Pennywort

20160426-_DSC0094
Obolaria virginica
Gentianaceae

You know how birders keep “life lists” of their sightings? I have a life list of wildflower finds. I was delighted to add three new plants to it earlier this week, after visiting Rachel Carson Conservation Park: pinxter azalea, pennywort, and an orchid.

…and that’s about the most interesting thing I can say about pennywort. It’s a low-growing forb of moist woodlands, ranging from Texas northeast into Pennsylvania. There are no conservation issues. Obolaria is a monotypic genus (meaning there are no other species of Obolaria). I saw no other pennywort plants in the area.

“Pennywort”, by the way, is a popular name; there are quite a few plants (entirely unrelated to each other) that are called “pennywort”.

That’s all, folks. Tomorrow: the orchid. You can see a bud peeking up behind the pennywort in the photo above.

Pink!

20160421-_DSC0052

pinxter azalea, pinxterbloom,
pinxterflower, pink azalea
Rhododendron periclymenoides
(formerly R. nudiflorum)
Ericaceae

20160421-_DSC0028

 

 

About ten days ago I read that the pinxters in Rachel Carson Conservation Park were in bud. A few days later, I went to have a look, but only a few were open. A few days after that, I went back and found them fully open, glorious splashes of pink blossoms among the pale green of new leaves on other trees.

20160426-_DSC0155

There are thirty two native species of Rhododendron in the continental US. Seven of these occur in Maryland, mostly in the western counties or on the coastal plain. Three species are found in the piedmont. This species is a deciduous shrub growing to twelve feet tall (usually less). Like most ericaceous plants it prefers moist but well-drained acidic soils. At Rachel Carson you can find it near rock outcroppings and along the shore of the Hawlings River.

20160426-_DSC0054

Supposedly pinxter is a fairly common plant, but I’ve never come across it before. I’ve read that it can be found on Sugarloaf Mountain. Guess I need to get back there soon. It’s listed as endangered in New Hampshire, expoitably vulnerable in New York, threatened in Ohio, and special concern in Rhode Island.

20160426-_DSC0164

About the name…  According to  Cookies, Coleslaw, and Stoops: The Influence of Dutch on the North American Languages (Nicoline van der Sijs, Amersterdam University Press), the word “pinxter” comes from the word “pinkster”, the Dutch name for the religious festival known in English as Pentecost. You can read more about that here.

20160426-_DSC0058

The more I looked at this flower, the more fascinated I became by its structure. Note the five stamens and one very long pistil per flower. In general, plants in the Ericaceae have twice as many stamens as petals (typically ten stamens and five petals, but not always). It took awhile but I finally read that the North American azaleas are an exception to this rule, having the same number of stamens as petals.

Rachel Carson Conservation Park

20160421-_DSC0027

flowering dogwood (Cornus florida, Cornaceae)
stands out among other trees

Along the banks of the Hawlings River in northeastern Montgomery County lies a 650-acre area called the Rachel Carson Conservation Park. The park has no facilities, just a few interpretive signs and about six miles of natural-surface trails through the rolling woods and meadows.

20160421-_DSC0080

 

wood thrush (Hylocichla mustelina), often heard in deep woods but seldom seen

 

 

Among local native plant enthusiasts this park is known primarily for its pinxter flower azaleas, and that was reason enough for me to go. But I was pleasantly surprised by how nice the area is. By “nice” I mean not full of people and trash, and not over-used. I found some wonderful flowers and plants other than the azaleas, including two species that I had never seen before. This always makes for a great day but one of the species was an orchid, which catapults Rachel Carson Conservation Park to the top of my favorite places list.

Animal viewing was good, too. There was a wild turkey that I couldn’t get pictures of; I was making notes at the time and those birds move fast! There were lots of spicebush swallowtails but they didn’t sit still for more than a second.

20160426-_DSC0028

 

northern green frogs (Lithobates clamitans) [I think]

 

 

20160421-_DSC0033

 

see the pink shrub peeking out?

 

 

 

 

More about the plants in the next several days.