A WALK IN THE PARK

THE SANGUINE ROOT ENJOYS THE GARDEN THIS PAST WEEKEND AND TAKES A WALK IN MORRIS PARK AND IN THE WISSAHICKON VALLEY PARK. MANY BEAUTIFUL NATIVE SPRING EPHEMERAL FLOWERS ARE FOUND DESPITE THE THREATENING INVASIVES THAT CROWD AROUND THEM

Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The  Mayapples are finally starting to emerge and express themselves in Morris Park. A neighbor asked the classic question: What are those little umbrella plants? we were so happy to answer that they were Mayapples.  He then asked, what about the blue flowers? Yeah, that would be the invasive Vinca vine (Vinca minor).  Then he asked, what about the yellow flowers? Yeah, that one is also a highly problematic invasive, Lesser celandine (Ranunculus ficaria) . Then he asked, What about the white Flowers?  Ah, Yes, that is a native wildflower, Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis).  We like that one.

So two natives and two invasives.  We Love to answer questions about the native and invasive plants growing in Morris Park, especially the ones next to the path at Morris Park Road.

Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Mayapples in Morris Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Mayapples making their way into the world in Morris Park, next to the most grand oak tree in the whole park.

The garden of the Sanguine Root  Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
The garden of the Sanguine Root Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Our front yard. ( Sanguinaria canadensis) The Bloodroot continuously blooms for 3 weeks so far in our yard as the bluebells ready themselves for their blooming season.

The garden of the Sanguine Root  Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
The garden of the Sanguine Root Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The Arts and Crafts facades of the 1920s rowhomes in this section of Overbrook, boast built in stone planters raised up against the front windows of the homes. The Sanguine Root Staff was able to re-build this planter during a thorough restoration of the stonework on the facade of the building. Now the House of the Sanguine Root has been able to plant our namesake species, Sanguinaria canadensis, Bloodroot, in the special planter. The planting was done last fall,which is the best time to plant perennials, as a bare-root.  The amount of flowers that came up is astounding. However, the robust flowering is testament to the previous location of the plant, not its present one. In this, we mean that the previous location received ever so much sunlight and moisture and this fed the roots that are now sending up flowers this Spring.  Once the flowers finish blooming and produce seed, the plant will then set about the business of doing photyosynthesis which will give the roots the necessary energy to flower and produce seed the following year.

Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The Sanguine Root loves to explore.  The Wissahickon Valley Park is a gorge just 15 minutes away in another section of Philadelphia. This most amazing and fantastic part of the Fairmount Park system is not only part of our drinking water source, it is also our neighboring watershed.

 Trout lily, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Trout lily, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Blooming Trout-lilies in the Wissahickon Valley Park.  When you look carefully, you will see them.  These flowers stop us in our tracks. The ones that are actually flowering are old plants that are growing out of corms, a bulb-like root that will pull itself deeper and deeper into the ground as the years pass. When they get deep enough and develop the critical size of a root that comes with age, they will send out a bloom. For the most part, Trout lilies are single leaves with the most striking and exotic look, colors and textures. Whole colonies of this native spring ephemeral will form, covering the hillsides of ravines.  These plants are important to the geology of ravines, in that they are an integral part of soil retention. They form complex networks of corms, growing at  different depths in the soil, with the flowering specimens at the deepest depths. These plants keep the soil intact and limit the erosion that can occur in a ravine during heavy rains.  Other  native species such as Mayapple, Skunk cabbage, Lobelia and Jewelweed, just for starters, depend upon the rich, moist, and most importantly, Intact soils of the ravine.  In Morris Park, Trout lilies grow abundantly, and are an important part of soil retention in this at-risk urban drainage setting. Because of increased paving and development around both Morris Park and the Wissahickon Park, the run-off of water has become a  critical issue in the health of the creeks and the surrounding valleys. To find robust populations of the beautiful Trout Lilies is a reminder that there is a natural check growing in place of the increasingly inbalanced water- runoff in our urban parklands, which are primarily ravines along creeks.

 

 Mayapples, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Mayapples, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Mayapples grow abundantly along this tributary of the Wissahickon Creek, near Kitchen’s lane. The invasive English Ivy grows alongside the Mayapples.  Only the sharpest eye will see that Bloodroot is flowering off in the distance.

