I went out for some goldenrod and sunflowers on my break the other day, and I got a bonus of false boneset and stiff goldenrod.
The stiff goldenrod is in the middle right of the bouquet, just above the two biggest sunflowers. The flowers are arranged differently than most goldenrod.
The false boneset (Brickellia
eupatorioides) is the beige-colored flower on the left. The leaves of false boneset are arranged differently than common boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum). Both plants have similar blooms and both are medicinal, just for different things.
I look forward to the lovely goldenrod popping up everywhere this time of year. And it's a very good cut flower, too. The sunflowers need to be put in water right away, though, they wilt much faster than goldenrod.
If you get flowers from the ditch like I do, be sure to give them a good shaking before you get back in your vehicle. There are a lot of happy insects and arachnids hanging out on them who would like to continue their normal lives. So let them, yeah?
Herbcraft, foraging, wildcrafting, herbs, botany, bugs, creatures, genealogy, organic gardening and whatever else that takes my fancy, including altered books, dance, frugality, tightwaddery, and the like.
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Random photos of wonderful plants of late summer
I got some groceries today, and this handsome oak tree got my attention. I wonder why it's suckering at the bottom.
Not a great picture, but this white snakeroot is just beautiful right now. It's very toxic to livestock and humans both. But darned pretty. It was growing at the edge of a small woodlot at the edge of town.
I apologize for the poor quality of this photo, but I really liked this dense clump of sunflowers amongst all the corn.
This is the very cute flower of prickly lettuce. I like it, but it's VERY small and the prickly lettuce has a huge ugly factor at this time of year and most times of year.
The only things I admire about it, is that in the drought years it grew just fine, juuuust fine. I have to admire that. And like I said, the flowers are cute.
Not a great picture, but this white snakeroot is just beautiful right now. It's very toxic to livestock and humans both. But darned pretty. It was growing at the edge of a small woodlot at the edge of town.
I apologize for the poor quality of this photo, but I really liked this dense clump of sunflowers amongst all the corn.
This is the very cute flower of prickly lettuce. I like it, but it's VERY small and the prickly lettuce has a huge ugly factor at this time of year and most times of year.
The only things I admire about it, is that in the drought years it grew just fine, juuuust fine. I have to admire that. And like I said, the flowers are cute.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Beautiful and quirky ... but noxious!
Daucus carota aka wild carrot aka Queen Anne's Lace aka bird's nest is a naturalized plant brought with settlers from Europe and southwest Asia. Here is why it's called "bird's nest."
The flower is seen from the edge here; the better picture is of the flower after it's done and it curls up to allow the seeds inside to ripen.
Bring it into your home or property only with the greatest caution. Throw the used flowers into the trash, not your compost.
This plant is known to be a companion plant to tomatoes IN EUROPE and SOUTHWEST ASIA, where it attracts native wasps. It does not do this in North America.
It is classified by the USDA as a noxious weed.
Now, I like it. It's super cute! But I'm very very careful with it.
If you're curious, the flower spike to the far left, up high, is Russian sage. The furry spike on the far right is Blue vervain with the blossoms near the tip. Below the Queen Anne's lace is flowering spurge, which is going great guns in the ditches right now.
I think of flowering spurge as one of the "bright-white" flowers. Some plants bloom creamy-white, like elderberries; some greenish-white, and others are a bit like spotlights, thus "bright-white" like this spurge.
As you look around at the plants blooming, you'll see things to help you distinguish colors, shapes, heights, etc.
Good hunting!
Monday, August 12, 2013
Drying herbs in the oven
This is but one example of my ultra-fancy labeling. I can always put nicer labels on later, but when I'm drying, I figure I'll remember what stuff is, and when I did it. I swear, I always think I'll remember. But after a couple decades, yeah, I think I get it now.
This is a first for me, but I turned the oven on to WARM. I checked the thermometer inside frequently. After 8 times and about 90 minutes, I figured that 80 degrees was about as hot as it was going to get while open.
As it happens, that's about right. I had five baskets and 8 or 9 herbs.
You are seeing only a few of my favorite baskets here. Flat, loose-weave, these qualities allow for air circulation, which is necessary for herbs to dry. 2011 and 2012? No oven necessary. The humidity rarely got over 45% those summers.
I didn't have a tight-enough weave wicker basket for the juniper berries, so I improvised. Improvisation is king! Well, improvisation will sometimes mess you up, but it's good to have an open mind!
Plantains to the left, yarrow & comfrey in back, and linden blossoms under the sieve ... somewhere.
Juniper berries. For real! The blue color leaves them as they dry. ... Also, someone had told me to pierce them to help them dry. That's a pain in the butt! Hurts my pinchy muscles in my thumb! But I did it, because the last time I dried junipers, they molded up like BIG dogs!
This is a first for me, but I turned the oven on to WARM. I checked the thermometer inside frequently. After 8 times and about 90 minutes, I figured that 80 degrees was about as hot as it was going to get while open.
