Showing posts sorted by relevance for query EW. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query EW. Sort by date Show all posts

Downy Phlox (Phlox pilosa)


 



































Downy Phlox (Phlox pilosa)

Photo by Leticia Provencio

The blossoms of downy phlox gather in rounded clusters at the top of the stems, sometimes three inches across, like small bouquets. Each blossom is only half to three quarters of an inch wide, but the five petals make a generous display. Pale pink, lavender, soft purple—sometimes all three shades appear in the same patch.

Downy phlox can also be quite variable in height. Some plants barely reach six inches, just hugging the ground. Others stretch up to two feet, especially in open woodlands where the light filters through in shifting patterns. The stems often branch near the top, giving the flower clusters a loose, airy look. When a breeze moves through, the whole plant sways.

The leaves are narrow and pointed, up to three inches long but only about half an inch wide. Their soft hairs catch the light, giving them a silvery cast in early morning. When I touch them, they cling slightly to my fingers—a reminder that this plant is built for dry places, conserving moisture in whatever way it can. I usually find downy phlox in prairies or open woodlands, places where sunlight reaches the ground and the soil drains quickly.

Downy phlox earns its place in both the landscape or the garden. Early‑season bees, skippers, and small butterflies rely on its nectar when few other blossoms are open, and its dense, hairy foliage offers shelter for tiny insects moving along the prairie floor. In a native garden, downy phlox needs only what its native haunts provide: sun for at least part of the day, soil that drains well, and space for air to move through its stems. It thrives in sandy or loamy ground, and once established, it handles dry spells with ease. Give it those simple conditions and it will return each spring with the same reliability it shows in the prairie—blooming early and feeding the first pollinators of the season. 

Sources:

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Phlox pilosa (downy phlox) species profile

Minnesota Wildflowers — downy phlox (Phlox pilosa)

Illinois Wildflowers — downy phlox

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Phlox pilosa (downy phlox)

Wisconsin DNR — Prairie and open‑woodland wildflowers of Wisconsin

(EW)

Marsh Marigold (Caltha palustris)

Marsh Marigold (Caltha palustris) 

When I was a kid, marsh marigold was the first wild green I ever tried cooking. I’d read somewhere that you had to boil it to remove the toxins, so I did—once. The result was so bitter it nearly curled my tongue. Later I learned you were supposed to boil it twice. I tried again, hopeful. It was just as awful the second time. That was the end of my marsh‑marigold‑as‑food experiment. Since then, I’ve learned to appreciate it for what it truly offers: not flavor, but beauty. The next thing I tried foraging was deep‑fried, breaded dandelion blossoms—but that’s a story for another day.

What marsh marigold does give us, reliably and generously, is ecological value. It’s one of the earliest splashes of color in the wet woods, opening its glossy yellow flowers while the ground is still cold and the tree canopy barely hints at green. Those early blooms are a lifeline for emerging insects—hoverflies, early bees, and a whole cast of small pollinators that need nectar long before most plants wake up. In the soggy hollows where it grows, marsh marigold helps stabilize the soil, slowing erosion along stream edges and holding moisture in places that would otherwise dry too quickly. Its dense clumps create shelter for amphibians and invertebrates, tiny pockets of shade and humidity that matter more than we tend to notice.

The plant itself is unmistakable once you know it. Yellow Marsh Marigold is a native, perennial wildflower that rises one to two feet tall on thick, hollow, branching stems. Before the flowers open, the round green and yellow buds look like small lanterns waiting for a signal. When they finally unfurl, they reveal five to nine shiny, petal‑like sepals—up to an inch and a half wide—that catch the light like polished metal. The heart‑shaped basal leaves, two to seven inches across, sit low and broad, gathering sunlight in the dim understory.

You’ll find marsh marigold in the places that stay wet long after everything else has dried: shaded seeps, marshy hollows, mucky streambanks, and the dark, humus‑rich soils of deciduous woods. It’s a plant that thrives in mud and shadow, a bright flare in the saturated areas of spring.

I may never eat it again, but every April I’m grateful for its return. Some plants feed the body; others feed the season. Marsh marigold, for me, has always been firmly in the second camp.

