I thought I’d start this post where the last one left off, when I was looking for wild columbines (Aquilegia canadensis.) This time I found them in bloom but I had quite a time getting photos of them because of a nonstop wind. Anyone who knows wild columbines knows that the flowers dangle from long stalks and dance in the slightest breeze, and they danced on this day. Out of close to 75 photos I got two that are usable and here is one. It was all worth it to be able to see beauty like this, especially since it only happens once each year.
I gently bent one down onto the soft moss so I could get a shot looking into a blossom for those who have never seen what they look like. Columbines are all about the number 5. Each blossom has 5 petals and 5 sepals. Each petal is yellow with a rounded tip and forms a long funnel shaped nectar spur that shades to red. You can see up into these spurs in this photo. Long tongued insects and hummingbirds probe the holes for nectar. The oval sepals are also red and the anthers are bright yellow. All together it makes for a very beautiful flower and I was happy to see them again.
Spring, like fall, starts on the forest floor with the spring ephemeral flowers and then it moves to the understory before finally reaching the treetops. Now is the time for the understory trees and shrubs to start blooming and one of the earliest is the shadbush (Amelanchier canadensis.)
Shadbush gets its name from the way it bloomed when the shad fish were running in the rivers before they were all but fished out. The plants are more of a small tree than a bush but they cross breed readily and botanists have been arguing for years about all the different species. From what I’ve seen they all have white flowers with five petals and multiple large stamens. Each flower is about three quarters of an inch across and if pollinated will become a blueberry size, reddish purple fruit in June. Its roots and bark were used medicinally be many Native American tribes, and the berries were one of the main ingredients of pemmican. Shadbush flowers also signaled that it was time to plant corn.
After shadbushes come the cherries, closely followed by the crab apples and then the plums. The small tree shown here is a young pin cherry (Prunus pensylvanica,) also called bird cherry and red cherry. This plant grows as a shrub or small tree and is very common.
Pin cherry flowers are quite pretty and are pollinated by several kinds of insects. They become small, quarter inch bright red berries (drupes) with a single seed. The berries are said to be very sour but edible and are used in jams and jellies, presumably with a lot of sugar. Native Americans used the berries in breads and cakes and also preserved them and ate them fresh. The bark of the tree was used medicinally for a large variety of illnesses including coughs, stomach pains and as a burn salve.
Hobblebush (Viburnum lantanoides) is one of our most beautiful native shrubs in my opinion, and they have just started blooming. The large white, flat flower heads are very noticeable as they bloom on hillsides along our roads. Botanically speaking the flower head is called a corymb, which is a flat topped disc shaped flower cluster.
Hobblebush flower heads are made up of small fertile flowers in the center and large infertile flowers around the perimeter. The infertile flowers are there to attract insects to the much less showy fertile ones and it’s a strategy that must work well because I see plenty of berries in the fall. They start out green and go to bright red before ripening to a deep purple color.
This shot shows the size difference between the fertile and infertile flowers and also how the center of the infertile flower is empty of reproductive parts. The outer infertile flowers are about three quarters of an inch across and a single fertile flower could hide behind a pea. All flowers in a hobblebush flower head have 5 petals, whether fertile or infertile.
Blooming everywhere in lawns right now is one of our lawn loving wildflowers: bluets (Houstonia caerulea.) These tiny, 3/8 inch diameter flowers make up for size with numbers and huge drifts of them yards in width and length are common. Though they bloom in early spring and are called a spring ephemeral I’ve seen them bloom all summer long where they weren’t mowed.
Because they grow in such huge colonies getting a photo of a single bluet blossom is difficult. In fact this is the only one I’ve ever gotten. I love seeing these cheery little flowers in spring and I always look for the bluest one. So far this year this example is it. The native American Cherokee tribe used bluets to cure bedwetting, but I’m not sure exactly how.
I gave up on showing most small yellow flowers on this blog long ago because many look so much alike that it can take quite a long time to identify them, but this one grew all alone in a big field so I took its photo. I think it’s a spring cinquefoil (Potentilla neumanniana) but I wouldn’t bet the farm on it. It’s pretty, whatever its name is.
I’m guessing that we’re going to see a great blueberry harvest this year. These blossoms grew on a highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) but lowbush blueberries (Vaccinium angustifolium) are also heavy with blossoms. It is said that blueberries are one of only three fruits native to North America, the others being Concord grapes and cranberries, but the crabapple is a fruit which is also native so I disagree with that line of thought. Native Americans called blueberries “star berries” and used them medicinally, spiritually, and as food. One of their favorite uses for them was in a pudding made of dried blueberries and cornmeal.
The flower shape of blueberries must be highly successful because many plants, like this Japanese andromeda (Pieris japonica,) use the same basic shape. This evergreen shrub is usually planted among rhododendrons and azaleas here and as an ornamental is quite popular. Some call it the lily of the valley shrub, for obvious reasons. I like how the pearly white flowers look like tiny gold mounted fairy lights. In japan this shrub grows naturally in mountain thickets.
Dwarf ginseng (Panax trifolius) plants have three leaflets on each compound leaf and together form a whorl of three compound leaves around the stem. The plants are very small; each one would fit in a teacup with plenty of room to spare. Dwarf ginseng is very choosy about where it grows and will only grow in undisturbed ground in old hardwood forests. It is not the ginseng used in herbal medicine but is quite rare in my experience, so it should never be picked.
Each dwarf ginseng flower head is about the size of a malted milk ball, or about 3/4 of an inch in diameter. Individual flowers are about 1/8 inch across and have 5 bright white petals, a short white calyx, and 5 white stamens. In a good year the flowers might last 3 weeks, and if pollinated will be followed by tiny yellow fruits.
