I don’t get to do many flower posts in October but we’ve had such a warm September and October that it seems like anything might be possible this year. I recently stumbled into an area where quite a large colony of chickweed still bloomed. I think it was star chickweed (Stellaria pubera) but I’m never one hundred percent sure with chickweeds. I didn’t see them when I took the photo but this example was covered with tiny black insects. Pollen eaters, I’m guessing. That they’re still busy is as much of a surprise as seeing the flowers they’re on.
Cosmos is a garden annual that is grown new from seed each year. It self-seeds readily and usually the gardener finds a few cosmos volunteers the following spring, but I’ve never known it to escape gardens until now. I found this example growing at the edge of the forest. Cosmos can be large plants; I’ve seen them reach six feet tall, but this one wasn’t even knee high. It had a single white blossom that was also very small for a cosmos plant; probably only about an inch across. Cosmos were first introduced from Mexico somewhere near 1880. They were an instant hit and have been grown in summer gardens ever since.
Silver leaved cinquefoil (Potentilla anserina) still blooms along roadsides and in waste places but the plants aren’t as robust as they were in June, so instead of fifty blossoms on a plant you might see two or three. This plant is originally from Europe and is considered invasive in some areas, but I see it only occasionally here. Its leaves are deep green on top but bright silvery white underneath, and that’s how it comes by its common name.
Even in the rain the inner light shines from purple morning glory blossoms (Ipomoea purpurea.) This morning glory is an annual that grows new from seed each year unlike the bindweeds, which are perennial. I found this example on a fence at a local restaurant.
I’ve never paid attention before to what happens when a purple morning glory blossom is finished, but this is what they do. It’s an amazing color change. These plants were full of seed pods so I took a couple in the hopes that it might grow here at home. It might find it too shady here in the woods, but we’ll see.
Spiderwort blossoms (Tradescantia virginiana) usually close on rainy or cloudy days so I was surprised to find an open blossom just after a rain one day. Though the sprawling plants aren’t much to look at I love the blossoms, and have since I was a very young boy. They used to grow along the railroad tracks and since I just about lived on those tracks this plant goes deep into my earliest memories. I’m always happy to see them, even though I find it hard to recommend them for a garden.
Yellow toadflax (Linaria vulgaris) has been in this country for a very long time, having been brought over as a garden flower by a Welsh Quaker in the late 1600s. It was also used medicinally at least since the 1400s and modern science has shown the plant to have diuretic and fever reducing qualities. As if that weren’t enough it’s also used as a cut flower by florists because they are so long lasting when cut. I found these examples still blooming by a cornfield and I enjoyed seeing them.
Rabbit’s foot clover (Trifolium arvense) has formed pink ribbons along our dry, sandy roadsides as it does each year, but it’s starting to look a little ragged. This annual plant is said to be invasive but few plants want to grow where it does, so I don’t think it out competes any natives in this area.
Most goldenrods (Solidago) have given up the ghost for this year but I still see them blooming here and there. Any flower blossoming at this time of year will be covered with bees, just as this one was. All but one very determined one flew away though, as soon as I poked a camera at them.
New England asters are also turning in for their winter sleep. Once pollinated they have no need for flowers and are now putting all of their energy into seed production.
I know a place where thousands of wild thyme plants grow and here they were still blooming in October. I usually look for them in May but the bees don’t care when they bloom; they love at any time of year and they were all over these plants in large numbers.
If you feel the need to make yourself crazy, just try photographing a single thyme blossom. It’s among the smallest I’ve ever tried. I’m not going to tell you how many tries it took to get this photo because if I did you might think I really was crazy.
Nobody seems to know how shaggy soldier (Galinsoga quadriradiata) got from Mexico to New Hampshire but everyone agrees that it’s a weed; even in its native Mexico. The plant is also called common quick weed or Peruvian daisy and is common in gardens, where it can reduce crop yields by as much as half if left to its own devices. The tiny flowers are about 3/8 of an inch across and have 5 white ray florets widely spaced around tiny yellow center disc florets. This one was every bit as challenging to photograph as the thyme blossom was.
