Thursday, April 26, 2012

Woodsy/Rural Thursday

 Trout lilies

Wildflowers are blooming beneath hardwood forests, a favourite time of year for me and my camera. Trout lilies grow in colonies that can be - can you believe this - as much as 300 years old!

 Dutchman's breeches

The blooms are said to resemble pantaloons hanging upside-down. Seeds of Dutchman's breeches are spread by ants.

Canadian wild ginger

Usually the heart-shaped leaves are seen first since the flower is hidden below them where beetles and other crawling insects  fertilize them.

I am linking with
Rural Thursday

37 comments:

  1. I always love your spring wildflowers photos!

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  2. Okay, thanks to your posting I am heading to the hiking trails.

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  3. How cool that their colonies come back for so many years!

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  4. I love your woodland flowers. The Dutchman Breeches are too cute! I can definately see the pantaloons.
    Hugs,
    Jann

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  5. love the flowers. Different than what I'm used to seeing. Beautiful photos!

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  6. Add some fiddle-heads and wild leeks and poof... dinner. :)

    Lovely photos and informative post.

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  7. Both those flowers are new to me and so interesting, thanks for sharing.

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  8. Very pretty. New Spring flowers are always so lovely. Nice images.

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  9. The lillies are esp. nice - and I didn't know we had such a thing as wild ginger!

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  10. Love the names of your wildflowers EG, and 300 year old colonies, how fantastic! I bet they look wonderful when they come out in the masses.

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  11. your first two shots and blooms reminded me SO much of my childhood in Wisconsin! loved those wildflowers!

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  12. Such interesting-looking woodland flowers. And I appreciate your descriptions. :)

    Thank you for sharing at Rural Thursday this week. xoxo

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  13. I had never heard of trout lilies before. I googled them and they, or at least a variant, grow in some of the preserves and parks of Oklahoma.

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  14. Lovely, EG, especially the trout lilies!

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  15. Woodland plants are a favorite topic of mine. We have many types growing in the woods but it has been so wet I just haven't been exploring yet.

    Love the window variety. MB

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  16. Woodland flowers are great. Thanks for sharing these!

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  17. Beautiful! I love the wild flowers.

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  18. Woodland wildflowers, the stuff of fairy tales. Love the britches.

    Darla

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  19. Thank you for the visit. Enjoying this lovely photos of overlooked flowers.

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  20. Love your wood lot flowers. I need to get out in our woods.

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  21. I love wildflowers -- familiar with the middle one, the other two are new to me. Amazing to learn about the trout lily colonies.

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  22. You have some very wild wildflowers. I mean, really! Pantaloons? Of course I would not know a pantaloon from a looney tune, but still! And those trout lilies hang the wrong way. What's that all about? And before you say it, I refute any comment that trout lily colonies are as old as I am!

    Put that in your ginger and snap it!

    Heh, heh!

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  23. Did you find all these flowers in York Regional Forest?
    I just came back from UK, lots of wild flowers blooming there.

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  24. Great photos of the wildflowers. The trout lilies are lovely!

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  25. These are beautiful wildflowers. I really like the Dutchman Breeches.

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  26. I always ;pve trout lilies...and dutchman's breeches...and just about any woods plant.

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  27. I really like your wildflowers shots. The first one almost resembles the Fawn Lilies that we have here in BC.

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  28. Such interesting and different flowers! I really enjoyed hearing about them and seeing the photos!

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  29. Such lovely shots!

    I can see a face in the wild ginger! Or am I just going mad?

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  30. It is always interesting to see flowers that are unknown to me - but obviously from spring!

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  31. Oh it looks like you are just a little ahead of us I am waiting for trout lilies and dutchmen britches.
    Thanks for the photo of the ginger I have never noticed it here I will be taking another look. B

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  32. that's a pretty amazing fact about the trout lilies. loved your pics today.

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  33. Dogtooth colonies can be 300 years old?!?! How can they tell? Do you know why so many of the leaves seem to have no flowers associated with them? I have never seen wild ginger. May be too cold here...

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  34. Love these wildflower shots! Please feel free to post them up on Floral Friday Fotos - I am sure the people visiting there would love to see them:

    http://floralfridayfoto.blogspot.com/

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  35. I love all these! There are huge patches of trout lilies in the woods behind my house.

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