Archive for Wildflowers: Yellow

NYC Wildflower Week

NYC Wildflower Week . . .

The native perennial, Yellow Wood Sorrel (Oxalis stricta), is just one of the many wildflowers that adds a glow to Manhattan during the month of May. (photo taken May 13, 2010)

The 2010 NYC Wildflower Week was celebrated between May 1 and 9.

The NYCWW sponsored numerous free events on various wildflower and gardening topics, including botanical walks and classes in the cultivation and cooking of native species. Several were hosted at Union Square with others spread across the five boroughs of the city.  The organizers supplemented the activities with an excellent website loaded with resources for those interested in both wildflowers and New York City gardens. The mission statement of the NYCWW, available also on the website, sums up their intentions well . . .

“NYC Wildflower Week presents a full week of free events to showcase the 53,000 acres of open space and 778 native plants in NYC’s 5 boroughs. The goal of the week is simple: to encourage New Yorkers to get to know the nature in their own back yard and to inspire them to protect this natural heritage for future generations.  In 2010 we are transforming the organization from an all-volunteer one-week annual event into a full-time, year round resource that empowers all New Yorkers to cultivate and preserve a landscape that is beautiful, sustainable and ecologically sound.”

More information and resources are archived on the NYCWW website. Here is the URL . . .

http://www.nycwildflowerweek.org/

Meanwhile, The New York Times sponsored a call for photo submissions in conjunction with NYC Wildflower Week. The May 6 post of the City Room Blog – ”Let’s Create a Magic Garden” — stated . . .

“And just as wild plants make this most built-up of cities a more habitable place, we are looking to florify City Room”

Like potted plants spaced outside of an office tower entrance, or flower boxes adorning the facade of a brownstone tenament, this blog post injected a wash of color into the online component of the newspaper once known as “The Gray Lady” . . .

“Let’s Create a Magic Garden”

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/05/06/lets-create-a-magic-garden/

I considered participating myself and, after some deliberation, decided to shelve my ego and submission plans. Wildflowers of the West Village is a forum best designed to report and comment on the intersection of Nature and New York City, and so I therefore recused myself and focused instead as a journalist in order to report on this good urban wildflower news.

The results of the submission call culminated in a May 13 post on the City Room Blog — “A City in Bloom” — that took the form of a slide show. The City Room Blog editors did bend their own rules and allow some domesticated flower photos. They claimed the season was still too early for a variety of wildflowers. Perhaps I should have directed them to Wildflowers of the West Village for some reference points. Such is the internal debate of a nature writer trying to write, promote the writing, while staying at the same time somewhat objective and out of the subject’s light.

I’ll sign off here and allow the featured photos themselves speak for the Wildflowers of the West Village, and for all five boroughs of New York.

“A City in Bloom”

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/05/13/a-city-in-bloom/?scp=1&sq=city%20in%20bloom&st=cse

– rPs 05 28 2010

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Wine and Dandy

Wine and Dandy . . .

A common dandelion (Taraxacum oficinale) grows in the median strip garden of Houston Street and proves the plant likes a bed of ivy as much as a lawn of grass. (photo taken 04 27 2010)

Few wildflowers are as familiar as the common dandelion (Taraxacum oficinale). Each stage of the plant’s life cycle offers an iconic visual image: the rosette patterns of toothed leaves spreading out from cracks in a sidewalk; the lush golden blooms  that can pepper the spring green sward of a backyard almost overnight; the spherical, almost alien, parachute ball of seeds suspended on a swan’s neck of stem.

The common dandelion is a tenacious perennial as well as an herbaceous plant of the genus Asteraceae.  The plant emigrated from Eurasia, is now found in every American state, along nearly every street and green space in the West Village, and is so widespread that its distribution is nearly worldwide, or cosmopolitan. While a weed in the sense that the plant grows quickly and almost anywhere, the herbaceous qualities make it too useful to either ignore or eradicate outright.

Old World gardeners in France observed a resemblance between the plant’s serrated leaves and a lion’s tooth, and from there the popular name “Dent-a-Lion” was born. Other Europeans have embraced the greens, which can be sautéed in olive oil, and they now reside beside escarole in the pantheon of traditional Italian cooking. Urban green grocers, including those found throughout the West Village, often sell new dandelions in spring when the leaves are bright and tender. Raw, the lion’s tooth sits well in a salad.  Anyone who enjoys endive and other slightly bitter lettuces will also savor dandelions. Their flavor blends particularly well with the sweet acidity of balsamic vinegar.

