Early May Flowers
May 11, 2019 by New Hampshire Garden Solutions

Our cool wet weather has held many flowers back from blooming but shadbushes are right on time. The plant is actually more tree than bush but they’ll start blooming when they’re quite small and at that size they do look like a bush. Shadbush is our earliest native white flowered tall shrub, blooming along the edges of woods just before or sometimes with the cherries. Another name for it is serviceberry, which is said to refer to church services. One story says that its blooming coincided with the return of circuit preachers to settlements after winter’s end and the resumption of church services. Another name, Juneberry, refers to when its fruit ripens.

Shadbush gets its common name from the shad fish. Shad live in the ocean and much like salmon return to freshwater rivers to spawn. Shad was a very important food source for Native Americans and for centuries they knew that the shad were running when the shadbush bloomed. In late June they harvested the very nutritious shad fruit, which was a favorite ingredient in pemmican, a mixture of dried meat, dried fruit, and animal fat.

The month of June was known to many Native American tribes as the “Strawberry Moon” because that was when most strawberries began to ripen. The berries were picked, dried and stored for winter use, or added to pemmican, soups, and breads. In the garden strawberries easily reproduce vegetatively by runners (stolons,) but the fruit was so plentiful in the wild that colonials in North America didn’t bother cultivating them until the early 1800s. The first documented botanical illustration of a strawberry plant appeared in 1454.

If you have dandelions and violets in your lawn, there’s a good chance that you also have wild strawberries (Fragaria virginiana.) If the pollinators do their job each of these flowers will become a small but delicious strawberry. My kids used to love them, and they’d eat them by the handful.

Violets are having a rough time this spring because it seems like every time they open their flowers it rains. I’ve had quite a time getting a photo of one fully opened.

I did find a white violet fully opened. Native Americans had many uses for violets. They made blue dye from them to dye their arrows with and also soaked corn seed in an infusion made from the roots before it was planted to keep insect pests from eating the seeds. The Inuktitut Eskimo people placed stems and flowers among their clothes to give them a sweet fragrance, and almost all tribes ate the leaves and flowers.

I’ve never seen Forsythias bloom like they are this year. The cool weather seems to be extending their bloom period. This one was in an old unused parking lot.

Wild ginger (Asarum canadense) is a plant you have to watch closely if you want to see its flowers, because it can produce leaves and flowers in just days. You can see how its unusual brownish flower rests on the ground in this photo. This makes them difficult to get a good shot of.

For the first time ever I was early enough to see the round hairy buds of wild ginger. The bud splits into three parts to reveal the reproductive parts within.

Because they grow so close to the ground and bloom so early scientists thought that wild ginger flowers must be pollinated by flies or fungus gnats, but we now know that they self-pollinate. The flowers have no petals; they are made up of 3 triangular calyx lobes that are fused into a cup and curl backwards. Though flies do visit the flowers it is thought that they do so simply to get warm. Native Americans used wild ginger roots as a seasoning, much like we would ginger root, but science has shown that the plant contains carcinogenic compounds that can cause kidney damage.

At a glance you might mistake leatherleaf (Chamaedaphne calyculata) for a blueberry but this plant will grow in standing water and blooms earlier. The plant gets its common name from its tough, leathery leaves, which are lighter and scaly on their undersides. Florists use sprays of leatherleaf leaves as filler in bouquets. The flower type must be very successful because it is used by many other plants, from blueberries to heather. Native Americans used the plant medicinally to reduce inflammation and to treat fevers, headaches and sprains.

Goldthread (Coptis groenlandicum) gets its common name from its bright yellow, thread like roots. It likes to grow in moist undisturbed soil in part shade. Native Americans used the plant to treat canker sores and told early settlers of its medicinal qualities, and this led to its being over collected into near oblivion. Luckily it has made a strong comeback and I see quite a bit of it. There’s a lot going on in a little goldthread flower. The white petal like sepals last only for a very short time before falling off. The actual petals of the flower are the tiny golden club like parts just above the white sepals. These are cup shaped and hold nectar for what must be very small insects, because the whole flower could hide behind an aspirin. My favorite parts are the yellow green, curved styles, which always remind me of tiny flamingos.

