I have decided to join the blogging craze. I am looking forward to taking a moment to find out a little more about the plants I have been photographing. I hope to explore all aspects of plants, flowers, trees and other garden related topics. Sorry about having to watermark the photos but there are a lot of people using them without permission.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Spotted Hawkweed
Spotted Hawkweed
Hieracium spilophaeum 'Leopard'
(hi-er-uh-KEE-um) (spee-lo-FAY-um)
Synonyms: Hieracium maculatum
This post was originally going to be about some of the flowers I saw last week in Southern California but yesterday on a quick trip to Manhattan I decided to stop at the Conservatory Garden in Central park and on the way home Wave Hill in the Bronx. The Central Park garden was finished for the year. There were a few flowers if one looked hard for them but even most of the fall foliage had come down. It did yield the bonus picture for today.
Unusual mottled foliage of Hawkweed
The cute little yellow daisy was growing in a stonewall at Wave Hill. I hadn’t seen Spotted Hawkweed for so many years I forgotten about it. The flowers usually bloom in the summer but there were several out yesterday. I have always wanted this blog to feature flower pics that I had shot the day before and I lived up to that today. Wave Hill had a couple of other flowers out in the garden and as always the conservatory yielded some interesting blooms.
For more flower pictures from around the world check out:
Today’s Flowers . The links open at 1400 GMT.
Today’s bonus picture is a tree not a flower.
Sassafras
Sassafras albidum
(SASS-uh-frass) (AL-bi-dum)
Synonyms: Tea Tree, Mitten Tree, Cinnamonwood
This is a fun native tree to me although some people find it a bit invasive. We are always trying to encourage them to grow at the estate with mixed results. It is difficult to buy from nurseries because of the long taproot but a few places are now offering container specimens. The fall color is lovely and if you look at the leaves hard you can find three distinct shapes growing on one tree. The leaves and roots have medicinal value for a variety of ailments but should be used with caution.
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6 comments:
Hi, nice pictures.. interesting what you say..
The hawkweed is a beautiful flower. And the colorful tree is gorgeous! Wonderful post and photos.
The cinnamon tree is beautiful, although it is not the true cinnamon, which grows here, and never changes colour.It is always a boring green.The picture of the yellow flower is stunning.
Very interesting and beautiful post!
Your hawkweed glows like the sun itself!
Gostei muito das flores, pois são lindas e únicas, mas gostei mais da árvore colorida no caminho! lINDAS FOTOS!
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