Sightings – Other Plants

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/13/20

Observation Time: 5:30 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: American Groundnut

Scientific Name: Apios americana

Comments: Apios americana is found in every state east of the Rocky Mountains. It is a perennial vine that grows to 10 feet long in wet areas – marshy meadows and thickets, stream and pond banks, and moist woodlands. Both the tuber and the seeds are edible. Apios americana was a noteworthy food of both native Americans as well as early colonists of New England. It is a good source of carbohydrates and protein.

More Information: Wildflowers of the United States

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 7/11/15

Observation Time: 1:36 p.m.

Observation Location: near Gavins Pond

Common Name: American Groundnut

Scientific Name: Apios americana

Comments: Apios americana is found in every state east of the Rocky Mountains. It is a perennial vine that grows to 10 feet long in wet areas – marshy meadows and thickets, stream and pond banks, and moist woodlands. Both the tuber and the seeds are edible. Apios americana was a noteworthy food of both native Americans as well as early colonists of New England. It is a good source of carbohydrates and protein.

More Information: Wildflowers of the United States

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 11/6/06

Observation Time: 2:10 p.m.

Observation Location: Gavins Pond Road

Common Name: Autumn Olive

Scientific Name: Elaeagnus umbellata

Comments: Autumn-olive is a hardy, prolific shrub that thrives in a variety of conditions, in part because it is capable of fixing nitrogen. Some varieties can produce up to 80 pounds (37 kilos) of bright red edible berries in a season, which ripen in October and give the plant its common name. Introduced from Japan in 1830 and widely planted in the 1940s to revegetate disturbed habitats, it is now invasive in many parts of North America. Birds (especially starlings) and mammals relish its copious fruits and spread it far and wide.

Having a sweet and tart flavor when ripe, the berries can be eaten fresh or processed for jam, condiments, or fruit leather. When mature, the red berries contain carotenoids, including considerable amounts of lycopene, a substance also found in tomatoes, watermelon, pink grapefruit, pink guava, papaya, and rosehip.

More Information: Go Botany and Wikipedia

 

 

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/23/18

Observation Time: 9:10 a.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm (TTOR)

Common Name: Autumn Olive

Scientific Name: Elaeagnus umbellata

Comments: Autumn-olive is a hardy, prolific shrub that thrives in a variety of conditions, in part because it is capable of fixing nitrogen. Some varieties can produce up to 80 pounds (37 kilos) of bright red edible berries in a season, which ripen in October and give the plant its common name. Introduced from Japan in 1830 and widely planted in the 1940s to revegetate disturbed habitats, it is now invasive in many parts of North America. Birds (especially starlings) and mammals relish its copious fruits and spread it far and wide.

Having a sweet and tart flavor when ripe, the berries can be eaten fresh or processed for jam, condiments, or fruit leather. When mature, the red berries contain carotenoids, including considerable amounts of lycopene, a substance also found in tomatoes, watermelon, pink grapefruit, pink guava, papaya, and rosehip.

More Information: Go Botany and Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/26/19

Observation Time: 2:40 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm (TTOR)

Common Name: Autumn Olive

Scientific Name: Elaeagnus umbellata

Comments: Autumn-olive is a hardy, prolific shrub that thrives in a variety of conditions, in part because it is capable of fixing nitrogen. Some varieties can produce up to 80 pounds (37 kilos) of bright red edible berries in a season, which ripen in October and give the plant its common name. Introduced from Japan in 1830 and widely planted in the 1940s to revegetate disturbed habitats, it is now invasive in many parts of North America. Birds (especially starlings) and mammals relish its copious fruits and spread it far and wide.

The undersides of the leaves are silvery green – noticeably lighter than the top sides.

Having a sweet and tart flavor when ripe, the berries can be eaten fresh or processed for jam, condiments, or fruit leather. When mature, the red berries contain carotenoids, including considerable amounts of lycopene, a substance also found in tomatoes, watermelon, pink grapefruit, pink guava, papaya, and rosehip.

More Information: Go Botany and Wikipedia and Wintergreen Botanicals

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/29/24

Observation Time: 11:35 a.m.

Observation Location: Sharon Historical Society, High Street, Sharon

Common Name: Black Raspberry

Scientific Name: Rubus occidentalis

Comments: The black raspberry is related to the red raspberry Rubus idaeus and Rubus strigosus, sharing the white underside of leaves, and fruit that readily detaches from the carpel.

