Aquatics (and friends)
July 20, 2019 by New Hampshire Garden Solutions

As the 90+ degree heat and humidity of July takes hold I think of being near cool water and it’s hard to be near water in this part of New Hampshire without noticing all the beautiful flowers that live in and around our lakes, rivers and ponds. Queen of all the aquatics in my opinion is the fragrant white water lily (Nymphaea odorata.) Unless you happen to be in a kayak or canoe it’s all but impossible to get a shot of one from above, but this one was right at the shoreline of a small pond and it gave me a rare look at the beautiful golden flame that burns in the center of each one. They’re said to smell like honeydew melons, but I’ve never gotten close enough to one to find out. I could have picked this one, but why would I?

A small sampling of what can often be very large colonies of pickerel weed (Pontederia cordata.) Native Americans washed and boiled the young leaves and shoots of this pretty plant and used them as pot herbs. They also ground the seeds into grain. The plant gets its name from the pickerel fish, which is thought to hide among its underwater stems.

Pickerel weed has small purple, tubular flowers on spikey flower heads that produce a fruit with a single seed. Ducks and muskrats love the seeds and deer, geese and muskrats eat the leaves. If you see pickerel weed you can almost always expect the water it grows in to be relatively shallow and placid, though I’ve heard that plants occasionally grow in water that’s 6 feet deep.

Bur reed grows just off shore but I’ve also found it growing in wet, swampy places at the edge of forests. Bur reeds can be a challenge to identify even for botanists, but I think the one pictured above is American bur reed (Sparganium americanum.) There are two types of flowers on this plant. The smaller and fuzzier staminate male flowers grow at the top of the stem and the larger pistillate female flowers lower down.

The female bur reed flowers are always lower down on the stem and look spiky rather than fuzzy. They’re less than a half inch across. After pollination the male flowers fall off and the female flowers become a bur-like cluster of beaked fruits that ducks and other waterfowl eat. The flowers of bur reed always remind me of those of buttonbush.

The male staminate flowers of bur reed look fuzzy from a distance and kind of haphazard up close. Though they must be full of pollen I can’t remember ever seeing an inset on one.

Bur reed stems twist and turn in odd configurations, and only they know why.

Vervain (Verbena hastata) is described as having reddish blue or violet flowers but I see a beautiful blue color. Somebody else must have seen the same thing, because they named the plant blue vervain. Vervain can get quite tall and has erect, terminal flower clusters. The plant likes wet places and I find it near ponds and ditches.

Vervain flowers are quite small but there are usually so many blooming that they’re easy to spot. The bitter roots of this plant were used medicinally by Native Americans to relieve gastric irritation, as an expectorant, and to induce sweating. The seeds were roasted and ground into a flour or meal by some tribes, and the flowers were dried and used as snuff to treat nose bleeds. Natives introduced the plant to the European settlers and they used it in much the same ways.

Pipewort (Eriocaulon aquaticum) usually grows in ankle deep standing water. Since they grow with their lower stems submerged being able to see the entire plant is rare, but there are basal leaves growing at the base of each stem underwater. I’m guessing that they must still get enough sunlight through the water to photosynthesize. The stem has a twist to it with 7 ridges and because of that some call it seven angle pipewort. It is also called hatpins, for obvious reasons.

Most pipeworts grow just offshore in the mud and send up a slender stalk that is topped by a quarter inch diameter flower head made up of very tiny white, cottony flowers. Eriocaulon, the first part of pipewort’s scientific name, comes from the Greek erion, meaning wool, and kaulos, meaning plant stem. The second part of the scientific name, aquaticum, is Latin for a plant that grows in water, so what you have is a wool-topped stem growing in water, which of course is exactly what pipewort looks like. Pipewort is wind pollinated.

As their name implies swamp candles (Lysimachia terrestris) like wet places and often grow right where the water meets the shore. This plant is easy to identify; I can’t think of another that has loose, yellow flower spikes (racemes) like this one unless it is broad leaved goldenrod (Solidago flexicaulis,) but its leaves are very different. This is a native that grows to about 3 feet.

Swamp candle is in the loosestrife family and each of the 5 yellow petals has two red dots at its base, which makes the flowers look a lot like those found on whorled loosestrife, but slightly smaller. A major difference between the two plants is how the leaves don’t grow in whorls on swamp candles.

Common arrowhead (Sagittaria latifolia) grows just off shore and is also called broadleaf arrowhead and duck potato, because ducks eat its small, potato like roots and seeds. All arrowheads that I’ve seen always have three pure white petals, but I’ve heard that some can be tinged with pink. The pretty flowers are about an inch across.

It’s easy to see how arrowhead gets its name. In late fall or early spring, disturbing the mud in which they grow will cause arrowhead’s small tuberous roots to float to the surface. They are said to have the texture of potatoes but taste more like chestnuts. They were an important food for Native Americans, who sliced the roots thinly and dried them and then ground them into a powder that was used much like flour. Ducks, beavers, muskrats and other birds and animals eat the seeds, roots, and leaves.

