The Hottest Day?
July 25, 2020 by New Hampshire Garden Solutions

Last Sunday was supposed to be the hottest day of the year according to the weather people, with highs nearing 100 degrees. In the 1800s before air conditioning our ancestors used to climb hills for the breeze or find water to sit by or swim in to stay cool. It was too humid to climb so I went to the Ashuelot River, one of the most beautiful and natural bodies of water in the area.

Not only are the trails shaded along the river but there are no hills there, so there is little exertion required to hike them. Still, it was hot.

Ferns often make it seem cooler but on this day they burned like flames.

A turtle contemplated the beautiful blue of a pickerel weed blossom.

Fragrant white water lilies (Nymphaea odorata) blossomed all along the river banks on both sides of the river. Each blossom lasts only 3 days before the stems coil and pull them underwater to set seeds but there are so many of them they never seem to disappear.

Blue vervain, Allegheny monkey flower and fringed loosestrife grew all in a tangle, all competing for the same place in the sun.

Allegheny monkey flowers (Mimulus ringens) have square stems and are also called square stemmed monkey flowers. The throat is partially closed and bumblebees are one of the few insects strong enough to pry it open to get at the nectar. Native Americans and early settlers sometimes used the leaves as an edible green. This plant usually gets about knee high and likes to grow in wet, sunny places, and it isn’t all that common. No matter how many times I see it I never see a monkey.

Beautiful blue vervain (Verbena hastata) also likes to grow in damp sunny places so it does well along the river. The plants here must have been six feet tall. Its bitter roots were used by Native Americans to treat gastric irritation and some tribes roasted them and ground them into flour. Others dried the flowers and used them as snuff to stop nosebleeds. This is one of the plants they introduced to the Europeans and they used it in much the same way.

Great colonies of fringed loosestrife (Lysimachia ciliata) can be found along roadsides and wood edges, and along waterways. They are the last of the native yellow loosestrifes to bloom in this area but they seem to be having an extended bloom period this year. The flowers on fringed loosestrife are about the size of a quarter and nod to face the ground so I have to bend the stems up gently to get a face on photo like this one. It’s always worth the effort.

This bat box was new since I was here last. I’m seeing more and more of these in my travels. Bats are natural insect controllers so I’m all for seeing more of them.

I love the leaves of the royal fern (Osmunda regalis.) They look like no other fern I’ve ever met.

White rattlesnake root (Prenanthes alba) can be tough to identify because even plants growing side by side can have differently shaped leaves, but once they bloom identification becomes much easier. I can’t think of another plant that has small, drooping white, lily like blossoms at this time of year. The half inch flowers appear in clusters at the end of branched stems that can reach 5 or 6 feet in some cases, and have forked stamens that are longer than the petals. The plant gets its common name from the Native American belief that it could cure rattlesnake bites.

Though I’ve been coming here for over 50 years I always find something new when I return, and today’s new thing was a colony of marsh bellflowers (Campanula aparinoides.) Since I’ve never seen them anywhere before I had to spend a while trying to identify them but they were obviously in the campanula family so it only took a little while.

The small white flowers are maybe a half inch long and about the same diameter as an aspirin. The 5 petals flare outward and are pointed at the tip, with a single thin gray or blue line down the center. White stamens and a long curly style make up the reproductive parts. They’re quite small but very pretty.

The plants have weak stems and tend to sprawl and tangle.

I thought I heard a tall meadow rue say “Pssst; hey, come over here and look at this.” I didn’t need to see its leaves yellowing already, but I looked. Like spring fall begins on the forest floor with just a whisper, but before you know it the whisper becomes a shout and the trees are ablaze. The forest here is made up of mostly red maples and in the fall this trail is as beautiful as a place can be.

Boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) had just started blooming here. Its flowers look like white Joe Pye weed and that’s because the two plants are closely related. In fact they can often be found growing side by side I find it on river, pond and stream banks; almost always near water.

Mad dog skullcap (Scutellaria lateriflora) plants grow in great bunches along the shoreline. These small blue-violet flowers get their common name from the way that the calyx at the base of the flowers look a bit like a medieval helmet, called a skull cap, and how the plant was once thought to cure rabies because of its anti-spasmodic properties. Though it doesn’t cure rabies there is powerful medicine in this little plant so it should never be eaten. When Native Americans wanted to go on a spirit walk or vision quest this was one of the plants they chose.

