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Wildflower or weed?
Gardening Farming
July 26, 2024

Wildflower or weed?

When someone mentions wildflowers, what comes to mind? Daisies? Black-eyed Susans?

They’re as familiar as the summer days of our youth, so well-loved that we often pick wildflowers for bouquets or add them to our gardens. What we call weeds tend to be any plant claiming a place for itself at our homes uninvited and unwelcome.

Goldenrod blooms in late summer and early autumn. Allergy sufferers curse the yellow-plumed wildflower as a truly obnoxious weed. The truth is goldenrod doesn’t cause all the sniffling and sneezing (its pollen isn’t windborne as it is too heavy).

The real culprit is ragweed, a weed you probably never noticed that blooms at the same time as goldenrod. Its pollen is plentiful and spreads easily on the breeze.

While goldenrod can be a bully in the garden if allowed to spread unchecked, this perennial’s flowers are a favorite of bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. It’s a native wildflower that grows between three and five feet tall, so it’s hard to miss.

Queen Anne’s lace with its lacey foliage and flat, umbrella-like clusters of white flowers is a familiar sight along Northeast roadsides. Photos by Deborah J. Benoit

Queen Anne’s lace with its lacey foliage and flat, umbrella-like clusters of white flowers is a familiar sight along roadsides. Unlike goldenrod, it is a naturalized non-native with origins in Europe and Asia. It grows three to four feet tall and flowers from June through August. While it makes a lovely addition to cut flower arrangements, some people may be sensitive to its sap.

If you’re out picking wildflowers, beware of lookalikes. American cow parsnip is native to North America. While its flowers are similar to those of Queen Anne’s lace, its foliage is quite different and the plant is much larger, growing up to eight feet high. Its sap is phototoxic, meaning that if it gets on your skin and is exposed to sunlight, blisters can result.

Wild parsnip looks like Queen Anne’s lace too, but its flowers are yellow. It is highly invasive. Remove the plant or flowerheads before blooming to avoid spreading by seed. Be sure to cover exposed skin to avoid contact with the sap as it’s also phototoxic.

The sap of the wild parsnip, a Queen Anne’s lace lookalike, contains toxic chemicals that are activated by sunlight and can cause serious burns and blisters to human skin after contact.

Giant hogweed is an even more dangerous lookalike. It is invasive in the Northeast and a federal noxious weed. Giant hogweed can reach heights of seven to 20 feet. Touching it causes exposure to its phototoxic sap and can result in severe skin reactions or chemical burns.

Jewelweed is a native wildflower you’ve probably seen even if you don’t know its name. Spotted jewelweed, also known as orange jewelweed or spotted touch-me-not, and pale jewelweed, also known as yellow jewelweed, are annuals native to eastern North America.

Jewelweed grows two to five feet tall and blooms from mid-summer through frost. Its dangling flowers are attractive to hummingbirds and bees. Jewelweed spreads by seeds that “explode” out of the pod when touched and easily self-seed. If you find yourself with an overabundance of jewelweed, it’s easy to pull by hand due to its shallow roots.

While native jewelweed is a beautiful and beneficial wildflower, its lookalike relative, Himalayan balsam, is an import from Asia. Although its appearance is similar to its native counterparts, Himalayan balsam is easy to identify when in bloom. Its flowers are pink or purple in color.

More information on invasive plants (and the dangers they present) can be found at https://vtinvasives.org.

The next time you’re out for a drive in a rural setting, take a look at what’s growing along the roadside. Are they wildflowers? Or are they weeds?

by Deborah J. Benoit, Extension Master Gardener, UVM

Featured photo: If allowed to spread unchecked, goldenrod can be a nuisance although many gardeners welcome this perennial as its flowers are a favorite of bees, butterflies and other pollinators. Photo by Deborah J. Benoit

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