Purple loosestrife will grow in standing water but usually grows just onshore. It is an invasive plant that came over from Europe in the ballast of a cargo ship in the 1800s. The beach sand ballast, loaded with purple loosestrife seeds, was originally dumped on Long Island, New York. The seeds grew, the plant spread and now it covers most of Canada and all but 5 of the lower Untied States. It likes wet, sunny meadows. Purple loosestrife chokes out native plants and forms monocultures. These colonies can be so large that finding a single plant like the one pictured above is becoming more difficult each year.

Though it is much hated you can’t deny the beauty of purple loosestrife. I’ve worked for nurseries and have had people come in wanting to buy “that beautiful purple flower that grows in wet areas,” but of course it can’t be bought, sold or traded here because it is a prohibited invasive species. The law says that “No person shall collect, transport, import, export, move, buy, sell, distribute, propagate or transplant any living and viable portion of any plant species, which includes all of their cultivars and varieties, listed on the New Hampshire prohibited invasive species list.” So, don’t even collet the seeds.

Swamp roses (Rosa palustris) are about as big as an Oreo cookie and can grow in great numbers when conditions are right. This rose, like many other water loving plants, grows on hummocks and small islands but it can grow in drier locations as well.

How I wish I could find fields full of beautiful swamp milkweed plants (Asclepias incarnata) but the truth is I only see one or two plants each year if I’m lucky. This is a flower that made me gasp the first time I saw it because it was so beautiful. It is not a flower from my childhood so it is relatively new to me and I think I could just sit and stare at it for hours. I wish I had some growing here at home.

Three years ago I followed a trail through a swamp and was astonished to see a two foot tall greater purple fringed bog orchid (Platanthera grandiflora) growing right there beside the trail. There was another one nearby but it was off in the swamp, all but inaccessible unless you wanted very wet feet. This year the plant beside the trail was gone and I felt my heart sink, but as I looked around I saw the other one still there, out in the swamp. Without even thinking I stumbled through the black, sucking muck until I reached it, and these photos will hopefully show you why. It’s like seeing a bush full of beautiful purple butterflies and I still can’t believe I ever found such a thing.

How can anyone not want to fall on their knees before something as beautiful as this? To find yourself absorbed by it to the exclusion of everything else is to visit that place of deep peace from which all flowers come. Once you’ve been there you never forget it, and you’ll ache to return. Natural science writer Loren Eiseley also visited that place and explained: “The hours when the mind is absorbed by beauty are the only hours when we really live, so that the longer we can stay among these things so much the more is snatched from inevitable Time.” Maybe that’s why I’m willing to wade through the mud of a swamp to see such a thing.

I came out of the swamp with mud up to my knees, but also with a smile on my face. I know that nature isn’t static; everything is changing constantly and I don’t usually have trouble accepting that fact, but the loss of something so rare and beautiful is painful, and even though I was happy to see this plant I was sorry to not find the other one. I’ve read that orchids can disappear and then suddenly reappear a year or even years later, so I’ll keep checking the spot. Hopefully it will come back and help beautify this earth as only it can.

