Saturday, July 20, 2024

Cone Flowers

Tall Cone Flowers 
reaching for the sky!
Purple Cone Flowers
also known as Echinacea. 
Echinacea's name is rooted in the Greek word “echinos,” meaning "hedgehog," because of its spiny seed head. Technically speaking, this thick and spiky cone is actually hundreds of flowers, all tightly packed together. The entire plant can be used for its immune boosting properties. The purple ray flowers attach to a round, high and spiky cone – hence the common name “purple coneflower.” Technically speaking, this thick and spiky cone is actually hundreds of more flowers, all tightly packed together.
Bumblebee On Echinacea
Bumblebee On Echinacea
Bumblebee On Echinacea
Black Swallowtail Butterfly On Echinacea
Monarch Butterfly On Echinacea
Monarch Butterfly On Echinacea
Monarch Butterfly On Echinacea
Monarch Butterfly On Echinacea
Monarch Butterfly On Echinacea
Red Admiral Butterfly On Echinacea
Red Admiral Butterfly On Echinacea
Red Admiral Butterfly On Echinacea
White Admiral Butterfly On Echinacea
White Admiral Butterfly On Echinacea
Spotted Skipper Butterfly On Echinacea

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 PHOTOGRAPHS ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE THROUGH ELISECREATIONS.NET

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, 2024

Queen Anne's Lace

Wild Carrot
Daucus carota, also known asbird's nestbishop's lace.
Lovely Lace
Queen Anne’s lace earned its common name from Queen Anne of England (1665-1714) who was an expert lace maker. Legend has it that when pricked with a needle, a single drop of blood fell from her finger onto the lace, leaving the dark purple floret found in the flower’s center. 

Queen Anne's Lace (Daucus carota) can reach heights of about 1 to 4 feet high. You can find these biennials in bloom during their second year from spring on into fall. The fruit of this plant is spiky and curls inward, reminiscent of a bird’s nest, which is another of its common names. Belonging to the carrot family, Queen Anne’s lace is also known as wild carrot.

Queen Anne's Lace Going To Seed
This photo was awarded Photo of the Day, on Capture My Vermont, for October 15, 2017.
The Queen Anne's lace flower resembles lace, and oftentimes the flower has a solitary purple dot in the centre.

Early Europeans cultivated Queen Anne’s lace, and the Romans ate it as a vegetable. American colonists boiled the taproots, sometimes in wine as a treat. Interestingly, Queen Anne’s lace is high in sugar (second only to the beet among root vegetables) and sometimes it was used among the Irish, Hindus and Jews to sweeten puddings and other foods.

Edible Parts
Using first year Queen Anne’s lace roots are recommended. Roots are long, pale, woody, and are finger-thin and are edible, and can be cooked and used in a similar way as cultivated carrots, used in soups, stews and in making tea. The dried roasted roots can be ground into a powder and used as a coffee substitute. First year leaves can be chopped and tossed into a salad. Flower clusters can be ‘french-fried’ or fresh flowers can be tossed into a salad. The aromatic seed is used as a flavoring in stews and soups, tasting like caraway. The leaves are edible as both a raw (when young) and cooked green. Since wild carrot is a biennial, and flowers in its second year, the root of a carrot in flower is too woody to be used. At this point you can peel the stem and eat it both raw and cooked.

Medicinal Uses

The seeds are a diuretic and they support the kidneys and help prevent kidney stones. They are also carminative, soothing the digestive tract in case of gas, diarrhea, or indigestion. The seeds can also be used to stimulate the appetite, and alleviate menstrual cramps. An infusion of the seeds can be made using one teaspoon of the seeds per cup of boiling water.

Women have been using the seeds as a contraceptive for centuries.


Medicinal History Of Use: Queen-Anne’s-lace belongs to the carrot family (Umbelliferae) and contains beta-carotene and other properties that are used to treat bladder and kidney conditions. American colonists boiled the taproots, sometimes in wine. They also mixed the leaves with honey and applied  the poultice to sores or ulcers, to help heal and kill bacterial infections. The seeds were used as a form of contraception. The roots were roasted and used as a coffee substitute or infused as a mild diuretic tea. Settlers also used the herb as a source of orange dye. 

NOTE:
Queen Anne’s lace and poison hemlock appear very similar, so be very careful when harvesting Queen Anne’s lace from the wild. The most telling difference is the existence of a red or purple flower in the center of the wild carrot umbel. Not all wild carrot umbels have a dark flower, so the second difference is that Wild carrot stems are hairy, while the stems of both hemlock’s and fool’s parsley are smooth and hairless. This difference is important because it can be noticed in even the first year plants, which otherwise look very similar. Wild carrot also smells like a carrot.

Queen Anne's Lace Of A Different Color

Queen Anne’s Lace is the familiar wild form of carrot, and the white-flowered version is what we currently see blooming along the side of the roads. But this Dara Flowering Carrot, is a vividly-colored variety, with Flowers that open white, change to soft pink and finally deep, rich red. This red coloration is the result of a genetic deviation. The wild form almost always has a single red flower at the center of the cluster and, in the case of this cultivar, the coloration message seems to have made its way to all the flowers. I've been told by someone, that they saw the pink version along the roadside for the first time last year in northwestern Michigan. So, the deviation must have started in the wild and then was cultivated for people to plant in their gardens.