Spring beauty, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Spring beauty, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The Spring beauty has us constantly pausing in the springtime.

Sessile trillium, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Sessile trillium, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

A stunning native wildflower. However, this one is growing out of its native range, and its proximity to a neighborhood indicates it is most likely a garden escape. As far as garden escapes go, this one is not troublesome, at least yet.  We have a doozy to show you in just a minute, but first we must show you the Bloodroot.

Bloodroot, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Bloodroot, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Note the beautiful Kalmia latifolia off in the distance.(Mountain Laurel)

Multiflora Rose with Isabelle for size, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Multiflora Rose with Isabelle for size, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

The old saw, Rosa multiflora. Isabelle is smiling for the camera. She is not overjoyed to see this mess of Multiflora rose.  In fact, we selected trails that would have the least invasives, so we could enjoy our Sunday afternoon without thinking about depressing things.

Multiflora Rose with the Japanese angelica tree, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Multiflora Rose with the Japanese angelica tree, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

However we were confronted with reality, the invasive Aralia elata, the Japanese Angelica tree has penetrated the Wissahickon Valley Park in a disturbing manner.  Morris Park is one place where it has not become completely invasive but is teetering on the brink of falling victim to this emerging threat to our forests.  See our post The Japanese Angelica Tree Invades Morris Park for a more comprehensive discussion of this jaw-dropping, ongoing drama of invasive removal on the razor’s edge of success or failure in a highly at-risk natural area.

pachysandra terminalus, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania
pachysandra terminalus, Wissahickon Valley Park, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

O.K., This is the garden escape doozy mentioned earlier.  Pachysandra terminalis, Japanese Pachysandra. This one allows nothing else to grow in its midst except the most troublesome spring invasive we have found to date, the Lesser Celandine, Ranunculus ficaria. We are still not ready to go into this one.  We will discuss this invasive when we are ready.

The Pachysandra pictured above is the classic garden escape found in the Fairmount Park system.  When we see this one, we know that houses are not too far away.  We had this one covering our yard, which was ripped out 4 years ago, but which we still struggle to eradicate in the public property bordering our yard, Morris Park. This invasive has been crowding out and eradicating the native Mayapple from Morris Park, among who knows whatever other native plants and associated insects birds and animals dependent on those specific native plants.

So with the full onset of spring we are full of joy at the sight of new green plants, and we are also confronted with the reality of the invasives.  Spring is usually a roller coaster of experiences and emotions, and the beautiful native flowers and the disturbing invasives in our lives reflect this state of fluctuation and uncertainty.

EARLY SPRING IN THE GARDEN OF THE SANGUINE ROOT

EGarden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

This is our dream garden.  Our yard was covered in Pachysandra terminalis and Hedera helix. We joked that it would be so cool if we had Bloodroot as a groundcover instead of the Pachysandra, which has invaded into the park. That was 4 years ago. This vision was the start of a great adventure and learning experience. We have had so much pleasure in creating a garden of plants native to our area of Southeastern Pennsylvania.

We started out very much admiring the plants that grow in the adjacent Morris Park.  Bloodroot, Mayapples, Wild Geranium, and the native coral Honeysuckle.  Emulating the forest plants was a great start, being that we know that these plants will do well in the area.  It turns out that Redbud Nursery, just 20 minutes from our house sells these plants. Our friends who are native plant enthusiasts made us aware of this great local resource for native plant gardening.

Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

So we took the plunge and ripped out the entire yard, which was 100% non-native Japanese Pachysandra and English ivy.  It was a barren wasteland until we realized we had Bishops weed (Aegopodium podagraria) and Vinca Vine (Vinca minor) also growing there. These are two plants that have been marketed to gardeners as a good groundcover for yards.  It turns out that they are also non-native, invasive plants that are jumping the fence, and invading natural areas all across the east coast, threatening native , naturally occurring plant populations.  To this day, we are still trying to rid our yard of these noxious weeds. These three invasives run from the yard into the park and make it hard for native woodland herbaceous plants to survive.

