mellowtigger (
mellowtigger) wrote2009-06-24 09:33 am
Entry tags:
poppies
I went outside this morning (before the drizzle started) and saw that the poppies have opened. What started from a single red california poppy left over from the previous residents has now grown into two small areas full of them. (One of those areas was unintentional. The seeds looked just like the strawberry-spinach, so I threw down a lot of them this year. Oops.)
I see that I have both pink and red. How is it that they end up looking square?


I don't suppose anyone would know what this plant is? I dug it up this morning because of the crowding, but I might rescue some seeds if it has an interesting story to it.


The flowers look almost vicious.
I see that I have both pink and red. How is it that they end up looking square?
I don't suppose anyone would know what this plant is? I dug it up this morning because of the crowding, but I might rescue some seeds if it has an interesting story to it.
The flowers look almost vicious.
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may I be a tiny bit pedantic?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Poppy
What you have is a true poppy, probably a Laciniatum cultivar of Papaver somniferum.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papaver_somniferum
The second plant is common milkweed, Asclepia syriaca, which is very invasive, but the flowers have an exquisite scent at dusk, and the seeds are of course pretty interesting.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asclepias_syriaca
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When the plants don't get as much sunlight, the flower ends up being smaller and less ornate. Closer to the "california poppy" photo, but still too ornate in the center of the flower, obviously. I guess it really is the other kind. I think I'll call it a "garden poppy", as "the illegal kind" doesn't seem nearly as suburban. :)
Milkweek, interesting. I wouldn't have thought to look for that name. Out in West Texas we used the term milkweed for a very different plant. (But what can you expect. We use the term locust instead of cicadas.)
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What does "milkweed" mean in TX?
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In West Texas, the leaves of the plant were not as big as this one's. At it hugged the ground closely rather than branching upwards like this. Break one of the stems, though, and it would produce a large drop of milky white fluid. "Milkweed". :)
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