The wildflowers continue to share their beauty, even as Summer's end is drawing near.
Cool
nights and mist-filled mornings have finally prevailed.
And
so as we transition into the gentler days of Autumn I share with you the last
few flowers of our summer meadows.........
Joe
Pye Weed, Eupatorium purpureum, is an amazing plant that is an herb, a
wildflower, a butterfly plant and an ornamental for the flower bed.
It
obtained its name after a Native American herbalist, named Joe-Pye, cured fevers
using the Eupatorium plant. Though we tend to think of it as a wildflower in the U.S., it's long been an ornamental plant in England where our cottage gardens are so popular.
I
enjoy gathering the flowers, stems and all, to hang from the rafters of my
potting shed. Surprisingly enough they stay vividly colored until late Winter.
Yarrow has also been used as a food, and was very popular as a vegetable in the seventeenth century.
The younger leaves are said to be a pleasant leaf vegetable when cooked as spinach, or in a soup.
The Wild Yarrow, Achillea Millefolium, also known as Milfoil, Soldiers
woundwort, Nose Bleed Weed, Sanguinary, and Devil’s Nettle is a very useful
medicinal herb.
Yarrow has also been used as a food, and was very popular as a vegetable in the seventeenth century.
The younger leaves are said to be a pleasant leaf vegetable when cooked as spinach, or in a soup.
Yarrow
is sweet with a slight bitter taste. The leaves can also be dried and used as a
herb in cooking.
Solidago,
commonly called goldenrods, are herbaceous perennial species found in the
meadows and pastures, along roads, ditches and waste areas in North America.
Parts
of some goldenrods can be edible when cooked, they can also be used for
decoration and making tea.
Goldenrods
are, in some places, held as a sign of good luck or good fortune.
They
are considered weeds by many in North America but they are prized as garden
plants in Europe.
8 comments:
I have tried growing Eupatorium here, but the slugs love it too!!
Interesting post Jo.
Your wild flowers are also populating my garden and I love them. As I understand your weather is already cooler. We have one of these rare after summers with temperatures upto 28 degr. C.
Interesting info about these three, all of which we have lots of.
Lovely to see and hear about the wildflowers. It is the first few days of Spring here in Australia and out in the west our wildflowers and Wattle are starting to appear everywhere now.
We don't have as many wild flowers now. To much building going on, in the hay field out back we had butterfly weed growing and the butterfly's were covering it ,then they mowed.
That top shot is lovely!!! Such beautiful flowers...Don't you just love how nature provides such wonderful beauty for every season???
My Joe Pye Weed was beautiful this year, it servived on neglect
I like the yellow and the angle of taking the photo !
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