Mid August Flowers
August 17, 2019 by New Hampshire Garden Solutions

I thought I’d start this post with a flower that I couldn’t show in my last flower post. This is the ornamental datura (Datura metel) finally fully opened and it’s a beautiful thing. It’s a huge blossom; the end of the trumpet shaped bloom seen here is nearly as big as a tennis ball and the overall length must be close to 5 inches.

I’ve seen the first purple flowered aster of the year. I’m not sure which one it was but the flower size was too small to be a New England aster. It might be a purple stemmed aster (Symphyotrichum puniceum.) It grew in a very wet spot.

At a glance common boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) looks like white Joe Pye weed. That’s because the two plants are closely related. In fact they can often be found growing side by side as they are here, with the Joe Pye weed the pinkish purple flowers in the background. I find it on river, pond and stream banks; almost always near water.

The perfoliatum part of boneset’s scientific name means “through the foliage” and that’s how its stem appears to grow; as if the leaves have been perorated by it. The common name comes from the way that the joined leaves looked like broken bones knitting themselves back together. Joe Pye weed leaves have leaf stems (petioles) and look very different. Boneset was a very valuable medicine to Native Americans and they showed early settlers how to use the plant to reduce fever and relieve coughs and congestion. It was also used to ease aches and pains of all kinds.

Two years ago with a lot of help from readers this beautiful little thing was identified as low baby’s breath (Gypsophila muralis.) The flowers are tiny; about the same size as those of red sandspurry, and blossom on the ends of wiry stems. Its leaves are also small and sword shaped and very hard to see in this photo. This entire plant shown would fit in a tea cup with room to spare. It is an annual plant native to Europe and available commercially, sold as cushion baby’s breath. I had never seen it before that but now I see it quite regularly. I’m guessing it re-seeds itself prolifically.

Virgin’s bower (Clematis virginiana) is a late summer blooming native clematis vine that drapes itself over shrubs so it can get all of the sunshine that it wants. I’ve also seen it climbing into trees, but in this photo it has set its sights considerably lower and grew over nearby plants. As long as it finds the sunshine it needs, it doesn’t matter what it grows on. An extract made from the plant is hallucinogenic (and dangerous) and was used by Native Americans to induce dreams. Mixed with other plants like milkweed, it was also used medicinally. It is a very toxic plant that can cause painful sores in the mouth if eaten. Another name for virgin’s bower is traveler’s joy which it is, but its small white flowers are another reminder that fall is near.

Native wild cucumber (Echinocystis lobata) is a late summer blooming vine that climbs on shrubs and trees like it’s doing in this photo. It likes to grow in sandy soil and prefers shade over full sun. The flower spikes (Racemes) grow to 6 inches or more all along the main stem. These plants are annuals and grow from seed each year.

The greenish white, star shaped male flowers of wild cucumber have 6 petals that are twisted slightly. The female flowers are yellowish green and not at all showy. They grow at the base of the male flower stems. There is usually only one female flower for every 5 or 6 male flowers, which is why there are so few fruits seen on each vine.

The spiny, 2 inch long fruits of wild cucumber have a watermelon shape and boys have been throwing them at each other for as long as I’ve been around. They look prickly but the spines are soft until the fruits dry out and drop their seeds. By then they’re so light and desiccated that they can’t be thrown at anybody. The fruit is not edible and doesn’t really resemble a cucumber. I couldn’t find any on this vine so I’m showing this example from last year.

Native clethra (Clethra alnifolia) is also called summer sweet because of its sweet, spicy fragrance. If you have low spots in your yard that get wet occasionally, this is a good shrub to plant in them because it likes moist soil and grows naturally along stream banks and in swampy ground. Bees love it too, and these plants are covered with them every time I visit them in bloom. If you’re trying to attract pollinators this shrub should be in your yard.

