Siskiyou wildflower roundup

There are quite a few wildflowers we’ve photographed on our walks, and identified, that I haven’t had time to research and write about. Here are some, with just species, date seen, and brief comments. All are natives unless otherwise noted.

We are very much amateur botanizers and we don’t key out these plants, so our identifications are not authoritative and we welcome helpful comments from more experienced folks. Each species account in this post is followed with a link to a page about the species, on the Pacific Northwest Wildflower site of Mark Turner, who really is an expert. In fact he and Phyllis Gustafson “wrote the book”, Wildflowers of the Pacific Northwest (Timber Press Field Guide). If you have an interest in PNW wildflowers, or are a hiker/fisher/etc., you should go out and buy this book right now, preferably from your local independent bookstore. Knowing more about the flowers you see really adds to your enjoyment of the outdoors.

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This pasture, not far from Applegate Lake, has been invaded with a daisy-type flower—all the white areas in the photo above.

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It’s probably Anthemis cotula, common name Stinking Mayweed. The leaves of this species have an unpleasant odor, but there was a slippery gravel slope down to the edge of the field, and we didn’t get close enough to confirm that. Next time.

It’s been introduced, and is a native of Eurasia. Find in Turner here. [photographed July 4, 2010]

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Above is Dichelostemma capitatum, common names Common Brodiaea or Blue Dicks. This was taken back in on May 4, 2010, but I’ve seen others in bloom at higher elevation (around 2000 ft) even now.

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Height varies from 6 to 27 inches, and leaves are flat.

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Find in Turner here.

The plant below is a native shrub that also serves as an ornamental, and I saw it in bloom last week in Portland (OR). It’s found from British Columbia south through California, and also in Missouri and Tennessee. If we are to see it in our area it would be in sunny but wet spots.

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This is Spiraea douglasii, common name Rose Spiraea or Hardhack.

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I was unable to resist the temptation of investigating what “hardhack” means, but all I found was that the same common name is also applied to unrelated species, such as Potentilla fruticosa (back in 1885, here), Collinsonia canadensis, and Arrowwood Viburnum (Viburnum dentatum) as well as to other Spiraea spp. But this may be a clue: another common name for Spiraea douglasii is Ironwood, and Native Americans used the wood for mat-making needles, spoons, and spears. Photographed July 2, 2010 in Portland OR. Find in Turner here.

Below is Arnica cordifolia, common name Heartleaf Arnica.

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Photographed May 9, 2010. Find in Turner here.

An earlier post showed Ribes roezlii, the Shiny-leaved Gooseberry. Below is Ribes sanguineum, Red-flowering Currant.

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The genus Ribes includes currants and gooseberries. What’s the difference?

Gooseberries and currants, although closely related, can easily be identified by examining the canes and fruit color; gooseberry canes normally produce a spine at each leaf node and bear roughly grape-sized berries singly or in groups of 2 or 3, while currant canes lack spines or prickles and bear 8 to 30 smaller fruit in clusters. Figure 1. Cane and fruit of (A) Gooseberry and (B) Currant.

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Drawing and text from University of Minnesota Extension page.

Photographed May 6, 2010. Find in Turner here.

Next is one of the thistles, a plant group which people find hard to appreciate. But this one is unlikely to show up in your backyard or pasture, and perhaps that will make it easier. We think it is Cirsium occidentale, Snowy Thistle—Turner calls it uncommon—and it is growing in a dry rocky area next to a road. We’ve seen the plant re-appear there for perhaps a decade and its seed has only produced two other plants in that time.

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The plant blends in with the greyish stones, having greenish-grey leaves and also a heavy coat of hairs like spiderwebs. Another of its common names is Cobweb Thistle.

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Perhaps the dramatic white pollen, seen below, is the origin of the “snowy” part of the common name.

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Photographed June 21, 2010. Find in Turner here.

Hydrophyllum fendleri, Fendler’s Waterleaf, is a moisture-loving plant with large leaves and fuzzy flower-heads.

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It has a spreading habit and often grows where vegetation is lush, so that other plants cover it up.

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Photographed on May 2, 2010. Find in Turner here.

Last, this small sedum.

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This is Sedum stenopetalum, Narrow-leaved Sedum. Flowers are yellow according to standard sources, but Turner shows white as well. Photographed end of June, 2010. (Yellow blossom in lower left, below, is clover.) Find in Turner here.

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Siskiyou wildflowers and butterflies

Our roadside botanizing was especially exciting today. First perhaps I should explain why we walk along forest service roads instead of hiking along trails. It has a lot to do with a single plant, although not one I would describe as a widlflower.

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Yes, it’s poison oak (Toxicodendron diversilobum), seen above early in the spring before it has reached its full diabolical potential of thickets six feet tall, stretching branches out onto trails in search of sunshine in order to grow even more monstrously large. Poison oak could be an interesting plant: it occurs in various forms from semi-vines threading up tree trunks, to a low-growing ankle-ambusher, as well as the aforementioned woody thickets. But all parts contain a chemical that is—not poisonous—but an extremely powerful allergen, an oil called urushiol. Most people are allergic to it, and I am very very allergic, so once we get off of bare ground I spend most of my time looking down and around before every step in order to find it before it finds me. (Be warned: allergies can come and go, so a history of immunity doesn’t mean you’ll always be immune.)