Though perspective makes this eastern redbud tree (Cercis canadensis) look big it’s actually on the small side. Redbuds are native trees but they aren’t native to New Hampshire and their hardiness is questionable, but this one has made it through -20 degree F. temperatures. It’s possible that it was grown from northern grown seed. They’re very pretty but I know of only two of them in the area.
It’s obvious that the redbud is in the pea / bean family. The flowers are very small but there are enough of them on the naked branches to put on quite a show.
The whitish flower panicles of red elderberry (Sambucus racemosa) are just coming into full bloom. I don’t see a lot of these native shrubs but I wouldn’t call them rare, because if they like a certain place they will spread. In this location there must be at least twenty of them.
Each greenish white red elderberry flower is tiny at about 1/8 inch across, but has a lot going on. They have five petals which are called “petaloid lobes” and which curve sharply backwards. Five stamens have white filaments and are tipped with pale yellow anthers. The flower is completed by a center pistil with three tiny stigmata. If pollinated each flower will become a small, bright red berry. Though the plant is toxic Native Americans knew how to cook the berries to remove their toxicity. They are said to be very bitter unless prepared correctly. Birds love them and each year they disappear so quickly I’m not able to get a photo of them.
Sessile leaved bellwort is also called wild oats and the plants have just come into bloom. They are a spring ephemeral and won’t last but they do put on a show when they carpet a forest floor. They are a buttery yellow color which in my experience is always difficult to capture with a camera. In this case the word sessile describes how the leaves lie flat against the stem with no stalk. The leaves are also elliptic and are wider in the middle than they are on either end. The spring shoots remind me of Solomon’s seal but the plant is actually in the lily of the valley family.
Flowers carry not only beauty but also the silent song of love. You just have to feel it. ~Debasish Mridha
Thanks for coming by.
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I am so pleased you managed to get a couple of shots of the columbine; they are very pretty!
Thank you Clare. They sure are. I wish I could get a shot of all of them blossoming on the stone ledges but so far, no luck with that shot!
Isn’t it disappointing when there is only one chance at a shot and it doesn’t work out! Better luck next year!
Yes, nature teaches patience!
All the flowers are beautiful, but the columbine and bluets were stunning! Both grow around here, but I seldom see them in the places I go, so they were a welcome sight.
I admire your patience in getting the photos of the columbine on a windy day, flowers are tough enough to photograph well on a calm day.
Thanks Jerry! As you know it’s hard to be sure of what you’ve gotten until you get home but I had a feeling I was blowing every shot of the columbines because of the wind so I just kept on snapping the shutter. It’s a good thing I did because I had a camera full of junk!
Excellent photo of the single Bluet. I can appreciate the challenge of that capture. You seem to be a bit ahead of us now with most blooms.
Thank you. That little bluet was tough!
A lot of plants are blooming a week or two early and I think it’s because of the hot 80+ degree days we’ve had.
Your spring flowers are wonderful. I find it hard to believe your Spring growth after such a severe winter & those enormous blocks of ice you had photos of in winter. We had a bush in our garden which looks similar to your Hobblebush, it had the most beautiful spring flowers. Your first two photos are worthy of a photography magazine .. Congratulations, a wonderful post.
Thanks very much Gerrie.
Yes, we certainly have 4 distinct seasons here!
Your bush that looks similar to the hobblebush might be another viburnum. There are over 200 species in the family and a few have blossoms that look like hobblebush blossoms. From what I’ve read viburnums are grown throughout the world.
What a wonderful array of pretty spring flowers. The columbines are fabulous and very different with the 5\5 thing. So many of the flowers are completely new to me and again, I love the way you describe them, especially their size. You are so fortunate to live in such a beautiful area. My new neighbor here is from New Hampshire. Farther north from where you are.
We are having some wet weather with flooding north of us a real concern. It is nice to have rain because fire season is right around the corner, but all that snow melting too quickly is scary.
Thank you Penny. At least you’ll be able to talk plants with your new neighbor! You’ll probably see them here at one time or another.
I hope the flooding doesn’t turn out to be any worse than it has been. I grew up right next to a river and I agree that it can be very scary. I’d keep a close eye on the forecast and be safe!
Those columbines are gorgeous! I love the multicolor! The only one I’ve found here is all yellow and blooms near the end of June, but it lives at around 5,000 feet. (Aquilegia flavescens)
Thanks Montucky! I think I remember yours from last year but I’d love to see it again if you can find them.
Delighted to find a fellow lover of hobblebush, such a beautiful plant. I live in a place where I expected to see them (here on my land) as they grow all along the main road just a half mile away. No luck though. Disappointing, but I enjoy those just down the road.
Thank you Sandy. Yes, I’ve always liked hobblebushes but I have to drive to see them so you’re lucky to have them so close. If you picked a handful of good ripe purple berries this fall and scattered them over your property they might grow well since they’re already so close. I doubt anyone would care.
You are making up for time after your late spring. I like the columbines a lot.
Yes. We’re not at the “flowers everywhere you look” stage yet but it shouldn’t be too long.
What a lot of treats, I particularly enjoyed the wild columbine and the redbuds because of their shapes and colours.
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Thank you Susan. They are beautiful!
That wild columbine was definitely worth the trouble. What a beauty!
Thank you Laurie, I agree!
My grandmother used to call the bluets “Quaker Ladies”. Are they the same thing or are they different flowers?
Yes, they are the same flowers but I’m not sure where that name comes from. Interesting though!
I have two redbud that have survived the cold but have some damage from ice. The flowers are quite tasty (and colorful). Thanks for the flower pictures.
Thank you John. I didn’t know they were edible but they sure are pretty.
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Thank you John!
Thank you John.