Black raspberry grows in disturbed areas and in meadows, often near streams and lakes, trails or roadways. The native range of Rubus occidentalis extends as far east as New Brunswick, as far west as Nebraska, as far north as Quebec, and as far south as Mississippi.

More Information: Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/24/21

Observation Time: 3:10 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm (TTOR)

Common Name: Black Raspberry

Scientific Name: Rubus occidentalis

Comments: The black raspberry is related to the red raspberry Rubus idaeus and Rubus strigosus, sharing the white underside of leaves, and fruit that readily detaches from the carpel.

Black raspberry grows in disturbed areas and in meadows, often near streams and lakes, trails or roadways. The native range of Rubus occidentalis extends as far east as New Brunswick, as far west as Nebraska, as far north as Quebec, and as far south as Mississippi.

More Information: Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/29/11

Observation Time: 11:35 a.m.

Observation Location: Gavins Pond

Common Name: Blueberry

Scientific Name: Vaccinium

Comments: These unripe blueberries were growing in sandy soil in the vicinity of Gavins Pond near a bluebird nesting box. The baby bluebirds will probably fledge around the time the berries ripen.

More Information: Mother Earth News

Blueberry

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 8/11/23

Observation Time: 4:45 p.m.

Observation Location: Gavins Pond Rd. (garden in my back yard)

Common Name: Carolina Horsenettle

Scientific Name: Solanum carolinense

Comments: As the name implies, the natural range of this invasive, thorny weed is the mid-Atlantic states, but it is spreading north as the climate warms.

More Information: Minnesota Wildflowers

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/13/20

Observation Time: 6:10 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Catchweed Bedstraw

Scientific Name: Galium aparine

Comments: Native to North America and Eurasia, this weed is an annual broadleaf plant with a shallow, branching taproot. The stems of catchweed bedstraw are square in cross-section, weak, mostly unbranched, and grow to about 6 feet long, but are unable to stand on their own, so they often clamber over upright plant species.

Catchweed bedstraw, also known as Stickywilly, Cleaverwort, White Hedge, Goosegrass, Gripgrass, Scarthgrass, and Velcro Plant, remains low and sprawling, forming dense, tangled mats. Hairlike bristles cover the stems and leaves of the plant; these bristly hairs are responsible for its characteristic tangled growth habit and the “sticky” way it clings to clothing and animals.

Historically used as an herbal remedy for various ailments, its dried and roasted fruits have also been used to make a coffee substitute (in fact, the plant is in the same family as coffee, Coffea spp).

More Information: Washington State University

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 7/12/20

Observation Time: 7:10 p.m.

Observation Location: along Gavins Pond Road

Common Name: Common Mugwort

Scientific Name: Artemesia vulgaris

Comments: Common mugwort is used as a culinary herb and medicinally throughout the world.

More Information: Botanical.com and Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 8/13/20

Observation Time: 3:30 p.m.

Observation Location: Mountain St.

Common Name: Devil’s Beggarticks

Scientific Name: Bidens Frondosa

Comments: A summer annual that may reach as much as 3 1/2 feet in height.  Devils beggarticks has prickly fruit that facilitate seed dispersal by sticking to the fur and clothing of any animal or human that brushes by this weed when mature.  Devils beggarticks is primarily a weed of pastures, hay fields, roadsides, landscapes, and nurseries.  It is found throughout the United States.

More information: University of Missouri

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/28/10

Observation Time: 2:00 p.m.

Observation Location: 154 Wolomolopoag St.

Common Name: Dewberry

Scientific Name: Rubrus species

Comments: Not sure if this is Rubrus flagellaris, the northern dewberry, or some other Rubrus species such as Rubrus hispidus, the swamp dewberry.

More Information: Dewberries and Brambles: University of Massachusetts

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/4/20

Observation Time: 11:20 a.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Field Horsetail

Scientific Name: Equisetum arvense

Comments: Field horsetail, a perennial plant of genus Equisetum, is the only living representative of the very ancient and primitive class Sphenopsida, tree-sized members of which were prominent in the land vegetation of the Carboniferous era (353-300 million years ago).

More Information: Minnesota Seasons

Observer: Susan Drisko

Observation Date: 4/27/2022

Observation Time: 3:35 p.m.

