July 2020 Batch 1

In case you didn't think wildflowers were serious business

Tonestus pygmaeus, July 7, 2020

Tonestus pygmaeus, July 7, 2020

Common & scientific name
Pygmy serpentweed, Tonestus pygmaeus

Family
Sunflower, Asteraceae

Location
Green Mountain, 12,700’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
“Recent work by L. Brouillet et al. (2004) and R. P. Roberts and L. E. Urbatsch (2004) has refined our understanding of the affinities of taxa included by G. L. Nesom and D. R. Morgan (1990) in Tonestus, some of which are now referred to Eurybia, Lorandersonia, or Toiyabea. In spite of these revisions, Tonestus appears to comprise at least three distinct elements. Two species primarily of the Rocky Mountains and ranges of the Pacific Northwest, T. lyallii and T. pygmaeus, resemble one another morphologically; molecular systematic studies by Roberts and Urbatsch suggested that these may be more closely related to different elements of the Solidagininae than they are to each other or to the remainder of the taxa included here in Tonestus. Likewise, while morphologic evidence indicates that T. eximius and T. peirsonii are closely related, the work of Roberts and Urbatsch placed the decaploid T. peirsonii in a clade with members of Lorandersonia wherein it is treated here; T. eximius is placed within a largely unresolved clade of the Solidagininae. Tonestus graniticus is included here mostly as a matter of convenience. It bears only superficial resemblance to other taxa included in the genus, differing in habit, array of heads, involucre, and hair type. The placement of this species within Solidagininae remains uncertain, although the work of Roberts and Urbatsch suggested that it may be related to Chrysothamnus. The treatment presented here must be considered tentative, at best. Tonestus pygmaeus is the nomenclatural type of the genus; further refinement of the taxonomy of this difficult group may require nomenclatural innovations.”  Flora of North America

‘Nuf said.

Pledge allegiance

Aquilegia coerulea, July 7, 2020

Aquilegia coerulea, July 7, 2020

Common & scientific name
Colorado columbine, Aquilegia coerulea

Family
Buttercup, Ranunculaceae

Location
Independence Ghost Town, 10,800’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Our beloved state flower, equally at home in aspen groves and on rocky tundra, manifesting all kinds of color combinations, hybridizing with all other species of Aquilegia, occasionally with spurless variants: how lucky we are to call this endlessly interesting flower our own!

Whip's veneration

Penstemon whippleanus, July 2, 2020

Penstemon whippleanus, July 2, 2020

Common & scientific name
Whipple’s penstemon, Penstemon whippleanus

Family
Snapdragon/Figwort, Scrophulariaceae 

Location
Grizzly Lake Trail, 11,200’ & Linkins Lake area, 12,300

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Named for the leader of a transcontinental railroad survey team, this is one of our most unforgettable flowers, with its large, tightly-packed, and unusually colored flowers, ranging in our area from deep-purple to wine-colored to nearly white. 

P. whippleanus, July 30, 2020

P. whippleanus, July 30, 2020

Ballhead, indeed

Arenaria congesta, July 1, 2020

Arenaria congesta, July 1, 2020

Common & scientific name
Ballhead sandwort, Arenaria congesta

Family
Pink, Caryophyllaceae 

Location
Midway Trail, 10,700’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Ballhead sandwort (poorly named, it seems to me, in light of its hardly “ball-like” clusters of flowers—usually only a few) lines the trails in dry, rocky, sandy soils.  Its spindly appearance makes it easy to overlook, but a close-up viewing of its intricate, lovely flowers, like many in the Pink family, will inspire new appreciation!

Of European descent

Veronica serpyllifolium 7.1.20.jpg

Veronica serpyllifolia, July 1, 2020

Common & scientific name
Thyme-leaved speedwell, Veronica serpyllifolia

Family
Snapdragon/Figwort, Scrophulariaceae 

Location
Lower Lost Man trail, 10,500’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
This non-native but seemingly non-invasive speedwell (I rarely see it on the Pass), owing to its small stature and tiny but lovely 1/4” flowers, is easily lost amidst other wildflowers and plants.  Like our other more common and native speedwells, Veronica wormskjoldii and V. americana, it prefers wet places.

Not just a pretty face

Bistorta bistortoides, July 1, 2020

Bistorta bistortoides, July 1, 2020

Common & scientific name
American bistort, Bistorta bistortoides

Family
Buckwheat, Polygonaceae 

Location
Lower Lost Man trail, 10,500’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
One of our most common subalpine and alpine flowers.  Bistort has a long history of use by Native Americans as food and for medicinal purposes, and is also favored by many animals.  