 Blue Cohosh, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Blue Cohosh, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

Early on in our adventure of native plant gardening, we stumbled upon a program on WHYY, an interview with entomologist Douglas Tallamy on Radio Times.  Listening to Doug Tallamy was an everlasting inspiration.  “Garden as if your life depended on it” – that is what he eventually wrote on our copy of his book, Bringing Nature Home. Doug Tallamy’s message revolves around the fact that you cannot rely on designated natural areas such as Morris Park only, to sustain the biodiversity that we need to survive.  It is essential to create corridors of sustainable habitats to maintain that biodiversity.  Our own yards don’t have to be a sterile lawn full of ornamental cultivars that do not contribute to the ecosystem, but instead can become an integral part of those essential corridors.

 Bluebells, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Bluebells, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

The yard is not all that large and heavily wooded. We even have a Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum) growing in the yard.  This is a challenging native tree to grow a garden around because it is very shady and it has lots of roots close to the surface.  We manage, grateful that it is not the invasive exotic Norway Maple or some other problematic non-native tree.

Columbine, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Columbine, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

We  have adjusted to the conditions and have embraced the shade garden concept. It is fun to experiment with different plants that are native to our area, to see them actually grow in our yard.  We buy plants that are native to the area of Southeastern Pennsylvania. We prefer ones that are propagated from a local seed source, if we can have the luxury of such an option.  What is really fun about it is seeing a specimen of our garden plants growing in the wild.  When our native Columbine was withering away under the shade of the Sugar maple, we puzzled over its descent.  Then we saw ones growing in the wild.  They were blooming, and located on a hillside with some sun, but with some trees as well.  So they do like some sun to thrive. We remembered this hillside, and we moved our Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis) in the fall to another location, in the backyard, with some sun, and we anticipate them to do better. The above picture is one of them in its new location.  It looks to be in good shape, perhaps it will bloom.  Even if it doesnt bloom, watching the leaves unfurl and the plant establish itself is great entertainment.

Maidenhair fern, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Maidenhair fern, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

This incredible unfurling spirally red thing is Adiantum pedatum, the Maidenhair fern.  These ferns love our yard.  One theory is they like a bit of lime in their soil and when they built these houses they mixed up the mortar on site in front of the houses and the lime in the mortar ended up in the soil they grow out of.  They also seem to like protected areas and grow near cliffs or on the slopes of steep ravines, often in quite some shade.  Imagine the stone house as a cliff. These ferns love the yard, and we encourage people to try them in their yards as well.  We first saw one in the wild in Ridley Creek State Park, and we were very excited about this.  We then saw one in Shenks Ferry Wildflower Preserve, where they are very occasional.

However, this experience was tainted by the fact that an overzealous photographer had crushed the blooming Trillium  erectum var album growing around it in order to get up close to the fern for a photograph. We can only assume that the well-meaning photographer and lover of flowers and plants was so eager to get a picture of the Maidenhair fern that they were shaking with excitement and they dropped their tripod and then tripped on a rock, subsequently crushing the blooming trilliums and leaving a horrific scar on the landscape for all to bear witness.  The photographer, haunted by the crushed aspirations of these trilliums (which worked for an entire year of photosynthesis only to be crushed just before they could set seed), is now a vocal advocate of trail and nature photography etiquette and stewardship, we can only hope.

The third time we saw a Maidenhair fern growing in the wild was along the James River in Virginia, just one month ago. All we saw were the old fronds resting on the leaf litter near the dormant fiddleheads poking out  of a rocky, steep slope running right up to the river’s edge.  See our post Virginia is for Rivers. Here we found a quiet, undisturbed riverside, with a barely used path, in an area we could tell was  rich with biodiversity and botanical interest.

 

Mayapple, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Mayapple, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

Mayapple is moving out of its winter shell. Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) is a great garden flower.  They are abundant in the woods of Morris Park, and form colonies of woodland umbrellas.  The double umbrellas create a waxy white flower that nods below the two umbrellas.  This plant is the most entertaining to watch break out of the pointy white capsule that  encases its embryonic form all fall and winter, and rise up into the world, ready for photosynthesis and  flower and seed production.  A whole colony of the green umbrellas in the spring is a woodland herbaceous version of the image of the Jersey Shore in July and August, or of the Fancy Brigades parading up Broad Street  and partying down Two Street on New Years Day here in Philadelphia. On this day, there are many hundreds of festive satin umbrellas bobbing up and down along the streets of South Philadelphia.  One year it dawned on us that the image is reminiscent of a colony of  Mayapples in the spring.

