our answer to prairie smoke

Prairie smokeA plant that was a big hit with many of the blog­gers who made it to Chicago for the recent Gar­den Blog­gers Spring Fling was prairie smoke, Geum tri­folium. I didn’t make it to Chicago, and I’ve never seen prairie smoke in per­son. But it looked like I’d have been as struck with it as all the blog­gers who wit­nessed its ter­rific puff­ball seed­heads in real life.

Photo to the right: Gary A. Mon­roe, US For­est Ser­vice [ source ]

fallugia-paradoxa-seeds

The seed­head to the left, how­ever sim­i­lar it might appear, is not prairie smoke. Instead, it’s Apache plume, Fal­lu­gia para­doxa, the Southwest’s alter­na­tive to the Midwest’s puffball.

Flow­ers and seed­pods are great ways to tell which plants are related. Just look­ing at the seeds you could prob­a­bly guess that the two plants are related, with both of them belong­ing to the rose fam­ily. You can see the rose resem­blance even more in the flow­ers in the fol­low­ing photo.

fallugia-paradoxa-flowers-and-plumes

I pho­tographed these ten days ago in the park­ing lot of Las Pil­i­tas Nurs­ery, where they were near their peak. If I had more space I might have brought some of these home with me…

The shrubs grow about four feet tall and a lit­tle wider, with whitish stems and nar­row rosemary-like leaves. The Jep­son Hor­ti­cul­tural data­base states that Fal­lu­gia para­doxa “grows espe­cially well in zones 14, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, and 23 and also in zones 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, and 24.” No plant is per­fect, unfor­tu­nately. The Native Plant Data­base of the Lady­bird John­son Wild­flower Cen­ter gives you a heads-up: “It is good for ero­sion con­trol because of drought-tolerance and aggres­sive seed­ing. It can, how­ever, become too aggres­sive in opti­mum conditions.”

All those cool seeds must go some­where.

June 17 2009 | Categories: gardeningplant profiles | Tags: | 5 Comments »