A web of present and past events
These short articles are written to highlight connections of the plants, history and lore of the Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden with different time frames or outside connections. A web of intersections.
2021 postings
December 15, 2021: Our Wild Poinsettia - Not as showy but a native species. Did Joel Roberts Poinsett ever conceive of the popularity of the plant now bearing his name?
December 10, 2021: Our Native Holly - Birds love the berries: but leave the fruit to the birds - in humans it is a great purgative.
November 12, 2021: A possible new Oak species for Minnesota?
During the next 50 years the habitat zone of our Oaks will move northward. Find out what that means for Minnesota species and which new species may move in.
October 17, 2021: Virginia Creeper or Grape Woodbine - Can you tell the difference?:
October 4, 2021: The Autumn Grapplers: Five plants that represent a fair example of the how seeds hitch a ride on humans and animals.
September 19, 2021: Video. Talk by author John Moriarty.
John Moriarty is senior manager of wildlife for Three Rivers Park District. He has written or co-authored five books on the natural world of Minnesota. His talk concentrates on the latest book - Minnesota’s Natural Heritage. Minnesota hosts three of the world’s ten biomes: the northern coniferous forests, the deciduous forests, and the prairie, each with its lakes, wetlands, streams and rivers. The book covers all three allowing readers to comprehend our ecosystems and its future.
September 5, 2021: Surviving the drought: The many uses of Pennsylvania Sedge.
August 22, 2021: Minnesota connections to naturalist Joseph Banks.
August 13, 2021: Cattail Invasion
We have three species of cattail in our marshes in Minnesota, one native and the other two species are imports which have been running amok for years now. How to tell them apart.
July 23, 2021: Eloise and Monet
Both Eloise Butler and Claude Monet were contemporaries; both wanted a plant garden and a water garden; both achieved what they wanted and both accommodated what many would call a weed. Details.
July 5, 2021: It would not grow for her!
Fireweed, or Great Willow Herb (Chamerion angustifolium), was an elusive plant for Eloise Butler - she told her friend Gertrude Cram that nothing would ever induce it to grow for her.
June 11, 2021: It’s under your foot, found around the world, and do you see it?
A look at Black Medick, a Pea Family legume and how to identify it.
May 22, 2021: Memories of Eloise Butler could have been much different:
What events of 1911 put Eloise in charge of the Wildflower Garden and why it might not have happened.
May 9, 2021: A cautionary word to horses about Box Elder:
Why the seeds are deadly to horses.
April 17, 2021: Yellow Trillium now in bud in the Garden.
While it is not native to Minnesota, it is still in the Garden. How did it get there?
April 6, 2021: Such a Variety
Three plants introduced by Eloise Butler to her Wild Flower Garden 100 years ago in 1921 have a story to tell.
March 21, 2021: Devil's Club:
One hundred years ago Eloise Butler brought into her wild flower garden in Glenwood Park several obscure plants. One has a lengthly history. It is called “Devil’s Club” and from the Latin name of “Oplopanax horridus” you may gather it is somewhat formidable.
March 4, 2021: 75 years ago.
One of the rarest spring ephemeral plants in the Wildflower Garden is the Minnesota Dwarf Trout Lily (Erythronium propullans). Read more about it.
Feb. 15, 2021: A bunch of berries.
All six of the Minnesota native Dogwoods were once in the Wildflower Garden but two are missing - lost and probably not replaceable. One is the Round-leaf Dogwood, Cornus rugosa and the other is the Bunchberry, C. canadensis. Bunchberry. More about them.
Jan. 31, 2021: Superstition, the Maltese Cross and White Ash all come together. -
Never mind the many useful qualities of our native White Ash tree, we turn to the superstitious quality well known in pioneer times.
Jan. 18, 2021: Dandelions to the rescue -
Herbal and medicinal uses and treatments you may have never heard of.