rmishra, to plants
@rmishra@mstdn.social avatar

Cardinal flower- it's a humming bird magnet. Summer 2023 .#nature #nativeplants @nativeplants @nativeplants @plants

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Ready to ship tomorrow 💚🌱

(Native plant food security project)

@plants

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

#ClimateDiary #ClimateChangeGardening

Addressed all the envelopes for the native plant food security project and will be packing seeds this week. Will ship everything off on Monday.

The pawpaw and persimmon are partially cold-stratified already but since it’s winter, they should go back in the fridge as packed until spring. Boehmeria and physalis, follow directions on pack.

(Sorry, a month late.)

#gardening #rewilding #FoodSecurity #NativePlants @plants

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Gaultheria procumbens, wintergreen

Been looking for this plant for a while and ended up stumbling across it at Lowe’s. Tastes like certs candy, sweet and minty. 😊

@plants

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

#ClimateDiary

84F/29C, climate zone 8, East Coast, NA. Wild blackberries blooming, Oct.28th.

Pure golden green sweat bee on Allegheny blackberry. (Augochlora pura, Rubus allegheniensis)

#bloomscrolling #florespondence #fleuristonfil #hiking #NativePlants #InsektenSamstag #insects #insectos #plants #plantas @plants #bees #pollinators

Easydor,
@Easydor@metalhead.club avatar
jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Really missing my redbud tree (Cercis canadensis) this fall. It had such beautiful peach colored leaves.

It fell over after successive tropical storms this fall. Arborist said it was near the end of its lifespan anyway. I searched all over for volunteer seedlings but couldn’t find any. 😔

@plants

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Polistes fuscatus, dark paper wasp on Passiflora incarnata, maypop

Maypops are starting to turn bright yellow for the fall. 🍂

@plants

rmishra, to plants
@rmishra@mstdn.social avatar

Drummond’s aster in full display. It was planted last summer. NE Ohio
@plants

cohanf, to plants
@cohanf@mastodon.online avatar

: and (also rain!) for a lot of leaves on the ground, but still colour to be found, especially in the understory and some plants /trees that turn later than others.
Top left Prunus- a plum variety growing well in the last few years-- after its pollinating mate died 🙄 Centre Ontario native Aralia racemosa ripened some berries, though the plants have mostly frozen down, now.
@plants cont---

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar
jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

This is your seasonal reminder that all acorns are edible. Some need processing, others do not.

In October, I will do a thread on Southern Live Oak, Quercus virginiana. These don’t need processing but do need to be steamed in their shells to remove the nut. Last year, house moths ate most of mine so they need to be well-sealed and frozen after shelling.

@plants

Colorful sprigs of herbs and greens arranged artfully on a black speckled plate. In the middle is a broiled rectangle of tofu with acorn dengaku paste. Acorn dengaku with yuzu zest aromatic. Adapted from “dengaku.” Tsuji 192. Garden veg: Mexican tarragon (reserved), Okinawa spinach, red Hopi amaranth, summer savory, willow oak acorns, yuzu zest
Black background, black plate with darker black speckles. An upside down pyramid of 6 caramel colored mini acorn pancakes with a red paste dollop on top each pancake. A green sauce is drizzled overtop the pancakes in diagonal lines. Three camelia flowers adorn the plate to the left, too and right. Mini acorn okonomiyaki with madhatter/queen of minalco tomatillo/strawberry and yuzu sauce, sissoo-ezu and yuzu zest. Adapted from “Okonomiyaki.“ Sakai, p.261. Garden veg: camellia flower (not eaten) madhatter, queen of minalco tomatillo, sissoo, strawberry (Ozark beauty, maybe), willow oak acorns, yuzu (not my tree)
Black speckled plate on black background. Willow oak Acorn soba noodles are arranged vertically on the plate with a few curved on the right towards the left for dramatic effect. A sprig of moringa and borage flower lays on top of the noodles. A pink candy stripe camelia is on the top right. Acorn soba. Adapted from “soba,” Sakai, p.81. Garden veg: borage flower, camellia (not eaten), moringa, willow oak acorns

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Bombus impatiens on Impatiens capensis

For reals. This was not staged. The bee landed on this flower of its own accord.

Common eastern bumblebee on jewelweed

@plants @gardening

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

I am just a person, gazing into a phone, asking pocket friends on mastodon if they would like to grow edible native plants.

