Elderberry

This is a stand of tall plants (about 7 or 8 feet tall) out in a big bramble of swamp roses and blackberries and poison ivy. I waded out into it but this is as close as I could get before it was just too thorny. From this distance, I could see the leaves well enough to make an identification: Elderberry!

Will produce black berries that are used to make wine and jelly. The berries are bitter–safe to eat, but the other parts can induce cyanide poisoning. Used medicinally for centuries. The branches are used to make flutes in eastern Europe. And in some regions, tradition prevents the cutting of elderberry trees for bonfires: “Elder be the Lady’s tree; burn it not or cursed ye’ll be.” Native.

Elderberry (Sambucus canadensis)

Black-eyed Susan

The roots were used for medicinal purposes– Ojibwas used it to treat snake bites. Aster family. Native to the Midwestern U.S. (a prairie flower!)

Black-eyed Susan, Yellow Ox-eye Daisy (Rudbeckia hirta)

Purple Coneflower

This is not in the wild, but in a little garden of native plants right by a road where I drive frequently. A favorite with many insects, and some small songbirds eat the seeds.

Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea)

Pokeweed

This is the big glossy weed that gets dark purple berries on magenta stems later in the season. Their juice was used by natives to make dye to paint their horses! The Constitution was written in dye MADE FROM POKEBERRIES!

Okay now, you know that song about Poke Salad Annie? That refers to this plant.

Poke salad was (is?) a southern dish, but the leaves must be cooked and rinsed at least twice, because the whole plant is toxic unless properly processed. The berries are poisonous to mammals, but birds can eat them. 4 – 10 feet tall. Native.

Pokeweed, Poke (Phytolacca americana)

Flowering Grasses — need ID


For now, I have to give up on naming these three. Maybe they are more grass than wildflower, because I’m not finding them in any of my resources.

Hispid Buttercup

Hard to tell the buttercups apart. Look at the waxy reflective surface of the petals. Native.

Hispid Buttercup (Ranunculus hispidus)

Wild Garlic

What a find, this Dr. Seussical plant! They’re about an inch across, 1 or 2 feet tall, and with no discernible leaves, just a tall stalk. Lily family.

Wild Garlic (Allium vineale L.)

Alfalfa

An important forage crop. The English name comes from the Spanish name alfalfez, which comes from the Arabic al-fisfisa, meaning fresh fodder. Has been cultivated since at least the 4th century AD. Was introduced to the Americas by the Spanish as fodder for their horses. It’s where alfalfa sprouts come from! Pea family.

Interesting note from Wikipedia: “Alfalfa pollination is somewhat problematic  because Western honey bees, the most commonly used pollinator, are not suitable for this purpose; the pollen-carrying keel of the alfalfa flower trips and strikes pollinating bees on the head, which helps transfer the pollen to the foraging bee. Western honey bees, however, do not like being struck in the head repeatedly and learn to defeat this action by drawing nectar from the side of the flower. The bees thus collect the nectar, but carry no pollen and so do not pollinate the next flower they visit.  Because older, experienced bees do not pollinate alfalfa well, most pollination is accomplished by young bees that have not yet learned the trick of robbing the flower without tripping the head-knocking keel. When western honey bees are used to pollinate alfalfa, the beekeeper stocks the field at a very high rate to maximize the number of young bees.”

Alfalfa, Lucerne ( Medicago sativa)

Bonus picture: This is the scene where I photographed the alsike clover, the milkweed, the curly dock, the alfalfa, the pale swallowwort… This area used to be a dairy farm, and I understand that it was a common thing to plant a useful tree (in this case, a Shagbark Hickory) at the high point of your field, so that you would have a shady place to sit while you kept an eye on your herd or your flock (as demonstrated here, but he’s just watching Lucy).

Pale Swallowwort

Pardon my fingers; the wind was blowing and I was trying to steady the plant enough for a photo. There is just one of these plants all by itself in this field, but it’s considered highly invasive, so I wonder if there will be more next year. An unusual color. A twining vine. Milkweed family. Introduced from Europe in the 19th century.

Pale Swallowwort, Dog-strangling Vine (Cynanchum rossicum)

Curly Dock

This is one of those big unattractive weeds that I’ve always seen but never knew the name for… or noticed that up close, it’s rather pretty. About 3 feet tall. Native to Europe and Asia.

Curly Dock, Sour Dock, Narrow Dock (Rumex crispus)