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Secrets of Wildflowers: A Delightful Feast of Little-known Facts, Folklore, and History [Kietas viršelis]

4.31/5 (106 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x222x32 mm, weight: 1089 g, Illustrations, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Apr-2003
  • Leidėjas: Lyons Press
  • ISBN-10: 1585746681
  • ISBN-13: 9781585746682
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x222x32 mm, weight: 1089 g, Illustrations, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Apr-2003
  • Leidėjas: Lyons Press
  • ISBN-10: 1585746681
  • ISBN-13: 9781585746682
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Presents the history, habitats, folklore, and odd facts about some of North America's wildflowers,

An authoritative and unique guide to an unsung treasure--North America's wildflowers.


Jack Sanders's colorful tribute to wildflowers is bursting with odd facts, ingenious uses, and bizarre superstition about some of North America's most beautiful and common plants. There are more than 10,000 varieties of wildflowers in North America, some rare, some so plentiful that they are designated as invasive weeds. Each has a unique story.
There's Bouncing Bet, a perennial common along the roads and railroad tracks of America. Like many of our most abundant summer wildflowers, Bet was brought over to fill colonial gardens. It's a beautiful plant, but also a useful one. Open up the stalk and its sap makes a fine soap. Colonial beermakers used to put a dab in to help the head on a brew. Doctors used it to wash wounds. Generally considered a weed, it's everywhere.
Or Coltsfoot, which pops up almost alone in winters, and was used in New England as a cure for coughs, the leaves boiled down in water. Asthmatics, Sanders tells us, used to smoke it for relief. For many years, apothecaries in France used Coltsfoot as its symbol, a surprising pedigree for a neglected "weed."
More a companion than a field guide, THE SECRETS OF WILDFLOWERS is a must-have for anyone who enjoys a walk in a meadow or a gaze outside.

Daugiau informacijos

Commended for Benjamin Franklin Award (Nature) 2004.
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction xiii
Skunk Cabbage: First Flower of Winter
3(4)
Hepatica: Gem of the Woods
7(4)
Spring-Beauty: A Pink Potato
11(3)
Anemones: Flowers of the Wind
14(4)
Coltsfoot: Roadside Cough Medicine
18(4)
Bloodroot: A Bloody Early Bloomer
22(3)
Dandclion: Our Tulip in the Grass
25(6)
American Columbine: An Elfin Beauty
31(3)
Dutchman's Breeches: Rude Little Trousers
34(3)
Garlic Mustard: A Tasty Foe
37(3)
Trout Lily: A Lily by Any Other Name
40(4)
Ginscngs: The Man-Plants
44(4)
Violets: Love in the Springtime
48(7)
Trilliums: Dead Meat
55(3)
Speedwells: Diamonds in the Rough
58(4)
Pussytocs: The Feet in the Lawn
62(3)
Buttercups: Bitter Beauties
65(4)
Celandine: A Golden Poppy
69(3)
Marsh Marigold: Friend of the Farmer
72(4)
Blue Flag: Born to the Purple
76(4)
Solomon's Seals: The Several Seals of Solomon
80(3)
Wild ginger: An Overlooked Crank
83(3)
Jack-in-the-Pulpit: The Silent Preacher
86(4)
Saxifrages: Rock Crushers?
90(2)
Lady's Slippers: The Secretive Slippers
92(5)
May Apples: The Green Umbrellas
97(4)
Daisy: A Flower Loved and Hated
101(4)
Wild geranium: The Catapulted Crawler
105(2)
Baneberries: Two-Season Treats
107(6)
goatsbeard: The Geodesic Clock
113(2)
Bedstraws: Creepers for Runners
115(2)
Cinquefoil: A Rose by Another Name
117(3)
Forget-Me-Nots: Legendary Flowers
120(4)
Chickweeds: For the Birds
124(4)
Black-Eyed Susan: A Pretty Face
128(3)
Bindweeds: The Pretty Stranglers
131(4)
Deptford Pink: Tiny but Divine
135(2)
Milkweed: A Sweet Grabber
137(5)
Butterflyweed: A Neglected Beauty
142(3)
Clovers: Ubiquitous and Useful
145(5)
Jewelweed: Nature's Salve and Toy
150(4)
Black Cohosh: Candles of the Fairies
154(3)
Chicory: The Roadside Peasant
157(4)
Bergamots: The Monster Mints
161(3)
Nightshades: Beautiful, but Deadly?
164(4)
Pokeweed: Bounty for Man and Bird
168(5)
Sundews: The Carnivores
173(3)
Purple Loosestrife: Summer's Deadly Glow
176(4)
Yarrow: The First-Aid Kit
180(5)
Queen Anne's Lace: The Royal Carrot
185(3)
Dayflowers: An Embarrassing Memorial
188(4)
Knotweeds: Knots Underfoot
192(6)
Indian Pipes: Ghosts of Summer's Woods
198(4)
Mullcins: The Bearded Weeds
202(5)
St. Johnsworts: Chasing the Blues with Yellows
207(4)
Avens: Both Blessed and Cursed
211(2)
Mints: Old and Lively Scents
213(4)
Cardinal Flower: America's Favorite
217(4)
Bouncing Bet: Soap with Bounce
221(2)
Evening-Primrose: An Owl-Like Sweet
223(4)
Toadflax: Old Toad Face
227(3)
Goldenrods: The All-Americans
230(6)
Ragweeds: The Season for Sneezing
236(4)
Joe-Pye Weed: A Noble Lummox
240(3)
Boneset: A Bitter Tea for the Ailing
243(3)
Sunflowers: Beauty and Bounty
246(5)
Turtleheads: The Talking Heads
251(3)
Vervain: A Favorite of Priests and Witches
254(3)
Groundnut: Sweet from Tip to Toe
257(4)
Ladies-Tresses: Orchids of Autumn
261(3)
Dogbane: A Fly's Worst Friend
264(3)
Thistles: Watch Your Step!
267(4)
Asters: The Stars of Autumn
271(5)
Gentians: The Royal Family
276(5)
Websites 281(2)
A Brief glossary 283(1)
Bibliography 284(10)
Index 294