Sources:

University of Wisconsin–Madison Herbarium Marsh Marigold (Caltha palustris) Species Account

Minnesota Wildflowers Marsh Marigold

USDA Forest Service Plant Guide: Caltha palustris

Illinois Wildflowers Marsh Marigold

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Caltha palustris Profile

 (EW)

 

Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica)


Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica) 

This is one of the earliest spring wildflowers that I hunt for on April hikes in the woods. The spring beauty, a signal of early spring, is a native, perennial wildflower that rises six to ten inches from the forest floor just as the soil begins to warm. Its loose clusters of 1/3‑inch pink or white flowers—each one marked with fine, darker pink veins—open in the upper part of the stem. Midway up the slender stalk, a pair of smooth, grass‑like leaves stretches four to twelve inches long. The plant thrives in part shade, in rich, moist woodland soils where snowmelt lingers.

Spring beauty’s value becomes apparent when you notice the life it supports. This flower is the primary host of the spring beauty bee (Andrena erigeniae), a tiny, early‑emerging specialist whose entire life cycle is timed to this plant’s brief bloom. While many bees forage widely, this one depends almost entirely on spring beauty pollen to raise its young. On warm April afternoons, you may see the bees dusted in pale pink pollen, moving steadily from blossom to blossom. Their presence reveals how essential these early flowers are. Together, the plant and its bee form one of the first partnerships to reawaken the forest each year.

Sources:

Wisconsin Horticulture--Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica)

Illinois Wildflowers--Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica)

Minnesota Wildflowers--Claytonia virginica (Spring Beauty)

Bee Watching--Spring Beauty Mining Bee (Andrena erigeniae)

Minnesota DNR--Andrena erigeniae (Spring Beauty Mining Bee)

Vermont Atlas of Life--Spring Beauty Mining Bee (Andrena erigeniae)

 (EW)



 

Shooting Star (Dodecatheon meadia)





































     



 Top photo by Gary Kurtz and Bottom photo by Carla Wells
     
Shooting Star (Dodecatheon meadia) 

Shooting Star is one of those plants that is especially photogenic. A single stalk rises ten to twenty inches from the ground, and at the top, one to five nodding flowers hang like tiny ornaments, each about an inch wide. Most are a soft purple, though every so often I find a white one, pale as a ghost among the new spring greens.

What always strikes me is the way the petals sweep backward, as if the flower has been caught in a sudden gust of prairie wind. Five petals flare away from the center, giving the bloom that unmistakable “shooting star” shape. It’s a design that feels both whimsical and precise, like nature having a bit of fun while still following the blueprint.

The leaves stay close to the ground—lance‑shaped, toothless, and surprisingly long, sometimes up to six inches. Their rounded tips make them look gentle, almost soft, even though they’re built to handle the thin soils and exposed slopes where this plant likes to grow. I usually find shooting stars in glades, rocky wooded slopes, bluff ledges, open meadows, and prairies. These are demanding landscapes, and the shooting star rises to the challenge.

Sources:

University of Wisconsin–Madison Herbarium — Dodecatheon meadia (Shooting Star) Species Account

Minnesota Wildflowers — Shooting Star (Dodecatheon meadia)

Missouri Botanical Garden — Dodecatheon meadia Plant Profile

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Dodecatheon meadia (Shooting Star)

Prairie Moon Nursery — Shooting Star (Dodecatheon meadia)


(EW)

Wood Betony (Pedicularis canadensis)




































     
             Wood Betony is a perennial, native wildflower in Wisconsin. It grows five to 14 inches in height.  The flowers appear in a spike cluster, one to three inches tall. The plant bears yellow, white, or red tubular flowers that are about an inch long. The leaves are highly divided, fern-like in appearance, one to three inches long, and covered in fine white hairs. It grows in dry woods and prairies. (EW) 

Pasqueflower (Pulsatilla nuttaliana)






























    

      





 












 





 







Pasqueflower (Pulsatilla  nuttaliana)

What catches my eye first is the color. I’ll be walking a sandy rise or an open patch of prairie in April in one of those places that warms early; and suddenly there's a pasqueflower, holding out a bloom the color of cold dawn. Lavender, blue‑purple, sometimes nearly white, each flower only an inch or two across but somehow commanding the whole hillside. Five to eight sepals flare open like a small lantern, and in the center sits a bright yellow mound of stamens, 150 to 200 of them. The whole plant is wrapped in a soft fuzz. The stems are hairy; the basal leaves divided neatly into three parts and covered with silky hairs that catch the light. When the breeze moves through, the plant seems to shimmer.

