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"People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us." - Iris Murdoch

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Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 5 June, 2025 by Jeremy Bartlett5 June, 2025

Buttercups are one of the delights of spring, yet I haven’t written about them in the fourteen years I’ve been writing this blog.

It’s time to make amends, so this month’s blog post is about Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus.

Goldilocks buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus

Goldilocks buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus. (There are a couple of Lesser Celandine flowers too.) Late April 2025.

Where to find Goldilocks

Ranunculus auricomus,is a perennial herb. It is a calcicole, a plant that thrives in lime rich soil (chalk, limestone and other basic, often clay soils). It avoids very acid and very dry sites. While usually known as Goldilocks Buttercup, one of its other English names is Wood Buttercup and it can often be found growing in woodlands.

Goldilocks Buttercup also grows on road verges, in churchyards and amongst scrub. It sometimes grows in old meadows too, and in more upland habitat provided there is some shelter such as on ledges or amongst boulders.

I don’t see Goldilocks Buttercup very often. In previous years I’ve found it in woods and churchyards but this spring my sightings were all from road verges here in Norfolk, often in large patches, while out on a bike ride.

There are records of Ranunculus auricomus from many parts of the British Isles:

Distribution of Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus

Distribution of Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus. Image from 2020 BSBI Plant Atlas.

Further afield, Ranunculus auricomus is native to northern Europe and western Asia, approximately from latitudes 43 to 71 degrees and from western Ireland to the Ural Mountains. In Iceland it is quite rare and has a coastal distribution. It is also found in Alaska and the Western United States.

In the British Isles Goldilocks Buttercup appears to be both a weak competitor and intolerant of grazing or cutting.

In much of Scandinavia, Ranunculus auricomus has a wider habitat range than in the British Isles. It is not dependant on basic soils and can be found in meadows and grazed pastures, even on screes and in snow beds in mountainous country. It even grows as a weed in cultivated and disturbed ground.

Goldilocks Spotting

Goldilocks Buttercup is often the first buttercup to flower. Flowering starts in early April and is usually at its peak by early May and finished by June (note 2). The rootstock of Ranunculus auricomus overwinters with a bud at or just beneath the soil surface, ready to grow very early in the spring, with a head start on other buttercups.

Once you know what to look for, Ranunculus auricomus is very distinctive. Its flowers are a typical, shiny golden yellow but the flowers often look a bit tatty, with one or more missing or deformed petals.

Goldilocks buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus

Goldilocks buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus, on a Norfolk road verge. Early May 2023.

Closer up:

Goldilocks buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus

Goldilocks buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus. The flowers often have one or more missing or deformed petals.

Leaves at the the base of the plant the leaves are palmately and deeply lobed and slightly resemble those of Creeping Buttercup (Ranunculus acris). Higher up, whorls of leaves clasp the flowering stems. The plant grows up to 40cm (16 inches) tall.

There are good photographs on the Wild Flower Finder, Pete’s Walks, Wildflowers of Ireland and Nature Spot websites. Mike Crewe’s Flora of East Anglia website has excellent photographs that compare different species of Ranunculus.

Here is the fruit, similar to many other buttercups, a cluster of smooth achenes with short hairs and curved or hooked beaks:

Goldilocks buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus

Fruit of Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus.

Ranunculaceae and ranunculin

Ranunculus auricomus is a member of the Ranunculaceae (Buttercup or Crowfoot family), as are our other species of buttercup (Ranunculus). Stace’s Flora lists 30 species of Ranunculus in the British Isles and another dozen hybrids (note 1) and there are around 600 species of Ranunculus worldwide.

Previously, I’ve written about several other members of the Ranunculaceae on this blog, including Wood Anemone (Anemone nemorosa), Pasque Flower (Pulsatilla vulgaris) and Lesser Celandine (Ficaria verna).

Many members of the Ranunculaceae contain the compound ranunculin, which is broken down enzymically when plant tissue is damaged into protoanemonin, which has an acrid taste and can cause a range of unpleasant symptoms including blistering of the skin and, when eaten in quantity, nausea, vomiting, liver damage and paralysis. Cooking or drying plants as straw breaks down the protoanemonin and makes it harmless.

