Category Archives: months 04-06: spring

April thru June

Spring Wildflower Walk

I bet you can guess my response to this meadow of shooting stars? (Dodecatheon or Primula)

broad-leaved shooting star, Henderson's shooting star, mosquito bills, sailor caps bloom, American cowslip, mad violets, Dodecatheon hendersonii, primula hendersonii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

C, SM & I are exploring Dean Park when I drop to my knees to check out (& photograph ) the pretty spring flowers,
I’m delighted.
SM is charmed.
C smiles indulgently & waits …

broad-leaved shooting star, Henderson's shooting star, mosquito bills, sailor caps bloom, American cowslip, mad violets, Dodecatheon hendersonii, primula hendersonii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

The vibrant magenta colours look so perky! How can these delicate cyclamen-style blooms be tough enough to survive our temperamental spring weather?

Further down the trail there’s pollen everywhere – in the air, along path edges… even settling on plants & making them look different.  At first glance I thought I’d found a special variegated salal.  Check out the leaf with pollen & without:

I’m not sure exactly where the pollen is from. There’s so much of it I figure it’s got to be from the most dominant species of tree in this park.  Perhaps the douglas fir?

mice tails inside douglas fir cone, Pseudotsuga menziesii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Cones mottle the ground.  SM confirms they’re douglas fir.  She tells me a story about the little mice that hide inside the cones, with only their tails poking out between the layers.  Pretty cute, eh?

In another small clearing is a meadow of fawn lily  (erythronium).

white fawnn lily meadow, Erythronium oregonum ,garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

I’m used to seeing them in a more open meadow at Beacon Hill Park, so it’s nice to see them prosper in the dappled shade of the forest edge too.  Of course, I need a closer look.  This time C smiles indulgently but continues on his way.  (He’s here for the fresh air & exercise).

white fawn lily bloom Erythronium oregonum garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

It’s a bit tough to see into the face of the fawn lily because of its nodding head but I reckon that is its way to protect those private bits from the occasional downpour. Can’t you just imagine the bees taking refuge under a fawn lily umbrella?  Keeping company with a fairy or two ….

yellow violet, viola, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

There are many wild violets growing in our garden, some pink and some blue. Years ago I heard about a  wild yellow violet.   I finally saw a small clump in a Washington State Park last year.  But that’s pretty much it. Today  SM points out one to me.   It is so tiny!   I’d easily have missed it completely, walking right past none the wiser.   It’s so nice to see them growing locally.

Fairy Slipper Calypso bulbosa orchid, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Then SM spies a wild orchid.
                    OMG !!!

I’ve only ever heard of the fairy slipper (Calypso bulbosa).
We’ve got to invite SM along on our hikes more often.     🙂

I’m running around with the camera – up & down…  this angle & that one…
 Bucket list moment !!

C misses the entire thing.

western trillium patch, Trillium Ovatum, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

He’s down the trail. When he comes across another native plant he knows I’ll be excited about, he decides to sit until I catch up…

Trillium Is not your typical flower.   When the bloom first opens, the petals are white. Over time they turn pink.  It’s two plants in the space of one.

western trillium, Trillium Ovatum, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins
western trillium bloom, Trillium Ovatum, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Trillium is from the Latin ‘in 3’s’.

  • 3 leaves circle the stem.
  • 3 sepals frame the flower
  • 3 petals highlight the bloom
  • the stamens are set in groups of 3.
  • there are 3 chambers to the seed pod

I reckon it looks slightly alien.

With so much interest in the groundcover, I’ve barely looked up at all.

salmonberry shrub coming into leaf, Rubus spectabilis, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

SM asks me about a tall, rangy shrub just coming into leaf.  This time I’m the one to help with ID.  Salmonberry is one of the early spring shrubs.   I first noticed its flowers  while horseback riding through the Sooke Hills.

About the time these bright fuchsia flowers bloom, the rufous hummingbirds return for the season.  Kismet.

salmonberry flower, Rubus spectabilis, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

I once planted salmonberry (Rubus spectabilis) in our garden but later realized that a pretty flower & tasty berries didn’t balance with my aversion to growing anything with thorns.  Now I just enjoy salmonberries in the wild.

March, April & May are fabulous times to view the native flowers around Victoria.   Before I’m ready, many of them disappear into dormancy.  It’s their way of surviving our long dry summers.  Seems kinda backwards, doesn’t it?  We often wait for the summer warmth before heading outdoors, and before it even gets too hot, the big show is over.

-30-

Fawn Lily at Easter

Erythronium Oregonum Fawn Lily garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

After a hearty meal of ham & scalloped potatoes, I’m in need of some exercise & fresh air. We head off to one of our favorite walks: the forested loop  around Mount Doug Park.

It’s a delight, but not a surprise,  to come across the speckled leaves of a fawn lily at the edge of the path.  (I’ve seen these native wildflowers along the forest edge of walking trails at Cedar Hill Golf Course too, )  But then  I spy another leaf further off the trail… and a few more!

Erythronium Oregonum Fawn Lily garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Just beyond those is a meadow of them!  I wouldn’t have guessed that the deciduous under-story would give enough light for a whole meadow of fawn lily.

The  White Fawn Lily meadow at the north end of Beacon Hill Park is much more open than this.

Erythronium Oregonum Fawn Lily bloom & leaf CU, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Today there’s just a few flowers in bloom, but give it another week….

Last year Easter was well over a week later.  By then the Fawn Lilies at Swan Lake Nature Sanctuary were in their glory.

Erythronium Oregonum Fawn Lily garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Now it makes sense why some folk call these Easter Lily.

In Ontario the speckled leaves remind folk of brook trout, so they call them Trout Lily.   Perhaps Eastern Canadians don’t see deer as often as we do in Victoria?  A rose by any other name….

If we want to get scientific about names, the west coast native is Erythronium Oregonum, and its east coast cousin is E. Americanum.

No matter the moniker used, it’s lovely to see the early spring wildflowers.  Happy Easter!

-30-

Amaranth

amaranth seed head garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Decorative and delicious…
a conversation starter in any garden.

Our buddy GB planted the Inca’s ancient grain  amaranth in his newly created front yard veggie patch this spring.  Since then he’s met more of his neighbors than ever before.  Who wouldn’t be compelled to ask about this striking stand of burgundy plumes?  It was top of my list when our families got together at Cowichan Lake last week.

GB's stand of Amaranth, garden Victoria BC Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Like folks across South America, India, Fiji & China, GB’s  family enjoys the young amaranth leaves in their salads.

They also plan to  harvest the crop for the  complete protein, gluten-free grain.  Apparently it’s good to use raw in smoothies or cooked  in water as  a rice-style side dish.

GB gave me a stalk.  It made a lovely bouquet for a day or so, then drooped.  Another amaranth variety, Love Lies Bleeding, is even better for bouquets as its tassels dangle so drooping is not an issue at all.

Where would you grow amaranth – – the flower garden or the vegetable patch?

-30-