Henry David Thoreau once wrote “The splendid Rhodora now sets the swamps on fire with its masses of rich color,” and that’s what this little two foot tall shrub does each spring, usually in mid to late May. The flowers usually appear just when the irises start to bloom but this year they’re a little early. I often have to search for them on the banks of ponds because they aren’t common. Rhodora (Rhododendron canadense,) is a small, native rhododendron (actually an azalea) that loves swampy places. It is native to the northeastern U.S. and Canada and both its western and southern limits are reached in Pennsylvania. The flowers appear just before the leaves, but only for a short time in spring. By mid-June they will have all vanished.
The rhodora flower looks like an azalea blossom but it’s the color of this one that sets it apart from other azaleas, in my opinion. This plant was brought from Canada to Paris in March 1756 and was introduced to England in 1791. It is said to have been a big hit, but it must have been difficult to grow in English gardens since it likes to grow in standing water and needs very cold winters.
Unfortunately it’s time to say goodbye to the beautiful spring beauties (Claytonia virginica.) I doubt I’ll see them again this year because the sudden hot weather seems to have shortened their bloom time. Out of many thousands of plants that grow in this location this little group were all that was blossoming. I love seeing these pretty little flowers in spring and they’re part of why spring is my favorite season.
It’s also time to say goodbye to the coltsfoot plants (Tussilago farfara) that have bloomed for quite a long time this year. Though many blossoms in this colony were wiped out when a huge old pine tree fell they’ve cleaned up the tree in time for the coltsfoot leaves to appear. That means they’ll be able to photosynthesize as they normally would, so I’d guess they’ll all be blooming next year despite of the fallen pine.
Heartleaf foamflowers (Tiarella cordifolia) have just started blossoming near shaded streams and on damp hillsides. They’re easy to spot because of their hairy, maple-like leaves and foot high flower stalks, and a colony as big as this one is a beautiful sight. Native plants have leaves that are bright green at first and then turn a darker green, sometimes mottled with maroon or brown. Many hybrids have been created and foam flowers are now popular in garden centers and are grown in gardens as much for their striking foliage as the flowers. They are an excellent, maintenance free choice for shady gardens that get only morning sun.
The small, numerous flowers of foamflower have 5 white petals, 5 white sepals, and 10 stamens. It is said that the long stamens are what give foamflowers their frothy appearance, along with their common name. Native Americans used the leaves and roots of foamflower medicinally as a mouthwash for mouth sores. The plant is also called “coolwort” because the leaves were also used on scalds and burns to relieve the pain.
Bleeding hearts (Dicentra spectabilis) grow naturally in forests so they are plants that like cool, shady locations. They’ll go dormant quickly when it gets hot and they can leave a hole in the garden but that trait is easily forgiven. It’s one of the oldest perennials in cultivation and it is called old fashioned bleeding heart. I’ve always liked them and they were one of the first flowers I chose for my own garden.
What a show the grape hyacinths are putting on this year! Since blue is my favorite color, I’m enjoying them.
I saw a hillside with creeping phlox (Phlox subulata) flowing down it so I had to stop and get a photo. Though few of us think of this plant as a wildflower it is actually native to the forests of North America. It is sometimes called moss phlox or moss pinks and it loves growing in lawns. Luckily it doesn’t seem to mind being mowed and many people wait until it’s done blooming to do their first spring mowing.
Another plant called creeping phlox is Phlox stolonifera that has much the same habit, but it is native only as far north as Pennsylvania. One way to tell them apart is by the darker band of color around the center of the flower; if it is there your plant is Phlox subulata and if it isn’t you have Phlox stolonifera.
It’s lilac time here in New Hampshire and you can find them blooming in almost every yard. Though I like white lilacs I think the favorite by far is the common purple lilac (Syringa vulgaris.) It’s also the New Hampshire state flower, which is odd because it isn’t a native. Lilacs were first imported from England to the garden of then New Hampshire Governor Benning Wentworth in 1750 and chosen as the state flower in 1919 because they were said to “symbolize that hardy character of the men and women of the Granite State.” Rejected were apple blossoms, purple aster, wood lily, Mayflower, goldenrod, wild pasture rose, evening primrose and buttercup. The pink lady’s slipper is our state native wild flower.
