Month: May 2015 (Page 2 of 4)

Seed of the Week: Thyme

Our tiny mystery seeds from last week were from thyme, Thymus sp.

thyme-plant-52

Thyme is a small, evergreen perennial plant with tiny delicate leaves, which grows to only about 12 inches tall. It has been selected from wild plants originally found in southern Europe.

thyme-leaves-0017

Belonging to the mint family (it has square stems), selection has led to many different varieties.  General forms are common thyme, lemon thyme, caraway thyme and wild thyme.

Thymus_vulgaris(Public domain illustration from Franz Eugen Köhler, Köhler’s Medizinal-Pflanzen, Wikimedia)

The tiny white, pink or lilac-colored flowers attract bees.

Thyme is an herb that is used in cooking, either fresh or dried. It tends to have a powerful flavor, so use it sparingly. One advantage is that it has such small leaves it doesn’t require much mincing.

 Do you grow thyme? What is your favorite recipe for using it?

Bug of the Week: Hidden

It was hard to get the Bug of the Week photograph this week because we’ve been having a lot of gusting wind. Wind tends to interfere both by causing the plant to move about and also causing the light to flicker as branches move by.

In fact I was downloading some plant photographs when I noticed this:

thai-basil-plant045Do you see it? No, not the Thai basil plant, but the insect.

I admit I didn’t see it until the photograph was on my computer screen. When I went back out, there it was.

mini-mantis-be014Do you see it now?

Mystery Seed of the Week 249

 

We’ve talked before about how size of seeds and size of plants are not usually related.

mystery-seeds-249-1

Small seeds can grow into large plants and vice versa.

mystery-seeds-249-2

Today’s tiny seeds, however, do grow into a delicate little plant (the white object is a rice grain added for scale).

Do you recognize what plant these seeds are from? If you choose to, please leave a comment with your ideas.

Mystery Seed answers and new Mystery Seeds are posted on Tuesdays.

Edit:  The answer is now posted.

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