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Gardening With Flowers
Flowers And Plants - Natures Garden:
Wild Rosemary; March Holy Rose; Water Andromeda; Moorwort

Creeping Wintergreen ; Checkerberry ; Partridge-berry ; Mountain Tea; Ground Tea, Deer, Box, or Spice Berry

Black or High-bush Huckleberry; Whortleberry

Creeping Snowberry

Star-flower ; Chickweed-Wintergreen ; Star Anemone

Indian Hemp; Amy-root

Whorled or Green-flowered Milkweed (Asclepias verticillata) Milkweed family

Wild Potato Vine; Man-of-the-Earth;

Gronovius' or Common Dodder; Strangleweed ; Love Vine; Angel's Hair

Virginia Water-leaf

Read More Articles On Flowers

Flowers - Star-flower

( Originally Published 1916 )


(Trientalis Americana) Primrose family

Flowers—White, solitary, or a few rising on slender, wiry foot-stalks above a whorl of leaves. Calyx of 5 to 9 (usually 7) narrow sepals. Corolla wheel-shaped, 1/2 in. across or less, deeply cut into (usually) 7 tapering, spreading, petal-like segments. Stem: A long horizontal rootstock, sending up smooth stem-like branches 3 to 9 in. high, usually with a scale or two below. (Trientalis = one-third of a foot, the usual height of a plant.) Leaves : 5 to 10, in a whorl at summit; thin, tapering at both ends, of unequal size, 1 1/2 to 4 in. long.

Preferred Habitat—Moist shade of woods and thickets.

Flowering Season—May—June.

Distribution—From Virginia and Illinois far north.

Is any other blossom poised quite so airily above its whorl of leaves as the delicate, frosty-white little star-flower? It is none of the anemone kin, of course, in spite of one of its misleading folk-names; but only the wind-flower has a similar lightness and grace. No nectar rewards the small bee and fly visitors; they get pollen only. Those coming from older blossoms to a newly opened one leave some f the vitalizing dust clinging to them on the moist and sticky stigma, which will wither to prevent self-fertilization before the flower's own curved anthers mature and shed their grains. Sometimes, when the blossoms do not run on schedule time, or the insects are not flying in stormy weather, this well-laid plan may gang a-gley. An occasional lapse matters little; it is perpetual self-fertilization that Nature abhors.



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