Dandelion blossoms have a culinary use as well. These can be fermented with other fruits into a country wine, a libation that has even inspired the title of a literary classic: Ray Bradbury’s novel Dandelion Wine. Bradbury’s literary art imitated his own reflective life story about one of his boyhood summers in the Midwest. Dandelion wine enters the story through the main character’s grandfather. His love of the dandelion, and his wine recipe, act as a metaphor, a way for the writer to channel his boyhood and place that poetic experience into a prosaic bottle.

One of my read and reread childhood books was a paperback copy of Bradbury’s novel. The front cover pictured a boy standing in an idyllic field; an image that sums up some of my own best memories of childhood. I grew up in the Fineview section of Pittsburgh, atop one of the many hills overlooking the city’s downtown – The Point – the confluence of the rivers Monongahela and Allegheny that forms the Ohio. The surrounding hilltops remain too steep to build upon, and these undeveloped tracts of hilly woods gave my generation of kids plenty of freedom and access to nature with the city skyline still visible through the trees. I can trace my birth as an urban naturalist to this time and place.

Countless hours were spent with the dandelions in my yard, or across the street in my mother’s well-weeded vegetable garden, where I would read and field study plants and animals. Often I would get more ambitious and head farther afield down onto the hilly slopes of “the hollows” where more birds, mammals, hardwood trees, and wildflowers could be viewed and studied, often in complete solitude if I wanted it. My friends who preferred baseball and kickball called me “Nature Boy” back then, but they were always interested when I returned with new specimens and sketches.

My person was always fully equipped during these excursions. I carried a junior naturalist’s tool kit that included field guides, a pair of binoculars for birds, containers for insects or other temporary collectibles, and a notebook to document the time, place, and scientific names of my sightings. My favorite item was my folding magnifying glass, which I used especially for plants. Botanical specimens fascinated me. Plants did not move, which allowed for a quiet, thorough examination that the fleeting flight of birds and butterflies could not provide. This contemplation of the form cultivated my interest in aesthetics. The colors and symmetries of natural plant forms were a seed that later grew into a parallel fascination with the visual arts and architecture. The still life, the landscape, the use of organic motifs on building facades: the phrase “It’s all there.” sums up the point, succinctly.

Now contemplate the common dandelion’s bloom under a lens: this exercise reveals the flower is a composite consisting of numerous compacted florets. These give the dandelion bloom its richness of color, largesse of pollen, and that lush quality of depth one can sink his or her nose into.

Next, after the bloom has gone to seed, contemplate the spherical head. The fluffy white ball consists of numerous seeds, each corresponding to one of the earlier golden florets. The individual seed is attached to its own parachute and, after going airborne, the chute will actually release the seed once it is bumped or comes to a landing. This organic high technology transport system is the secret to the plant’s pervasive success.

A trio of parachute balls display the common dandelion's symmetry (and geometry) on the Hudson River Park lawn. (photo taken 04 30 2010)

Tasty and attractive, the dandelion should not be viewed merely as an invasive weed that produces golden blemishes on the face of a green grass lawn. The dandelion is classified as a “companion plant” – a species that can aid in the cultivation of another. A common example of this relationship can be seen in the cultivation of clover on fallow farm fields. The clover grows quickly and through the course of an off year produces nitrogen and other nutrients that replenish soil depleted by monocrop plants like corn. The dandelion, like the clover, is a “beneficial weed” – one that is also beautiful and, thanks to a great American author, storied.

– rPs 05 07 2010

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The Fly Fisher’s Flower

The Fly Fisher’s Flower . . .

Marsh marigolds (Caltha pulustris) grow and bloom beside the cul-de-sac that connects Horatio and Jane Streets. (photo taken April 14, 2010)

My interest in wildflowers grew like a branch off my main outdoor recreation of fly fishing. This outdoor sport projects a person into the spaces where wild things are and, over time, even the most focused angler becomes aware of more than the fish and act of fishing. There is the bird life that sings and sometimes indicates where the fish might be holding, the insects that the fly fisher imitates with hook-bound feather, fur, and thread, the trees that give voice to passing breezes, and then there are the patches of color that punctuate the bucolic scene: the wildflowers.