Wood anemone (Anemone quinquefolia) is very similar to false rue anemone (Enemion biternatum.) Rue anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides) which is also similar, also grows in New Hampshire, which complicates being able to identify these plants. While false rue anemone is native to the eastern U.S., the USDA and other sources say that it doesn’t grow in New England, so that leaves wood anemone and rue anemone. False rue anemone always has 5 white sepals, while wood anemone and true rue anemone can have more.

Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis) is another plant that has had a rough spring because of all the cloudy, cool days. It likes sunshine but hasn’t seen much, and I’ve had quite a time finding one that was both dry and open. They have a very short flowering period so I doubt I’ll see many more, but you never know.

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.

The small fertile flowers in the center of hobblebush (Viburnum lantanoides) flower heads haven’t opened yet but the larger, sterile flowers around the outer edges have. Technically a hobblebush flower head is a corymb, which is just a fancy word for a flat topped, usually disc shaped flower head. It comes from the Latin corymbus, which means a cluster of fruit or flowers. All flowers in a hobblebush cluster, both fertile and infertile, have 5 petals.

Trout lilies (Erythronium americanum) blossom by the thousands here so I thought I’d see how the new camera’s depth of field did. It wasn’t bad but it could have been better. In a forest with fallen logs and other obstacles it’s hard to get a very long shot. But the story isn’t about camera tricks, it’s about thousands of trout lilies that go on and on and not being able to show them properly. I’ll keep trying because I’d really like you to see what I see on this blog.

I’d guess that most people would find a flower like this one beautiful; or at least pretty. Multiply that by thousands and you have beauty that is close to indescribable.

Here is another try at depth of field, which did work but the flowers are so small you can hardly see them.