As it happens, that's about right. I had five baskets and 8 or 9 herbs.
You are seeing only a few of my favorite baskets here. Flat, loose-weave, these qualities allow for air circulation, which is necessary for herbs to dry. 2011 and 2012? No oven necessary. The humidity rarely got over 45% those summers.
I didn't have a tight-enough weave wicker basket for the juniper berries, so I improvised. Improvisation is king! Well, improvisation will sometimes mess you up, but it's good to have an open mind!
Plantains to the left, yarrow & comfrey in back, and linden blossoms under the sieve ... somewhere.
Juniper berries. For real! The blue color leaves them as they dry. ... Also, someone had told me to pierce them to help them dry. That's a pain in the butt! Hurts my pinchy muscles in my thumb! But I did it, because the last time I dried junipers, they molded up like BIG dogs!
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Watch your ditches for bloomers!
There are a ton of plants blooming in the ditches just now, and I want you to look at them. It's not just a blur of green and yellow, now ... Maybe you could go down a country road where you should only go 50, tops, right? ... Right? ... lol
Compass plants are blooming, several sunflowers, showy partridge pea, birdsfoot trefoil (okay, like it's been blooming all summer, to be truthful), I believe I'm seeing flowering spurge and snow-on-the-mountain. Tall red clover is still blooming. What else?
Ah, and the horrible, the invasive, the *cute* Queen Anne's Lace. I even went to the one place I know a woman has it in her yard, just to look, in the next town over. Yup, it's there. Every year. It's not going anywhere soon! It's having a spectacular year. Usually I see it in *one*place* along my highway. This year it's along a stretch of 10 miles of this highway. Are you seeing that, too? Mullein is doing better this year in my yard, but I still don't see it other places. Maybe where you are, it's different.
I haven't had time to go investigate with my camera, so ... sorry! You'll need to do that part on your own.
Let me know what's blooming near YOU!
Compass plants are blooming, several sunflowers, showy partridge pea, birdsfoot trefoil (okay, like it's been blooming all summer, to be truthful), I believe I'm seeing flowering spurge and snow-on-the-mountain. Tall red clover is still blooming. What else?
Ah, and the horrible, the invasive, the *cute* Queen Anne's Lace. I even went to the one place I know a woman has it in her yard, just to look, in the next town over. Yup, it's there. Every year. It's not going anywhere soon! It's having a spectacular year. Usually I see it in *one*place* along my highway. This year it's along a stretch of 10 miles of this highway. Are you seeing that, too? Mullein is doing better this year in my yard, but I still don't see it other places. Maybe where you are, it's different.
I haven't had time to go investigate with my camera, so ... sorry! You'll need to do that part on your own.
Let me know what's blooming near YOU!
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Bee balm, yarrow, etc., and the grooviest seed heads EVER
Russian sage, the last of the yarrow and the last of the bee balm.
Yarrow hanging to dry.
Yarrow next to pineapple weed next to sage, next to sweet Annie.
These look darker in real life. I have so few! *sob*
So fine.
These are from Bluebird Nursery @ Clarkson, NE
About 20 new rocks for the rock garden. Some of them had to be stacked. It's a thing.
Physalis or Chinese lanterns, related to tomatillos.
Rudeckia hirta, black-eyed susan.
The rockin'-est seed heads EVER. Illinois bundleflower has an inconspicuous flower, like a pale white pompon. Es no importante! The really cool part of this plant, visually, is its seed pod. They are crescents, arranged in this loose sphere, that are my FAVE in the weird seed head department. Very cool!
This is a more distant view of them.
Somedamnedmint. I don't know what species. Unkillable. Over the years I've been calling it "monster mint." Cute, though.
Yarrow hanging to dry.
Yarrow next to pineapple weed next to sage, next to sweet Annie.
These look darker in real life. I have so few! *sob*
So fine.
These are from Bluebird Nursery @ Clarkson, NE
About 20 new rocks for the rock garden. Some of them had to be stacked. It's a thing.
Physalis or Chinese lanterns, related to tomatillos.
Rudeckia hirta, black-eyed susan.
The rockin'-est seed heads EVER. Illinois bundleflower has an inconspicuous flower, like a pale white pompon. Es no importante! The really cool part of this plant, visually, is its seed pod. They are crescents, arranged in this loose sphere, that are my FAVE in the weird seed head department. Very cool!
This is a more distant view of them.
Somedamnedmint. I don't know what species. Unkillable. Over the years I've been calling it "monster mint." Cute, though.
Friday, August 2, 2013
A groovy moth! A getting-rare butterfly.
Virgin Tiger Moth, Grammia virgo. It was hanging on the curb at Dollar General this afternoon.
Female Monarch butterfly, laying eggs on a milkweed Tuesday. Wellllll, maybe not in this exact picture, but that's was she was up to.
Female Monarch butterfly, laying eggs on a milkweed Tuesday. Wellllll, maybe not in this exact picture, but that's was she was up to.
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