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#eutrochium
coffeenuts · 1 month
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faguscarolinensis · 8 months
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Bombus on Eutrochium purpureum / Bumblebees on Sweet Joe-Pye Weed at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University in Durham, NC
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vandaliatraveler · 2 years
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I stopped by the reservoir at White Park yesterday to photograph the rose mallow (Hibiscus moscheutos), sometimes referred to as swamp rose-mallow, which is now at peak bloom. This is a healthy and vigorous wetlands community visited by great blue and little green herons, kingfishers, a variety of ducks, and the occasional osprey - all the more remarkable because it’s within walking distance of downtown Morgantown. Anyway, the rose mallow was fabulously beautiful in its various shades of crimson red, pink, and white, and the hollow Joe Pye weed (Eutrochium fistulosum) was equally impressive, presiding over its wetlands kingdom with the massive lavender crowns of true kings.
From top: rose mallow, whose flowers display high variability in color and petal sizes/orientations (although some specimens may be hybrid escapees, this plant nonetheless possesses some wild genetic impulses); wild mint (Mentha arvensis), a cosmopolitan mint with a strong flavor and an affinity for wetlands; Allegheny monkeyflower (Mimulus ringens), a whimsical perennial that forms dense stands in swamps and along streambanks; seedbox (Ludwigia alternifolia), so named because of the four-sided shape of its seed capsules; and without further adieu, a true king bowed under the weight of its elegant crown.
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thebotanicalarcade · 3 months
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n423_w1150 by Biodiversity Heritage Library Via Flickr: Flore médicale des Antilles, ou, Traité des plantes usuelles :. Paris :Pichard,1821-1829.. biodiversitylibrary.org/page/2956624
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sheltiechicago · 2 years
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Massive 20-Story Flower Mural Sprouts From Jersey City Skyline
“Shauquethqueat’s Eutrochium,” Jersey City, 2021
Wildflowers aren't commonly found in urban spaces, but artist Mona Caron is slowly changing that fact. The San Francisco-based artist creates massive murals of plant life as part of her ongoing WEEDS series. Her newest addition is a 20-story mural of a flower that sprouts from the Jersey City skyline.
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Eutrochium maculatum, spotted joe-pyeweed. Good for butterflies.
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deathtek · 1 year
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8/16/22
I found a small clearing full of joe-pye weed over 10 feet tall. I stood on the outside of the grouping and saw hundreds of pollinators, from tiny parasitoid wasps to huge tiger swallowtails, dancing atop the powder pink blooms.
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flowerishness · 8 months
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Eutrochium (Joe-Pye weed) and Bombus (bumblebee)
Open for Business
Joe-Pye weed is in full bloom right now and, as you can see, it's really bringing in the 'customers'.
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psikonauti · 1 year
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Lois Dodd (American, b. 1927)
Joe Pye Weed (Eutrochium), 1995
Oil on linen
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Native Plants I’ve Actually Seen Growing Wild in Southern Ontario
Acer saccharinum (silver maple) --along the sides of highways
Acer saccharum (sugar maple) --GTA ravines
Achillea millefolia (yarrow) --GTA ravines
Allium schoenoprasum (wild chives) --GTA ravines, Ridgetown
Allium tricoccum (ramps) --Niagara region escarpments
Amaranthus retroflexus (redroot amaranth) --fallow areas in the GTA
Ambrosia artemisiifolia (ragweed) --fallow areas in the GTA
Ambrosia trifida (giant ragweed) --parks in the GTA
Amelanchier spp. (saskatoon/serviceberry) --GTA ravines
Arisaema triphyllum (Jack-in-the-pulpit) --GTA ravines
Aronia melanocarpa (black chokeberry) --ravines and parks in the GTA
Asarum canadense (Canada ginger) --GTA ravines
Asclepias syriaca (common milkweed) --fallow areas, ravines, and parks throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Asplenium trichomanes (maidenhair spleenwort) --Niagara region escarpments
Betula spp. (birch) --ravines and parks throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Bidens spp. (beggar ticks) --GTA ravines
Caulophyllum thalictroides (blue cohosh) --GTA parks
Ceratophyllum demersum (hornwort) --GTA ravines (native in freshwater across the globe anyway)