#ClimateChangeGardening #gardening #NativePlants #rewilding #foraging @plants #plants #trees #food #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #ClimateDiary #FoodSecurity #permaculture

From: @jblue
https://mastodon.world/@jblue/111030812090151429

choyer, to plants en-gb

Seen today on the wayside in a quiet valley of the Taunus mountains, Germany: Lonicera periclymenum (honeysuckle, Waldgeißblatt). @plants @plantscience

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Amblyscirtes aesculapius, lace-winged roadside skipper on Verbesina occidentalis, yellow crownbeard

Found on pawpaw seed hunt Thursday.

@plants

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Melothria pendula, creeping cucumber

It’s related to the cucamelon (M scabra) and is also a perennial. Pictured fruits are ripe. When they turn darker green they are no longer edible and when they are black, are stinky and work like ipecac.

Please let me know if you want seeds to this when I pass out native edible seeds this fall. More in AltText.

@plants

A finger holding up a very tiny cucumber. It is round and looks a little bit like a watermelon.  the little melon is smaller than the fingertip. Behind it is a wooden fence.  The creeping cucumber tastes exactly like a cucumber, small and crunchy. It does not store well and needs to be eaten within hours of being picked or it starts to get squishy. I’ve tried salt-drying them, and they shrivel to nothing like a little shriveled dot. I’ve also tried pickling them, and it’s not really worth the trouble since they are very small. Honestly, they are best just eaten raw.
Four tiny cucumbers in a wooden basket next to two native physalis husks to the right and pink okra to the left and an orange madhatter pepper to the far left. 
A bunny sitting in front of a fence. Behind it is a wall of chicken wire and heavier fencing. Small, delicate vines climb up the wire and they look a little bit like ivy, but the leaves are light green, and the vine itself is not woody, rather, it is thin, soft and breaks easily.  The vines die back in winter and come up again in the late spring. The older the vine is the earlier it will fruit. If you start from seed in the spring, the vines won’t fruit until September, but for an established vine, it might start fruiting in late July. It is hardy to zone 8, possibly 7. It doesn’t transplant well and doesn’t like to have its roots tampered with. It is possible to grow in a pot and overwintered in a garage. It is a short-lived perennial. I don’t know how long it lives but probably not many years. The tuber is flexible and thin and the vines don’t get very long even on established plants. Needs a lot of sun. It fruits prolifically but the fruits are very tiny.

PJD65, to gardening
@PJD65@mas.to avatar

This started as 3 plug size plants this spring. It's clearly something we are going to have to keep watching so that it doesn't take over. It is just starting to come into bloom. The flowers are just starting and should be more impressive soon.

Mistflower - Conoclinium coelestinum

@gardening

PJD65,
@PJD65@mas.to avatar

Last week I posted a picture of this plant - mistflower (conoclinium coelestinum) - that was just starting to bud. This is a close up of one of the flower heads.
@gardening

PJD65, to gardening
@PJD65@mas.to avatar

A few plants seen along a small roadside in northern Wisconsin.

Aralia racemosa - American Spikenard
Seed head: Arisaema triphyllum – Jack-In-the-Pulpit
Seed head: Actaea pachypoda - white baneberry (or doll's-eyes)

@gardening

rmishra, to plants
@rmishra@pixelfed.social avatar

Wild Bergamot @plants

cohanf, to plants
@cohanf@mastodon.online avatar

This is from a week ago, but I was so late with it, I just left it for this week- then still didn't have oomph to post it after my gross weekend of work...lol
This set is a reminder that I not only for but for the !(more details in replies- also a couple of photo bombs with cropped photos).

@plants @nature

Private
Pollinators,
@Pollinators@epicure.social avatar

@chillicampari @plants Thank you for sharing the photos. We’ve sprouted and started a lot of and plants. I’ve never looked at the sprouts and saw hungry little carnivores like this photo. , .

rmishra, to plants
@rmishra@mstdn.social avatar

Hummers love these. @plants

jblue, to plants
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Chionanthus virginicus, American fringe tree

Mine is a female tree but birds and squirrels eat most of the berries. The berries are awful, chemical tasting. 2 cycles of cold stratification needed to germinate seeds. Flowers smell faintly like honeysuckle with a little jasmine. Dried, they smell like floral fresh hay.

@plants

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