 Observation Location: Town-owned conservation land near Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Green False Hellebore

Scientific Name: Veratrum viride

Comments: Green false hellebore, or giant false-helleborine, is native to eastern and western (but not central) North America. It is extremely toxic, and is considered a pest plant by farmers with livestock. The species has acquired a large number of other common names within its native range, including American false hellebore, American white hellebore, bear corn, big hellebore, corn lily, devil’s bite, duck retten, itchweed, poor Annie, blue hellebore and tickleweed.

PLEASE DO NOT DIG UP WILD PLANTS.

More Information: Wikipedia

Observer: Rita Corey

Observation Date: 8/13/20

Observation Time: 1:50 p.m.

Observation Location: Rattlesnake Hill

Common Name: Halberd-leaved Tearthumb

Scientific Name: Persicaria arifolia

Comments: Halberd-leaved tearthumb has distinctly arrow-shaped leaves with outward-pointing projections at the base. The stem is covered with small downward-curving barbs that gives this small annual wetland vine its common name. A halberd is a medieval battleaxe.

More Information: Go Botany

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/30/10

Observation Time: 4:30 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Highbush blueberry

Scientific Name: Vaccinium corymbosum

Comments: The northern highbush blueberry, is a North American species of blueberry which has become a food crop of significant economic importance. It is native to eastern Canada and the eastern and southern United States, from Ontario east to Nova Scotia and south as far as Florida and eastern Texas.

More Information: Highbush Blueberry

Highbush Blueberry

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/22/18

Observation Time: 10:55 a.m.

Observation Location: Town-owned conservation land near Sandy Ridge Circle

Common Name: Honeysuckle

Scientific Name: Lonicera spp.

Comments: Bush honeysuckles are invasive deciduous shrubs that grow up to 20 feet tall. There are three species of bush honeysuckle common in the region including tartarian (Lonicera tatarica), Morrow’s (Lonicera morrowii), and Amur (Lonicera maackii). All species are similar in appearance, with simple, opposite, oval-shaped leaves. Honeysuckles bloom in May and June, producing fragrant white or pink flowers. Berries are round, fleshy and red. The center of twigs on invasive bush honeysuckles are hollow, a trait that distinguishes the invasive species from their native look-alikes.

More Information: Adirondack Park Invasive Plants

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/16/23

Observation Time: 4:05 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon WIldlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Indian Cucumber Root

Scientific Name: Medeola virginiana

Comments: Indian cucumber-root is a common perennial of the forest understory in New England. As the name suggests, the edible root tastes somewhat like cucumber.

More Information: Go Botany

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/14/09

Observation Time: 7:30 a.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm, Trustees of Reservations land

Common Name: Indian Pipe

Scientific Name: Monotropa uniflora

Comments: Indian pipe, also known as ghost plant (or ghost pipe) or corpse plant, is a herbaceous perennial plant native to temperate regions of European Russia, Asia, North America and northern South America, but with large gaps between areas. It is generally rare in occurrence.

Unlike most plants, it is white and does not contain chlorophyll. Instead of generating energy from sunlight, it is parasitic, more specifically a myco-heterotroph. Its hosts are certain fungi that are mycorrhizal with trees, meaning it ultimately gets its energy from photosynthetic trees. Since it is not dependent on sunlight to grow, it can grow in very dark environments as in the understory of dense forest. It is often associated with beech trees. The complex relationship that allows this plant to grow also makes propagation difficult.

More Information: Wikipedia

Indian Pipe

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/23/19

Observation Time: 10:45 a.m.

Observation Location: Billings Loop Botanical Trail

Common Name: Indian Pipe

Scientific Name: Monotropa uniflora

Comments: Indian pipe, also known as ghost plant (or ghost pipe) or corpse plant, is a herbaceous perennial plant native to temperate regions of European Russia, Asia, North America and northern South America, but with large gaps between areas. It is generally rare in occurrence.

Unlike most plants, it is white and does not contain chlorophyll. Instead of generating energy from sunlight, it is parasitic, more specifically a myco-heterotroph. Its hosts are certain fungi that are mycorrhizal with trees, meaning it ultimately gets its energy from photosynthetic trees. Since it is not dependent on sunlight to grow, it can grow in very dark environments as in the understory of dense forest. It is often associated with beech trees. The complex relationship that allows this plant to grow also makes propagation difficult.

More Information: Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/26/10

Observation Time: 3:20 p.m.

Observation Location: headwaters of Beaver Brook

Common Name: Indian Pipe

Scientific Name: Monotropa uniflora

Comments: Indian pipe, also known as ghost plant (or ghost pipe) or corpse plant, is a herbaceous perennial plant native to temperate regions of European Russia, Asia, North America and northern South America, but with large gaps between areas. It is generally rare in occurrence.