As a boy I used to like sucking the sweet nectar out of lilac flowers and after I took this photo I found that I still do. I wish you could have smelled them!
Witch alder (Fothergilla major) is a native shrub related to witch hazel which grows to about 6-7 feet in this area. Though native to the southeast it does well here in the northeast, but it is almost always seen in gardens rather than in the wild. The fragrant flower heads are bottlebrush shaped and made up of many flowers that have no petals. What little color they have comes from the stamens, which have tiny yellow anthers at the ends of long white filaments. They do very well in gardens but aren’t well known. I’m seeing more of them now than in the past though.
Nodding trillium (Trillium cernuum) is a little later than the purple trillium and just ahead of the painted trillium. They’re shy little things with flowers that hide beneath the leaves like the mayapple, and this makes them very hard to see. Even though I knew some plants in this group were blossoming I couldn’t see the flowers at all from above. Nodding trillium is the northernmost trillium in North America, reaching far into northern Canada and Newfoundland.
When the buds form they are above the leaves but as they grow the flower stem (petiole) lengthens and bends, so when the flower finally opens it is facing the ground. My favorite thing about the nodding trillium blossom is its six big purple stamens. My least favorite thing is how hard they are to get a good photo of. At barely 6 inches from the ground there isn’t a lot of room to maneuver.
Painted trilliums (Trillium undulatum) are the third trillium I look for each spring. Usually as the purple trilliums fade and nodding trilliums have moved from center stage along comes the painted trillium, which is the most beautiful among them in my opinion. This year though, like last year, both nodding and painted trilliums are blooming at the same time. Unlike its two cousins painted trillium’s flowers don’t point down towards the ground but face straight out, 90 degrees to the stem. With 2 inch wide flowers it’s not a big and showy plant, but it is loved. Each bright white petal of the painted trillium has a reddish “V” at its base that looks painted on, and that’s where the common name comes from. They like boggy, acidic soil and are much harder to find than other varieties. Many states have laws that make it illegal to pick or disturb trilliums but deer love to eat them and they pay no heed to our laws, so we don’t see entire hillsides covered with them. In fact I consider myself very lucky if I find a group of more than three. Painted trilliums grow in the cool moist forests north to Ontario and south to northern Georgia. They also travel west to Michigan and east to Nova Scotia. I thought this was a rare plant with two flowers but it was actually two plants growing very close together.
I wonder if people realize that every apple tree in this country (except crabapples) has been imported from somewhere else or was planted by seed; either by man, bird or animal. That’s why John Chapman (aka Johnny Appleseed) did what he did. There are four species of crabapple native to North America; they are Malus fusca, Malus coronaria, Malus angustifolia and Malus ioensis. I planted the example in the photo but I’ve long since forgotten its name. The crab apple is one of the nine plants invoked in the Anglo-Saxon Nine Herbs Charm, recorded in the 10th century. The nine herbs charm was used for the treatment of poisoning and infection by a preparation of nine herbs. The other eight were mugwort, betony, lamb’s cress, plantain, mayweed, nettle, thyme and fennel.
A small clump of violets looked like purple butterflies had landed on it. Violets seem to be having a good year. I’m seeing a lot of them.
If you’re tempted to pass by what you think are violets you might want to take a closer look, because beautiful little fringed polygalas (Polygala paucifolia) are blossoming. Their color and the fact that they sometimes grow beside violets has fooled me in the past. The small 3 inch tall by inch and a half wide plants usually bloom in pairs as can be seen in the photo above. Fringed polygalas are in the milkwort family and are also sometimes called flowering wintergreen. The leaves were once used medicinally by some Native American tribes to heal sores.
Fringed polygala blossoms are also called gaywings and it’s easy to see why. They look as if they’re ready to take off. Each blossom is made up of five sepals and two petals. The two petals for a tube and two of the sepals form little wings. The little fringe at the end of the tube is part of the third sepal, which is mostly hidden. When a heavy enough insect (like a bumblebee) lands on the fringe the third sepal drops down to create an entrance to the tube. Once the insect crawls in it finds the flower’s reproductive parts and gets dusted with pollen to carry off to another blossom. I usually find this one in shady, mossy places and I think it prefers moist ground. Some mistake the flowers for orchids and it’s easy to see why. I love to just sit for a while and look at them; they’re one of those beautiful and unusual flowers that I can find myself lost in.
