Sunday, August 18, 2019

Curling Purple Heliotrope

Curling Purple 
These Purple Flowers are Heliotrope, Native to Peru it represents eternal love.

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Monday, August 5, 2019

Bee On Gallardia

Bee On Gallardia Flower

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Sunday, August 4, 2019

Purple Flowering Raspberry

Purple Flowering Raspberry
Rubus odoratus (Flowering Raspberry, Virginia Raspberry)
I found this deciduous shrub, growing in the woods in Essex Jct. Vt.
Edible Parts: Fruit
raw or cooked, Somewhat tart and dry, it is usually cooked and used in pies, jellies, preserves. 
Medicinal:
The leaves are highly astringent. They are used in the treatment of dysentery and diarrhea. The leaves have been used as a wash for old and foul sores, boils etc. A decoction or infusion of the branches has been used to settle the stomach. A decoction of the leaves and stems has been used to treat kidney complaints. The root is astringent. A decoction of the root or the root bark has been used as a treatment for diarrhea and colds. The root has been used in the treatment of toothaches. The berries have been used as a diuretic.

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My blog is meant to inform and I strive to be totally accurate. It is solely up to the reader to ensure proper plant identification. Some wild plants are poisonous or can have serious adverse health effects.

Friday, July 26, 2019

Plains Coreopsis

Plains Coreopsis
Coreopsis tinctoria

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Sunday, July 21, 2019

Sweet Dreams

Sweet Dreams Bumble Bee Napping In A Cosmos Flower
 Cosmos
Bees Love Cosmos

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Thursday, July 18, 2019

Birds Foot Trefoil

Birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) is a moderately long-lived herbaceous perennial legume. Also known as birdfoot deervetch, broadleaf birdsfoot trefoil, Dutchman’s clogs, and lady’s slippers. Uses include Erosion control: used along roadsides to control wind and water erosion. For Wildlife: Birdsfoot trefoil is a choice food for Canada goose, deer, and elk. As ground cover, it provides green cover most of the year and blooms profusely. It is a beneficial wildflower for bees.
Considered both edible and medicinal but be aware that all parts of this plant are poisonous. The seeds can be nibbled and it has been used medicinally as a antispasmodic, sedative, to remove gas and reduce fever.
Medicinal use of Bird's Foot Trefoil:
Carminative, febrifuge, hypoglycaemic, restorative, vermifuge. The flowers are antispasmodic, cardiotonic and sedative. The root is carminative, febrifuge, restorative and tonic. The plant is used externally as a local anti-inflammatory compress in all cases of skin inflammation.
An orange-yellow dye is obtained from the flowers.

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Thanks for your visits, favs and comments. As always, appreciated very much!
© all rights reserved by Elise T. Marks. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.


My blog is meant to inform and I strive to be totally accurate. It is solely up to the reader to ensure proper plant identification. Some wild plants are poisonous or can have serious adverse health effects.

Monday, July 15, 2019

Black Crowned Night Heron

Black Crowned Night Herons 
usually forage by standing still or walking slowly at edge of shallow water. They may perch above water on pilings, stumps, small boats. They forage mostly from late evening through the night, avoiding competition with other heron species that use the same habitat during the day. They may feed during the day in the breeding season, when they need extra energy for nesting, or in unusual weather.
Black-crowned Night-Herons are common in wetlands across North America, including saltmarshes, freshwater marshes, swamps, streams, rivers, lakes, ponds, lagoons, tidal mudflats, canals, reservoirs, and wet agricultural fields. They require aquatic habitat for foraging and terrestrial vegetation for cover. They spend the winter in southern and coastal portions of their breeding range as well as across Mexico and Central America, where they use mangroves, marshes, swamps, lagoons, and flooded rice fields. They Nest in groves of trees, in thickets, or on ground, usually on islands or above water, perhaps to avoid predators.
Their Diet is quite variable, freshwater, and marine animals, mostly fish, but also squid, crustaceans, aquatic insects, frogs, snakes, clams, mussels, rodents, carrion, eggs and young birds, leeches, earthworms, crayfish, amphibians, lizards, and turtles.

The male chooses a nest site in a tree or in cattails, usually in a habitat safe from predators such as on an island, in a swamp, or over water. The male advertises for a mate with displays that involve bowing and raising the long plume on his head.
Black-crowned Night-Herons nest colonially, often with a dozen nests in a single tree. Colonies sometimes last for 50 years or more.

My photographs are available for purchase through EliseCreations.net
Thanks for your visits, favs and comments. As always, appreciated very much!
© all rights reserved by Elise T. Marks. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.