New York Botanical Garden's Native Plant Garden - May 15, 2016
Guest post by Joel Nevis y Flores
A cool day in the upper 50's F, cloudy with passing sprinkles. I had twelve people on my 12:30p tour and 8 people on my 2:30p tour. Here is what we saw in bloom:
Acorus calamus Sweet flag
Amsonia tabernaemontana Bluestar
Amsonia tabernaemontana |
Anemonella thalictroides |
Aquilegia chrysantha Golden columbine in the Glade
Aquilegia chrysantha |
Asarum canadense |
Camassia scilloides Atlantic camas, wild hyacinth
Carex pensylvanica Oak sedge in the woodland garden
Cerastium arvense villosissimum Hairy field chickweed grows in serpentine soils that are high in nickel and chromium but low in nitrogen, potassium, phosphorus, and otherwise toxic for other plants; look for these on the rocks near the educational pavilion
Cerastium arvense villosissimum |
Chrysogonum virginianum Green and gold on the unpaved rosebay trail
Clematis ochroleuca Curlyheads
Cornus florida Flowering dogwood
Cornus sericea Red osier dogwood
Crataegus viridis Green hawthorn by the school group entrance
Cypripedium parviflorum Yellow lady's slipper
Cypripedium parviflorum parviflorum Lesser yellow lady's slipper
Delphinium tricorne Dwarf larkspur
Dicentra eximia Wild Bleeding heart
Diphylleia cymosa Umbrella leaf in the Glade
Erigeron Daisy fleabane
Erigeron |
Geum triflorum Prairie smoke by the Split Rock
Gymnocarpium dryopteris Oak Fern
Half High Blueberry
Houstonia caerulea Azure bluets
Iris cristata Dwarf crested iris in the Glade
Iris hookeri Beach-head iris - I am not sure of this identification but these are growing in the water of the wetland garden
Leucothoe axillaris Doghobble, Fetterbush
Maianthemum racemosum False Solomon's Seal
Maianthemum stellatum Starry false Solomon's Seal
Mertensia virginica Virginia bluebells had only a few flowers left
Orontium aquaticum Golden club in the wetland garden
Osmundastrum cinnamomeum Cinnamon fern
Parthenium integrifolium Wild Quinine near the Split Rock
Penstemon hirsutus Hairy beardtongue by and on the exposed Manhattan schist
Phacelia bipinnatifolia Fernleaf phacelia, purple phacelia in the Glade
Phlox divaricata Blue phlox
Plantago lanceolata English plantain, narrowleaf plantain
Podophyllum peltatum Mayapple shows a few flowers still but the fruits are now growing
Polemonium caeruleum Jacob's ladder
Polemonium reptans Creeping Jacob's ladder
Polygonatum biflorum Solomon's Seal
Primula meadia Shooting stars in white and pink
Prunus maritima Beach plum by the stream connecting to the Rock Garden
Rhododendron canescens Pinxter Azalea
Rhododendron minus minus Piedmont rhododendron, Carolina rhododendron
Sarracenia flava Yellow pitcher plant
Sarracenia purpurea Purple pitcher plant, northern pitcher plant
Sedum nevii Nevius Stonecrop
Sisirynchium angustifolium Narrowleaf blue-eyed grass shows are few blossoms in the Glade but not blooming up by the Rock Garden yet
Stylophorum diphyllum Celandine poppy had maybe two flowers left; its seed pods are becoming prominent
Stylophorum diphyllum |
Tiarella cordifolia |
Tradescantia Spiderwort in the meadow
Tradescantia Spiderwort |
Trillium erecta Stinking Benjamin
Trillium grandiflorum White trillium; lots of the double white trillium are in bloom
Trillium luteum Yellow trillium
Trillium recurvatum Bloody butcher, prairie trillium
Trillium recurvatum |
Vaccinium angustifolium Lowbush blueberry
Vaccinium corymbosum Northern highbush blueberry
Viola blanda Sweet white violet - not sure of the species but I like the nectar lines for the bees
Viola blanda |
Zizia aptera Heartleaf golden alexanders
The NYBG gardeners will be busy with these non-natives:
Chelidonium majus Greater celandine is an invasive lookalike for Stylophorum diphyllum Celandine poppy until the seeds form
Convallaria majalis Lily of the valley
Oxalis acetosella Wood sorrel, white oxalis
Oxalis stricta Yellow woodsorrel
Rumex acetosella Sheep's sorrel, red sorrel see last post
Taraxacum officinale Dandelion
Here is one I could not identify. It was in the woodland on the rose bay path near a patch of mayapples.
By the way, I see comments are not appearing on this blog and I have not been able to make them appear through troubleshooting but I will continue to try.
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