CANADA GOLDENROD: A LARGE, SPREADING PERENNIAL PLANT... |
...PLUME OF SMALL YELLOW FLOWERS.. |
...LONG, NARROW, SMOOTH LEAVES |
Sunday, 8:00 AM. 61 degrees F at the ferry dock, 56 on the back porch. The wind is variable and calm, the sky partly cloudy with mare's tail and other thin white clouds, presaging an incoming front from the west. The humidity is 88% and the barometer steady at 30.04" of mercury. Highs today will be around 70, warming to mid-70's with chances of rain throughout the coming week.
When goldenrods begin to bloom, the summer is on the wane. Canada goldenrod, Solidago canadensis, in the Sunflower Family (Compositae),
is one of the easiest to identify of the seventy-five plus species in
the genus, most of which are native to North America but many of which,
Canada goldenrod specifically, have spread as an invasive species
throughout the Northern Hemisphere and elsewhere (native species of plants and animals can be just as invasive as non-native).
Goldenrods hybridize readily and are a nightmare even to
taxonomists, who's mission in life is to study complicated things and
complicate them even further. There are only a half-dozen or so that I
recognize readily and I simply lump the rest together.
Canada goldenrod will grow almost anywhere except very dry or very
wet areas. It is quite attractive and sometimes grown in the garden,
but it spreads and takes over. Some ornamental goldenrods are less
aggressive than the species and are welcome in cultivation. As wild
plants goldenrods are attractive in late summer and fall. They
are often blamed by hay fever sufferer's for their allergies, but they
are insect rather than wind pollinated so they are not guilty in that
regard.
Dried S. canadensis and other species have been used in herbal medicine as a diuretic in the treatment of gout and kidney stones, and as a wash for eczema and other skin irritations, and the genus name alludes to that fact in a roundabout, Latinized way.
Dried S. canadensis and other species have been used in herbal medicine as a diuretic in the treatment of gout and kidney stones, and as a wash for eczema and other skin irritations, and the genus name alludes to that fact in a roundabout, Latinized way.
No comments:
Post a Comment