If you are lost inside the beauties of nature, do not try to be found. ~Mehmet Murat ildan
Thanks for coming by.
I’m glad that you began this post with the photos of the Rhodora, what a beautiful flower! I wish that they grew here in Michigan in the wild.
I suppose that I’ve heard before that lilacs aren’t native here, but that’s hard to believe the way that they’ve been distributed almost everywhere, either by man or naturally. To me, nothing says spring quite like the color and scent of lilacs in bloom.
It seems like this spring is flying past once again, as it was just one month ago that the last significant snowstorm hit Michigan, and now we’ve had several days of record heat in a row, the plants all seem to be in a hurry to bloom and set seeds. If it weren’t for your wonderful photos of the flowers, the feeling I have of missing out on the spring bloom would be even worse.
Thanks Jerry! Unfortunately I don’t think rhodoras ever made it that far west.
A lot of people believe that lilacs are native, probably because they were here before the U.S. was even a country.
I hope you’ll get some time to get out and enjoy the flowers. I know Aman park put on quite a show this year!
The problem for me is that this is also the best time of year for birding, and Aman Park isn’t great for birding. I did consider it though, until I saw the reports of species of birds that I needed to add to my life list. Next year I’ll do the trillium and bluebells when I have a better camera and wide angle lens to photograph the huge fields of flowers there.
Wonderful pictures, Allen. I especially loved the Fringed polygalas which I have never seen before. I used to suck the nectar from the Lilacs when I was a kid – thought I was the only one – glad to see I wasn’t.
Thanks very much Sue. No, I know of many people who sucked on lilac blossoms!
This is such a beautiful collection of plants and flowers, Allen! Thank-you so much for sharing your knowledge with us. I can understand why you chose that particular Crabapple to plant in your yard – it is wonderful!
You’re welcome Clare, and thank you. That crabapple has finally started to really bloom after many years of sparseness and it is beautiful when it does.
Oh, what good news!
These are truly some of the most beautiful photos I’ve ever seen. So many I have never seen before, either in photographs or in person. I am really beginning to notice the 5\5 thing and wondering about that. What a lovely area you live in to enjoy your craft. A most enjoyable post!
Thanks very much Penny, I’ve had a lot of practice!
Some flowers do 5s, some 7s, some 3s, and some seem completely random.
This is a beautiful area full of amazing wildflowers!
Fringed polygalas seldom seen here but it does show up now and then in jack pine and mixed upland black spruce/jack pine forests.
Here they grow in mixed maple / oak and white pine / eastern hemlock forests, so they don’t seem to be real choosy about where they grow as long as the soil is on the acidic side.
Jack pine and spruce forests are certainly on acidic soils. Striking flowers. I always enjoy finding them.
Me too. Luckily I know of several small colonies of them.
Beautiful dicentra
Thank you, they are beautiful.
That Painted Trillium is a beauty! I have never seen one. I love the Foamflower also.
Painted trilliums can be hard to find. I usually find them near ponds and streams in very moist soil. Actually the foam flowers like the same situation. I always find them near water, so both plants must like higher than average humidity levels.
I stumbled on this blog and am really enjoying it. Thought I would share it with you.
Thank you Vicky and welcome, I’m glad you’re enjoying the blog.
Hooray for springtime!
I’ll second that!
Beautiful post. That was probably the best bleeding heart photo I’ve seen.
Thanks very much Judy. They’re beautiful flowers!
Fabulous, especially those painted trilliums.
Thank you Laurie. Those are my favorites, but so hard to find!
The Heartleaf foamflower and the Fringed polygalas are flowers we don’t often see right in central Ohio, beautiful!
Thank you. I think they’d be worth driving for a while to see, especially the fringed polygalas.
What a feast of beautiful colours and shapes, I was interested to read about crab apples and the nine herb charm. Thank you for re-telling the story.
Thank you Susan. I don’t know if the nine herb charm cured any illnesses but it must have smelled good.