As I looked through my SD cards in my camera today, trying to clean them off, I realized that I had taken a lot of native wildflower pictures. Every year, I try to document via pictures all the wildflowers that are blooming each month, so that I can see the progress we're making. There are several that do very well here and, in spite of the very hot, dry weather we've had, they are at least daring to spread their petals and square off with the intensely hot sun.
Late June Bloomers
These were planted in December, 2014. They did okay, in 2017 but at the end of June this year, my gray-headed coneflowers were kickin' it in the west savanna area.
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Gray-headed coneflowers |
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Black-eyed Susans |
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Virginia Mountain Mint |
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Butterfly Milkweed (bloomed from June through July) |
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Ox-eye Sunflower |
July Bloomers
The heat intensified in July, but still, the wildflowers were determined.
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Lobelia |
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Royal Catchfly (red) and Black-eyed Susan |
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Even more Gray-headed coneflowers bloomed in July |
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Ladino clover seems to love the heat |
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Queen Anne's lace (wild carrot) | | |
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And 4 years after planting - looky, looky who showed up!! Royal Catchfly - there were 4 plants this year (also planted in the Savanna with the Gray-headed coneflowers).
The Partridge pea started blooming in early July, but has really been showing off since the last week of July into August.
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Partridge Pea |
Of all the blooming flowers I thought the honeybees would love, the sumac was not even on my list! But, turns out sumac is one of their favorites here. So, I guess I'll let it stay.
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Smooth Sumac - only 1 of 2 flowers on this page that the honeybees seem to really like. |
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Rose Pink |
The Rattlesnake Master is spreading like crazy - it has basically taken over my specimen garden, ousting most of the coneflower varieties there and only the prairie blazing star is hanging on. Since it's a native wildflower and all kinds of bees and butterflies love it, I'm not going to try to stop it. It's too hot to try to fight it. The clever prairie blazing star has managed to spread to other parts of my field, so it has figured out how to outrun the rattlesnake master.
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Prairie Blazing Star in a field of Rattlesnake Master. |
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Wild Quinine |
Turns out, the most favorite plant on my property for the Bumblebees have been all the St. John's Wort bushes I've planted. They are crazy about it...unfortunately, the Japanese beetles are too. *sigh*
Interestingly, I haven't found one honeybee on the St. John's Wort and the Bumblebees are enjoying a pollen Bonanza!
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St. John's Wort |
I have a lot of favorites, but Wild Bergamot scores in the list of my top-five.
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Wild Bergamot |
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Trumpet vine |
We plant a LOT of red clover - the Bumblebees love it and the Honeybees don't use it (due to the difference in the length of their "tongues"). Guess who just bought 50 more lbs. of red clover? Heh!
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Red Clover - Bumblebees LOVE it! |
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Common Milkweed and Wood Sage |
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Bindweed - the flowers are open in the morning, but close up when the temperatures start rising. |
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Ironweed (with Queen Anne's Lace in the foreground) |
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Prairie Fleabane |
This picture doesn't do the wildflowers justice - Wild Quinine, Queen
Anne's Lace, Coneflowers, Sumac and Prairie Blazing Star are just a few
of the predominant native wildflowers you can see here (click on the
picture to get an enlarged view - that's true for all of them).
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July - Wild Quinine dominates, but it will soon retreat and another will come up to carry us into Fall. |
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Passion Flower |
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Wood Sage |
Lastly, a few of which we're not sure
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Wild Potato Vine? |
Well, I have searched & searched and we thought the vine &
flowers in the picture to the left were either a variety of Morning Glory, or
"Redvine"; but the best online site I can find calls it "
Wild Potato Vine"
UPDATED 8/15 - Thanks to Chuck Yetter & his wife, these have now
been *correctly* identified - they're called "wild petunias".
A field of wild petunias - you're welcome, Chuck! :-)
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Field full of "wild petunias". |
Out of all the flowers above, the only ones I've found that my honeybees really like are the Butterfly milkweed and the Smooth Sumac. I've been searching all my August blooming flowers and haven't been able to find from where my honeybees are getting their pollen and nectar stores for the Fall. Today though, my investigation may have identified their source. Stay tuned....pictures and details are forthcoming!
Goldenrod is popular with the bees this time of year.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Allan - Missouri has 20 varieties of golden rod here. I've tried for a week to identify the species I have, but apparently that's a lot more difficult that I thought it would be.
DeleteField Pansy, perhaps?
ReplyDeletehttps://ipm.missouri.edu/IPCM/2011/5/Weed-of-the-Month-Field-Pansy/
Thanks, Henry! That was close...we finally figured out that it's a "wild petunia". Thank you for your reply!
DeleteYou have beautiful wildflower area. I would love to turn some of my grass acres into that but... that's a big job. You have created a beautiful sanctuary for all your creatures. They are lucky to have you as the master gardener!!
ReplyDelete