In my last flower post I ended with a stand of wildflowers that I drive by each morning on my way to work. I didn’t think that photo showed all of the beauty there was to see there so I went back and took more photos. This is one of them.
And this is a wider view. How lucky I am to see this each morning. I think about how, if they stopped mowing the roadsides, they might all look like this. I don’t know why they can’t wait until the flowers are finished blooming to mow certain areas. Some states actually spend a lot of time and money trying to get their roadsides looking like what happens here naturally.
Johnny jump ups (Viola tricolor) have bloomed quietly all summer; so unobtrusive but always able to coax a smile and warm a heart. Long used medicinally in Europe, here it is a welcomed alien. It is plant that has been known for a very long time and goes by many common names. It’s said to have 60 names in English and 200 more in other languages. In medieval times it was called heartsease and was used in love potions. Viola tricolor is believed to be the original wild form of all the modern varieties of pansy. I’m lucky enough to have them popping up at the edge of my lawn. I always make sure I miss them with the lawn mower.
Finding one or two forsythia blossoms in fall isn’t that unusual but if I saw a bush full of them I’d be concerned. This shrub had exactly one over anxious blossom on it, so it should still bloom in spring like it usually does. Forsythia was first discovered by a European growing in a Japanese garden in 1784 by the Swedish botanist Carl Thunberg.
Orange hawkweed (Hieracium aurantiacum) is still blooming, I was happy to see. Orange is a hard color to find among wildflowers in this part of the world. Other than orange daylilies which really aren’t wildflowers, and orange jewelweed, I can’t think of another orange wildflower.
This New England aster (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae) had a lot of red in its purple and leaned toward a rose color. My color finding software sees violet, plum, and orchid.
Though it is nearing the end of September I wasn’t surprised to see silky dogwood (Cornus amomum) blossoming. Sometimes the shrub can have ripe fruit on it and still grow a flower cluster or two in a fall re-bloom. These bushes are big; many are 10 feet across. Silky dogwood is named for the soft, downy hairs that cover the branches. Native Americans used dogwood branches to make fish traps and twisted the bark into rope.
The little lobelia called Indian tobacco (Lobelia inflata) blooms quite late but is almost finished for this year. Its small flowers are about 1/3 of an inch long and pale lavender to almost white. I thought I’d show a blossom on a penny so you could see just how small they are. It is the only lobelia with calyxes that inflate after the flowers have fallen and to identify it I just look for the inflated seedpods. The plant gets its name from the way its inflated seed pods resemble the smoking material pouches that Native Americans carried. The inflata part of its scientific name also comes from these inflated pods. The pods form so quickly that they can usually be found on the lower part of the stem while the upper part is still flowering.
A plant I’ve never noticed before is this nightshade, which I think is black nightshade. There is an American black nightshade (Solanum americanum) but it is native only to the southwest of the country, so I’d say this example might be the European invasive black nightshade (Solanum nigrum.) Solanum nigrum has been recorded in deposits of the Paleolithic and Mesolithic eras of ancient Britain, so it has been around for a very long time. It was used medicinally as mankind grew and learned and was even mentioned by Pliny the Elder in the first century AD.
But is this plant Solanum nigrum? It doesn’t look hairy enough to me but it does have pea size green berries that I’ve read should turn black. There is another that I’ve read about called Solanum L. section Solanum which is nearly hairless but otherwise has the same features. And then there is still another plant called eastern black nightshade (Solanum ptycanthum) but there seems to be much confusion over which plant is which. Though they have been used medicinally for thousands of years Solanum berries contain powerful alkaloids. They are considered toxic and have killed children who have eaten the unripe green berries. A few people do eat the ripe black berries but I think I’ll pass.
The swept back petals and bright yellow centers remind me of another nightshade I regularly see called bittersweet nightshade (Solanum dulcamara.) Its flowers are blue and yellow rather than white and yellow but they look much the same otherwise. If this plant reminds you of a potato plant, that’s because they’re in the same family.
According to an article on National Public Radio scientists have found that once sunflowers mature they stop following the sun and face east. When young they greet the sunrise in the east and then as the day progresses they follow it to the west until it sets. During the night time they slowly turn back to the east to again to wait for the next sunrise. They do this through a process called heliotropism, which scientists say can be explained by circadian rhythms, a 24 hour internal clock that humans also have. The plant actually turns itself by having different sides of its stem elongate at different times. Growth rates on the east side of the stem are high during the day and low at night. On the west side of the stem the growth rate is high at night and low during the day, and the differing growth rates turn the plant.
Chicory (Cichorium intybus) bloomed in a field that has been mowed all summer long. This plant stood about three inches tall but it was still blooming as if it hadn’t been touched. I love its cheery, bright blue color. Our average first frost happens in mid-September, so this might be the last photo of it this year.
White rattlesnake root (Prenanthes alba,) is a plant in the aster family that blooms as late as asters do. It is said that the common name comes from the way that some Native American tribes used the plant to treat snakebite. William Byrd of Virginia wrote in 1728 that “the rattlesnake has an utter antipathy to this plant, in-so-much that if you smear your hand with the juice of it, you may handle the viper safely.” I hope nobody actually tried that. This plant is not toxic, at least not enough to kill; the Native American Choctaw tribe used the tops of it in a tea that they used to relieve pain.