Nonetheless, if you have a shady area in your yard, these plants are highly recommended and available at native plant nurseries. They propagate well and will stay into the month of October if watered enough.

Christmas fern, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Christmas fern, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

What are these feathered curled-up wild things? Polystichum acrostichoides, the Christmas fern. From a garden perspective, this is a native treasure.  By the way, the picture above is the most charming image we can present at this time. This fairy-tale scene is not a movie set, but a West Philadelphia yard.  This fern gives our yard the seal of woodland authenticity.  It is at once a wild-looking fern that reads forest landscape, and yet a very distinguished, compact and well-defined fern that at the same time has a formal appearance. It bridges the divide between its wild  reality and the human need for definition and discipline in the plant world. On top of that, this fern is evergreen, giving the native plant garden a winter architectural presence. This Fern is a landscape architect in and of itself.

Bloodroot, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Bloodroot, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

We at the Sanguine Root have found that gardening is an emotional experience.  Plants resonate in our being, and they stir our source. They can be a source of joy and peace, and a source of fear.  Poison-ivy and stinging nettles, weeds that invade our vegetable gardens or grow out the sides of our houses are the first to come to mind.  Because plants are our absolute source of survival, they have become something of the ‘elephant in the room’ our favorite expression. In Philadelphia, we are at the mercy of Ailanthus altissima, the ‘tree of heaven’.  If left uncontrolled, this plant will destroy all of our buildings in less than ten years.

In the city, a long dreary winter can be officially ended with the  blooms of a daffodil.  For us, it is the Bloodroot plant that marks the end of one season and the beginning of another.  We want to share our enthusiasm for this native wildflower.  This flower has captured our imaginations and has driven us to be interested and learn about native plants and in botany itself. Pictured above, this specimen of Bloodroot in our yard  has the biggest leaves in comparison to the other patches of Bloodroot. Keeping up with the plant world  is a fascinating pursuit of knowledge.

Bloodroot, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
Bloodroot, Garden of the Sanguine Root, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

 

THE HAPPY PLACE – DAY THREE

Mayapples emerge from the earth, West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
Mayapples emerge from the earth, West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia

We returned the next day to the section of West Fairmount Park that was at least a week ahead of Morris Park in the Mayapple department.  The sun was out and was casting a favorable glow on the Mayapples. (Podophyllum peltatum)  We are enchanted by the youthful and jaunty Mayapples rising out of the leaf litter.

gSpring beauty emerges from the earth, West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
Spring beauty emerges from the earth, West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia

Claytonia virginica

We found Spring beauty blooming as well. Only three miles away and about 100 feet lower in elevation at the most, and these flowers are blooming. Not to be found even emerging in Morris Park, in the vicinity of Morris Park Road. This native wildflower is so interesting to watch develop.  Each specimen has a series of flowers waiting in line along the stem, and every day a new one gets its chance to bloom.  We love to find them along the path in Morris Park, or for that matter, wherever we may be.  The flowers have very distinct and ultra-thin pinkish stripes in their white blooms. Their stature is small, only about 4 inches.  Like Bloodroot and Rue anemone, they must be appreciated from the ground level.  Once down on the forest floor, you can see how they grow out of the dense leaf litter, their tiny stems finding the holes in the matte of dead leaves and sending out a pair of long and thin leaves, and then the flower stalk  finds its way out, reaches above the leaves and sends out the series of flowers.

Like Bloodroot and Rue anenome, these flowers will smile for the camera. The Sanguine Root likes to move slowly on wooded paths in the spring. Our cameras have bumped against the forest floor many times getting a picture of the happy life of a small spring flower blooming in its place in the world, in its own ecosystem, often amidst a miniature colony of flowers in the wild.

 

 Cranefly orchid, the bottom of the overwintering leaf, West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
Cranefly orchid, the bottom of the overwintering leaf, West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia

We returned to the site of the Cranefly orchid. The small colony of 5 or so specimens captured our imaginations. Especially interesting is the underside of the solitary winter leaf.  The underside has a rich maroon color.  The Maroon color is found only in the veins and some spots on the upper side of the leaf.

Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia
Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia

Blooming in the very late morning, the Bloodroot of Morris Park.

Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia
Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia

We have been learning to read a forest landscape by just looking at the fallen leaves. Even last years crop is still legible, old crumpled-up Tulip Poplar and Oak can be seen.   These bloodroot flowers are just now opening up. We have noticed how the cold and rainy weather has not been conducive to full-on blooming. The flowers will remain in a hesitant state for days before they fully open.

Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia
Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia

We were not able to watch, but these flowers most likely fully opened by two this afternoon. This shot was taken  around half past eleven.

Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia
Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia

To have the opportunity to observe these flowers on a full-time basis would be necessary to fully understand their nature. However, we have been observing them closely since 2007, and have been able to see patterns of behavior in the past 4 years. Taking interest in this species has helped us understand other native perennials as well. Just a few weeks ago, The Sanguine Root was able to see Bloodroot in the state of Florida, that had already begun seed production.  This was eye-opening.  We drove over 1000 miles and there it was, Sanguinaria canadensis, growing in Florida. Then, we found it blooming in South Carolina a few days later.  Understanding a species will most likely take a lifetime, but  most likely more, because species must adapt to constantly changing conditions.

Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia
Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia

When the Sanguine Root Environmental Restoration Team found these two patches, they were just a few flowers barely reaching out of a matte of Japanese honeysuckle, Garlic mustard, and Multiflora rose. These three noxious invasive exotics had taken over this section of woods.  Since their control has begun, The native Bloodroot has thrived and expanded its colonies. In the picture above can be seen two colonies of Bloodroot, growing successfully on the forest floor. This flower is contributing to the ecosystem by providing an early source of nectar to pollinating insects.  The bee we found yesterday just waiting on the outside of the flower, possibly for hours, is illustrative of this need for nectar.  We have seen bloodroot flowers on a warm spring day a-buzz with insects, with so much activity, that some of the petals get knocked off, and fall on to the forest floor, and the bees keep coming anyway.

The lone, cultivated specimen of Bloodroot in the Spring of 2010. Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa
The lone, cultivated specimen of Bloodroot in the Spring of 2010. Morris Park Road, Philadelphia Pa

While Bloodroot will pollinate itself, it is the cross-pollination between populations that makes for a healthy species.  Genetic diversity is necessary for the longevity of a species.  Each strain has its own story to tell, its own adverse series of events, and the plants that survived those events and were able to succeed and grow, and provide pollen, are contributors to the collective genetic pool of a species.

The pollen will make its way to a flower of another population, and will find its way into the ovary of the female part of that flower.  This flower will now create a seed that has genetic traits that are representative of the specimens within that population that were able to provide pollen during a period of adversity or just a period where a pollen-creating population survived and produced pollen.  The period of adversity could be just as much as that annoying late March snowstorm  or that hailstorm that broke so many of the bloodroot flowers . The flower that was closed up real tight during these events and the three days of cold and rain that followed, but was able to open up the following week for  two consecutive days of sunny weather in early April is the one that survives. This is the flower that the insects gravitate towards, and this is the specimen that gets pollen from another survivor a bit away, and  now the  flower has been exposed to pollen from another flower that has survived the latest early spring hailstorm/snowstorm/cold spell/rain event/heat wave/…This is how any species survives the long haul.

Bloodroot, Morris Park, Philadelphia,Morris Park, Philadelphia

The garden of the House of The Sanguine Root. Our gardening philosophy is simple;  What native plants are growing in the nearest woods?  What Native plants grow in the immediate area of our house historically?    These plants will be the most productive from a flowering perspective, because they have been here for thousands of years. A native flowering plant, obtained from a nursery that sells native plants, in your yard, can very possibly be the solution to any anxieties you will ever have about gardening or yard maintenance.  Our yard was a dead zone of  the non-native  Pachysandra (Pachysandra terminalis). We decided to have a yard full of native plants just like the ones in Morris Park, which  bordered our house.

Bloodroot, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia
Bloodroot, Morris Park Road, Philadelphia

So one Saturday, we ripped out all of the Pachysandra terminalis. It took us about 18 months to replace it.  But the learning process was fun, more of an adventure in cultivation, with some losses along the way. The patch in the picture above started out as one flower, shown in a previous picture.   Now, Just four years later, we have our dream yard.  The native plant yard is now a contributing part of the local ecosystem, and we have given it a landscaped touch which allows it co-exist with the aesthetics of the neighboring front yards.