Goldilocks Buttercup is a bit of an oddity. It lacks the acrid taste of other buttercups, suggesting it contains little or no ranunculin. This makes it more vulnerable to browsing than other buttercups.

Not a single species

Ranunculus auricomus is actually a collection of microspecies (also known as agamospecies), much like Dandelions (Taraxacum sp.) and Brambles (Rubus fruitcosus s.l.). The plants can reproduce sexually but they also reproduce by apomixis, where  pollination must take place for seed to form but there is no actual fertilisation. This results in offspring that are clones of the mother plant.

For convenience, we lump the plants together as Ranunculus auricomus but several hundred microspecies of Ranunculus auricomus have been described from the Continent and the 200 or so microspecies found in the British Isles are probably different from these (note 1). These differences presumably explain different habitat requirements.

Much work needs to be done to distinguish microspecies and their preferences. Individual colonies with particular characteristics could be lost due to climate change or destruction of habitat without us knowing.

What’s in a name?

Goldilocks Buttercup’s specific name, auricomus, means “golden hair” (from a compound of aurum meaning gold and coma meaning hair of the head). “Goldilocks” has been used to describe a person with bright yellow or golden hair since the mid-15th century and has been used as a name for buttercups since the 1570s.

There doesn’t seem to be any direct link between the plant and the well known children’s fairy tale, “Goldilocks and the Three Bears”. The fairy tale is an old one, first published in written form by Robert Southey in 1837. Earlier versions of the story feature the bears but the intruder who eats their porridge is an old woman. Goldilocks makes her first appearance in twelve years later, when writer Joseph Cundall changed the old woman into a little girl in his book Treasury of Pleasure Books for Young Children.

In Latin, rana is a frog and Ranunculus means “little frog”, perhaps because many buttercups prefer wetter habitats. (So I suppose the Ranunculaceae is the family of little frogs.)

All in all it’s a good excuse to include a photograph of one of our garden residents:

Common Frog, Rana temporaria

A little frog. (Common Frog, Rana temporaria.) Photograph by Vanna Bartlett.

Notes

Note 1 – The Fourth Edition of Clive Stace’s “New Flora of the British Isles“ (2019).

Note 2 – It’s all weather dependant but the sequence tends to start with Goldilocks Buttercup, followed by Bulbous (R. bulbosus), then Meadow (R. acris) and finally Creeping Buttercup (R. repens).

Posted in Ornamental | Tagged Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus, Woodland Buttercup

Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 28 May, 2025 by Jeremy Bartlett28 May, 2025

A Tree Lupin in the garden

Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus

Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus.

Our Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus, is in flower in the back garden. Its pale yellow flowers are a contrast to other flowers at the moment, such as the pink and white of Sweet Rocket (Hesperis matronalis) and the red-flowered climbing Rose ‘Allen Chandler’. There is a blue shed behind the Tree Lupin, giving more contrast, and a Golden Hop (Humulus lupulus ‘Aureus’) trailing up a support next to it, whose leaves match the colours of the lupin. The lupin’s leaves are silky, grey-green and palmately-lobed, contrasting in form, as well as staying green throughout the winter.

Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus

Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus, with Golden Hop (Humulus lupulus ‘Aureus’)

Our Tree Lupin really belongs in the garden and it’s easy to forget that I only planted it three years ago. I bought it as a potted plant from Hethersett Plant Fair (note 1) at the beginning of May 2022 and planted it a couple of days later.

The Tree Lupin isn’t a tree, and never will be. It’s a short-lived shrub, lasting up to seven years. Our plant is now 1.5 metres (five feet) tall and about 1.2 metres (four feet across). The RHS website says that plants can grow to 1.5 – 2.5 metres tall with a similar spread. Wikipedia gives a maximum height of 2 metres (7 feet) tall in sheltered positions, but more typically 1 – 1.5 metres (3 – 5 feet) tall. I prune our plant whenever it grows across a path and it doesn’t seem to mind.

Our garden soil is very well-drained sandy loam and this is just what Tree Lupins prefer (note 2).

Tree Lupins in the wild

The Tree Lupin is a native of North America, particularly parts of California. It has been introduced into other parts of the world, including other parts of North America (British Columbia, Oregon and Washington), South America (Argentina, Chile and Falkland Islands), Australia (Tasmania and Victoria) and New Zealand (North and South Islands). In Europe it now grows in Great Britain and Ireland.