Each long upright clethra flower head is packed with small white flowers. Small yes, but also very fragrant; it has the name summer sweet for a reason. I took a nice big sniff of these and the spicy sweet fragrance stayed with me almost all day. Some older nurserymen might also know it as sweet pepperbush. Whoever gave it that name thought its fruits resembled pepper corns. Clethra was named wildflower of the year by the Virginia Wildflower Society in 2015. An odd fact about this native shrub is that it doesn’t seem to have any medicinal or culinary uses. I can’t find a single reference regarding its use by Native Americans but I feel certain that they must have used it in some way.

I find spearmint (Mentha spicata) growing in the sunshine at the edge of the woods. Like wild mint (Mentha arvensis) spearmint has been used since before recorded time both medicinally and as a flavoring. Pliny wrote of it and the ancient Romans cultivated it to scent their bath water. Spearmint is originally from Europe but the Pilgrims brought it on their first trip to America, so valuable was the plant to them.

Instead of growing in the leaf axils as they do on wild mint, tiny spearmint flowers appear near the top of the stem. They are said to be pink or white but these were white, blue, pink and lavender. Their scent is very refreshing on a hot summer day and always reminds me of spearmint gum. Just imagine; right now you are seeing the same flowers that people admired 2000 years ago.

I wasn’t sure if I’d see chicory (Cichorium intybus) in bloom this year but there were several plants blooming along the roadside in Stoddard. I love the beautiful blue color of these flowers and if I could have a yard full of them I would. I’ve read that chicory flowers can also rarely be white or pink, but I’ve never seen them wearing those colors. These plants aren’t real common here but you can find small colonies dotted here and there throughout the countryside. The large, inch and a half diameter flowers on 4 foot tall plants means they’re easy to see. The roasted and ground root of chicory makes a passable coffee substitute.

I found this hollyhock growing in a local garden. At least I think it’s a hollyhock. I’m sure that it’s in the mallow family but I’ve never seen it so I had to try to find it in books and online. I think it might be the mountain hollyhock (Iliamna rivularis,) which is a small flowered native with maple shaped leaves. According to the U.S. Forest Service it likes to grow along woodland streams, but I’ve never seen it in the wild. Mountain hollyhock is also known as “checker mallow.” Mallow means “soft” and describes the soft leaves. Native Americans chewed the stems like gum.

This pretty daylily that grows in the garden of friends has a strange story. My friends were pretty sure I gave it to them years ago but none of us could remember for sure, and since I didn’t have one like it in my yard I doubted it had come from me. But then part of an old oak tree fell a couple of years ago and like magic, I had this daylily blooming in my yard this year. The oak tree had shaded it out so badly years ago that it had lived for years but didn’t bloom. Now, I can enjoy it once again. Amazing what a little sunshine will bring about.

Here is a sampling of what our meadows look like now, with goldenrods and purple loosestrife predominating. The loosestrife is highly invasive but it is very pretty when it blooms with goldenrods.

Here is a wider roadside view of just a small sampling of the flowers we have blooming now. For sheer numbers and variety August is the month of flowers.

You would never see one of our prettiest wildflowers blooming in that previous photo, because beautiful little forked blue curls (Trichostema dichotomum) are also one of the smallest. These little beauties get barely ankle tall and like to grow in sandy soil in full sun. One unusual thing about the flower, other than its unique beauty, is its four long, arching stamens that dust bees with pollen when they land on its lower lip.