Unlike most plants, it is white and does not contain chlorophyll. Instead of generating energy from sunlight, it is parasitic, more specifically a myco-heterotroph. Its hosts are certain fungi that are mycorrhizal with trees, meaning it ultimately gets its energy from photosynthetic trees. Since it is not dependent on sunlight to grow, it can grow in very dark environments as in the understory of dense forest. It is often associated with beech trees. The complex relationship that allows this plant to grow also makes propagation difficult.

More Information: Wikipedia

Indian Pipe

 

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 9/4/20

Observation Time: 1:20 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm

Common Name: Indian Pipe

Scientific Name: Monotropa uniflora

Comments: Indian pipe, also known as ghost plant (or ghost pipe) or corpse plant, is a herbaceous perennial plant native to temperate regions of European Russia, Asia, North America and northern South America, but with large gaps between areas. It is generally rare in occurrence.

Unlike most plants, it is white and does not contain chlorophyll. Instead of generating energy from sunlight, it is parasitic, more specifically a myco-heterotroph. Its hosts are certain fungi that are mycorrhizal with trees, meaning it ultimately gets its energy from photosynthetic trees. Since it is not dependent on sunlight to grow, it can grow in very dark environments as in the understory of dense forest. It is often associated with beech trees. The complex relationship that allows this plant to grow also makes propagation difficult.

More Information: Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 10/7/10

Observation Time: 3:15 p.m.

Observation Location: end of Lee Road

Common Name: Japanese Barberry

Scientific Name: Berberis thunbergii

Comments: This specimen was a few yards beyond the end of Lee Road near the Atlantic White Cedar Swamp drainage ditch. Japanese barberry is often planted for hedges, and easily spreads to natural areas, as this specimen evidently did.

“In recent years the plant has been recognized as an invasive species in parts of the eastern United States; it is avoided by deer and has been replacing native species. Further, the plant raises the pH of the soil and affects its nitrogen levels. In Canada its cultivation is prohibited as the species can act as a host for Puccinia graminis (black rust), a rust disease of wheat. Currently there are breeding and selection programs aimed at producing cultivars that are either sterile or produce relatively little seed.” Wikipedia

More Information: Wikipedia

Japanese Barberry

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 7/12/20

Observation Time: 6:45 p.m.

Observation Location: along Gavins Pond Road

Common Name: Oriental Bittersweet

Scientific Name: Celastrus orbiculatus

Comments: This non-native invasive species comes from Asia. It grows as a vine that smothers plants and can topple trees due to its weight.

It was introduced into the United States around 1860 as an ornamental plant. In fall, it produces attractive red and orange berry-like fruit. The stems are cut and used for decoration, which unfortunately facilitates its spread.

Here’s a short video explaining how to get rid of Oriental Bittersweet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRplW9_UhKg

More Information: USDA and Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/26/10

Observation Time: 5:15 p.m.

Observation Location: Beaver Brook headwaters area

Common Name: Partridgeberry

Scientific Name: Mitchella repens

Comments: Called “noon kie oo nah yeah” in the Mohawk language.

More Information: US Forest Service

Partridgeberry

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/23/18

Observation Time: 9:35 a.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm (TTOR)

Common Name: Poison Ivy

Scientific Name: Toxicodendron radicans

Comments: Everyone should learn to identify poison ivy and avoid contact with its glossy, notched leaves. As both its common name and its scientific name suggest, the triplicate leaves of this plant can cause an intensely itchy rash that lasts for weeks. Jewelweed, which often grows near poison ivy, is also an antidote for poison ivy.

Poison ivy is often seen in disturbed areas along roads and paths, but it can also climb up trees as a thick vine. When ripe, the white fruits are a favorite food of many migrant and game birds, as well as white-tailed deer. The seeds are adapted for sprouting after digestion softens the seed coat.

More Information: Go Botany

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/25/23

Observation Time: 6:45 a.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary (wetland boardwalk)

Common Name: Poison Sumac

Scientific Name: Toxicodendron vernix

Comments: Everyone should learn to identify poison sumac and avoid contact with it. As both its common name and its scientific name suggest, the leaves of this plant can cause an itchy rash.

Poison sumac is often found in marshy areas.

More Information: Healthline

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/29/14

Observation Time: 11:30 a.m.