Mad-Dog Skullcap flowers grow in pairs in the leaf axils. Another skullcap, marsh skullcap (Scutellaria galericulata,) looks very similar and the two are difficult to tell apart. Both grow in full sun on grassy hummocks at the water’s edge, but the blossoms of mad dog skullcap are slightly smaller than those of marsh skullcap.

One of my favorite shades of blue is found on bottle gentians (Gentiana andrewsii) but I don’t see many because they are quite rare here. This is the only place I can find them so you can imagine my delight when I found that they hadn’t been cut down this year like they had been two years ago. That was the time I found that the Keene Parks and Recreation Department had sent someone out here with a weed wacker, and that person had cut down countless beautiful wildflowers all along the trail, including the gentians. When they start to go by theses flowers become even more beautiful by turning very dark blue and then a kind of purple. They closely resemble narrow leaved gentian (Gentiana linearis) but that plant has much narrower leaves. Why anyone would cut down such a rare and beautiful thing is beyond me.

By the time I reached the little red bridge I was drenched and ready to turn around and go back.

I saw a lot of blue here on this day and since it’s my favorite color I was happy to see it. Blue is supposed to be a cool color but I didn’t feel very cool. When I started the temperature was 66 degrees F. and when I finished it was 86 degrees F. A rise of 20 degrees in an hour and a half, but was it worth it? Absolutely. In the words of the Chinese poet Lu Tung (790 – 835), “all the wrongs of life passed out through my pores.”
Those who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night. ~Edgar Allan Poe
Thanks for stopping in.
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Posted in Nature, Wildflowers | Tagged Allegheny Monkey Flower, Ashuelot River, Bat Box, Blue Damselfly, Blue Vervain, Boneset, Bottle Gentian, Canon SX40 HS, Fragrant White Water Lily, Fringed Loosestrife, Hay Scented Fern, Keene, Mad Dog Skullcap, Marsh Bellflowers, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, NH, Olympus Stylus TG-870, Painted Turtle, Royal Fern, Summer Wildflowers, Tall Meadow Rue, Tall White Rattlesnake Root | 17 Comments
Oh wait, except for the turtle right there on the log.
I showed a shot of a turtle in the water once and everyone asked what it was, so now only log bound turtles appear here.
If you’ve been waiting to hear whether I see a monkey, wait no longer. I’m with you on this one. I don’t see a monkey. I don’t see a turtle either.
Yes, I have been waiting to hear you say that.
Turtles will be coming along shortly when the turtle heads bloom. Then you’ll be the only one who sees turtles.
That suits me perfectly. Just me and whoever gave them their apt name.
Actually I think I’m the only one who doesn’t see a turtle, so you’ll be among the majority.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but I think it is the beak or snout where I see the resemblance. I suppose it’s a little too late for renaming and “Turtlesnout” doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue, but “Turtlebeak”, now that has a certain ring to it. Just sayin.
Next time I can catch a flight to Vienna I’ll go and see the International Botanical Congress and propose the name change. Of course it will have to be approved by the International Association for Plant Taxonomy first but I don’t see that being a problem.
Thanks, but on further thought, maybe you should hold off. All that fame and fortune would probably just go to my head.
Too bad. You might have ended up with a yard full of turtle heads.
I would like that.
We’ve hit 90 a few days this year already, but at least we don’t have the humidity. I enjoyed this tour of the woods, and was glad to see a turtle on that log. I don’t see many turtles out here. Thank you for the natural history lesson, once again!
You’re welcome Lavinia. Since i have COPD the heat and humidity combined make it hard to function sometimes. They say we’re in for more of both this week. I’m glad you don’t have it there!
Even if you found it hot, your pictures were delightfully cool.
Thank you. It’s been so hot here lately that it’s hard to think or write about anything else. It’s almost too hot to go outside at all.
Sorry your weather is so unpleasantly hot, hope it breaks soon. Mad Dog Skullcap was both beautiful and interesting, you know so much about plants!
Thank you Susan, we have more hot weather coming but we’ll get through it.
I’ve been studying plants for a long time but there’s still a lot I don’t know!