On the other hand, Orange-fruited Horse Gentian (Triosteum aurantiacum) prefers the sun-drenched clearing under a powerline that runs through the woods at Skidmore College. The small red trumpet-shaped blooms that now circle the stems of this hip-high plant will later yield wreaths of round, two-seeded orange fruits along the entire length of the stems.
Back home, one of our loveliest native wildflowers, Venus's Looking Glass (Triodanis perfoliata), recently volunteered in my Saratoga Springs backyard and is now producing its ascending blooms of beautiful flowers. Masses of these native plants, with their small purple flowers tucked into spikes of ruffly heart-shaped leaves, just showed up, unbidden, between the bricks in my patio. And this one continues to open new flowers from its vase on my kitchen table.
For a wildflower enthusiast like me, I sure do live in Paradise. Every week, new gifts from the wildflower gods appear where I can delight in them.
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