder to identify. Luckily these examples are old friends and I know them well, so there is no doubt.
I think this was an example of the bushy American aster (Symphyotrichum dorsum) which has small blue flowers and looks much like the small white American aster (Symphyotrichum racemosum) in size and growth habit. Each flower is about a half inch across and plants might reach waist high on a good day, but they usually flop over and lean on the surrounding plants as this one has. It likes dry, sandy fields and that’s exactly where I found it growing.
I found a tiny, knee high bull thistle (Cirsium vulgare) with a single flower head on it, in a color that I’ve never seen it wear before. It had a lot of white in it and bull thistle flowers are usually solid pinkish purple. It is also called spear thistle, and with good reason; just look at those thorns.
Here’s another look at the bull thistle flower head. I’ve never seen another like it. I wonder if it’s some sort of natural hybrid. Or maybe, because it is so loose and open, I’m just seeing parts of it I haven’t seen before.
I was surprised to find creeping bellflowers (Campanula rapunculoides) still blooming. This pretty flowered plant was introduced as a garden ornamental from Europe and escaped to find nice dry places in full sun, which it loves. It’s usually finished blooming by the time the goldenrods start but this year it looks as if this plant will outlast them. It’s a plant that is very easy to identify, with its pretty blue / purple bell shaped flowers all on one side of its stem.
I don’t know if it’s the unusual hot temperatures we’ve had or if there is another reason but I’m seeing a lot of summer flowers that I shouldn’t be seeing now, like this St. Johnswort (Hypericum perforatum.) It usually blooms in June and July and should be long since done by now but I guess it can do whatever it wants. In any event it’s a pretty thing and I was happy to see it. Originally from Europe, St. Johnswort has been used medicinally for thousands of years. It likes to grow in open meadows in full sun.
Yet another plant that I was surprised to find still blooming was purple flowering raspberry (Rubus odoratus.) This plant is in the rose family and has flowers that are 2 inches across and large, light gathering leaves that it needs to grow in the shade. It usually blooms in July for about 3 weeks but I was happy to see it in September.
At about 2 or 3 times the size of a standard raspberry the berry of the purple flowering raspberry looks like an extra-large raspberry. It is said by some to be tart and dry but others say it tastes like a raspberry if you put it on the tip of your tongue. This was an important plant to the Native Americans. They had over 100 uses for it, as both food and medicine.
Joe Pye weed (Eupatorium) starts blooming in late July and is usually finished by now, but you can still see them here and there. Joe Pye is thought to have been a Native American healer who used this plant to treat early Massachusetts Bay Colony settlers suffering from typhoid fever, but the discussion over the origin of the name goes back and forth. For instance I’ve read that a Native word for the plant was “jopi,” which meant typhoid, and it is thought by some that jopi the plant name became Joe Pye the person’s name. I learned just this year that monarch butterflies love these flowers.
Most purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) plants stopped blooming weeks ago so I was surprised to find one still blooming. This is an invasive perennial that came over from Europe in the ballast of a cargo ship in the 1800s. The beach sand ballast, loaded with purple loosestrife seeds, was originally dumped on Long Island, New York. The seeds grew, the plant spread and now it covers most of Canada and all but 5 of the lower Untied States. It likes wet, sunny meadows but will grow just about anywhere. It’s hard to deny its beauty, especially when you see a meadow full of it growing alongside yellow goldenrods, but the plant chokes out natives including goldenrod and creates monocultures.
I was also surprised to see an ox-eye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare) blooming but that’s one of the great things about nature study; there is always another surprise right around the next bend. I’m always grateful to be able to see and smell flowers but even more so in at this time of year because it is then, when they really shouldn’t be blooming, that I remember what a great gift they are. The plant came over from Europe in the 1800s but is much loved and many believe it to be a native.
Japanese knotweed (Fallopia japonica) still blooms here and there but it’s pretty well finished for this year. Its final act will be to drop millions of seeds before it dies back completely until spring. This plant was brought to Europe from Japan sometime around 1829. It was taken to Holland and grown in nurseries that sold it as an ornamental. From there it found its way across the Atlantic where we still do battle with it today. It is one of the most invasive plants known and the only plant I have ever seen overtake it is purple loosestrife, which is also an invasive weed. Japanese knotweed is also a tough plant that is very hard to eradicate once it has become established.
Japanese knotweed does have pretty flowers but they aren’t enough to convince people that it’s a plant worth having on their property. It can take over entire yards when left alone.
Bugbane (Cimicifuga racemosa) bloomed in a local children’s butterfly garden. This plant gets its common name from its powerful fragrance that is said to chase away bugs when bouquets of its long racemes are brought inside. Other names for it include black snakeroot and black cohosh. Native Americans used it for centuries to treat pain, fever, cough, pneumonia, and other ailments. They also taught the early European settlers how to make a tonic from the plant to boost women’s reproductive health; a kind of spring tonic.
The pee gee hydrangea (Hydrangea paniculata) is a “panicled” hydrangea, meanings its flower heads are cone shaped rather than round. These plants grow into large shrubs sometimes reaching 10-20 feet tall and nearly as wide. Though originally introduced from Japan in 1862 this plant is thought to be native by many and is a much loved, old fashioned favorite. What I like most about this hydrangea is how the flower heads turn a soft pastel pink in the fall. When they’re cut and dried they’ll hold their color for quite a long time.
Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) starts blooming usually in June and then takes a rest in the heat of summer before re-blooming when it cools off again. Its flowers are sparse at this time of year but I find it blooming here and there. Humans have used this plant in various ways for thousands of years. It is mentioned in the Chinese I Ching, which is said to pre date recorded history, and it has been found in an excavation of a Neanderthal grave site. Yarrow was known as the soldier’s woundwort and herbe militaris for centuries, and was used to stop the flow of blood. It was a valuable healing herb, one of the nine “holy herbs,” and was traded throughout the world since before recorded time, and that is believed to be the reason for the plant being found in nearly every country on earth today. Native Americans used it for everything from snake bites to deodorant.
I never thought I’d see chicory (Cichorium intybus) blooming in September but here they were on the roadside and I was happy to see them. The flowers were small for chicory at about 3/4 of an inch across, but their beautiful shade of blue more than made up for their small size.
We can only be said to be alive in those moments when our hearts are conscious of our treasures. ~Thornton Wilder
Thanks for coming by.
I see from your post that the flowers are a bit confused there as well as they are here. I’m seeing many of the same flowers that you are, but they are in poor shape due to the drought that we’ve had. Both the plants and the flowers look stunted or deformed in one way or another, maybe that’s why the bull thistle that you showed us looks the way it does?
I also wonder about the viability of the seeds that are being produced this year, if the flowers are in such poor shape, does that affect the seeds that will produce next year’s flowers? And, is that one way that nature produces the many variations of similar flowers?
Thanks Jerry! Yes, some plants do seem confused. I think that thistle got started too late, right at the hot dry spell we had. Now we’re having a warm wet spell so plants are starting to perk up a bit. Just in time to get frost bitten, probably.
That’s a good question about seed viability. Seeds come with their own food that the embryo uses to get started, but if the parent is weak that food might not be what it would be if the plant was healthy, so I would think it could affect the next generation.
I don’t know if that would be the cause of a natural hybrid or “sport.” That’s a question for a plant breeder or someone a lot smarter than I am. I’m not sure if anyone really knows why, in a field of white flowers, one will be red or some other color. I think only nature knows the answer to that one!
I grow a lot of Bluestem Goldenrod in the garden. It’s a very useful plant, though it does self-sow quite a lot.
It stays blue all summer if it doesn’t get too hot.
How wonderful when flowers are competing with fall foliage! The weather this years really seems to have some plants confused as to what they should be doing. Great post as always!
Thank you Laura. There aren’t lots of flowers to be seen but if you look you can find them here and there. It’s always nice to see them, especially at this time of year.
It’s like September this year is a second short summer, with some plants reblooming. You make the common dandelion look beautiful.
Thank you Cynthia. So far October is warm here too, so I expect to see a few more flowers.
The dandelion is beautiful. I just take its photo!
Thank you for your interesting post, and of course the quote at the end is always food for thought.
I’ve been following a few US blogs like yours for a while now, and I’m quite proud of myself, I can recognise a lot more plants and names now. The next step will be to visit this lovely part of the US sometime.
Thank you. If you love wildflowers the best time to vist this area would be in July and August. They’re everywhere then.
It is strange that a number of your flowers are blooming so late. The hydrangea paniculata is a lovely plant.
Thank you Clare. That hydrangea is an old fashioned one that isn’t very showy but I like its pink blush in the fall. I used to cut and dry them and they held their color for a very long time.
I was really surprised to see some of these flowers so late but it has been a very strange summer this year, with it cold enough to run the furnace in August and sweltering heat in September and now October, and very rainy throughout until recently. I wouldn’t be surprised if the plants were totally confused.
I’m sure they must be!
The Japanese knotweed is wrecking our river bank here but they are more concerned with removing giant hogweed because it is dangerous to touch.
We have giant hogweed too but they destroy it immediately as soon as someone reports it so it has never gotten a real foothold here. It’s a very dangerous plant.
They are working hard at it here now.
It’s surprising to see so many flowers this late in the year. We still have a dandelion or two and I was surprised to see a single blossom on some wild strawberries.
Thanks Montucky. We don’t have flowers everywhere like we did in August but there are still a few to be seen if you search for them.
I actually saw a blueberry blooming the other day!
Still so much to notice. I especially like your description of heal all: “The tiny orchid like flowers look like a bunch of little mouths, cheering on life.” Especially important as there doesn’t seem to be much cheering going on in this country anymore.”
Thank you Laurie. There are still flowers out there but you have to search for them now, much like you do in spring.
No, I’m not hearing much cheering either. I think you might hear quite a bit on the next presidential election day though.
Let us hope so!
Thank you for another interesting read. I always learn so much information, if only I could retain it all!
You’re welcome Jane, and thank you. I can’t retain it all either!
Reblogged this on Poltrack Pix and commented:
Beautiful collection of photos
Thank you John.
More treasures. Thank you.
You’re welcome Ben!
My favourite photograph was the Joe Pye weed, beautiful.
Thank you Susan. I like Joe Pye weed too.