Observation Location: Borderland State Park

Common Name: Purple pitcherplant

Scientific Name: Sarracenia purpurea

Comments: This carnivorous plant captures and digests hapless insects.

More Information: Harvard Forest

Purple Pitcherplant

Purple Pitcherplant

Purple Pitcherplant

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 4/13/13

Observation Time: 5:50 p.m.

Observation Location: near Gavins Pond

Common Name: Pussy Willow

Scientific Name: Salix discolor

Comments: The fuzzy nubs that appear on pussy willows in early spring are actually flowers just before they fully bloom. The species most commonly called pussy willow in the Northeast, Salix discolor, is a small, shrubby species of willow that can be found dotting wetlands and moist woods throughout much of North America.

More Information: Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/9/19

Observation Time: 4:05 p.m.

Observation Location: trail near Brook Road

Common Name: Three-leaved Rattlesnake Root

Scientific Name: Nabalus trifoliolatus

Comments: The leaves of this species of rattlesnake root look quite different from the arrowhead-shaped leaves of other kinds of rattlesnake root.

More Information: GoBotany

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/9/19

Observation time: 2:50 p.m.

Observation Location: along trail near Brook Road

Common Name: Roundleaf Greenbriar

Scientific Name: Smilax rotundifolia

Comments: Greenbriar vines, often found near wetlands, have glossy, rounded leaves and large, sharp thorns. The tips of the vines are edible.

More information: Marblehead Conservancy

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/23/23

Observation Time: 7:00 a.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Sapphire Berry

Scientific Name: Synplocos paniculata

Comments: Sapphire Berry is a non-native shrub. Since it is a non-native species that spreads and displaces native plants, the specimen shown in the photo will be removed.

More Information: Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/17/20

Observation Time: 10:10 a.m.

Observation Location: woods near Gavins Pond

Common Name: Sarsaparilla

Scientific Name: Aralia nudicaulis

Comments: On a whim, I decided to photograph a random plant along the trail in the woods. A friend helped me identify it, and it turned out to have a story!

Wild sarsaparilla is a 1-2 foot tall shrub common to the forest understories of southern New England. It produces tiny white flowers in spherical clusters beneath the compound leaves, which ripen into blue-black berries in mid-summer. The rhizome of wild sarsaparilla has a sweet, aromatic taste, and sometimes has substituted for sassafras in the making of home-made root beer.

More Information: Go Botany

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 4/16/19

Observation Time: 1:50 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Skunk Cabbage

Scientific Name: Symplocarpus foetidus

Comments: Skunk cabbages are among the first plants to emerge in early spring. They can maintain an internal temperature significantly warmer than the surrounding air – as much as 15-35 degrees warmer – by consuming carbohydrates stored in their fleshy rhizomes. The warmth they generate helps in attracting cold-blooded, early-emerging pollinating insects in early spring when temperatures are typically quite chilly.

More Information: National Park Service

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/24/10

Observation Time: 3:40 p.m.

Observation Location: Beaver Brook near tennis courts

Common Name: Skunk cabbage

Scientific Name: Symplocarpus foetidus

Comments: Tearing a leaf produces a pungent but not harmful odor, the source of the plant’s common name; it is also foul smelling when it blooms. The plant is not poisonous to the touch. The foul odor attracts pollinators, such as scavenging flies, stoneflies, and bees. The odor in the leaves may also serve to discourage large animals from disturbing or damaging this plant which grows in soft wetland soils.

Eastern skunk cabbage is notable for its ability to generate temperatures of up to 15–35 °C (27–63 °F) above air temperature by cyanide resistant cellular respiration in order to melt its way through frozen ground, placing it among a small group of thermogenic plants. Even though it flowers while there is still snow and ice on the ground, it is successfully pollinated by early insects that also emerge at this time. Carrion-feeding insects that are attracted by the scent may be doubly encouraged to enter the spathe because it is warmer than the surrounding air, fueling pollination.

Eastern skunk cabbage has contractile roots which contract after growing into the earth. This pulls the stem of the plant deeper into the mud, so that the plant in effect grows downward, not upward. Each year, the plant grows deeper into the earth, so that older plants are practically impossible to dig up. They reproduce by hard, pea-sized seeds which fall in the mud and are carried away by animals or by floods.

