Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Perhaps I should explain... the Canadian prairies are largely grassland, but intermixed with stands of somewhat stunted trees and/or shrubs where ever they can exist... even in the most open areas, trees/shrubs still grow in the coulees and along watercourses and drainages. I hope that helps to give a mental picture... ?Some more species that occur all across our prairies, from the same locale as the other wild photos I've shown:1) Allium textile2, 3) Early yellow locoweed, Oxytropis sericea. These were in bloom in the yard quite a bit earlier. (The second photo shows it growing in association with Smilacina stellata... as I mentioned, the latter does not require moist areas.)4, 5) Hedysarum boreale var. boreale starting to bloom. Oddly enough, my plant out along the fence, though much more robust, is lagging behind these in flowering. The seedheads are Pulsatilla patens. Some of the ubiquitous prairie shrubs...6, 7, 8 ) Saskatoon berry, Amelanchier alnifolia, with berries starting to form.9, 10) Also perfuming the air in this season, chokecherry, Prunus pennsylvanica virginiana* on the left and wolf-willow (Elaeagnus commutata) on the right. The single-stemmed, tree-form chokecherry in our yard is looking good now. (I almost wish it looked awful so there'd be an excuse to cut it down - I hate crawling under it to cut out the suckers! I wish the nursery people would understand that they want to be thickets - not trees!! - and graft them onto a nonsuckering base. Oh well, it was here when we moved in and it is a fine specimen.) *Oops, I'm getting the name mixed up with pin cherry.
backroad bicycle botanising
The subject said "Show your prairie plants", so here are some that occur across the Canadian prairies.1-7) Penstemon nitidus, blooming in the front yard, on the south-facing slope. It's locally native but I don't believe it's in bloom in the river valley yet.8, 9) Viola canadensis var. rugulosa, also in the yard.10) The Geum triflorum along the river are more vividly coloured than the ones I grow.
Graham, if you would like to try it from seed, I can send you some - I'll see if I still have any from last year. Failing that, I'll be collecting more in late summer, and I always send it to the seedexes.
Quotebackroad bicycle botanisingGreat idea and title for a thread Cohan, looking forward to coming along
Thanks, Robin.Cohan, the photos from the wild are all from the "nature" park along the Bow River here in NW Calgary, through which the bike path that I take to and from work runs.Some more...1 - 6) I'm not certain if these photos are of two different oxytropis species, or one. I think Oxytropis viscida is one of them, maybe all of them... ? Anyway, they seem to be oxytropis from the absence of leaves on the stems; I'll have to dissect some flowers and count leaves to be sure... if even then. Quite lovely, whatever they are. The flowers on some have faded to the most unusual shade of blue.7) A very attractive potentilla... must try to figure out what it is.8, 9) Wolf-willow, Elaeagnus commutata... the little yellow four-petalled flowers are almost insignificant but have a delicious, sweet, heavy scent! (Forgive the fuzzy photos - the wind was howling that day.)10) And, not so advanced in the wild yet, but budding out in the yard, Zigadenus elegans (or whatever it's called these days!)And that's it, until the next time I take my camera along!
my ideal situation would be to have the boreal forest behind the house and prairie in front...lol
err--that's the ideal cold climate situation...lol
Quote from: cohan on June 07, 2010, 03:45:24 AMmy ideal situation would be to have the boreal forest behind the house and prairie in front...lolYeah!! Quote from: cohan on June 07, 2010, 03:45:24 AMerr--that's the ideal cold climate situation...lol Yeah, a tropical beach in front might be okay too.