Tuesday, June 07, 2022

White froth

Turning from the flowers towering over my head, the devil's club, the elderberry, the cow parsnip, to look down at ankle height. It seems that the colours come in waves; earlier most of the flowers at ground level were pink: bleeding hearts, pink fawn lily, some of the trilliums. Now they're white, with the occasional blue for variety. And the yellows are next, the buttercups and assorted dandelion look-alikes.

This week, the whites:

Philadelphia fleabane, Erigeron philadelphicus. With golden-brown beetles.

Erigeron comes from the Greek eri meaning "spring" and geron meaning "an old man", in reference to the white-hairy fruiting heads or possibly to some hairy spring-flowering species. (Pojar & MacKinnon)
UPDATE: This plant has been re-identified as False Bugbane, Trautvetteria caroliniensis, one of the buttercup family. I'll go back and look for leaves, to confirm this.

Foamflower, Tiarella trifoliata

The flower stalks stand above the leaves. On a forest floor, in a dense patch of these, the flowers seem to float in the air, like foam above the waves on a windy shore.

Vanilla leaf, Achlys triphylla

Another "foamy" flower. The genus name, Achlys, means "mist". Dry these leaves and hang them in bunches to fill a room with a vanilla fragrance.

And a blue spring flower:

American brooklime, Veronica beccabunga.

These like wet ground. I have found them with their feet in the creek. They're edible; add them to your salad, as long as the water they're growing in is clean.

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Dejando atrás las flores que se alzan más altas que mi cabeza, las del garrote del diable, las elderberry, las de la pastinata de vaca, me agaché para mirar las que crecen a la altura de mis tobillos. Parece que aquí al nivel del suelo, las flores vienen en olas de color; primero las de color de rosa, los lirios de cervato, los corazoncitos sangrantes, algunos de los trilios; ahora las flores son blancas, con unas pocas azules. Seguirán con las amarillas; las ranunculus, las de la familia de los dientes de león.

Esta semana, las blancas:

Foto #1: Una de las Erigeron, la llamada espantapulgas, Erigeron philadelphicus. Con unos escarabajitos color café dorado.

"Erigeron viene del griego, eri que quiere decir "primavera", y de geron, "un hombre viejo", referiéndose a los frutos blancos y peludos, o posiblemente a algunas especies peludas que florecen en la primavera." (Pojar y MacKinnon)
#2: La flor espuma, Tiarella trifoliata. Las flores se levantan arriba de las hojas. En el bosque, en un grupo con muchas flores, parecen flotar en el aire, en apariencia como la espuma sobre las olas en un dia de viento.

#3: La hoja de vainilla, Achlys trifylla. Otra flor "espumosa". El nombre del género, Achlys, quiere decir "neblina". Secas las hojas, se cuelgan en ramos para compartir su aroma de vainilla a la habitación.

Y unas azules:

#4: Verónica americana, Veronica beccabunga. A estas les gusta la tierra mojada. Las he encontrado con las patas en el riachuelo. Son comestibles: añadelas a tus ensaladas, siempre y cuando crecen en agua limpia.


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