Monday, September 1, 2008

Flower Power

Generally-speaking, people appreciate a flower for the beauty of its color, the pleasantness of its fragrance or the efficacy of its ability to get one out of the trouble that one has gotten into.

Insects (to be so bold as to speak for the critters who will be around to occupy our collective wreckage), meanwhile, may well appreciate a flower for its intricate architecture (that nicely foils the competitors' search for pollen) or its preferred place in the landscape or its season of pollen production.

Ponder these or your own musings as you appreciate the following summer of 2008 blooms from some of Indiana's protected natural areas. We greatly enjoyed bumbling across these many wonders while working for their continued protection amongst their woodland, swamp and prairie homes.


Wanna Chip In?:
www.nature.org
www.acreslandtrust.org
www.lrwp.org



Wild Senna



Rose Pogonia (an orchid)



Small-Flowered Foxglove



Solitary-Flowered Rockrose



Sundew



Swamp Saxifrage



Marsh Pea



Michigan Lily



Unknown



Pickerelweed



Pitcher Plant



Red Clover



Fire Pink



Grass Pink (an orchid)



Hepatica



Marsh Marigold



Spotted Touch-Me-Not



Boneset



White Vervain



Blue Vervain



Ladies' Tresses Orchid



Jerusalem Artichoke



Grass-of-Parnassus



Brook Lobelia



Water Hemlock



Bugleweed



Monkeyflower



Joe-Pye-Weed




Unknown



Common Milkweed



Ironweed



Swamp Milkweed



Swamp Thistle



Some Sort of Vine-ing Legume



Harebell



Brown-eyed Susan



Some sort of Tick-Trefoil



Common St. Johnswort



Heal-All



Birds-Foot Violet



Blue Flag



Arrowhead



Just a few reasons why we care.

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