Pasqueflower likes dry to moderately moist soil, full sun, and a bit of space. It thrives on sandy hillsides and open prairies—places where the land drains quickly and there's a little more wind. These are often old places, remnants of prairie that escaped the plow. What I love most is how early it arrives. While the rest of the prairie is still rubbing sleep from its eyes, pasqueflower is already blooming, already feeding the first hungry bees of the year. Those fuzzy stems and leaves aren’t just charming—they’re insulation, a strategy for surviving cold nights and unpredictable spring weather. It’s a plant built to survive in early spring weather.

Sources:

University of Wisconsin–Madison Herbarium — Pulsatilla patens (Pasqueflower) Species Account

Minnesota Wildflowers — Pasqueflower (Anemone patens)

USDA Forest Service — Plant of the Week: Pasqueflower

Prairie Moon Nursery — Pasqueflower (Anemone patens)

Missouri Botanical Garden — Anemone patens Plant Profile

(EW)

 

Golden Alexander (Zizia aurea)


     Golden Alexander is a perennial, native wildflower that grows one to three feet tall. Its tiny, cream yellow 1/4-inch flowers form clusters that are five to six inches wide. It has compound leaves that divide into three stalks. Each stalk has three to seven narrow, coarse-toothed, pointed leaflets. It grows in wet, sun to partial shade in ditches, along roads, in moist fields, and in woodlands and woodland edges. (EW)


 

Round-lobed Hepatica (Hepatica americana)








Round-lobed Hepatica (Hepatica americana)

On those first genuinely warm, hopeful spring days—when the air carries that fresh, unmistakable scent of the season turning—this is the wildflower I look for. Round‑lobed hepatica is one of the earliest native perennials to bloom in Wisconsin, often appearing before anything else opens, other than skunk cabbage, of course. It stands only four to six inches tall, but its flowers shine brightly: white, pink, or lavender, each with five to nine petal‑like sepals and three green bracts tucked beneath. The blossoms emerge even before the plant’s own leaves, so a forest floor can suddenly be dotted with hundreds of half‑inch to one‑inch clusters, all rising on fuzzy stems. The three‑lobed basal leaves are evergreen—green through spring and summer, then turning burgundy in fall and winter. The leaves you see in early spring are often the ones that endured the snow. Hepatica thrives in dry or moist, humus‑rich soil in shade or part shade, especially in woodlands and woodland edges. 

As do many other early spring wildflowers, round-lobed hepatica has a partnership with ants. After the plant finishes blooming, it produces seeds with a small, nutrient-rich structure called an elaiosome that ants eagerly collect. They carry the seeds back to their underground nests, feed the elaiosomes to their larvae, and discard the intact seeds in protected, nutrient-rich chambers. Those discarded seeds often germinate, allowing hepatica to spread slowly and steadily across woodland slopes. Over time, this nearly invisible process helps create the scattered colonies that return to the same places year after year.

Sources:

 Wisconsin Horticulture--Hepatica (Hepatica americana)

North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox--Hepatica americana

Prairie Moon Nursery--Hepatica americana

Friends of the Wildflower Garden--Round‑lobed Hepatica (Hepatica americana)

Illinois Wildflowers – Round-lobed Hepatica (Hepatica americana)

(EW)
 

Sweet White Violet (Viola blanda)






























Sweet White Violet (Viola blanda)

Photo by Carla Wells 

At only six to twelve inches tall, sweet white violet settles into the understory, offering very small white flowers. The flowers are delicate, each one a small white face with purple veins running through the lower petals. Those veins act like landing guides for pollinators, subtle but purposeful. The upper petals often twist or bend backward, giving the blossom a slightly windswept look.

The leaves are all basal, heart‑shaped, and only an inch or two long. They sit close to the ground, soft and rounded, like small green cups holding the plant’s energy. When I brush my hand over them, they feel cool, as if they’ve been storing the shade. Sweet white violet seems to prefer places where moisture lingers—mesic woodlands, riparian edges, swamps, shaded ditches. Anywhere the soil stays rich and damp, it finds a foothold.

