The first water lily (Nymphaea odorata) blooms of spring, together with cypress, Spanish moss, and mistletoe.
Pictures by Gretchen, 20 March 2008.
Category Archives: Plants
Yellow jessamine
What are those yellow vine flowers that smell like jasmine? Yellow jessamine (Gelsemium sempervirens), native to the U.S. southeast (and the South Carolina state flower, although these examples grow in Lowndes County, Georgia).
But don’t eat them; they contain a compound similar to strychnine and said to be as effective as hemlock. Nonetheless, sometimes used as a sedative.
Pictures by Gretchen.
What are Those Lilies?
The pictures of
Easter Lilies from a few days ago obviously aren’t the big Japanese
lilies commonly sold as Easter Lilies; they’re a native plant,
found in their native habitat in Lowndes County, Georgia.
Everybody around here recognizes them, and seems to call them either Easter Lilies, or “those lilies you see in the ditch by the road.” Nobody seems to know any other name for them, neither common nor botanic.
So Gretchen and I journeyed two hours south to the strange land of Gainesville, Florida, to attend the Gopher Tortoise Council spring meeting, taking a few samples of “those lilies” in hopes that the assembled botanists and biologists could identify them. And they could! Continue reading
Dogwoods
Native dogwoods
(Cornus florida) blooming in the woods, Lowndes County, Georgia. They’re everywhere, but they only show up on camera if they’re close by. Pictures by Gretchen.
Wild Azaleas
Native wild azaleas,
Rhododendron canescens, growing in the woods.
No, not honeysuckle; that’s a vine, and is from Japan. These are bushes, and are from here.
Easter Lilies
Longleaf by the Road
A previous landowner clearcut what was natural forest and replanted slash pine. Apparently nobody told
these longleaf not to sprout up from seed.
