Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Summer Wildflowers

Mid-July is the season for summer wildflowers, those usually beautiful flowers that some call 'weeds'.  They deserve a lot of credit though, since they grow all on their own, unlike the heavily pampered flowers we grow in our gardens.

Buttercups are one of the first here, and one of my favourites.  The town left these growing in a nearby ditch for a few days til they were mowed down.

Bright yellow Bird's-foot Trefoil spread all the way up the Collingwood Street hill.  Here I was literally only a few hours before the mowers!

This is one of those nasty invasive plants that is spreading widely here, Wild Chervil.  You can see it in ditches and along field edges all around here.

And this is Dames-rocket, easily confused with Phlox.  But this one has four petals, Phlox has five.

This is the remarkable seed-head of the Goat's-beard, like a giant dandelion seed.

This scraggly looking plant is Sow Thistle, taken in front of the brick wall of the new Long Term Care Home.

This pretty purple bloom is Knapweed, a plant with tough wiry stems that spreads too easily, but with a very pretty flower.

My favourite among all these is the Chicory, such a gentle blue.



11 comments:

  1. Your summer flowers, a real boost to me as we languish, for want of a better word, in winter. Not much to see in our garden, snowdrops galore, early winter cheer, in pure white or some with a flash of gold. Love the ditch photos.

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  2. A very nice collection of photographs.
    Those buttercups look amazing.

    All the best Jan

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  3. gorgeous!! and i could not agree most!! no fuss, no muss and they grow beautifully all on their own. i like that they reseed and come back, often for years!! pretty photos today!!

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  4. Love all the summer flowers. :)

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  5. I confuse Dames rocket and Fireweed.

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  6. I love lots of "weeds". Sometimes I wish we "americans" weren't so enamored of our "grass" lawns but would let other low-lying natural, native plants grow there instead, clover and other plants that support bees and birds. Sure would cost us a lot less for "lawn" care. Those buttercups are lovely.

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  7. We had an absolutely gorgeous ditch here a few years ago. When I returned a few days later, it had been mowed, and it has never been the same since then.

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  8. My thoughts totally agree with your opening lines about wildflowers being thought of as weeds. Along my morning walking road grow pretty much all of the flowers you have listed, and maybe a few more. Purple Vetch, Daisies, and Canada Thistles comes to mind.

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  9. That is terrible to see the flowers mowed down.

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  10. Unfortunately, if it is not in a garden around here, it gets mowed before we can see it.
    Stay Safe and Enjoy the beauty of mature.

    It's about time.

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  11. Perhaps I'm wrong, but I believe that none of the flowers you photographed are native -- most are really pretty though.

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