Forked blue curls are annual plants that grow from seed each year. They are very small and you have to get down on your hands and knees for a view like this but it’s worth it because they are beautiful. This native plant grows as far west as Texas.
If you take a flower in your hand and really look at it, it’s your world for a moment. ~Georgia O’Keefe
Thanks for stopping in.
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Posted in Nature, Wildflowers | Tagged Ashuelot River, Black Datura, Boneset, Canon EOS Rebel T6, Chickory, Clethra, Daylily, Forked Blue Curls, Goldenrod, Joe Pye Weed, Keene, Low Baby's Breath, Mid Summer Flowers, Mountain Hollyhock, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, NH, Olympus Stylus TG-870, Purple Loosestrife, Purple Stemmed Aster, Spearmint, Summer Sweet, Summer Wildflowers, Swanzey New Hampshire, Sweet Pepper Bush, Virgin's Bower, Wild Cucumber | 31 Comments
I walked down the old dirt portion of Londonderry Turnpike West here in Bow this morning, and walked through a swamp that had many of the flowers you photographed. On the way I passed another pond/swamp where the maples were already turning. I grew up in New Hampshire, but lived in Tennessee for almost 40 years, and how I remembered the early turning of those leaves! I am happy to have found your blog.
Thank you Elizabeth. I’m glad you found it too! I think you’re the third or fourth person to tell me they’ve seen leaves turning, but I haven’t yet. Since I’m colorblind it takes me a little longer to see them, I suppose.
Beautiful!
On Sat, Aug 17, 2019 at 1:11 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions wrote:
> New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” I thought I’d start this post > with a flower that I couldn’t show in my last flower post. This is the > ornamental datura (Datura metel) finally fully opened and it’s a beautiful > thing. It’s a huge blossom; the end of the trumpet shaped bloom seen here > is ” >
Thanks!
I was just admiring the blue forked curls on my walk yesterday and was happy to see them on your post. Such beautiful little flowers! It can be a challenge photographing them and you did a lovely job.
Thank you Jennifer, I’ve had a lot of practice!
I’m glad you saw the flowers in person. They really are beautiful little things.
My brother grew Virgin’s Bower in his garden. Despite the maidenly name, it was a voracious creature that threatened to consume his entire house.
That’s often the way I see it growing in the wild too.
Your meadows are amazingly pretty now! Here most everything at the valley level has turned brown and there are very few flowers still blooming.
That’s too bad. I hope you’ll get some rain soon!
There was some white-flower Datura (Jimson weed) growing on a place in Texas where I hunted wild hogs. One day, I saw a dead cow. The rancher told me he had no clue why she died. I told him “It’s probably because she ate the poisonous Datura that is all around where you feed your cattle hay bales. I suggest you dig it all up.”
He thanked me profusely and did.
On Sat, Aug 17, 2019, 4:11 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” I thought I’d start this post > with a flower that I couldn’t show in my last flower post. This is the > ornamental datura (Datura metel) finally fully opened and it’s a beautiful > thing. It’s a huge blossom; the end of the trumpet shaped bloom seen here > is ” >
It was a good thing for that rancher that you came along, Ron. I know of a similar situation but the farmer doesn’t remove the jimson weed. I’m not sure why but the cows don’t seem to eat it. Although, if the cows were dying I would have no way of knowing unless I happened by at the time.
I could see where the Jimson weed had been eaten. Maybe she was the only one and paid the price.
Yes, maybe the rest of the herd learned from her sacrifice. It’s how I imagine we humans learned which plants and fungi were safe.
For sure.
Another beautiful post, Allen. I liked your daylily story and am pleased you have this gorgeous flower in your yard. Your hollyhock could also be Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis) or a relative. The forked blue curl is wonderful!
Thank you Clare. I do like the color of that daylily so I’m glad it came back.
I’ve wanted to see a marshmallow for years. I’ll have to go back and look at the plant a little more closely!
The forked blue curls are having a good year. I’ve seen hundreds of blossoms, which is unusual.
That was a good story about your day lily.
Thank you, I’m glad you liked it.
It wasn’t only boys who fought battles with wild cucumber. I threw my share back in the day, as well. 😀
Thanks Lee, I can believe that but it’s hard for me to speak about. Girls came after my wild cucumber throwing phase!
Methinks your daylily is a Frans Hals.
Thank you Elaine, I think you’re right!
Gorgeous flowers, wonderful explanations – I’ve been to class, and it’s always a good thing. 🙂
Thank you Judy. I went to see “our” cardinal flowers and found that they had all been eaten by hungry deer or woodchucks!
Oh, no! They looked so lovely there. This has been a tough gardening season fighting all the elements in play.
Yes. I’ve seen lots of eaten plants just about everywhere I’ve been this year.
Perfect quote for today. -Susan
Thank you Susan. Or any day!
Excellent quotation, so true. Loved the fascinating history and photograph of the spearmint and thought your opening picture was a real winner.
Thank you Susan. Mint was a very valuable plant in the past.