It is a very adaptable plant. I’ve seen it thriving in deep forest shade, but also along quiet roadsides where the light shifts throughout the day. It doesn’t demand pristine habitat. It simply asks for a bit of moisture and a little protection from the harshest sun. In return, it offers these small, luminous flowers that brighten the ground in early spring.

But sweet white violet is more than a pretty spring face. It also offers ecological benefits. Its early‑season blooms offer nectar and pollen at a moment when few woodland flowers are open, giving small native bees and early‑emerging flies a dependable resource. The plant’s dense basal leaves create shaded pockets of moisture that shelter ground‑dwelling insects and help stabilize the thin soils of forest floors and streambanks. In a native plant garden, it slips easily into the understory, weaving between ferns, sedges, and spring ephemerals without crowding them. It only needs moisture and protection from harsh sun—and in return it softens the ground layer, supports early pollinators, and brings a little brightness to the dimmer corners of a garden.

Simple Source:

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Viola blanda (sweet white violet) species profile

Minnesota Wildflowers — sweet white violet (Viola blanda)

Illinois Wildflowers — sweet white violet

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Viola blanda (sweet white violet)

Wisconsin DNR — Spring woodland wildflowers of Wisconsin


(EW)

Downy Yellow Violet (Viola pubescens)

 

Downy Yellow Violet (Viola pubescens)

When I’m walking through the woods in early spring, before the trees have fully leafed out, I’m always struck by how much work is already happening at ground level. The downy yellow violet is one of those plants I’ve learned to appreciate. One of the first things I learned about this violet is how it supports the earliest insects of the season. Queen bumble bees, groggy from hibernation, zigzag low over the leaf litter looking for their first real meal, and these yellow blooms are often among the first reliable sources of nectar and pollen they find. Solitary bees stop by too, along with early flies and beetles—small creatures that, in turn, become food for the first wave of migrating birds. It’s a whole chain of spring energy, and this little violet helps set it in motion.

But here’s something that surprised me when I first learned it: unlike many of our blue and purple violets, the fritillary butterflies don’t use downy yellow violets as a host plants. We tend to lump all violets together because fritillaries are so famously tied to them, but the butterflies are far pickier than they appear. Their caterpillars rely on the low, basal‑leafed blue violets—Viola sororia, V. pedata, V. pedatifida, and others—plants that leaf out early and stay close to the ground, offering shelter and food at just the right moment. The yellow violets, lovely as they are, simply don’t fit the larvae’s needs. It’s one of those small ecological distinctions that changes how you see the forest floor.

Even without hosting fritillaries, this violet still tells me a lot about the health of a woodland. It tends to grow where the soil stays cool and moist, where leaf litter hasn’t been scraped away, and where the understory hasn’t been trampled or overgrazed. When I see it thriving, I take it as a sign that the forest is still functioning the way a forest should—nutrients cycling, moisture held in place, shade doing its part.

And then there’s the plant itself, which is worth admiring on its own terms. The downy yellow violet is a native, perennial wildflower in Wisconsin. It reaches a height of 8 to 16 inches. It has several 3/4‑inch yellow flowers per plant. Its flowers have 5 petals with several dark purple veins. Each flower grows on its own stalk. It has hairy heart‑shaped, alternate leaves with round or scalloped teeth. It grows in wet, cool shade, in deciduous woodlands.

Sources:

Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources — Violets of Wisconsin: Species Accounts and Habitat Notes

Minnesota Wildflowers — Viola pubescens (Downy Yellow Violet)

Illinois Wildflowers — Downy Yellow Violet (Viola pubescens)

Flora of North America — Viola pubescens Species Description

USDA Forest Service — Viola Species: Ecology, Pollination, and Ant‑Mediated Seed Dispersal

University of Wisconsin–Madison Extension — Woodland Spring Ephemerals and Their Pollinators

Butterflies of Wisconsin (Jeffrey B. Glassberg) — Fritillary Host Plant Requirements and Violet Specialization

Xerces Society — Host Plants of North American Fritillaries

University of Minnesota Extension — Fritillary Butterflies and Their Violet Hosts

Tallamy, Douglas — Bringing Nature Home: Native Plants and Lepidoptera Host Specificity

(EW)
      

