Canada's Local Gardener Volume 2 Issue 1

Page 20

The unhumble dandelion and its imitators By Dorothy Dobbie

The Dandelion O dandelion, rich and haughty King of village flowers Each day is coronation time, You have no humble hours – Vachel Lindsay

20 • 2020

Botanical illustration by Kräuterbuch Losch.

T

he poor dandelion has been given a wickedly bad name, but are we assigning it some of the blame that should be attributed to look-a-likes? There are quite a number of these imposters filling our lawns and lurking in road allowances and ditches. Dandelion (Taraxacum officinialis) is a useful and benign plant. While it does nothing to enhance the look of a perfectly groomed lawn, in springtime its pretty yellow flowers attract children and bees to collect little bouquets of love and gain sustenance. All parts of the dandelion are edible and the fresh new leaves are a spring tonic in salads (they are full of nutrition, but get bitter as they mature), the flowers can be made in to wine or used to make yellow dye, the amazing tap root can be ground into a coffee substitute or made into a tea useful for everything from boosting liver, kidney and bowel function to, according to legend, increasing psychic abilities and, brewed with leaves, calling up spirits when set in a steaming tea beside your bed! But the tap roots are even more clever than that. Small pieces left in the ground can regenerate a new dandelion. While the roots do not travel horizontally, they certainly can travel deep, usually existing in the top 6 to 18 inches of soil but, when necessary, drilling down 10 feet. This is not a bad thing. The roots bring useful nutrients to the surface and while doing so, they aerate your lawn. By the way, rabbits like dandelions, enticing the critters away from your bulbs in springtime. Dandelions have a few other tricks. The flowers know to open an hour after sunrise. They close to rain and at night to preserve their pollen and nectar, and seeing petals close in daytime is a pretty good predictor of rain. Sap from the stems has been used to cure warts and corns. But that is just the common dandelion. There are several plants with dandelion-like blooms that are often mistaken for the sunshine rays of the dandelion flower. False dandelion Hypochaeris radicata or the false dandelion or cat’s ear stems can rise 20 inches. The leaves hug the ground in rosettes that resemble dandelions, but cat’s ear leaves are not as deeply notched. Like dandelions, their leaves are edible—and hairy. The stems are not hollow, they are branching, but they do emit a milky sap. Wild lettuce Lactuca virosa has oval leaves with prickles on the ends and stems filled with medicinal-smelling sap that has some

Dandelion (Taraxacum officinialis).

interesting properties. When dried, this sap turns brown and is known as lactucarium. It can be dissolved in wine to create a soothing drink to relieve pain and help sleep. The drink eases coughs and colic and is a diuretic like dandelion but doesn’t cause an upset stomach. Some of its common names are opium lettuce (all lettuce is somewhat narcotic, but the leaves of this plants deliver the most potent dose), bitter lettuce, and green endive. Hawkweed Heracium aurantiacum flowers are orange and occur mainly in BC in Canada, where they are invasive nusiance. It has underground creeping roots that quickly populate large areas and outcompete other plants because they release a chemical to discourage germination of competing plant seeds. The yellow-flowered variety of hawkweed (H. umbellatum, some call it H. canadense) can be found throughout Canada. It can get quite tall, growing at much as six feet Issue 1

localgardener.net


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Beautiful Gardens: Roy Morris, Upper Golden Grove, New Brunswick

4min
pages 56-61

Beautiful Gardens: Helen Hogue, Winnipeg

5min
pages 50-55

Beautiful Gardens: Victoria Beatti, Calgary

6min
pages 44-49

Beautiful Gardens: Lynne and Michael Knowlton, Durham, Ontario

4min
pages 38-43

Dealing with deer

4min
pages 27-29

How to get started

5min
pages 62-64

Things plants know

5min
pages 35-37

Tree diversity: A popular concept but not without concerns

5min
pages 32-34

End of season tool care

3min
page 30

Two olde dawgs: The seasons are changing, what to do now?

3min
page 31

Cheating the climate gods

3min
pages 22-23

Growing hot peppers – what makes them hotter?

7min
pages 24-26

The unhumble dandelion and its imitators

4min
pages 20-21

Save the great red oak

2min
pages 8-9

Hugelkultur

2min
page 13

Have you ever tried growing pineapple?

3min
pages 18-19

Houseplants 101

4min
pages 10-12

Looking for beautiful gardens

1min
page 5

Dear gardeners

3min
page 4

Planning a fairy garden

3min
pages 14-17

What you need to know about growing tomatoes on a balcony

4min
pages 6-7
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.