Circaea lutetiana (enchanter’s nightshade) --fallow areas in the GTA
Commelina spp. (dayflower) --fallow areas in Windsor
Cornus alternifolia (Pagoda dogwood) --GTA wooded areas
Cornus sericea (red osier dogwood) --GTA ravines and in Windsor riverside parks
Crataegus spp. (hawthorn) --GTA ravines and parks
Echinocystis lobata (wild prickly cucumber) --GTA ravines
Elaeagnus commutata (silverberry) --GTA parks and fallow areas
Epilobium ciliatum (fringed willowherb) --fallow areas in the GTA
Equisetum spp. (horsetail/scouring rush) --GTA ravines and fallow areas
Erigeron spp. (fleabane) --GTA parks and fallow areas, Ridgetown
Erythronium americanum (trout lily) --GTA ravines and parks
Eutrochium maculatum (Joe-Pye weed) --GTA parks
Fragaria virginiana (wild strawberry) --fallow areas in the GTA
Geranium maculatum (wild geranium) --Windsor green spaces
Geranium robertianum (herb robert) --Windsor green spaces
Geum aleppicum (yellow avens) --GTA fallow areas
Geum canadense (white avens) --GTA fallow areas
Geum macrophyllum (large-leaved avens) --GTA fallow areas
Gymnocladus dioicus (Kentucky coffee tree) --GTA ravines
Helianthus spp. (sunflower) --GTA fallow areas and parks
Heracleum maximum (cow parsnip) --GTA ravines
Hordeum jubatum (foxtail barley) --GTA fallow areas
Humulus lupulus (hops) --GTA ravines
Hydrophyllum virginianum (Virginia waterleaf) --GTA ravines
Impatiens capensis (jewelweed) --GTA ravines and in Windsor riverside parks
Juglans nigra (black walnut) --GTA ravines
Lactuca canadensis (Canadian lettuce) --GTA fallow areas
Lilium michiganense (Michigan lily) --GTA ravines
Lupinus perennis (sundial lupine) --GTA parks
Maianthemum canadense (Canada mayflower) --GTA ravines
Maianthemum racemosum (starry false solomon’s seal) --GTA ravines and parks
Maianthemum stellatum (starry false solomon’s seal) --GTA ravines
Matteuccia struthiopteris (ostrich fern) --GTA ravines
Monarda fistulosa (wild bergamot) --GTA ravines and parks
Morus rubra (red mulberry) --fallow areas in Windsor, GTA parks
Myosotis laxa (smallflower forget-me-not) --GTA fallow areas
Oenothera biennis (evening primrose) --GTA fallow areas
Onoclea sensibilis (sensitive fern) --GTA ravines
Oxalis stricta (yellow wood sorrel) --fallow areas and ravines throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Parietaria pensylvanica (Pennsylvania pellitory) --GTA fallow areas
Parthenocissus quinquefolia (Virginia creeper) --Windsor fallow areas and GTA ravines and parks
Persicaria lapathifolia (curlytop smartweed) --GTA fallow areas
Podophyllum peltatum (mayapple) --GTA ravines and parks
Portulaca oleracea (purslane) --fallow areas throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA (native globally anyway)
Potentilla norvejica monspeliensis (ternate-leaved cinquefoil) --GTA fallow areas
Prunella vulgaris (selfheal) --fallow areas and ravines throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Prunus virginiana (chokecherry) --Windsor fallow areas, GTA ravines and parks, Niagara region escarpments
Pteridium aquilinum latiusculum (western bracken fern) --GTA parks
Quercus spp. (oak) --wooded areas throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Rhus typhina (staghorn sumac) --parks and fallow areas throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to Collingwood
Ribes spp. (currants) --GTA ravines and parks
Ribes spp. (gooseberries) --GTA ravines
Robinia pseudoacacia (black locust) --GTA ravines and parks
Rosa spp. (roses) --GTA ravines, parks, and fallow areas
Rubus occidentalis (black raspberry) --ravines, parks, and fallow areas in Hamilton and GTA
Rubus odoratus (purple-flowered raspberry) --GTA ravines and parks
Rubus strigosus (American red raspberry) --GTA parks
Rudbeckia hirta (black-eyed susan) --GTA parks
Salix spp. (willow) --GTA ravines
Sambucus canadensis (common elderberry) --Windsor riverside parks, GTA ravines
Sambucus racemosa (red elderberry) --GTA ravines and parks
Smilax spp. (greenbrier) --GTA parks
Solidago canadensis (Canada goldenrod) --parks and fallow areas throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Sorbus spp. (mountain ash) --GTA ravines and parks
Streptopus spp. (twistedstalk) --GTA parks
Symphoricarpos spp. (snowberry) --GTA parks
Symphyotrichum ericoides (heath aster) --fallow areas throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Symphyotrichum novae-angliae (New England aster) --fallow areas throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Symplocarpus foetidus (skunk cabbage) --GTA parks
Tilia spp. (linden) --GTA ravines
Trillium grandiflorum (white trillium) --parks throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Tsuga canadensis (eastern hemlock) --GTA parks
Typha latifolia (broad-leaved cattail) --marshes in Essex county and GTA
Urtica gracilis (slender nettle) --GTA ravines
Uvularia spp. (bellwort) --streams in Windsor green spaces