Large-flowered Trillium (Trillium grandiflorum)



 




















































Large-flowered Trillium (Trillium grandiflorum)

Top photo by Carla Wells

Large‑flowered trillium grows up to 18 inches tall and is a native perennial in Wisconsin, often forming long‑lived colonies that can persist for decades in undisturbed woods. Its pure white flower gradually blushes pink as it ages—a natural process called anthocyanin accumulation—so a single hillside can show a mix of white, rose‑tinted, and fully pink blooms as the season progresses. Each blossom has three broad petals, two to three inches across, usually with softly ruffled or wavy edges that catch the light on overcast spring mornings. The petals encircle a bright cluster of yellow stamens that attract early pollinators such as small bees and hoverflies.

The plant’s three leaves—technically leaf‑like bracts—are three to six inches long and two to five inches wide. They are ovate with a pointed tip and a tapered base, arranged in the classic trillium whorl that gives the genus its name. When the sun filters through the hardwood canopy, the leaves often show a subtle mottling or sheen, a reminder that trilliums evolved to take advantage of the brief spring window before the forest fully leafs out.

Large‑flowered trillium thrives in partial shade beneath deciduous hardwoods, especially sugar maple, basswood, and beech. It prefers humus‑rich, well‑drained soil built from centuries of leaf litter. Because the plant grows slowly and relies on ants to disperse its seeds, it is most abundant in older, undisturbed woodlands—places where the soil has been allowed to deepen and darken for many years.

Sources;

Wisconsin Wildflowers — Native Wildflowers of Wisconsin: Large-flowered Trillium (Trillium grandiflorum)

Johnson’s Nursery Knowledgebase — Large White Trillium (Plant Profile)

US Forest Service — Great White Trillium (Plant of the Week)

Wikipedia — Trillium grandiflorum

Wisconsin Wildflowers — Great White Trillium | Spring Ephemeral


(EW)

Wood Anemone (Anemonoides quinquefolia)




 

Wood Anemone (Anemonoides quinquefolia)

Wood anemones are so slight—just four to eight inches tall—that you could miss them entirely if you weren’t paying attention. But once that first bloom lifts above the leaf litter, the species becomes easier to pick out. Each plant produces a single flower per stem, typically three‑quarters of an inch across, composed of five (sometimes six) white sepals rather than true petals. The blossoms rise on slender stalks above a whorl of finely divided leaves, catching enough early‑spring light to gleam against the forest floor.

The leaves themselves are sharply lobed—three to five pointed segments, each coarse‑toothed and about an inch long. They look like tiny green hands reaching outward. Though each stem stands alone, wood anemones often grow in loose colonies—sometimes wide, soft carpets that spread across damp woodland floors. They’re not aggressive; they simply move slowly through the soil by slender rhizomes, year after year, until they create a kind of living ground cover. I often find them in places where the soil is dark and rich, the kind that stays cool and mucky long after the snowmelt

Sources:

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Anemone quinquefolia (wood anemone) species profile

Minnesota Wildflowers — wood anemone (Anemone quinquefolia)

Illinois Wildflowers — wood anemone

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Anemone quinquefolia (wood anemone)

Wisconsin DNR — Spring ephemerals of Wisconsin forests


(EW)


     

Large-flowered Bellwort (Uvularia grandiflora)


Large-flowered Bellwort (Uvularia grandiflora)

I always smile when I come across large‑flowered bellwort because it looks so hopelessly wilted, as if it’s already given up on spring before spring has even begun. Those pale yellow blossoms droop so convincingly that I used to think they were past their prime, but it’s really just the plant’s twisted flower stalk playing a little trick on the eye. When I lean in close, I can see the six narrow tepals flaring slightly at their tips, and if the morning is warm enough, there’s a faint sweetness on the air—just enough for early pollinators to catch.

The whole plant has a relaxed, sleepy posture. Its leaves, only a few inches long, hang softly from the stem, and every time I notice how the stem seems to pass right through the base of each leaf, I have to remind myself that this isn’t damage or disease—it’s perfoliation, one of bellwort’s signature quirks. When sunlight filters through the canopy just right, those drooping leaves glow from within.