Lupinus arboreus is a neophyte and was introduced into the British Isles in 1793, when it was treated as a tender plant requiring greenhouse protection. It was first recorded in the wild in 1926 at Freshfield in South Lancashire. It is now well established, with a largely coastal distribution. But there are inland records too: Tree Lupins grow happily on well-drained soils and are given hardiness rating “H4” by the Royal Horticultural Society (“hardy through most of the UK (-10C to -5C)”).

Tree Lupins grow well in sand dunes (where they are widely planted) and on Cornish china-clay tips, as well as on roadsides, railway banks and on waste ground.

Distribution of Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus. Image from BSBI Plant Atlas.

Distribution of Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus. Image from 2020 BSBI Plant Atlas.

Tree Lupin flowers smell faintly of honey.

The Wild Flower Finder website has photographs of Tree Lupin flowers at different stages of development. Like our plant, the flowers are yellow but the First Nature website has a photograph of a flower with a tinge of mauve. Mike Crew’s Flora of East Anglia website has pictures of white and blue flowers as well as the more usual yellow. Flowering is usually from June until August but it is a bit earlier this year after the sunny and very dry spring.

Although each Tree Lupin plant is short-lived, the plants persist by seeding around. They produce large amounts of long-lived seeds in stiff, hairy pods.

Tree Lupin are members of the Pea family, the Fabaceae (formerly Leguminosae). They have a similar  shrubby, short-lived growth habit to our native Common Gorse (Ulex europaeus) and Common Broom (Cytisus scoparius).

Members of the Fabaceae have nitrogen-fixing bacteria in root nodules (in Tree Lupin, from the genus Bradyrhizobium) . These capture nitrogen from the atmosphere and convert it into ammonia (NH3) or ammonium ions (NH4+), which the plant can use to grow. This is especially useful in poor soils.

Other Lupins

There are over 199 species of Lupinus worldwide. Most are from North and South America, with some from North Africa and the Mediterranean region.

Mike Crew’s Flora of East Anglia website gives details of two other species of lupin found in our region of Britain:

Narrow-leaved Lupin, Lupinus angustifolius

The Narrow-leaved Lupin, Lupinus angustifolius, is an annual species with very narrow leaflets and blue flowers. It comes from southern Europe and has sometimes been used as a fodder crop. Like other lupins the seeds contain bitter-tasting toxic alkaloids but there is some natural variation and plant breeders have produced low-alkaloid, edible forms (note 3).

Russell Lupins, Lupinus x regalis

Most of us are familiar with Russell Lupins, Lupinus x regalis, which are the common garden Lupin, available in many colours. They are hybrids between the Tree Lupin and the Large-leaved Lupin, Lupinus polyphyllus. They are herbaceous perennials and have inherited this growth habit from the Large-flowered Lupin and a branching habit from the Tree Lupin.

Russell Lupins are often referred to as “”Russell Hybrids”. They grow to 1.5m (five feet) in height and have flowers in many shades of yellow, pink, red, blue, purple or white. Bicoloured flowers are common. Although both parents are from North America, Russell Hybrids were developed on two allotments in York by the horticulturalist George Russell in the first half of the 20th century (note 4).

Pink Russell Lupins, Lupinus x regalis

Pink Russell Lupins, Lupinus x regalis, at Kentwell Hall, Long Melford, 21st May 2025.

We don’t grow Russell Lupins in our current garden, though they would probably do well. Our previous garden in Norwich was full of Garden Snails (Cornu aspersum). These took a particular delight in eating Lupin leaves, tearing them apart with relish and small plants disappeared overnight. Snails weren’t a problem when I lived near Aberdeen and we had many fine Russell Lupins in the garden.

Russell Lupins in a Scottish garden.

Russell Lupins in a garden near Nethybridge in Scotland, June 2024.

Tree Lupins and wildlife

Lupin flowers are popular with bumblebees and in the last few days worker Buff-tailed Bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) have been visiting the flowers, starting at the bottom of a flower spike and working their way up towards the top.

Bombus terrestris worker on Tree Lupin

Bombus terrestris worker visiting Tree Lupin flowers.

