Tag Archives: showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa)

The right hue

If there’s one thing about wildflowers that gets my heart jumpin’, it’s that there are so many that come in my favorite color: purple.  Makes me all swoony and lightheaded…

Plumed thistle (a.k.a. spear thistle, bull thistle or roadside thistle; Cirsium vulgare) (20080601_06013)

Plumed thistle (a.k.a. spear thistle, bull thistle or roadside thistle; Cirsium vulgare)

Prairie verbena (Verbena bipinnatifida) (20080601_06059)

Prairie verbena (Verbena bipinnatifida)

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) (20080518_05364)

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa)

Mexican petunia (a.k.a. Texas petunia or common ruellia; Ruellia brittoniana) (2009_09_04_028688)

Mexican petunia (a.k.a. Texas petunia or common ruellia; Ruellia brittoniana)

Littleleaf sensitive brier (a.k.a catclaw brier, sensitive vine littleleaf mimosa, native mimosa; Mimosa microphylla) (20080518_05542)

Littleleaf sensitive brier (a.k.a catclaw brier, sensitive vine littleleaf mimosa, native mimosa; Mimosa microphylla)

Musk thistle (a.k.a. nodding thistle; Carduus nutans) (20080601_05941)

Musk thistle (a.k.a. nodding thistle; Carduus nutans)

Mother’s Day bouquet

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) (20080422_04421)

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa)

Firewheel (a.k.a Indian blanket or blanket flower; Gaillardia pulchella) (2009_05_31_021051)

Firewheel (a.k.a Indian blanket or blanket flower; Gaillardia pulchella)

Seedbox (Ludwigia alternifolia) (20080921_12589)

Seedbox (Ludwigia alternifolia)

Purple horsemint (a.k.a. lemon beebalm, horsemint, lemon-mint or plains horsemint; Monarda citriodora) (2009_05_31_021019)

Purple horsemint (a.k.a. lemon beebalm, horsemint, lemon-mint or plains horsemint; Monarda citriodora)

Wild carrot (a.k.a. bishop's lace or Queen Anne's lace; Daucus carota) (2009_05_31_021020)

Wild carrot (a.k.a. bishop’s lace or Queen Anne’s lace; Daucus carota)

Berlandier's yellow flax (Linum berlandieri) (2009_05_31_021054)

Berlandier’s yellow flax (Linum berlandieri)

Downy phlox (a.k.a. prairie phlox or fragrant phlox; Phlox pilosa) (2009_04_11_015027)

Downy phlox (a.k.a. prairie phlox or fragrant phlox; Phlox pilosa)

Texas greeneyes (Berlandiera betonicifolia) (2009_05_31_021013)

Texas greeneyes (Berlandiera betonicifolia)

That which is to come

Faces rise through the soil, ghostly apparitions of life once buried yet clawing its way to the surface.

They call themselves flowers, these earthly beings, these shining, petaled, hued portraits of aliens.

A spotted cucumber beetle (Diabrotica undecimpunctata) makes its ascent over the petals of a common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) (20080301_02425)

They open without a sound, yet other marvelous creatures hear their siren songs and rush to partake of the bountiful visage each proffers.

More than was lost the year before is found again with each blossom, each new life.

A close-up of several crowpoison (a.k.a. crow poison or false garlic; Nothoscordum bivalve) flowers (20080301_02394_p)

Soon their armies will march upon the mountains and plot upon the plains.

Soon their kind will take from the sun all that it fells upon the world, and in that taking they will give as much as they consume.

A western honey bee (a.k.a. European honey bee; Apis mellifera) dives to the heart of a showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) to fetch a bit of pollen (20080412_03273)

Lives will do battle with those risen from the ground, will eat of their flesh, and in doing so will give hope to more faces that will glow in generations to come.

What splendor does war in the vernal birth of our planet!  What marvels do manifest!

Western salsify (Tragopogon dubius) blooms and stalks reaching toward the sky (20080426_04675)

Towers will be built.  Traps will be set.  And more faces will rise than can be counted.

We will watch this, we humans, and we will wonder at the beauty of such beasts.

A western honey bee (a.k.a. European honey bee; Apis mellifera) resting atop a full bloom of wild carrot (a.k.a. bishop’s lace or Queen Anne’s lace; Daucus carota) (20080518_05549)

Even as we shrink away from the heat that besets the selves we wish to protect, dirt will crumble as more leviathans reach forth, climb the air above, strip away their winter skins for spring countenances too long hidden away.

Fields will be colored by them.  Winds will carry their essence.  Eyes will rest upon their forms like so many mouths upon a banquet.