The tiny white flowers in the previous photo were of course spring beauties (Claytonia virginica,)and I fear we may have to say goodbye to these beautiful little things soon, but maybe the cool wet weather predicted for next week will keep them blooming a little longer. I hope all of you had a chance to see them, or at least something as beautiful.
Go out, go out I beg of you
And taste the beauty of the wild.
Behold the miracle of the earth
With all the wonder of a child.
~Edna Jaques
Thanks for stopping in.
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Posted in Nature, Wildflowers | Tagged Bloodroot, Canon EOS Rebel T6, Early Spring Plants, Forsythia, Goldthread, Hobblebush, Japanese Andromeda, Keene, Leatherleaf, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, NH, Olympus Stylus TG-870, Shadbush, Spring, Spring Beauties, Swanzey New Hampshire, Trout Lilies, Violets, Wild Ginger, Wild Strawberry, Wood Anemone | 33 Comments
Our Serviceberry (as we call Shadbush) was also delayed this year, but the cool wet weather made for a long and beautiful display. I need to look at the Wild Ginger to see if it has flowers yet.
Lots of our flowers are just going on and on. I’ve never seen Forsythia bloom so long!
We have strawberries and violets in bloom here now too but there is a pause now before more species start to bloom, but finally the warm weather has arrived.
Thanks Montucky! We usually start off with a few here and there but soon there are flowers everywhere, but the cool rainy weather is having an impact on plants this year.
I’m glad you’re seeing some warm weather!
I love the variety of flower colour and shape of the plants you have in this post. I also appreciate the long shots of the trout lilies and spring beauties and have more of an understanding of the places where you find your plants and what they look like on the forest floor or wherever you see them.
Thank you Clare. I’ve got to remember to show more of the places where these plants grow!
That first photo is a keeper. Thanks for such a trove of information about early May flowers. I’m still waiting to see even a single bloom from our trout lilies. I know they love being in or near the forest floor and maybe that’s our problem, as they are in a garden bed.
Thank you Cynthia. Trout lilies take 7-10 years to blossom from seed, so you might just have to wait a little more. If you remember when they were planted you should be able to guess how close they are to blooming.
Once again, you have shown your native wild flowers off to their best advantage. Thank you.
You’re welcome. I always try to show them at their best.
The flowers are beautiful. I understand your feeling about the sea of trout lilies. I experienced much the same with English bluebells. The flowers are so delicate that seen against the soil, they seem to disappear even though they are glorious to the eye. I can imagine them from your description though.
Thank you Sue. I’d love to see a huge colony of bluebells. It’s a flower I’ve never seen in person.
I’ll keep trying with the trout lilies!
The Forsythias bloom here are deep yellow and very full, our Trout Lily and Bloodroot are past blooming. I have been looking in all the right places for Goldthread but haven’t found it blooming yet. It is such an interesting plant, well they all are!
Another good start to a Saturday because of a new post from New Hampshire Garden Solutions! Thank you.
Thanks Chris! The Forsythia here is the same-covered with blossoms.
I find goldthread growing with dwarf ginseng sometimes, and also with cinnamon ferns. Maybe your soild isn’t acid enough for it but I do hope you’ll find it!
I’m with Susan. Holy cats, that white violet is a beauty of a shot. A keeper and perhaps one to to print.
Thank you Laurie. They’re furry little things!
I think you collected all my favorite spring flowers here. , I’ll enjoy revisiting them all. Thank you. My mother could not believe that goldthread was no longer available at the drugstores and instructed me to keep an eye out for it as I wandered the woods and fields. I never did find any though. And I always looked for trout lilies or as we called them, dogtooth violets. I saw clumps of them in my usual area, but the day I saw a stream bank covered in their blooming flowers I simply sat down on the damp ground and watched them for a good long time. I hope you do manage a long shot of them some time.
Thanks very much. I don’t see huge numbers of goldthread but when I do it’s usually growing in good sized colonies.
I know just how you felt when you sat by the stream that day. It happens to me too. I think that it’s one of the best things that can happen to a person.
Fascinating. Your knowledge of the aboriginal uses and lore of the flowers is fascinating. My daughter-in-law is learning them well for not only flowers, but also trees and shrubs here in the Valdivian Rain Forest, said to be the largest temperature one in the world.
Thanks,
R. Clive
On Sat, May 11, 2019, 4:56 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions wrote:
> New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” Our cool wet weather has held > many flowers back from blooming but shadbushes are right on time. The plant > is actually more tree than bush but they’ll start blooming when they’re > quite small and at that size they do look like a bush. Shadbush is our > earl” >
Thank you Ron, I’ve always been fascinated by the uses that we humans have and have had in the past for plants. It’s really an amazing subject and I wouldn’t wonder that your daughter in law is becoming interested in it.
“With all the wonder of a child.”
Just so. 🙂
I like to think so!
🙂
I can recognize about half of the flowers you’ve shown in this post, but they’re all beautiful in their own way! Most of the flowers here in Michigan seem to be running behind their normal time to blossom, for we’ve had a very cool, wet spring as well. Also, it’s warbler migration time here, so it’s hard for me to look for small flowers when the bushes and trees are filled with small birds driving me crazy trying to get photos of them. Be glad that you’re not a birder this time of year, it leads to sensory overload.
I share your frustrations on the subject of trying to photograph hundreds or thousands of small flowers well enough to convey to others how beautiful such displays are. But unlike myself, you haven’t become obsessed with that and only note it in passing.
Thanks Jerry! You should see what Chris over at Plants Amaze Me saw in Aman Park. Incredible beauty there!
I am glad in a way that colorblindness keeps me from birwatching because I agree that it would be too much to absorb but when they land near me I do pay attention and try to get photos.
I’ve seen some beautiful photos where it was all about depth of field so I keep trying when I come upon a likely subject but I haven’t done great at it. Now if I could get to those white trilliums that you have at Aman Park………..
…..like a Mother’s Day bouquet, no delivery charge, such beauty! And a lesson for savoring the precious ephemerals while we have them. (A life lesson as well.) Thank you.
Thanks very much Lynne, I’m glad you enjoyed it!
The ice saints (11 – 13 May) this year show full power, so our hibiscus plants still standing in our appartment and not outside.But I have seen big fields full of dandelion more recently, they seemingly like this cool weather.
Thank you. Yes, dandelions do like cool weather and in fact I’ve noticed that they disappear during the hotter days of summer and return in the fall when it cools off.
I do love this post full of flowers! All the spring ephemerals are so delightful. I’ve been a wildflower enthusiast for decades, but today you’ve shown goldthread, which is new to me. It’s always nice to meet a new wildflower. Thanks for the introduction. 😊
Thank you Ginny. I usually find goldthread near water, especially the mossy areas at the edges of swamps and ponds. They’re small, about as big as an aspirin, and can grow in large colonies. They pass quickly though!
Lots of beauty in this post but your photograph of the white violet beat the band.
Thank you Susan. They’re coming up everywhere now!