Our mystery seeds this week were not what I expected.
After watching the seed pods for nearly a month, out burst these seeds with white wings.
Do you recognize them?
Be sure to leave a comment if you have a guess.
Edit: The answer is now posted.
Our mystery seeds this week were not what I expected.
After watching the seed pods for nearly a month, out burst these seeds with white wings.
Do you recognize them?
Be sure to leave a comment if you have a guess.
Edit: The answer is now posted.
The cone- or column-shaped seed head gave away our mystery seeds to at least a few of you last week. The seeds were from the Mexican hat or prairie coneflower, Ratibida columnifera.
The Mexican hat is named for the way its flower has whimsical resemblance to a colorful sombrero.
The flowers are unusual because the disk flowers in the center form a column, rather than a flat disk as seen in the sunflowers and daisies (hence the species name “columnifera“.)
It is fascinating to watch the ray flowers, which look like petals, unfurl from the bottom.
Slowly the disk flowers start to open at the bottom, then move up to the top over a few days.
The leaves are delicate and highly cut in, giving the plant a lacy and open look.
Mexican hats are perennial plants that grow throughout much of North America. They are particularly common in the prairies.
They are will tolerate quite dry conditions and are regularly grown in Arizona.
Mexican hat plants grow readily from seeds. (See a close up photograph of Mexican hat seeds at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center)
Do Mexican hats grow where you live? Have you ever watched their flowers unfurl?
The wildflower that produces these seeds can be grown throughout most of the United States.
Do you know the name of the unique flower that produces these seeds? Let us know what you think.
Edit: The answer is now posted.
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