I usually find bellwort in the cool, shaded understory of older deciduous woods, tucked into rich soil built from generations of leaf litter. It keeps good company—trilliums, bloodroot, spring beauties—each of them taking advantage of that narrow window before the trees fully leaf out. In places where the forest has been left alone for a long time, bellwort forms loose, easy colonies, returning year after year. For me, it’s one of those subtle markers telling me the season really is spring, and sometimes spring just droops quietly at your feet.

Sources:

Minnesota Wildflowers — Large‑flowered Bellwort (Uvularia grandiflora)

Illinois Wildflowers — Large‑flowered Bellwort

Wisconsin DNR — Spring Ephemerals of Wisconsin Forests

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Uvularia grandiflora Profile

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Uvularia grandiflora (Large‑flowered Bellwort)


(EW)

 

Rue Anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides)














































Rue Anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides)

Sometimes carpeting the forest floor in delicate drifts, rue anemone, a native, perennial wildflower in Wisconsin, rises just four to eight inches tall. Its blossoms—usually two or three per plant—range from pure white to soft pink or lavender, depending on age and light exposure. Each flower is about an inch wide and composed of five to ten petal‑like sepals surrounding a bright green cluster of stamens and pistils. On cool spring mornings, the flowers often remain partially closed, giving them a shy, nodding appearance.

Just below the blooms sits a whorl of simple leaves, each divided into five to eight rounded lobes. The leaves are about an inch long, with three gentle teeth at the tip, and their thin, translucent texture allows sunlight to glow through them when the canopy is still open. Rue anemone often grows in loose colonies, spreading slowly by tuberous roots that help it survive the long, shaded summers after the spring ephemerals fade.

This species thrives in moist, deciduous woodlands—especially in rich soils beneath sugar maple, basswood, and oak—where it takes advantage of the brief spring window before the trees leaf out. Its airy, lightweight structure allows it to sway with the slightest breeze, making it one of the most graceful early bloomers in Wisconsin’s forests.

Sources:

Minnesota Wildflowers — Rue Anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides)

Illinois Wildflowers — Rue Anemone

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Thalictrum thalictroides (Rue Anemone)

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Thalictrum thalictroides Profile

Wisconsin DNR — Spring Ephemerals of Wisconsin Forests


(EW) 

Yellow Trout Lily (Erythronium americanum)


































     Top photo by Carla Wells and Bottom photo by Sevie Kenyon 

Yellow Trout Lily (Erythronium americanum) 

The flower is usually not what I see first. It’s the leaves—those mottled, brown‑and‑green patterns that look so much like the flanks of a brook trout that the name feels inevitable. They lie close to the ground at first, cool and smooth. Then, almost overnight, the flower appears. A single yellow bloom per stem, nodding toward the forest floor. Each one is about an inch wide, with six petals that curve backward. I always have to crouch down to see it properly. At five to ten inches tall, it’s easy to miss unless you’re moving slowly, which is I generally try to do until I hear those magic words, "Gary, hurry up!"

The leaves are what anchor the plant—elliptical, pointed, and basal, sometimes as long as eight inches. When a whole colony is up, the forest floor looks like it’s been brushed with watercolor. These colonies can be decades old, spreading gradually through the soil by underground corms. Some patches in old-growth forests are thought to be more than a century in the making. What takes nature a century to build can take humans a few hours to destroy.

I usually find yellow trout lilies in dry, deciduous woodlands—places where sugar maple and American beech hold the canopy. The soil there is rich with leaf litter, the kind that stays damp even after a warm wind moves through. Trout lilies seem to like that combination of moisture and filtered light. They’re spring ephemerals, after all. They do their work early, before the trees leaf out and the shade deepens. When I see that first nodding yellow flower, I know the woods are waking up. The long winter is loosening its grip. And spring is beginning again.

Simple Source — Title List (no bullets, no links)

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Erythronium americanum (yellow trout lily) species profile

Minnesota Wildflowers — yellow trout lily (Erythronium americanum)

Illinois Wildflowers — yellow trout lily

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Erythronium americanum (yellow trout lily)

Wisconsin DNR — Spring ephemerals of Wisconsin forests

 (EW)


Cut-leaved Toothwort (Cardamine concatenata)




 







































































Cut-leaved Toothwort (Cardamine concatenata)

The name “cut‑leaved toothwort” tells two stories at once: the “toothwort” part comes from the plant’s knobby, tooth‑like rhizomes—pale, segmented underground stems once used by Indigenous peoples and early settlers as a peppery seasoning—while “cut‑leaved” refers to the plant’s finely divided, lacy leaflets. Together they point to a spring ephemeral that has both an interesting history and is instantly recognizable on the forest floor.

