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#16
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Pat Kiewicz[_2_];881594']Don Wiss said:
On Fri, 26 Mar 2010, mleblanca wrote: On Mar 25, 1:46 pm, Don Wiss wrote: I still have a batch of pictures from a years ago Wildman Steve Brill foraging walk that I have not yet put on the web. This means this batch is not yet merged into myhttp://foragingpictures.com/album. Before I can process them there are four pictures I need to identify. They are shown at: http://donwiss.com/PP-20060701.htm What are they? It might help to know where you saw these plants: country, state etc. Yea, I should have made that clearer. Wildman Steve Brill only gives tours in the NYC area. These are from Prospect Park. And the date is in the URL, which means these were taken on July 1st. Perhaps if you repost the images around that time it will help (especially with #1). I think that the pokeweed and Hibiscus IDs are reliable. The first one hasn't been IDed properly yet, and the other one with pinnately compound leaves is that is not slippery elm (and not a sumac, either, in my opinion) remained to be IDed. I'm thinking that one is not a woody plant at all, but rather an herb. Possibly even something like tickseed sunflower -- a common name for several species of large Bidens -- too bad we have no sign of flowers or even buds. (But this is a rather wild guess...) Were these plants all supposed to be edible or in some other way useful? -- Pat in Plymouth MI "Vegetables are like bombs packed tight with all kinds of important nutrients..." --Largo Potter, Valkyria Chronicles email valid but not regularly monitored dont know if this helps any but might the first yellow hibiscus on the left be what your pic is? http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/43357/ cyaaaaaaaaaaa, sockiescat. |
#17
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sockiescat;881605]Pat Kiewicz[_2_];881594']Don Wiss said:
On Fri, 26 Mar 2010, mleblanca wrote: On Mar 25, 1:46 pm, Don Wiss wrote: I still have a batch of pictures from a years ago Wildman Steve Brill foraging walk that I have not yet put on the web. This means this batch is not yet merged into myhttp://foragingpictures.com/album. Before I can process them there are four pictures I need to identify. They are shown at: http://donwiss.com/PP-20060701.htm What are they? It might help to know where you saw these plants: country, state etc. Yea, I should have made that clearer. Wildman Steve Brill only gives tours in the NYC area. These are from Prospect Park. And the date is in the URL, which means these were taken on July 1st. Perhaps if you repost the images around that time it will help (especially with #1). I think that the pokeweed and Hibiscus IDs are reliable. The first one hasn't been IDed properly yet, and the other one with pinnately compound leaves is that is not slippery elm (and not a sumac, either, in my opinion) remained to be IDed. I'm thinking that one is not a woody plant at all, but rather an herb. Possibly even something like tickseed sunflower -- a common name for several species of large Bidens -- too bad we have no sign of flowers or even buds. (But this is a rather wild guess...) Were these plants all supposed to be edible or in some other way useful? -- Pat in Plymouth MI "Vegetables are like bombs packed tight with all kinds of important nutrients..." --Largo Potter, Valkyria Chronicles email valid but not regularly monitored dont know if this helps any but might the first yellow hibiscus on the left be what your pic is? http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/43357/ cyaaaaaaaaaaa, sockiescat. okay i hear it already "sockie" u dont know your left from your right lolol. i mean the thumbnail to the right --Tropical Hibiscus Fort Myers Yellow. cyaaaaaaa, sockiescat. |
#18
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Plant ID help
Don Wiss said:
I thought the first one was one of the mustard family. Now I have taken many pictures of his tours in Prospect Park. There is no plant here that he hasn't pointed out on one of his prior tours and is already in foragingpictures.com. The Hibiscus I just took on my own, as it was a pretty flower. For the first one, I had the sudden thought last night of Artemisia dracunculus (tarragon). If we are thinking mustards, though, maybe Lepidium (peppergrass). So, L. virginicum or L. ruderale...? And how about another guess--Erigeron canadensis (horseweed). They all have something of that green plumey effect with flowers buds that start out small and insignificant. -- Pat in Plymouth MI "Vegetables are like bombs packed tight with all kinds of important nutrients..." --Largo Potter, Valkyria Chronicles email valid but not regularly monitored |
#19
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Plant ID help
In article
, Pat Kiewicz wrote: Don Wiss said: I thought the first one was one of the mustard family. Now I have taken many pictures of his tours in Prospect Park. There is no plant here that he hasn't pointed out on one of his prior tours and is already in foragingpictures.com. The Hibiscus I just took on my own, as it was a pretty flower. For the first one, I had the sudden thought last night of Artemisia dracunculus (tarragon). Looks too branched and busy to me to be tarragon. http://farm-wild-fresh.com/images/tarragon.jpg If we are thinking mustards, though, maybe Lepidium (peppergrass). So, L. virginicum or L. ruderale...? And how about another guess--Erigeron canadensis (horseweed). They all have something of that green plumey effect with flowers buds that start out small and insignificant. -- "Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Arn3lF5XSUg http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Zinn/HZinn_page.html |
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