Satellite saxifrage

Mitella pentandra, June 30, 2020

Mitella pentandra, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
Five-stamened mitrewort, Mitella pentandra

Family
Saxifrage, Saxifragaceae 

Location
Old wagon road east of Lincoln Creek turnoff, 9,600’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Oh how I love these miniature satellites, these most delicate, complex, and airy of wildflowers.  It feels like they shouldn’t even be called “flowers,” they are so totally unique. Look (HARD) for them now in moist woods, and be delighted!

M. pentrandra, in fruit, July 28, 2020

M. pentrandra, in fruit, July 28, 2020

Gangly Gayophytum

Gayophytum diffusum, June 30, 2020

Gayophytum diffusum, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
Spreading groundsmoke, Gayophytum diffusum

Family
Evening primrose, Onagraceae 

Location
Weller campground area, 9,400’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Hard to spot amidst other flowers or grasses, gangly Spreading groundsmoke’s red stem and four-petaled flowers are diagnostic (aside from the mustards, they are one of the only four-petaled families).  Their tiny flowers open in the morning and close up by late afternoon—just the opposite of its easier to spot cousins in the Oenothera (Evening primrose) genus. 

Eat but don't touch (?)

Heracleum maximum, June 30, 2020

Heracleum maximum, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
Cow parsnip, Heracleum maximum

Family
Parsley, Apiaceae

Location
Weller campground area, 10,400’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
This giant of the aspen forests is unmistakable, for its height and width, its enormous maple-like leaves, and platter-sized white umbels of flowers.  

This from a fascinating, and just-discovered (by me) website called The Botanist, sponsored by Islay Dry Gin, which brings together and shares recommendations from foragers:  “Cow parsnip has been used historically as fodder for livestock, and the scent of its flowers (the only non-delicious part) is of dung and pigs (to attract midges, flies and hoverflies) perhaps explaining the unglamorous common English name [“Common hogweed," which, needless to say, I will not be using!] . . . . Common hogweed also comes with a health warning. As the leaves develop and start to photosynthesise, it develops a sap that can sensitize the skin to bright sunlight, to the point where a recurring burn appears.”

Daisy vs. Fleabane

Erigeron peregrinus, June 30, 2020

Erigeron peregrinus, June 30, 2020

E. peregrinus, curling red phyllaries, June 30, 2020

E. peregrinus, curling red phyllaries, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
Subalpine daisy, Erigeron peregrinus

Family
Sunflower, Asteraceae

Location
Lost Man campground area, 10,400’ & north side summit, 12,500’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
I prefer “daisy” over the more commonly used “fleabane” for this lovely flower—it deserves better!  (“Fleabane” apparently referred to the Erigeron genus’s ability to drive away fleas or other insects when burned—which would probably hold true for many things.)  This Erigeron can be distinguished from the many lavender/purple erigerons to come this summer by its wider florets and red-tipped phyllaries that curl backward (see photo at bottom left).

E. peregrinus, August 24, 2020

E. peregrinus, August 24, 2020

Baby-blue beauty

Stickseed.jpg

Hackelia floribunda, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
Many-flowered stickseed, Hackelia floribunda

Family
Borage, Boraginaceae

Location
Roadside near Weller, 9,400’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Named after Josef Hackel, an early 19th century Czech botanist, Hackelia floribunda's endearing light-blue flowers become small, flattened nutlets with prickles along the edge, in typical Borage/velcro-like fashion.  This tall, lovely plant is unusual on the Pass—keep your eyes peeled!

A crowning achievement

Rhodiola integrifolia, June 30, 2020

Rhodiola integrifolia, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
King’s crown, Rhodiola integrifolia

Family
Stonecrop, Crassulaceae

Location
Above the Lost Man Campground, 11,000’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Who doesn’t love the succulent, uniquely-colored high mountain wildflower?  Rhodiola integrifolia’s flat-topped flower clusters have dozens of wine-colored to almost black flower heads packed tightly together.  King’s crown plants sprout from rhizomes, forming dense colonies, making them hard to miss and easy to enjoy!

Field of King’s crown on Blue Peak, July 8, 2020

Field of King’s crown on Blue Peak, July 8, 2020

Here, kitty, kitty

Antennaria rosea, June 30, 2020

Antennaria rosea, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
Rosy pussytoes, Antennaria rosea

Family
Sunflower, Asteraceae

Location
Weller campground, 9,500’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Called “pussytoes” because of their tightly packed flower head’s resemblance to the underside of a cat’s paw, Rosy pussytoes is our loveliest species owing to its bright rosy heads.  Each colony of pussytoes is a clone with all the plants connected to one another by underground rhizomes, and their evergreen leaf mats cover the ground throughout the four seasons.