Of course, flowers aren’t the only things you’ll see near water.
A monk asks: Is there anything more miraculous than the wonders of nature?
The master answers: Yes, your awareness of the wonders of nature.
~Angelus Silesius
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Posted in Nature, Wildflowers | Tagged American Bur Reed, Aquatic Plants of New Hampshire, Ashuelot River, Blue Vervain, Canon EOS Rebel T6, Common Arrowhead, Fragrant White Water Lily, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, NH, Olympus Stylus TG-870, Pickerel Weed, Pipewort, Purple Fringed Bog Orchid, Purple Loosestrife, Summer Wildflowers, Swamp Candles, Swamp Milkweed, Swamp Rose, Swanzey New Hampshire | 33 Comments
That’s a beautiful orchid, and I love the swamp candles. I have tried unsuccessfully to grow Verbena hastata, but have done much better with V. stricta, which likes drier soils.
Yes, I’d guess that Verbena hastata likes a lot of water because tht’s where it grows naturally. V. stricta looks much the same to me though. It’s a pretty plant.
How sad that one of the bog orchids has disappeared! I hope it returns one day. In 2010 we had a pyramidal orchid bloom in our garden and I had high hopes of it staying but it has never appeared again.
You have so many lovely aquatic plants in New Hampshire; thank you so much for your photographs and the knowledge you impart.
You’re welcome Clare. Maybe both our orchids will reappear someday. I know of a Northern spur orchid that disappears for a year or two and then comes back.
We will live in hope.
Yes!
The bog orchid… SUCH a beauty! The photo of the white lily is gorgeous as well. Your passion for plants is infectious.
Thank you Jennifer. I hope you’ll get to see them both in person. They’re certainly worth looking for!
Fingers crossed that lovely plant returns next year. Thank you for sharing such lovely photos!
You’re welcome Cathy. I hope I’ll be able to show you that orchid for many years to come!
I have white vervain here – Verbena urticifolia – but now I’ll keep my eyes open for the blue as well. Aren’t you lucky to see bog orchids, or even one bog orchid! They really are breathtaking.
Thank you Quinn. I didn’t know there was a white vervain. I’ll have to check and see if it grows here.
I consider myself very lucky to have seen those bog orchids. They’re pretty special!
These are all beautiful, but the bog orchid is very special!
Thanks Montucky, I agree!
I can quite see why the bog orchid caught your imagination, it looks wonderful.
If only it would grow on the side of the road like your orchids do.
Oh, my! After reading about your love of the swamp milkweed and scrolling down, the next image of the greater purple fringed bog orchid literally took my breath away! What a treasure to behold! Thank you!
You’re welcome Pat. I’m glad you enjoyed seeing these beauties as much as I did.
Lovely. 🙂
Thank you Ben, I’m glad you thought so.
I did,
What, no duck weed?? 😉 What a lovely bunch of flowers from the swampy and wet areas, especially the orchid! Allen, I have quite a nice bunch of swamp milkweed in my garden for the monarchs and would be more than happy to send you seeds. It’s becoming a bit of a garden thug, so I clip off the seed pods early. I would gladly let a few mature for you. LMK? And I agree, the flowers are splendid!
To be honest I haven’t seen any duck weed yet, Ginny. Now that you mention it, that seems odd.
Thanks very much for your offer of the swamp milkweed seeds. I know two clumps of plants I could get seeds from so there is no need for you to go to the trouble of mailing them. My problem is remembering to go and get the seeds when they ripen. That’s something I’ve meant to do for the last five years! This time I’ve written myself a note and put it on the refrigerator among all the trail maps and other ephemera, so there is no excuse!
But I do thank you for your offer asnd if I should lose my note (which has happened!) I might just take you up on it.
Time is running out, Allen! Five years you’ve been trying to do this? Tsk tsk. Let me send some, I won’t forget. And you should let the seeds from those clumps out in the wild disperse naturally. Really!
I hope you’re wrong about time running out. I haven’t even retired yet!
If you send a comment in the “contact me” page I’ll be able to email you my contact information, which I’d rather not put here.
That’s BOG orchids…not big orchids. Darn spell-checker
They do cause problems sometimes!
I was right next to many fringed big orchids yesterday, but didn’t have a good camera along. What exquisite photos you got of them. If you’re up for a field trip, I recommend the bog in Walpole at Distant Hill Gardens. It’s small, but you’d get close-ups of many of its wonders
Thank you Sue. I’ve been to Distant Hill Gardens and did a two part blog post on them which you can find here https://nhgardensolutions.wordpress.com/2015/07/25/distant-hill-gardens-part-two/:
I didn’t see any fringed bog orchids when I was there but I did see many rose pogonia orchids which were very beautiful. I’m going to have to pay them another visit sometime soon!
Back in the 70s I used to correspond with Loren Eisley, a very thoughtful and kind individual. He was a fellow archeologist, but a famous one. He wrote some fascinating books and essays, like “The Slit,” and was called the modern Thoreau. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loren_Eiseley
Your white water lily looks very similar to the pink lotuses (Nelumbo nucifera) or water lilies that we have covering a lagoon at Parque Saval in Valdivia, Chile. https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http%3A%2F%2Fttnotes.com%2Fimages%2Fra-philippi-museo-de-la-exploraci%25C3%25B3n-valdivia-3.jpg&imgrefurl=http%3A%2F%2Fttnotes.com%2Fra-philippi-museo-de-la-exploraci%25C3%25B3n.html&docid=jfH6odhkha4rmM&tbnid=s1qFH1Ke8Q2U1M%3A&vet=1&w=3872&h=2592&source=sh%2Fx%2Fim
Ours are from the Far East originally whereas I believe yours are native.
Many people come to see the lilies at Parque Saval and walk along its beautiful hiking trails.
On Sat, Jul 20, 2019, 3:55 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” As the 90+ degree heat and > humidity of July takes hold I think of being near cool water and it’s hard > to be near water in this part of New Hampshire without noticing all the > beautiful flowers that live in and around our lakes, rivers and ponds. > Queen ” >
Thanks very much Ron. That was fascinating reading of Loren Eisley, a man I had never heard of until I found the quote I used here. When I was a boy I used to love reading Thoreau so I’m really kind of shocked that I never heard of this obviously great man. We have a lot in common he and I, and you can bet that I’ll be looking for his books.
Our fragrant white waterlilies are indeed native and the place I visit to see them looks almost identical to the lagoon at Parque Saval, but this place is a simple water retention pond. No matter though; it’s still beautiful!
That white water lily was indeed beautiful but thank you for going up to your knees in black mud to take those pictures of that bog orchid, what a treat for us all.
Thank you Susan, it was a pleasure to see something so rare!