Difference between revisions of "Flora And Fauna:Wild Flowers"
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== Yellow Columbine == | |||
*''Aquilegia flavescens'' | |||
*To 40 in. (1 m) | |||
*Leaf: Basal | |||
*Plant Observed last week of May thru 1st week of September | |||
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File:yarrow.jpg | Yarrow | |||
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[[Category:In And Around Lexington|Wild Flowers]] | [[Category:In And Around Lexington|Wild Flowers]] | ||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Lexington Wild Flowers And Herbs}} | {{DISPLAYTITLE:Lexington Wild Flowers And Herbs}} |
Revision as of 17:19, 25 June 2017
In And Around Lexington |
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Events |
Events and Calendars |
Arts and Entertainment |
Art Galleries, Cary Library |
Museums |
Historical Buildings and Sites |
Bands |
Orchestras, Symphonies |
Local Flora and Fauna |
Ballet, Opera, Theater |
Trees, Shrubs and Vines |
Wild Flowers and Herbs, Birds |
Local History |
Articles, Books, Old Pictures |
Historic Commission, Historic Surveys |
Old Churches and Meeting Houses |
Period Maps, TV Stations, Web Site Mirrors |
Recreation and Outdoors |
Biking, Exercise, Gyms |
Parks, Trails |
Town Recreation Facilities |
Food and Drink |
Restaurants |
City Life |
Mailing Lists, Web Sites, FAQs |
Churches and Temples |
Child Care Centers |
Public, Private Schools |
Tutoring and Private Instructors |
Yarrow
- Achillea millefolium
- To 40 in. (1 m)
- Flowers are white to pink
- Leaves are fern like
Pokeweed
- Achillea millefolium
- To 10 ft (3 m)
- Grows in fields and waste areas
- Berries are toxic when raw but cooked juice is edible. The seeds remain toxic after cooking.
- Berries were used for ink making
Canada Mayflower
- Maianthemum canadense
- To 6 in (15 cm)
- Perennial
- Has 1 to 3 leaves
- Cluster of white flowers held above the leaves
- Berry fruit becomes red and translucent when ripe
False Solomon Seal
- Maianthemum racemosum
- To 2 ft (60 cm)
- Perennial
- Leaves elongated and alternating
- Round fruit turns red when ripe
Daisy Fleabane
- Erigeron strigosus
- To 5 ft (1.5 m)
- May be annual or biennial
- Name derived from the belief that the dried plants repelled fleas
- Flowers are white, pink or lavender and have yellow disk
Stinging Nettle
- Urtica dioica
- To 4 ft (1.2 m)
- Touching plant hairs produces burning sensation
Jack in the Pulpit
- Arisaema triphyllum
- To 3 ft (90 cm)
- Herbaceous perennial plant
- Curving hood ("Pulpit") covers over fingerlike central stem ("Jack")
Starflower
- Trientalis borealis
- To 8 in (20 cm)
- Perennial
Goldenrod
- Solidago genus
- To 5 ft (1.5 m)
- Perennial
- Large clusters of small yellow flowers that appear from the end of summer until frost
- Grows in open meadows, on the side of the road, in garbage areas
- Produces golden yellow dye
New England Aster
- Symphyotrichum novae-angliae (formerly Aster novae-angliae)
- To 7 ft (2.1 m)
- Perennial
- Gold disk florets at tip of stems, surrounded by 30 or more ray florets that are purple, lavender, or light pink
- Long leaves alternating along central stem and side branches which are covered with short white hairs
Bracken Fern
- Pteridium aquilinum
- To 5 ft (1.5 m)
- Perennial
- Instead of leaves, ferns have what are called fronds, subdivided in leaflets with small pinnae.
- Bracken fronds are shaped like triangles
- Grows in large colonies
Cinnamon Fern
- Osmundastrum cinnamomeum
- To 3 ft (90 cm)
- Likes moist and marshy soil
- Spreads by spores made on smaller cinnamon-colored frods
Common Milkweed
- Asclepias syriaca
- To 6 ft (1.8 m)
- Stem and leaves produce a white latex when broken
Joe-Pye Weed
- Eutrochium genus
- To 7 ft (2.1 m)
- Occurs naturally in moist and very wet soils, but also tolerates garden soil that is not too dry
- Was used by New England healer Joe Pye to treat a variety of ailments, therefore the name
Jewelweed
- Impatiens capensis
- To 5 ft (1.5 m)
- Juice from stems can be used as rubbing treatment for skin that had poison ivy contact
Skunk Cabbage
- Symplocarpus foetidus
- To 2 ft (60 cm)
- Huge leaves rise directly from ground
- Foul smelling flower attracts insects
- Prefers wetlands, river banks
Cattail
- Typha latifolia
- To 10 ft (3 m)
- Wetland plant
Yellow Columbine
- Aquilegia flavescens
- To 40 in. (1 m)
- Leaf: Basal
- Plant Observed last week of May thru 1st week of September