A syrphid fly (a.k.a hover fly; Toxomerus marginatus) feeding on the pollen of a Texas dandelion (a.k.a. false dandelion, Carolina desert-chicory, leafy false dandelion or Florida dandelion; Pyrrhopappus carolinianus) (20080518_05376)

What hope have we in light of such unstoppable invasions?

All hope, for vernal is that which is to come: life from lifelessness, growth from dormancy, brilliance from mundane, and new faces from the ashes of those who came before.

— — — — — — — — — —

Mary offered It’s Time for February Eye Candy and David offered Happy first day of spring!, both posting on the same day no less, and I blame them for this sudden want of mine to see the verdant, abundant life of spring.  Not that I don’t like winter, mind you; I love it, in fact, as it’s my favorite season, yet the naturalist within me desires the overflowing bouquet of marvelous flora and fauna that defines where we go from here.

Photos:

[1] A spotted cucumber beetle (Diabrotica undecimpunctata) makes its ascent over the petals of a common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale).

[2] As toxic as it is beautiful: crowpoison (a.k.a. crow poison or false garlic; Nothoscordum bivalve).

[3] A western honey bee (a.k.a. European honey bee; Apis mellifera) dives to the heart of a showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) to fetch a bit of pollen.

[4] A non-native species considered invasive in many parts, western salsify (Tragopogon dubius) produces large, elegant flowers.  All the towering buds you see around it are of the same species.

[5] A western honey bee (a.k.a. European honey bee; Apis mellifera) resting atop a full bloom of wild carrot (a.k.a. bishop’s lace or Queen Anne’s lace; Daucus carota).  Behind both towers yet another flower of the same plant has yet to open.

[6] A syrphid fly (a.k.a hover fly; Toxomerus marginatus) feeding on the pollen of a Texas dandelion (a.k.a. false dandelion, Carolina desert-chicory, leafy false dandelion or Florida dandelion; Pyrrhopappus carolinianus).

My favorite color – Part 4

Like the emperor’s robes tinted with hues so magical as to be unreal, nature loves to swaddle itself with rapturous shades of purple.

Long has it been the color of royalty and a sign of passion, symbolic of sensuality, mystery and wisdom.  Earth wears it well.

Sensitive brier (a.k.a catclaw brier, sensitive vine littleleaf mimosa, native mimosa; Mimosa nuttallii, or sometimes Mimosa microphylla) (20080518_05542)
Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) (20080518_05355)
Desert false indigo (a.k.a. false indigo, indigobush or lead plant; Amorpha fruticosa) (20080426_04801)

— — — — — — — — — —

Photos:

[1] Sensitive brier (a.k.a catclaw brier, sensitive vine littleleaf mimosa, native mimosa; Mimosa nuttallii, or sometimes Mimosa microphylla)

[2] Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa)

[3] Desert false indigo (a.k.a. false indigo, indigobush or lead plant; Amorpha fruticosa)

Then along came a bee

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa).  A delightful flower, at least by my standards.  Notwithstanding my love for things purple, of course.

Showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) growing along Dixon Branch at White Rock Lake (20080412_03155)

Difficult to photograph sometimes.  Why?  This particular plant is quite fond of fresh water; it therefore clings to edifices near sources that can give it what it loves.

I find it along the banks of creeks and tributaries, holding fast to positions at the edge of swamps, and especially where I live, rooted on the shores of lakes (in my case, White Rock Lake).

Daring and agile, it places me in the position of fighting the landscape to get respectable photographs.  But I’m no slouch when it comes to getting down and dirty to take a closer look at something.

I knelt in mud and dirt and wet grass as I crawled along the banks of Dixon Branch trying to appreciate and capture these marvelous beauties.

A close-up of a showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) (20080412_03158)

Then along came a bee.

Covered in pollen, the western honey bee (a.k.a. European honey bee; Apis mellifera) flitted about right in front of me as we both determined how much of a threat the other posed.  To me, it seemed far more dangerous than I would ever be to it, yet I appreciated its weary approach.  Most humans would shoo it away, if not kill it outright.

Not me, though.

A western honey bee (a.k.a. European honey bee; Apis mellifera) inspecting the back of a showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) (20080412_03272_b)

My first thought, at least at that specific moment, was “You’re doing it all wrong!  Shouldn’t you hunt for pollen on the other side of the flower?”  I felt that would be the approach most likely to succeed.

Eventually the bee figured out the error of its landing and righted the wrong.

A western honey bee (a.k.a. European honey bee; Apis mellifera) at the heart of a showy evening primrose (Oenothera speciosa) as it looks for pollen (20080412_03273_b)

I trundled on hands and knees trying to follow it, trying to capture that perfect moment of bee and pollen and flower.

It surely felt I wrongfully intruded, if not presented a rather selfish invasion of its privacy.  It tolerated me anyway, not flinching when I bumped the flower it occupied.