I think I'm up to about 75 native flowers with the additions this year. This one has actually been around here for a few years, growing in a native rose/snowberry copse in the north fence. Knowing what mint can do (spread everywhere), I was a little worried, but when several plants showed up in the prairie south of the copse I decided to make sure they're native (they are), and let them go. They bloomed this year...
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Another year of flowers: Nettleleaf horsemint
Saturday, May 28, 2022
Another year of flowers: Mule's ears
I planted these seeds so long ago, I can't really remember when it was. I think it was in the late 90s, but certainly no later than about 2005. Today is the first bloom I have ever seen on it, having had to use a photo of a flower blooming down the road for last year's "Year of Flowers" photo. Which means that it took about 20 years to see a bloom. It took about 12-15 years to see a leaf. So, I'm pretty tickled to see these flowers today!
Sunday, May 15, 2022
Another year of flowers: Palouse camas
I have rescued native plants from roadsides, construction sites, drainage ditches... These camas plants were the last camas bulbs not planted by humans that I had seen in my little town, growing in a small field just east of Palouse, about a block away from me. I loved seeing a camas flower or two show up every May for years in this particular spot. The owner had told me that I was welcome to dig any plants that I wanted, and I had gotten a few cinquefoil plants a long time ago, but I left the camas unmolested. For several years, the owner let someone overgraze their horses on it, so that it became a patch of dirt, mostly, and for about three years afterwards no camas bloomed. Then, four years ago, one camas came up in that spot and I thought--I'd better mark this and try to get the bulb. So I did, and I planted it in my camas patch, hoping for the best. Two plants came up! But, no flowers until this year. The lot has since been sold to a person who thought it would be a great idea to build an apartment complex there--fortunately the community came together and made sure that didn't happen, but it is only a matter of time now before they build a house or something there, so I am very happy to have saved these jewels.
Saturday, May 7, 2022
Another year of flowers: Grassland saxifrage, etc.
I have two clumps of this, rescued from a drainage ditch just across the border in Idaho, just as the spraying outfit was coming for it. I didn't know what it was, but I knew it was something. Well, now I know, thanks to my official Whitman County botanist, Pam Brunsfeld. This is another plant that DNA analysis has complicated with confusing names (well, to me, anyway). Its common name--Grassland saxifrage--is stable, but its scientific name has gone from Saxifraga integrifolia to Micranthese fragosa.
Since we're getting some real rainfall this Spring, flowers that I didn't have last year are blooming this year. Last year I had to use an older photo to show Sugar bowls (Clematis hirsutissima). It just started blooming out there this year. Such a wild flower!
Thursday, April 28, 2022
Another year of flowers: Glacier lily!
Erythronium grandiflorum
Wow, sometimes you get a gift. I did not plant this, but about ten years ago I planted the Cinquefoil seed that contributed the plant in the background. A few years later, a single leaf blade came up beside the Cinquefoil. It looked like a bulb of some kind, so I didn't mess with it, but I sure wondered what it was. For the last 5-6 years, it has just been that leaf, but today I went down to check on things and... it's a Glacier lily! One of those native plants that you really cannot dig and move, so you just have to enjoy them where nature decides to share. I feel very lucky!