More Information: Wikipedia

Skunk Cabbage

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 6/13/20

Observation Time: 6:15 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary

Common Name: Spreading Dogbane

Scientific Name: Apocynum androsaemifolium

Comments: Spreading dogbane is a showy member of the dogbane family (Apocynaceae) that is found in nearly all of the 50 states except some in the southeast. The common name, dogbane, and the genus name, “Apocynum,” meaning “away from dog,” are testaments to the toxic nature of this plant, not only to dogs, but to humans, livestock, and other mammals as well. The plant is poisonous due to the cardiac glycosides it contains.

Spreading dogbane is common in North America, and is widespread across most of the United States and Canada, and in Alaska, California, and northeast Mexico.

More Information: U.S. Forest Service

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 7/25/10

Observation Time: 11:10 a.m.

Observation Location: Gavins Pond Road

Common Name: Staghorn Sumac

Scientific Name: Rhus typhina

Comments: Staghorn sumac grows in gardens, lawns, the edges of forests, and wasteland. It can grow under a wide array of conditions, but is most often found in dry and poor soil on which other plants cannot survive. Some landscapers remove all but the top branches to create a “crown” effect in order to resemble a small palm tree.

More Information: Wikipedia

Staghorn Sumac

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 7/12/20

Observation Time: 7:15 p.m.

Observation Location: along Gavins Pond Road

Common Name: Summer Grape

Scientific Name: Vitis aestivalis

Comments: Vitis aestivalis, the summer grape, or pigeon grape, is a species of grape native to eastern North America from southern Ontario east to Maine, west to Oklahoma, and south to Florida and Texas. It is a vigorous vine, growing to 10 m or more high in trees.

Unlike most other species in genus Vitis, V. aestivalis does not propagate well through dormant cuttings. This has been a limiting factor for its use in commercial viticulture despite the species’ promising oenological characteristics.

More Information: Wikipedia

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/23/10

Observation Time: 3:00 p.m.

Observation Location: near Gavins Pond

Common Name: Sweetfern

Scientific Name: Comptonia peregrina

Comments: Sweetfern leaves are very aromatic. Edible fruit ripens in July and August. Sweetfern partners with actinomycete fungus that live in its root nodules to fix atmospheric nitrogen, so it can flourish in infertile soil. The soil in the area near Gavins Pond is relatively infertile because fill for the nearby Highway I-95 was taken from this area. It appears on some maps as “Sand Pits.”

The common name, sweetfern, is confusing, as it is not a fern. It is a deciduous shrub, growing to a maximum of five feet tall.

More Information: Wikipedia

Sweetfern

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 9/7/20

Observation Time: 5:30 p.m.

Observation Location: Conservation land at Morse & Lakeview

Common Name: Wild Grapes

Scientific Name: Vitis spp.

Comments: Wild grapevines are native to eastern North America.

I smelled these wild grapes before I saw the grapevine laden with purple fruit climbing a tree beside the trail.

Be careful not to confuse wild grapes, which are edible, with Canadian Moon Seeds, which are poisonous.

More Information: Identifying Wild Grapes or Gardening Knowhow

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 7/7/18

Observation Time: 12:50 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm (TTOR)

Common Name: Wild Onion or Crow Garlic

Scientific Name: Allium vineale 

Comments: Instead of flowers, they have bulbils, which are miniature sprouts not unlike garlic cloves.

More Information: Wikipedia or GoBotany

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 10/2/13

Observation Time: 12:15 p.m.

Observation Location: woods near Beaver Brook

Common Name: Wild Sarsaparilla

Scientific Name: Aralia nudicaulis

Comments: You might know Sarsaparilla as a sweet soft drink that was first introduced in the 19th century.  Wild sarsaparilla is a common plant found in the northern and eastern parts of  North America and grows on creeping underground stems.  This plant was used as food when hunting or during wars because it was so sustaining.  Wild sarsaparilla had a much wider use among native people because of its many medicinal purposes that treated everything from sores to toothaches.

While going through old photos on my computer, I came across this photo of yellow leaves. I opened an app on my cell phone called Seek by iNaturalist and pointed the phone at my computer monitor. The app immediately identified the leaves as wild sarsaparilla.

More Information: Stories from the Wigwam

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 4/27/23

Observation Time: 3:30 p.m.

Observation Location: Moose Hill Farm (TTOR) along dirt road under high tension wires

Common Name: Wild strawberry

Scientific Name: Fragaria virginiana

Comments: Found in patches in fields and dry openings, this plant produces tasty strawberries.

More Information: Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center