Yellow sorrel flowers (Oxalis stricta) seemed as huge as garden lily blossoms after dealing with thyme and quickweed flowers. I’m still seeing a lot of these little beauties and I expect that they’ll probably go right up until a frost. Speaking of frost, our first one usually appears during the third week of September on average, but we haven’t seen one yet. In October we get freezes, and that finishes the growing season. This year, who knows?
I saw a zinnia at the local college that looked like it had frosted petals. It was very pretty I thought, but the butterflies were paying it no mind. Every time I see a butterfly or bee reject one flower in favor of another I wish I could see what they see, just once.
Friends of mine still have string beans blossoming in their garden. In October. If that doesn’t show how warm it’s been here then nothing will.
I found a small tick trefoil growing in an area that had been mowed. The plant was quite stunted and looked more like clover than anything else, but the flowers gave it away. Note how they resemble the bean blossom in the previous photo. That’s because both plants are in the legume family, which contains peas, beans, and a long list of other plants and trees. Because of the leaf shape I think this one might be a panicled tick trefoil (Desmodium paniculatum) that had been stunted so its flowers couldn’t grow in a long panicle as they usually would. It was growing beside a pond in moist soil.
Finding a forsythia in bloom was a real surprise and showed just how confused by the weather some plants are. Normally this garden shrub would bloom in early spring but a cool August followed by a hot September is all it took to coax this one into bloom. There are others blooming in the area too. I have to wonder what they’ll do next spring. Forsythia was first discovered by a European growing in a Japanese garden in 1784 by the Swedish botanist Carl Thunberg.
Yes those are blueberry blossoms, specifically lowbush blueberry blossoms (Vaccinium angustifolium,) but there isn’t really anything that odd about this native shrub re-blooming in October because they do occasionally re-bloom. The surprise comes from when I think of the super crop of blueberries we had this year; I wouldn’t think the plants would have strength left to re-bloom after being so berry laden. This plant had the smallest blueberries I’ve ever seen on it; they were no bigger than a BB that you would use in an air rifle. Native Americans called blueberries “star berries” and used the plants medicinally, spiritually, and as a food source. They made a sort of pudding with dried berries and cornmeal which helped them survive the long winters.
All of the meadows full of flowers that I’ve been lucky enough to find and show here have passed now but I still find surprises, like this nice colony of whorled white wood asters. They really shouldn’t be blooming now but I was happy to see them. Most of their cousins have gone to brown and are finished for this year. I hate to see them go but it’s one of the things that makes spring seem so special.
When the goldenrod is yellow,
And leaves are turning brown –
Reluctantly the summer goes
In a cloud of thistledown.
~Beverly Ashour
Thanks for coming by.
I truly admire your perseverance in getting the macro photos of the tiniest of flowers, I’d give up and look for something larger. But, the results were worth all your efforts, at least I think that they were, I’d never seen a close up of a thyme flower before, and it was gorgeous. The same for the shaggy soldier, which I’ve never heard of.
I do love morning glories and the photo of yours really brings out why I love them so, they do seem to glow on their own, which may have led to their name, as glory is the right way to describe them.
We still haven’t come close to a frost here yet, not that it matters very much, the drought that we had stressed the plants too much I believe. As I’ve said, the few flowers that I’ve seen haven’t been much to look at.
Thanks Jerry! I get determined to get “that shot” sometimes and don’t want to quit until I do. I was surprised that the thyme blossom looked like it did. I always though they were more daisy shaped!
I nipped a couple of seed pods off that purple morning glory, so you might be seeing more of it here. I love them too, but I think “heavenly blue” is my favorite.
We had a frost here this morning finally but I can’t see that it did any real damage. Drought can stress plants out; I found that out last year. I hope yours ends soon!
Beautiful flowers! It’s amazing how many are still blooming there.
Thanks Montucky! Yes, there numbers are much fewer but they still bloom sporadically and I see them every day. They say we might see a frost tomorrow morning though, so that’ll make flower posts a little more difficult.
I am amazed and pleased you are finding flowers to photograph this far into October. We are due a couple of warm days after many very cool ones – a true Indian Summer! Your macro photography fills me with awe!
Thank you Clare. There are very few left but I do still see flowers each day. Yesterday I say a daylily blooming.
