I Love Wildflowers

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🖤 Woolly bear 🧡

This little dude is just out here predicting the weather 🖤🧡🖤

The amount of black on the woolly caterpillar in the fall is supposedly linked to the severity of the upcoming winter. The black varies in each season, and in different areas, too.

According to legend, the longer the woolly bear’s black bands are, the more severe the upcoming winter will be… and the wider the middle brown band, the milder the winter will be.

Also, the position of the longest dark band is said to indicate which part of winter will be coldest. If the head end is dark, the beginning of winter will be worse. If the other end is dark, the end of winter will be colder.

According to the folklore, the 13 segments of the woolly bear’s body correspond to the 13 weeks of winter… the “woolier” the coat, the colder the winter.


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💛 Partridge Pea 💛

I have these blooming down by the road! 💛 Partridge Pea is an annual and a legume so it fixes soil nitrogen and forms attractive maroon seed pods in the fall.
💛 This wildflower attracts bees and butterflies and the seed pods are eaten by gamebirds and songbirds. The plant provides excellent cover for gamebirds and browse for deer. Leaves collapse when touched, earning it the common name Sensitive-plant.


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💚🤍 Dotted Smartweed 🤍💚

I didn’t plant this dotted smartweed… it came up in one of my flower pots on its own.. but I read about it and decided to let it stay. 💚
Dotted smartweed (Persicaria punctata) is a wetland plant important to many different kinds of native wildlife. Its nectar attracts bees and beetles, and insect larvae feed on its leaves. Also, small birds and mammals find the seeds very tasty. 💚


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💛 Goldenrod 💛

💚🌼🌱💛 Goldenrods are a group of 100+ species of asters native to North America. They bloom from June through October, providing sustenance and shelter for pollinating insects long after summer flowers have passed.

💚After the Boston Tea Party, tea made from goldenrod became known as “liberty tea.” It was the first and for a while, the only tea colonists would drink while protesting against the British taxation.

🌼In 1918 a national publication, the Independent, published a survey on the American sentiments for a national flower. The survey found that Americans were undecided between columbine, clover, daisy, and goldenrod. In 1942, goldenrod was still running for the title of National flower, but had developed the reputation of causing hay fever. While its pollen was then believed to be an aeroallergen, scientists have since discovered this is actually not the case. Goldenrod’s pollen is not airborne .. it blossoms at the same time as ragweed, the true instigator of hay fever. Despite the clarification, the rose received the coveted honor of National flower in 1986.

🌱Goldenrod is a sign of good luck and fortune in many cultures. The stem of the plant was historically used as a divining rod. Some believe whenever goldenrod grows near a home, its occupants will have good fortune.

💛The most fascinating use for Goldenrod came from Thomas Edison, who cultivated a 12 ft tall plant that yielded 12% rubber content in each plant. Henry Ford gave Edison a Model T with tires made from Goldenrod but Edison unfortunately died before he could bring this project into commercial production. During World War II there was extensive process development conducted on Goldenrod but they were not as successful as Edison, as they could only cultivate leaves with a rubber content of 7 percent. 💚🌼🌱💛


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❤️🧡💛 Blanket flower 💛🧡❤️

❤️🧡💛 Gaillardia or blanket flower is a group of perennials in the Asteraceae (daisy) family native to North and South America.
❤️The plant is named after Maître Gaillard de Charentonneau, an enthusiastic botanist in France.
🧡The name blanket flower may have come from the resemblance of the flowers to the brightly patterned Native American blankets in similar colors, the ability of wild species to completely cover the ground with a blanket of color, or even the legend of a Native American weaver whose grave was always covered with blooming flowers that were as beautifully colored as the blankets she had made.
💛Native Americans made tea from Gaillardia to treat gastroenteritis and sore eyes. The Kiowa thought of it as good luck. ❤️🧡💛


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❤️ I planted this cypress vine for my hummingbirds ❤️

❤️ Cypress vine is believed to have been introduced to North America in the late 1600s. It was becoming a popular ornamental plant in the southeastern U.S. by the 1750s. The plants were a favorite of Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson was the first to provide written documentation of the cypress vine in the U.S. In 1790, he sent seeds from Philadelphia to his two daughters, Maria and Martha, who lived at Monticello in Virginia. Subsequent letters show that Martha and Maria planted these seeds in a window box.
Today, cypress vines are still cultivated at Monticello where the plants are grown on “pea sticks,” or branches that offer support for cypress flower’s twining vines. ❤️