Cut‑leaved toothwort is a native, perennial spring ephemeral in Wisconsin, rising four to twelve inches tall and often blooming in loose drifts before the forest canopy closes. Its flowers—typically three to eight per stalk—are white to pale pink, each about an inch long, with four petals that flare open like tiny cross‑shaped flags. On cool mornings the blossoms may remain partly folded, giving the plant a tentative, early‑spring posture.

Its deeply divided leaves are among its most distinctive features. Each leaf is composed of three sharply toothed leaflets, so narrow and lacy that they cast delicate shadows on the forest floor. Arranged in a whorl just below the flowers, these finely cut leaflets make the plant easy to distinguish from the broader‑leafed spring ephemerals that bloom nearby.

Cut‑leaved toothwort thrives in moist, deciduous woods, especially beneath sugar maple, basswood, and oak. It favors humus‑rich soil and the cool, filtered light of early spring. Its flowers are an important nectar source for early pollinators, including the specialist toothwort miner bee (Andrena arabis), which relies almost exclusively on toothwort species for pollen.

Sources:

(Each on its own line, no bullets, no links)

Minnesota Wildflowers — Cut‑leaved Toothwort (Cardamine concatenata)

Illinois Wildflowers — Cut‑leaved Toothwort

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Cardamine concatenata (Cut‑leaved Toothwort)

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Cardamine concatenata Profile

Wisconsin DNR — Spring Ephemerals of Wisconsin Forests


 (EW)

Wild Strawberry (Fragaria viginiana)


     The Wild Strawberry is a native, perennial wildflower. It grows three to six inches tall. It has 3/4 inch flowers with round petals surrounding a yellow center. The three-inch, three-part basal leaves are coarsely toothed. The leaflets are an inch long. It likes dry soil and sun. It can be found near woodland edges. (EW)


Early Buttercup (Ranunculus fascicularis)

Early Buttercup (Ranunculus fascicularis)    

Early buttercup is not a tall plant—only about six inches high and just as wide—but it has a way of brightening even the sparsest ground. The flowers are the first thing I notice: bright yellow, about three‑quarters of an inch across, with five petals that often bend backward, shining in a way that makes the whole plant seem lit from within. It’s one of the earliest wildflowers to bloom on dry hillsides, sandy prairies, and open savannas, sometimes appearing in April when the nights are still cold and the ground hasn’t fully warmed. It grows best in full sun, though it can manage in light, open shade.

The leaves sit mostly at the base, longer than they are wide, divided into small leaflets that are each lobed into three to five parts. When I kneel down to look closely, the leaflets remind me of tiny green hands, each one shaped slightly differently. It looks s a delicate plant, but still able to rise from soil that often looks too dry or too thin to support much of anything. Its preference for lean, rocky, or sandy soils is part of what makes it so dependable in these early‑season habitats.

What surprises me most is how much life this small plant supports. Hummingbirds visit the flowers, dipping toward the yellow petals with the same curiosity I feel when I find them. I don’t always expect hummingbirds to be drawn to such a low, modest bloom, but they know what they’re doing. Early buttercup offers nectar early in the season, when choices are still limited. It also feeds early‑emerging native bees and small pollinators that rely on these first flashes of color before the larger prairie flowers begin their long summer show.

Sources:

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Ranunculus fascicularis (early buttercup) species profile

Minnesota Wildflowers — early buttercup (Ranunculus fascicularis)

Illinois Wildflowers — early buttercup

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Ranunculus fascicularis (early buttercup)

Wisconsin DNR — Prairie and savanna wildflowers of Wisconsin

(EW)

May Apple (Podophyllum peltatum)




Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum)     

I always feel a small sense of anticipation when I see the first mayapple pushing up through the leaf litter. At first it looks like a closed umbrella on a pale green stem, rising quickly as if late for an appointment. The leaves stay folded while the plant gains height, then suddenly open into wide, twin parasols—six to eight inches across, glossy and unmistakable. Even in a crowded woodland, mayapple knows how to make an entrance.