Verbena hastata (blue vervain) --GTA ravines
Viburnum lentago (nannyberry) --GTA parks and Ridgetown ravine
Viburnum trilobum (highbush cranberry) --Ridgetown
Viola sororia (wood violet) --fallow areas and wooded areas throughout southern Ontario from Windsor to GTA
Vitis riparia (riverbank grape) --GTA fallow areas, ravines, and parks
Waldsteinia fragarioides (barren strawberry) --GTA ravines and parks
Xanthium strumarium canadense (Canada cocklebur) --GTA parks and fallow areas
I’ve likely seen many others and just couldn’t identify them, but there are a lot I’ve never seen growing wild. What I’m hoping is that some of the native species I have in my garden will make their way to the nearby ravine. If I get around to it, though, I might just take a walk with some Asclepias incarnata (swamp milkweed) seeds in the fall. They certainly seem to successfully germinate in my garden whether I want them to or not (don’t have space for them to go crazy). Can’t see why they wouldn’t in a natural swamp area.
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carolinawrenn · 9 months
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Hollow Joe Pye weed (Eutrochium fistulosum). Also called trumpetweed or queen of the meadow.  Butterflies love it.
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faguscarolinensis · 10 months
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Eutrochium fistulosa / Joe Pye Weed at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University in Durham, NC
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peterborough-scapes · 2 years
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Against the Light
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Monarch Butterfly (Danaus Plexippus) on an Eutrochium maculatum (Spotted joe-pye weed) flower
©2022 Ken Oliver
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aisling-saoirse · 2 years
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Native plants of the day: Eutrochium fistulosum or Hollow Joe Pye Weed
This species of Eutrochium (previously classified as Eupatorium) is a perennial herb closely related to Purple Joe Pye Weed. This plant is common in wet-moist locations throughout the eastern US including wide variety of stressed environments (like the serpentine barrens I found this in). The Hollow Joe Pye Weed can get up to 5-7ft easily with lovely pink/purple flowers. In late summer it's not uncommon to see this plant swarmed with pollinators and hummingbirds. This plant produces thousands of wind propelled seeds of which only a few are actually viable, making our Joe pye weed less weedy than the name implies.
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gardenvarietygay · 2 years
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I’m currently working in a garden that is almost only boxwoods (Buxus sempervirens) and Annabelle smooth hydrangeas (Hydrangea arborescens ‘Annabelle’). It’s pretty but it’s so curated that it feels kind of oppressive. Luckily, the client inherited the landscape and when I mentioned it to her she seemed relieved that she had permission to not like the look. We’re leaving the structure in place but we’re adding in tons of pollinator plants with lots of color to cheer it up. It’s very 90s gardening magazine right now and she wants something more fun.
I’m adding in Sweet Joe Pye (Eutrochium purpureum), sweetspire (Itea virginica), creeping oregon-grape holly (Mahonia repens), coral bells (Heuchera), and false sunflower (Heliopsis helianthoides). They can all take dappled shade in our area and will hopefully liven up the color scheme with magenta and yellow.
Most of what I’m planting also provides great fall color and winter interest so that seasons actually mean something in this evergreen garden. For that purpose I’m also going to plop in about a million spring bulbs, they’re not native but at least they’ll look pretty and provide something for early pollinators.
Elsewhere, I’m going to plant purple poppy mallow (Callirhoe involucrata), blue indigo (Baptisia australis), rosemallow (Hibiscus moscheutos), snowberry (Symphoricarpos albus), aromatic aster (Symphyotrichum oblongifolium) and goldenrod (Solidago missouriensis) in sunny spots. In those areas the only plants are roses (Rosa), spirea (Spirea japonica), barberries (Berberis thunbergii), and some evergreens (Taxus, Pinus, Picea). The roses are alright, I personally hate spirea and barberries but they’re so established I don’t think we’ll be able to do much about them.
It’s a beautiful location and a very sweet client so it’s a joy to work in. I might have to post some pictures of the finished product.
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kenclinger · 6 months
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Eutrochium et Redbeckia
music ©(P)2023 Ken Clinger
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