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.

Tower Rockcress

This is a plant I photographed weeks ago (second photo) but couldn’t identify. But recently, it’s gotten some very distinguishing characteristics, namely these leafless vertical seed pods that hug the stem. Plus they’re about 4 to 5 feet tall.

Tower Rockcress, Tower Mustard (Arabis glabra)

Shinleaf

A dainty little plant. A Wintergreen. Historic medical use was application of crushed leaves to bruises and injuries to ease pain. A paste of crushed leaves was called a shin plaster, and that’s the name origin. Native.

Shinleaf (Pyrola elliptica)

Whorled Loosestrife

Photographed at Centennial but also growing in the Needham Town Forest. There is so much more to spring than tulips. Or violets. All these things I’ve been walking by all these years. Also you start to see how people were able to survive off the land, when they knew the possibilities and utilities of each plant. Primrose family. Native.

Whorled Loosestrife (Lysimachia quadrifolia)

Horsenettle

Native. Can be up to 3 feet tall. After blooming will have round yellow fruit, like little tomatoes, but deadly to humans. Has spines along the stem. Nightshade family.

Horsenettle (Solanum carolinense)

Indian Pipe

When Indian Pipe is first emerging, it looks like a few Q-Tips buried up to their eyebrows.


Indian Pipe is not a fungus. It’s a flowering plant related to Rhododendrons and blueberries. The flowers are pollinated by bumblebees. This plant does not have chlorophyll to make its nutrients, so it lives parasitically by tapping into fungi that live in the soil (and are obtaining THEIR nutrients from tree roots, usually beech and pines). (This is also how Ladyslipper plants get established, and it makes sense that this particular area supports a big population of both these plants–with soil full of organic matter and lots of surface litter.) So they can grow in the dark because they don’t use the sun. And, they can’t be transplanted, because they need their connection to the underground fungus, which needs its tree roots. As they age, they turn black. The name is from the way they look like little pipes stuck in the ground. According to one reference, they’re very fragrant,  which seems hard to believe– and another says humans can’t detect a scent, but they attract bees nonetheless. The roots were chewed by native people to ease toothache. (Thanks to A.F. Donna for spotting these first!)

Indian Pipe, Ghost Plant, Corpse Plant (Monotropa uniflora)

Bonus picture from this hike: someone else enjoying a spot of sun.

Mountain Laurel


Evergreen shrub 3 – 9 feet tall. All parts are deathly poisonous to several animals, like horses, humans, deer, cattle and sheep… but NOT to dogs or cats! First noted in America in 1624. The Latin name is after Pehr Kalm, who sent samples of it to Linnaeus in the 1700s. Blueberry family. Native to the eastern U.S. (Thanks to A.F. Donna for sending me out after this one!)
Mountain Laurel, Spoonwood, Calico Bush, Lambkill (Kalmia latifolia)

Wild Madder

Growing tall in big drifts at Red Wing Bay. Small whorled leaves, meaning they circle completely around the stem. A kind of Bedstraw. Madder family.

Wild Madder (Galium mollugo)

Silky Dogwood

On the shore of Walker Pond. A favorite with butterflies. Will have blue/lavender berries. Dogwood familly.

Silky Dogwood, Swamp Dogwood (Cornus amomum)