Most plants have only two leaves, and they’re showy enough that it’s easy to overlook the flower entirely. It hides in the axil where the leaves meet the stem, a single nodding bloom with six to nine waxy white petals. Sometimes there’s a hint of rose color, but you have to crouch down to see it. I always do. There’s something satisfying about finding that secret flower tucked beneath the canopy of leaves, like discovering a quiet room in a familiar house.

The plant itself stands one to one and a half feet tall, but it feels larger because of those broad, umbrella‑like leaves. They cast their own shade, creating a small, cool world beneath them. When a breeze moves through, the leaves tilt and sway, and the whole colony seems to shift like a slow‑moving tide.

I usually find mayapple in part shade or full shade, in places where the soil is rich with humus—woodlands, shaded meadows, the dim edges of riverbanks. It likes moisture but not saturation, and it thrives in the kind of soil that has been built slowly by generations of fallen leaves. When mayapple appears, it’s a sign that the forest floor is healthy and alive.

What I love most is how communal it is. Mayapple rarely grows alone. It spreads by rhizomes, forming wide colonies that rise together each spring. Walking through a patch feels like moving through a gathering of small, green umbrellas, each one lifted in greeting. And beneath those leaves, the hidden flowers quietly go about their work, offering nectar to early pollinators and setting fruit long after the petals fall.

Every spring, when I see that first mayapple unfurling in the shade, I feel the familiar reassurance that the woods are waking. The soil is warming. And the quiet, steady rhythms of the season are returning once again.

Simple Source — Title List (no bullets, no links)

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Podophyllum peltatum (mayapple) species profile

Minnesota Wildflowers — mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum)

Illinois Wildflowers — mayapple

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Podophyllum peltatum (mayapple)

Wisconsin DNR — Spring woodland wildflowers of Wisconsin


(EW)

     

Jack-in-the-pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum)

























Jack-in-the-pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum)

Before I found my first jack‑in‑the‑pulpit, I had the wrong idea entirely. I’d been looking for a flower at least ten inches tall—something dramatic, something that would stand out in the understory. Instead, I walked past dozens of them without realizing it. The leaves get tall, one to two feet, rising like green flags in the spring woods. But the flower itself is tiny, tucked so neatly beneath those leaves that you almost have to kneel to see it.

When I finally spotted one, it felt like discovering a secret. The flower isn’t really a flower in the usual sense. It’s an upright spadix—“Jack”—sheltered inside a hooded spathe that curls over him like a little pulpit. Green, striped, sometimes tinged with purple, it looks like something out of a woodland fairy tale. You don’t just see a jack‑in‑the‑pulpit; you encounter it.

The leaves are impressive on their own. Each plant has a pair of trifoliate leaves, and each leaflet can be up to ten inches long and eight inches wide. When the plant is fully grown, those broad leaflets spread out like umbrellas, shading the ground beneath them. They’re showy enough that it’s easy to assume the flower must be equally bold. But jack‑in‑the‑pulpit hides its beauty in plain sight.

I usually find it in rich, moist soils—deciduous woodlands, shaded meadows, the cool edges of streams and springs. It likes places where the soil is dark and deep, built from years of leaf litter and quiet decay. When I see a colony of jack‑in‑the‑pulpits rising together, I know I’m in a healthy woodland, one that still holds moisture and shade the way a forest should.

What I love most is the moment of discovery. Even now, after years of walking these woods, I still have to slow down and look carefully. The leaves rise first, tall and confident, and then—if I’m patient—I find the little pulpit tucked beneath them.

Every year, when I spot that first jack‑in‑the‑pulpit hiding under its own leaves, I feel the forest is waking. The soil is warm. And the small mysteries of spring are returning, one step at a time.

Simple Source — Title List (no bullets, no links)

USDA NRCS Plants Database — Arisaema triphyllum (jack‑in‑the‑pulpit) species profile

Minnesota Wildflowers — jack‑in‑the‑pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum)

Illinois Wildflowers — jack‑in‑the‑pulpit

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center — Arisaema triphyllum (jack‑in‑the‑pulpit)

Wisconsin DNR — Spring woodland wildflowers of Wisconsin

(EW)