Trout season in most American states begins traditionally at the start of April just as the first plants are beginning to bloom. An evolving series of new and different flowering species will add their own color along streams and around ponds throughout the forward course of the fishing season. These provide the fly fisher with more than beauty.  Taking a cue from Phenology, the branch of science that connects climate with periodic biological life cycle phenomena, the predominant flower of the moment provides the hatch matcher important clues about which insects are active – or “hatching” – and they therefore choose to tie and fish their fly patterns accordingly.

Of all the plants fly fishers encounter out in the field, the marsh marigold (Caltha pulustris) is the most iconic. This is the angler’s first flower, the one encountered at the start of trout season. Known also as “cowslip” and “buttercup” in the vernacular, this species is a native plant with its own identity. The marsh marigold pushes through the leaf litter as early as March, grows in thick bunches of vigorous, heart-shaped leaves. The bright yellow blooms, which are actually the plant’s sepals, appear quickly thereafter and have the ability to carpet brookside glades with a mellow gold that glows even on cloudy days.

One can easily differentiate the marsh marigold from the true cowslip (Primula veris), which is found in Europe, and the buttercup, which may be any one of a number of immigrant varieties of the genus Ranunculus. The European cowslip grows from a rosette base of radial leaves that supports a stem that holds clusters of small, yellow, bell-shaped flowers. The Ranunculus, especially the common creeping buttercup (Ranunculus repens), bears a similar bloom to the marsh marigold, but possess a very different leaf pattern, one that is deeply lobed and veined.

I was not sure I would get to see my favorite fishing season flower this year. There are no trout streams flowing through Manhattan, nor are there any parks in the West Village that contain wild, untended woodlot wetlands. My wife and I travelled to her family’s southeastern Pennsylvania home for the holidays, so we squeezed in the Monday after Easter weekend and spent that morning wading and fly casting along a little freestone stream that flows within walking distance of her parents’ home. There we watched a pair of kingfishers, always a good omen for the angler, circle around in a call and response mating dance. I was delighted also to find the creek’s surrounding woods carpeted with thousands of Caltha pulustris blooming like little suns. Bathed in morning light, covered in dew, poised at the peak of their collective display, these marsh marigolds allowed me to see with my own eyes how the phrase “dripping with color” came to be coined.

Back in Manhattan, I continued my morning walks around the West Village. The final stretch usually finds me, coffee-to-go in hand, strolling north along the promenade of Hudson River Park, or else on the opposite side, walking along the West Side Highway. Both vantage points provide a fine, wide-angle view of the Jersey City skyline that leads south toward the distant silhouettes of the Statue of Liberty and the twin suspension peaks of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.

When I reach the front of Jane Street I stick to the right in the shadow of the buildings. The one situated on the northeast corner is of particular note. Red brick and limestone in construction, the facade boasts a prominent limestone cornerstone just above head level. The left edge facing the Hudson River reads “A.D.” and the right edge that faces south reads “1907” – This is the Jane Street Hotel, designed by William A. Boring, the architect of Ellis Island’s immigrant station. The hotel’s interior was designed with a nautical theme and, in 1912, accommodated survivors rescued from the doomed luxury liner, The Titanic. I imagine those folks – though happy to be alive and comfortably on land – may not have appreciated the décor quite so much, given their experience.

Across from the hotel is a narrow green space that separates the busy highway from the quiet cul-de-sac that links the front of Jane and Horatio Streets. The day after I returned from the Pennsylvania holiday, I broke from my usual route for no other reason but a spontaneous change of pace and place. Instead of walking by the cornerstone of the Jane Street Hotel, I hung a left toward the green space. My decision, made practically on autopilot, rewarded me when I began to walk on the brickwork between the plantings. There, among the rose bushes, nestled within the leaf litter, was a scattered colony of marsh marigolds; my favorite spring wildflower, the fly fisher’s flower, growing and glowing in the shadow of the adjacent hotel.

I had indeed discovered gold . . .

The setting sun creates an impressionist glow of marsh marigold beside Manhattan's West Side Highway. (photo taken April 12, 2010)

– rPs 04 15 2010

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