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Photos from a walk in Appalachia’s late summer woods. The flowers of spring have now borne their late summer fruit, fungi rule the forest floor, and the intoxicating perfume of dying ferns fills the air.
From top: the incandescent red berries of partridgeberry (Mitchella repens), which illuminate the forest understory wherever its creeping foliage grows; a gorgeous Pholiota cluster, possibly golden pholiota (Pholiota aurivella); the ripening, spotted berries of false Solomon’s seal (Maianthemum racemosum), which will turn bright red by October; the luminous orange-red berries of yellow mandarin (Prosartes lanuginosa), also known as yellow fairybells; the deep purple-blue fruit of Indian cucumber-root (Medeola virginiana); common puffball (Lycoperdon perlatum), just now fruiting in the local woods; white snakeroot (Ageratina altissima), a deadly beauty infamous for diary poisonings in the 1800′s; and bluestem goldenrod (Solidago caesia), also known as wreath goldenrod, an elegant, shade-tolerant perennial unusual among goldenrods in that its flowers grow from the leaf axils rather than from long panicles at the ends of the stems.
Maianthemum racemosum / False Solomon's Seal at the North Carolina Botanical Gardens at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, NC
I traded some yarrow (Achillea millefolium) seedlings to a neighbor today, in exchange for the chance to dig up some of her false lily-of-the-valley (terrible common name for Maianthemum dilatatum) and nodding onion (excellent common name for Allium cernuum). The latter is called that because it's flowers are so heavy and they bend over on the thin stems:
Trading plants back and forth is very fun! I enjoy the social expectation among gardeners to share knowledge, ideas, and seeds.