Happily, there’s an abundance of things to see by walking along the road and making a few careful excursions. Today was a bonanza.

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There’s an audio recording of Lew Welch reading this, here.

I don’t think we saw anything that “nobody’s ever really seen”, although one must pay careful attention to Lew Welch’s language, that “really seen” part. But what we saw was marvelous. Here’s one sight:

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From a distance I thought the butterflies were gathered upon a damp patch improbably located in the middle of the hot dusty gravel road. In other such situations, I haven’t been able to approach very closely without scaring them off. I took some pictures, then moved a bit closer, closer still, and in the end I was kneeling right beside them without really disturbing them at all. And then I could see what it was that they were so attracted to.

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They were on the scat of some animal, not an uncommon territorial marker to find in the middle of these forest roads. Could be fox, raccoon, coyote. Undigested material including seeds and some woody bits (pine needles?) can be seen, and the scat is pretty dry. Unlikely to be a source of moisture. However, butterflies require minerals not found in nectar, and often get these by drinking from damp soil or applying their tongues to scat. I am curious how they get nutrients from dry materials, because their tongues are hollow tubes designed for drinking liquids.

I poured some water on a nearby area before we left in search of lilies. When we came back, all the butterflies were still on the scat.

There were two species there. One was Adelpha bredowii, California sister, shown here exploring my arm. Some photos (here, for example) show this species with blue rather than grey markings, but that may be local variation.

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What’s the “sister” about? It’s said to refer to the black and white markings (like a nun’s habit) on the other side of the wings, the dorsal side (looking down on the outspread wings and the insect’s back, from above).

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Photo source.

The other is Limenitis lorquinii, Lorquin’s admiral. There are several different butterfly species with “admiral” in their names, and the reference is not clear. Some say the names were originally “admirable” but I can find no support, just speculation. Lorquin was a Frenchman in California during the Gold Rush of 1850, who sent butterfly specimens back to France where they were described for the first time by eminent lepidopterist Jean Baptiste Alphonse Dechauffour de Boisduval.

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It is unbelievable to see these creatures in such detail. First, Limenitis lorquini.

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It is possible to see the wing-veins as the three-dimensional structures that they are. When we read that a new butterfly emerging from the chrysalis has to “pump up” its folded wrinkled wings, before they are strong enough to fly, these veins are the means. “The butterfly has to expand and dry [its wings] as soon as it emerges from the chrysalis. To do this, it uses its body as a pump and forces fluid through a series of tube-like veins. It’s a little like inflating a balloon — as the veins fill with fluid, they slowly stretch the surface of the wings.” Source.

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Adelpha bredowii, trailing its long tongue over my skin.

We went on to look at the Washington lilies described in my previous post. The blooms that were white and pink on June 24th,

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today were nearly bright pink and drooping.

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But another plant was in spectacular bloom.

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This is Philadelphus lewisii, commonly called mock orange for its fragrance. To me there was nothing citrus-y about the fragrance, but I’ve never smelled orange trees in bloom. (There are perhaps a dozen other plants also called mock orange, illustrating how treacherous common names can be.) Philadelphus lewisii is one of nearly 200 plants new to science which Lewis and Clark described. Indians used its straight stems in making arrows.

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On the drive back to the main road we saw many more, all in synchrony of bloom. It’s a shrub that can reach 12 feet, so it offers a lot of flowers! We had remarked earlier on how many butterflies were about, in the air: monarchs, tiger swallowtails, and others. Surely the Philadelphus extravaganza had something to do with the sudden abundance of butterflies, and we speculated on how insects and plants keep in step when the music of the dance—the temperature, rainfall, sunny or cloudy skies—can vary so drastically year to year. This long rainy spring was very atypical, yet after three sunny days here are the partners right in step.

Another unusual find will have to wait for my next post. It has something to do with this wild rose…

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Siskiyou wildflowers: Washington Lily

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For two months we have been watching these lily plants, waiting for them to bloom. It took several days of sun and 80 degrees or so to coax them into revealing their flowers.

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These are Washington lilies, Lilium washingtonium. The flowers are white, sometimes pinkish, with tiny pink or purple dots inside.

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Despite the name, these are not found in Washington state, but only in Oregon and California. The plant was first described in 1859 by Albert Kellogg, who went against the usual practice of botanists and used the local settlers’ name, Lady Washington Lily, as basis for the scientific name. Presumably the settlers were referring to Martha Washington.

Turner calls them “uncommon”, and these are the only ones we have seen in our area. There are four plants within a six foot radius. One has had its top foot or so nipped off by some browsing animal, and one has not formed buds—too young perhaps.

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Uncommonly beautiful they certainly are. And they bear a sweet fragrance.

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Ah, Oregon!

Here in Elk Snout (the fictional small Oregon coastal town featured in the 1987 Kurt Russell/Goldie Hawn movie Overboard), things are different, all right.

From an article in the Oregonian about use of fake urine in drug tests, this information from a county Dept. of Community Justice spokesperson:

The tampering includes people who dilute their own urine and tricksters who turn in a range of substitutes. “For example,” she said, “someone tried to pass off a sample of elk urine as their own.”

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”You want what?” Photo source.