I’m glad you are going to see a little warmth. I hope the sun shines as well. We’re supposed to be having another warm and humid weekend.
Thank-you Allen. It was beautifully warm and sunny today and I actually spent about 6 hours gardening! Heaven!
Great!
Congratulations on having the patience and skill to capture the single thyme blossom.
Thank you. I think luck was also involved.
So many beauties here I can’t decide on I like best.. Excellent photography too as usual.
Thanks very much Ben!
I am most grateful that you are so crazy as to persist in photographing these tiny wonders! What a treat to see them so clearly in spite of poor vision. (Let’s not even speak aloud of the difficulty in crouching beside them!j Spiderwort, too, made me giggle. As kids on the farm in the 50s, we would rub our faces with the flower to make “warpaint” for our Cowboy and Indian shenanigans. Thanks for that skip down memory lane!
Thank you Barbara. Sometimes I wonder ! Macro photography is a great tool for letting us see so much that we wouldn’t otherwise be able to, and that’s why I do it. The amount of beauty out there on a tiny scale is really incredible, and I’ve always wanted to see a thyme blossom up close.
I’ve never heard that about spiderwort. I’m going to have to try it next time I see one.
You are such a good photographer, my favourite was the spiderwort blossom with the raindrops on it.
Thanks very much Susan. Spiderworts have been a favorite of mine for a very long time.
Being a Shakespeare enthusiast—along with a flower enthusiast—I must point out that you “know a bank where the wild thyme blows.” Watch out for Titania and Oberon!
Thank you Laurie. I think of that quote every time I see that thyme. It’s actually in a cemetery and the lawns are full of it in every shade of purple you can imagine.
Such a lovely quotation, isn’t it? So much beauty in Shakespeare’s writing. No one can touch him. Speaking of beauty…those lawns must be a sight to behold.
They sure are! Lots of bees on the thyme too.
I’m glad you persevered with the thyme flower. What a marvelous little thing it is. I grow thyme in my herb garden, but have never zeroed in on a flower that way. Thanks for showing it to me. Yes, it’s a strangely warm fall, but 12 years ago on Dec 23rd I went out to my upland garden in central NH and picked a l) bouquet of football mums and some of the small blue wild asters. You never know what to expect. And just when you think you do…..
You’re welcome Carol, and thank you. The thyme flower was a challenge but I’ve always wanted to see what one looked like.
Yes, nature is always full of surprises. I remember that winter too. I loved it!
Such exquisite photos! The morning glory is a prize winner. Thank you, as always, for expanding our view.
You’re welcome and thanks very much Robin, it was a very pretty flower!
Oh how grateful I am for your wonderful, beautiful posts. Thank you thank you! ~Jennifer
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You’re welcome Jennifer, and thank you. I’m glad you’re enjoying these posts!
It’s always a bit ironic that something as charming as the little shaggy soldier flower can be put of a plant that is such a nuisance.
Is challenging as it is, our little digital point and shoot cameras make photographing very small things “on the fly” possible. Back in the days of 35 mm film one would need to use a tripod, a micro lens, hope there was no wind, and focus very carefully!
Thank you. Yes, such a tiny flower doesn’t seem like it could do much harm but when there are hundreds per plant all making seeds, it adds up.
I remember the days of film cameras well, and I really don’t miss them!
As the flowers are demonstrating, this has been a strange October in northern New England. We had a glad in bloom last week, we found some basil hanging on amid taller greenery, and we’re still getting tomatoes, which usually fall to blight even before frost hits. As for our famed foliage? Our maples have been hit by something that’s browned and curled their leaves.
Thank you Jnana. Yes, we’ve had some strange weather and though they say we might finally see a frost on Friday they’re also saying 70s for the weekend.
Our maple trees did the same for a while but now they’ve turned and look more fall like. I thought it was probably the heat that made them act that way.
I think that – of all the surprises — finding a forsythia in bloom in October is the one I find most remarkable. Let’s face it: this usually blooms in early spring!
I like morning glory too, and if the day is cloudy, it can change colour to pink while remaining open for a few hours.
Thank you Cynthia. Yes, and that forsythia had quite a few blossoms on it. It shows how strange the weather has been.
I didn’t know the purple morning glory turned pink!