Legend has it that the central red flower is the stain of a drop of Queen Anne’s blood from pricking a finger with her lace-making needle.

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.

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.

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Burdock

Burdock
(the plant with the purple flowers in the foreground, is Heal-all)

Burdock is a large, robust plant, easily recognized by her bristled purple flower heads and broad, ruffled leaves. The leaves can be huge, up to 2 feet long and 1 foot wide. They remind some people of rhubarb plants, but unlike rhubarb’s leaves, burdock leaves have a felt-y, fuzzy texture and are whitish on the undersides. The margins of the leaves are wavy, almost ruffled. Burdock is a biennial, producing a massive rosette of leaves in the first year, then completing its life cycle by flowering (large, purple thistle-like flowers) and making burdock seed in the second year. The deeply excavating taproot is edible during the first year of growth.This wild weed lives two years, producing a 4 - 5 foot tall flower stalk during its second summer. The flowers turn to the seed burs that give the plant its name. The burs, with their hooked tips, are said to be the inspiration for Velcro. 

Fresh burdock root is delicious in soup or stew. Prepare it as you would carrots and add it to cooked dishes. Harvest the long root in fall and spring, or in the winter if your ground doesn’t freeze and you can find the plant after its leaves have died down. The leaf may be picked as needed for poulticing or tea as soon as it reaches sufficient size. Moderate harvest of the leaves will not deter root development. The immature flower stalks are another excellent vegetable this common plant provides. Similar to the Italian vegetable cardoon, burdock stalks should be harvested before the plants flower, which is usually in mid to late spring.

Burdock is a popular herbal medicine that can help regenerate liver cells, is a blood cleanser, diuretic, a topical remedy for skin problems such as eczema, acne, and psoriasis, and inhibits cancer.

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 PHOTOGRAPHS ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE THROUGH ELISECREATIONS.NET

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.

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Stone Walls Of Vermont


Stone Wall Glory!
Some of the most amazing stone art I've seen while working on our new project about Stone Walls and Sugar Houses of Vermont.
Natural Stone Walls
with reflections on Joiner Brook
Natural Stone Walls
with reflections on Joiner Brook
Rock Wall At The Intervale
Built by Thea Alvin
https://www.myearthwork.com/thea-alvin

Gotta Love a great Hobbit Hole

especially with the rabbit door handle and the Heart Rock next to the door.

Built by Thea Alvin
https://www.myearthwork.com/thea-alvin
Gotta love a Stone Wall with an antique tractor on a lovely country estate in Vermont.
Stone Wall at Rockledge historic summer estate in Swanton, Vermont. 
Architect Charles Saxe in 1918 designed alterations to an early 19th-century farmhouse, that is the principal surviving element of an early 20th-century gentleman's farm. The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.
Natural Stone Wall in Westford
Stone Walls in Westford
Red Barn with a Stone Foundation
and a Great Stone House in South Hero.
Lovely Red Barn 
with a beautiful Stone Foundation in Hinesburg.

East Fairfield
South Hero
Garden Wall in Colchester
Arched Stone Wall At The Intervale
Built by Thea Alvin
https://www.myearthwork.com/thea-alvin
Stone Wall in Jeffersonville
Round Barn 
with a Stone Foundation at Shelburne Museum
Stone Wall With Birches in Fletcher

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.

Saturday, June 1, 2024

Chickens

 

Chickens Checking Me Out. I think they were hoping it was time for a snack.
This photo was Awarded Photo of the Day, on Capture My Vermont, for November 29, 2017.

Lovely Hens

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.

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Honeysuckle

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly On Honeysuckle
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly 
on The most Gigantic Honeysuckle Bush I've ever seen. It was a busy place for bees and butterflies. This Honeysuckle had a most powerful fragrance today.
The most gigantic Honeysuckle Bush I've ever seen.
It was covered in bees and butterflies. Honeysuckle has fragrance day and night but exudes its scent most powerfully during the evening.
Bush Honeysuckle with Hoverfly, also called flower fly, or syrphid fly, resemble wasps or bees but do not bite or sting. The larvae of many hover flies are predatory on aphids, so I’m glad to see them in my garden.

Mandarin Honeysuckle
Honeysuckle Vine Budding
Honeysuckle Vine Flowering
This a Honeysuckle vine, I found growing in the woods, near water, in Vermont. 

Honeysuckle vine, Lonicera.

Honeysuckles are arching shrubs or twining vines in the family Caprifoliaceae, native to the Northern Hemisphere. Approximately 180 species of honeysuckle have been identified.
Sometimes called “woodbine.” The flower, seed, and leaves are used for medicine. The honeysuckle flower is commonly used to help ease the flu, colds and sore throat. Honeysuckle is also used for urinary disorders, headache, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and cancer. Some people use it to promote sweating, as a laxative, to counteract poisoning, and for birth control.
Honeysuckle essential oil is one of the most popular products derived from this plant, for medicinal uses as well as hair and skin care.

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.

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 and mushrooms are poisonous or can have serious adverse health effects.