Bringing some old friends home

When we bought our home in the spring of 2017, the gardens were quite a draw. They had been loved, nurtured and cultivated for almost 25 years. They start blooming in March and continue until November with lots of beautiful colors and flowers that pollinators adore. Once I had more time to spend on the land and get to know it better I realized the gardens were filled with many strangers. Most of the plants were cultivated and didn’t resemble their native cousins. Many natives like our beloved Goldenrod (Solidago, spp.), were weeded out.

Since we moved here, I’ve been trying to envision what the land would welcome. This has been an enormous and daunting task for me as I am a forager, not a gardener. I have always relied on Mother Nature to guide me; she always has the best designs. Who am I to mess with perfection? Nevertheless, it has become obvious that the land needs more and requires my support. But what and where?

In the first year, Mike and I created a nursery so I could bring my dearly treasured herbs over from the old house. They all loved their new home and thrived. Last year, I expanded the nursery and some friends made their way into it. I also brought in a couple of new herbs to get to know better, but they don’t seem to have overwintered well. Yet it is still early and we will see.

This year, I am trying my best to pay attention, listen and observe. I’ve started walking in our local forests and taking notice how the land and plants affect my heart and soul. Last week, I started to ask some plants to come home with me. I never take the first one I see and only take one or two that are growing in large groups. So far, they appear to enjoy their new home. I hope they thrive and multiply.

Here are some of the new additions to our land.

Trout Lily

When I see Trout Lily (Erythronium americanum) in the woods, I feel like I am home. For that reason, it made sense to try to bring her to our land. Even though, I’ve been told they do not transplant well, I thought it was worth a try. I found a large patch and tried my best to dig deep so I could release her entire bulb with some soil. The bulbs are known as a corm and are edible raw. They apparently taste like cucumber. I hope we will get a chance to taste them in years to come. I believe they are enjoying their new home. Time will tell.

 

Coltsfoot

One of my favorite spring indicators is Coltsfoot (Tussilago farfara). Years ago, I read a piece where Susun Weed noted that an excellent cough remedy could be made by infusing their blossoms in honey. I had always wanted to try this but whenever I found an abundant patch of Coltsfoot, it was in a drainage ditch. And folks, no one wants medicine made from herbs growing in a drainage ditch ~ yuck! Hopefully, our new arrivals will flourish and give me a chance to try this remedy some point down the road.

Hepatica

Another lovely spring indicator is Hepatica. When the sun shines, it makes the forest floor sparkle. She gets her name from her leaves, which, like the human liver has three lobes. She was once a very popular liver tonic. As a result, over 450,000 pounds of dried leaves were brewed into tea during 1883 alone. That is a lot of leaves! I don’t have plans to start collecting leaves, but who knows what will stir me in the years to come. I am simply grateful she seems to be enjoying her new home.

Slowing I am bringing old friends to the land. It will be fun to see how they will change the feeling of the land. How do you decide what to bring home? Please share and I will continue to share.

 

 

Such a little flower with so many names

I call it Dog Tooth Lily (Erythronium americanum), but you may call it Yellow Trout-Lily, or simply Trout-Lily, or Dog’s-Tooth Violet, or Eastern Trout-Lily, or Yellow Adder’s Tongue, or Adder’s Tongue, or  Fawn Lily, or Thousand Leaf, or Deer Tongue, or Yellow Snowdrop, or Yellow Adder’s Tongue Lily, or perhaps Yellow Fawn Lily. Nevertheless, it’s simply one of those beautiful flowers that screams “SPRING is here” while you are walking in the woods. dog tooth lily leaves only

There are perfectly good reasons for all those names. If you’re like me and love hiking in the woods, observing the daily changes, at first you see all these little single leaves that appear on the forest floor (ergo Thousand Leaf name). Each day, they get fuller and the green leaves start to develop brownish contrasting pigment that resembles the marking of a Brook Trout, a deer’s tongue or the camouflage coat of a fawn. On the other hand, perhaps another reason to associate it with Trout is that they start to appear the same time as trout season.  Adder’s tongue refers to the appearance of the emerging stamens of the flower, protruding like the tongue of a snake.

The name “dogtooth” refers to the tooth-like shape of the white underground bulb known as a corm, which looks like a dog’s canine tooth. The corms are edible raw and apparently taste like cucumber. This plant is not a violet nor related to violets, so why the name? Well, it’s simple guilt by association ~ since the leaves emerge in the spring at about the same time as the violet, the silly association was made.

Regardless of the name ~ it’s a welcome sight on hike through the woods.dog tooth flower