This cocklebur (Xanthium strumarium) grows on the banks of the Ashuelot River and I’ve never seen them anywhere else. The small oval burs aren’t quite as sticky as burdock burs but they will catch on clothing. Cocklebur leaves require long nights to trigger production of the chemicals needed to produce flowers, so they are considered “short day” plants. Their leaves are so sensitive that any light shining on them at night can keep the plant from flowering.
Cockleburs grow male flowers along its upper half, and female flowers grow in the lower half but I’m never early enough to catch them. All I ever see are the burs.
I can’t explain these white squiggly things appearing from the cocklebur fruit. The plant is here in a flower post because I thought they might be flowers but good information on this plant is very hard to find, so I’m not sure what they are. The seeds in cocklebur pods were eaten raw or cooked by Native Americans and among certain tribes in the Southwest the seeds were ground with squash and corn and applied externally to heal puncture wounds.
Balloon flowers (Platycodon grandiflorus) get their common names from their buds, which look like small, air filled balloons. It’s an Asian native that apparently doesn’t escape gardens, at least in this area. It is also called the Chinese bellflower and is in the campanula family. I love its blue color. This one had beautiful dark blue veins.
I liked this zinnia I found in a friend’s garden recently. These flowers are usually butterfly magnets but I didn’t see any this day.
This roadside view of asters is quite different from the first two photos in this post. It’s more pastel and subdued and has a different kind of beauty than those views I started out with, but I like them all.
The first act of awe, when man was struck with the beauty or wonder of nature, was the first spiritual experience. ~Henryk Skolimowski
Thanks for coming by.
I get confused with the Solanums too. Yours definitely looks like Black Nightshade but whether it’s a subspecies or not, I don’t know. Our dogwoods are all in full flower. They suffered in the drought which was at its worst at the time the dogwoods usually bloom so they are having a last-ditch attempt before the frosts arrive.
Beautiful shots of pretty flowers!
Thank you Clare. Yes, I had no idea that there were so many nightshades. I’ve got another one I’ve never seen in the latest post.
It must be odd to see dogwoods blooming in fall! They could fool you into thinking it was spring again!
It is strange to see all the flowers on some of the dogwoods I see. Other in more exposed places are now looking very autumnal with beautiful crimson and maroon leaves.
You’re lucky to have fall color and flowers at the same time!
Yes! It doesn’t happen very often!
I’m surprised that you found so many wildflowers still blooming at this time of year. The cultivated flowers in some people’s garden are putting on some fine displays this fall around here, but other than a few asters and goldenrod, I’m having trouble finding any wildflowers here. I’m not sure why that is, since we haven’t had a frost yet.
Anyway, I still can’t believe how well your camera works when photographing the tiniest of flowers such as the Indian tobacco.
I really liked seeing the balloon flower, I used to grow them when I had a place for a garden, I love their color.
I don’t remember ever seeing a yellow zinnia before, at least not that shade of yellow.
The cocklebur looks interesting no matter what the parts that you showed in this post are.
Thanks Jerry! We still have quite a lot blooming but it’s getting so you have to look for them. I doubt I’ll be doing too many more flower posts this year.
That Olympus is a good camera. I’ve heard from others who have bought one and they seem to like it.
I’ve always grown balloon flowers because of their color. It’s a great shade of blue.
I thought that zinnia was orange, so it must be a strange shade of yellow!
The cocklebur is a strange little plant that I’ve only seen in one place, right on the river.
Love the colors and the close ups! You were able to find so many models for your photo shoot here. Well done. It caught my eye too cause I just did a write up on Wild chicory – such a pretty pop of blue color to line our fields and drives to work this time of year…but fading fast.
Thank you. Yes, we still have a lot in bloom right now but it won’t last much longer.
I’ll have to stop in and see what you wrote about chicory. It’s one of my favorites but I hardly see it here.
Your flowers just keep going! I’m envious. It did see two shrubby penstemon blossoms today… at 7400 feet.
Thanks Montucky! It was in the 70s yesterday so I think the flowers will be around for at least a little longer.
That seems a little odd that flowers would be blooming that high up at this time of year. You must be relatively warm as well.
We are right on the edge. Daytime in the 60’s, nights in the 30’s. The high elevation plants bloomed just before the fall temperatures moved in.
We’ve had a couple of nights in the high 30s but nothing you could call cold yet. I hope it stays that way for a while yet!
These are beautiful autumn flowers, Allen. I love those Johnny jump ups too!
Thank you Lavinia. It has been warm enough so far to keep them coming. No frost yet!
Our big sunflowers were very reluctant to look at the sun at all this year for some reason. The smaller ones behaved as they should.
Plants do strange things at times. Sometimes the reflected light from a light colored wall is enough.
Good to know that Balloon Flower does not escape into the wild. Ours bloom much earlier than yours.
Ours have been blooming for a couple of months now but I’m just getting around to them.
I’ve never heard of them growing in the wild.
Balloon flowers do well in my perennial beds and have even self-seeded, here in Central IL. I love their true blue blooms!
Thank you, that’s interesting. I’ve never heard of them self seeding. I love that blue too!
Thanks for those excellent photographs of the wild flowers you drive past and thanks also for that picture of a balloon flower. It is a beautiful work of art as well as of nature.
Thank you Susan. Balloon flowers are beautiful things but you don’t see them very often.