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Tangled Branches: Cultivated

happenings in and around my zone 6b gardens in northern Virginia and in central Virginia

Monday, June 30, 2008

Cute Flowers: One Cultivated, Two Wild

Moving along from shiny flowers, how about some cute flowers? None of these are large, but all have interesting shapes to make up for the size deficit.

This is the first time I've grown Tropaeolum peregrinum, and because it's a nasturtium relative I expected a more vigorous plant. It's really somewhat delicate-looking. I trained it on string looped over the deck railing and it's only about 4 feet tall at present. I suspect it may fizzle in the heat of the summer, but for now it's a cute plant.


The common name, Canary Climber or Canary Creeper, comes from the resemblance of the flowers to a canary. You be the judge.


Here's a wildflower that I missed seeing last year - Chimaphila maculatum, aka Spotted Wintergreen et al. I knew that it grows in the woods in Central Virginia, but didn't happen upon it last summer while it was blooming. It's more noticeable in late fall and winter with it's attractive striped evergreen leaves.


It's not easy to see the flowers close-up because they're quite low to the ground, but look at the curious arrangement of the stamens and the jug-shaped gynoecium


This one, Polygala curtissii or Curtiss' Milkwort, grows at the edge of the woods but is so small and wispy that it's easy to overlook. These are about 6 inches tall overall and the flower head is about 3/4 inch.


It's worth looking more closely - the flowers are quite pretty.


I'm planning a longer update on the vegetable garden later this week, but on Saturday I picked the first chile pepper! That fresh chile aroma was just like perfume...

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posted by Entangled at 8:38 AM ::: Permalink

5 Comments:

Blogger Annie in Austin wrote...

The canary vine is cute, Entangled - although the flower looks more like golden antlers than a bird to me.

As to the sweet little Chimaphila maculatum - hope you won't throw anything at me but I can't resist saying, "Nice jugs!"

Do the leaves have a mint scent?

Annie at the Transplantable Rose

4:30 PM, July 01, 2008  
Blogger Entangled wrote...

Annie: I don't think it looks much like a canary either.

Geez, I shoulda run the whole jug thing by my spouse before I posted it. I'm sure he would have caught the reference. I didn't ;-)

I'll have to pluck a leaf of the wintergreen and sniff it. I had assumed that it was only called wintergreen because it was evergreen, but maybe not.

8:16 AM, July 02, 2008  
Blogger Yolanda Elizabet wrote...

To me it does look a bit like the wings of a yellow canary. My dad used to breed canaries you see. ;-)

Love the flowers of that wintergreen, very pretty and I'll womanly refrain myself from making any remarks about jugs. :-D

12:40 PM, July 03, 2008  
Blogger Entangled wrote...

Yolanda: Hmmm, come to think of it, I've never seen a canary in flight. I've never heard one sing either, but I understand they have a very pretty song?

Jugs...what can I say...?

9:47 AM, July 04, 2008  
Blogger kate smudges wrote...

The Tropaeolum is beautiful - I like the flower colour and shape. Love the Chimaphila too.

9:05 AM, July 07, 2008  

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