Fuzzy, was he?

Castilleja occidentalis, July 8, 2020

Castilleja occidentalis, July 8, 2020

C. occidentalis, July 15, 2020

C. occidentalis, July 15, 2020

Common & scientific name
Western Indian paintbrush, Castilleja occidentalis

Family
Broomrape, Orobanchaceae

Location
Green Mountain summit, 12,800’ & upper Lost Man 12,500

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
What a wonderful alpine fuzzball this is!  Especially when it hybridizes with other paintbrushes like the magenta C. rhexifolia to create tie-dyed, striped wonders.  

While there is much discussion among botanists about the proper classification of paintbrushes, including the genetic difference (if any) between C. occidentalis and the similarly yellowish-white C. sulphurea (also called C. septentrionalis), the two are readily distinguishable in the field by their elevation (C. occidentalis is an alpine plant, C. sulphurea is found lower), their size (C. occidentalis is shorter), and their fuzziness factor (C. occidentalis wins!)

Castilleja hybrid, July 17, 2020

Castilleja hybrid, July 17, 2020

These red berries won't kill you

Ribes montigenum, June 30, 2020

Ribes montigenum, June 30, 2020

R. montigenum in fruit, August 27, 2020

R. montigenum in fruit, August 27, 2020

Common & scientific name
Mountain gooseberry, Ribes montigenum

Family
Gooseberry, Grossulariaceae

Location
Lower Green Mountain, 10,000’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
One of our half-dozen species of gooseberry, producing arguably the tastiest of the group in late summer, Mountain gooseberry’s branches are covered in short prickles along with whorls of thicker, longer spines at the leaf nodes—so pick your berries carefully!  It can be distinguished from other gooseberries by its leaves, which are divided almost to the base into three coarsely toothed lobes, and are covered in sticky, glandular hairs. Its berries are bright red and covered in short, tasteless, and totally unharmful hairs.  Enjoy the bounty!

A (non) ray of sunshine

Arnica parryi, June 30, 2020

Arnica parryi, June 30, 2020

Common & scientific name
Parry’s arnica, Arnica parryi

Family
Sunflower, Asteraceae

Location
Lost Man Campground area, 10,400’ & upper Lost Man trail, 12,000

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Rayless and nodding, Parry’s arnica is easy to tell apart from our other arnicas, all of which have opposite and (mostly) fuzzy leaves.  It was named after the eminent, mid-19th century botanist Charles Parry, for whom many of Colorado’s wildflowers are named. 

A. parryi, July 15, 2020

A. parryi, July 15, 2020

Showiest in show

Oxytropis splendens, June 28, 2020

Oxytropis splendens, June 28, 2020

O. splendens, June 28, 2020

O. splendens, June 28, 2020

Common & scientific name
Showy locoweed, Oxytropis splendens

Family
Pea, Fabaceae

Location
Twin Lakes, 9,200’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Showy, indeed!  Covered in long, white hairs, the plant takes on a  silvery appearance, which contrasts with its numerous, richly colored flowers, ranging from dark purple to lavender, that sit atop tall, leafless stems that grow in large clusters.  

When I first encountered this flower, I thought it might be a cultivated Oxytrope that had escaped or been planted back in the Hotel Interlaken days, as I had NEVER seen a wildflower in our area quite as large and dramatic as this.  Alas, it IS a native, one you won’t see on the west side of the Pass, and worth a trip all by itself to the south side of Twin Lakes. 

PARASITE

Orobanche fasciculata, June 28, 2020

Orobanche fasciculata, June 28, 2020

Common & scientific name
Clustered broomrape, Orobanche fasciculata

Family
Broomrape, Orobanchaceae

Location
Twin Lakes, 9,200’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
This strange and fascinating flower has no chlorophyll and is parasitic on species of Artemisia (sage) and other members of the aster family.  Although not uncommon in Colorado, it is rarely seen on the Pass—the Interlaken area of Twin Lakes is a dependable location. 

The runt of the (lovely) litter

Penstemon procerus, June 28, 2020

Penstemon procerus, June 28, 2020

Common & scientific name
Small-flowered penstemon, Penstemon procerus

Family
Plantain, Plantiganaceae

Location
Twin Lakes, 9,200’

Fun, weird, helpful, or little known fact
Its name says it all: Penstemon procerus can be distinguished from all other penstemons in our area by its 1/2” long, tightly-packed, blue/purple/magenta flowers.  It grows on both sides of the Pass in a variety of habitats, especially the subalpine, but is not as common as many of our other penstemon species. 

P. procerus, summit, July 14, 2020

P. procerus, summit, July 14, 2020