On a sunny day the mirid bug Closterotomus trivialis uses our Tree Lupin leaves as a place to sunbathe and, presumably feed. (The bug, a recent arrival from the Mediterranean, is polyphagous, that is, it feeds on a wide range of plants.)

Closterotomus trivialis

Mirid bug Closterotomus trivialis on a Tree Lupin leaf.

Perhaps less welcome is the Lupin Aphid, Macrosiphum albifrons, which can be found on various species of lupins, including Tree Lupin and Russell Lupins.

Lupin Aphids.

Lupin Aphids. Photograph by Vanna Bartlett.

We haven’t found any (yet) this year but in previous years we have had high numbers on our Tree Lupin. We let nature take its course, glad of another species of insect in the garden, but the aphids can sometimes cause serious damage and plants that have been badly debilitated by the aphids can die. The excellent Influential Points website has more details and photographs.

Happy memories!

I have several happy memories of lupins.

Firstly, growing Russell Lupins with my Mum’s help when I was four or five years old. We forgot to water the seedlings but they survived and were the first plants I grew in what started off as a sandpit for me to play in and ended up as my very first garden.

Russell Lupins also remind me of our garden near Aberdeen when we moved to Scotland. I find the smell of Russell Lupin flowers a little peppery and we once made the mistake of picking some of the flowers for a vase. They were soon banished outside; never again.

My first definite memories of Tree Lupins is from the Suffolk coast near the Minsmere RSPB reserve, seen when walking and birdwatching in the area.

More recently, I think of Tree Lupins on the banks of the railway cutting at Felmingham in North Norfolk, where Small-flowered Catchfly grows. The soil is very sandy, which provides good winter drainage, and disturbed, which allows both the catchfly (an annual) and the Tree Lupin to spread by seed.

Finally, earlier this month I went to see the fabulous Oysterband perform at Folk On The Pier in Cromer, on the North Norfolk coast. We walked along the cliff tops from Overstrand to Cromer and, as we started to descend into Cromer there were some Tree Lupins in flower here too. It was a great day out: sunshine, the coconut smell of Common Gorse, good company, tea and cake, fish and chips, a superb concert …and lupins. Perfection!

Tree Lupin in our garden

Tree Lupin in our garden, earlier today.

Notes

Note 1 – Hethersett Plant Fairs are organised by Norfolk Plant Heritage and there are two a year. The fairs are held at Hethersett Village Hall (a few miles west of Norwich) in early May and late August.

Note 2 – The Gardeners World website recommends growing Tree Lupins in full sun, in rich soil (“Acidic / Chalky / Alkaline / Clay / Heavy / Moist / Well Drained / Light / Sandy”). In our north-facing garden our Tree Lupin is in sun for much of the day in summer, but doesn’t receive much direct sunshine in winter.

Note 3 – Several years ago I grew two varieties of Narrow-leaved Lupin, on the allotment, while taking part in a Garden Organic members’ experiment to test the palatability of lupins bred for human consumption.

It was a very dry summer but in spite of this the plants cropped well. But the seeds were very hard and dry and I had to boil freshly collected seeds for an hour or more to soften them. I then discovered that the taste was still too bitter for my liking. I didn’t try them a second time.

I let a few of the plants self-seed and they were very attractive but they eventually died out.

Note 4 – You can read more about George Russell and his lupins online: “The man who made lupins his life” (Yorkshire Post 2004) and “The Lupin Man of York – George Russell” (God’s Own County blog).

At their peak there were 152 named varieties but in the years after Russell’s death many were lost to Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) or allowed to self-sow, reverting to their original colours.

Posted in Ornamental | Tagged lupins, Lupinus, Lupinus angustifolius, Lupinus arboreus, Lupinus x regalis, Narrow-leaved Lupin, Russell Lupins, Tree Lupin

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 21 April, 2025 by Jeremy Bartlett21 April, 2025

At the beginning of April I met an old friend, American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus, in a wet woodland at Buckenham in Norfolk. I was on a BMS (British Mycological Society) foray. Fungi were few but seeing American Skunk-cabbage was a highlight of the day.

I hadn’t seen the plant for several years but I had strong memories of its magnificence and it didn’t disappoint. It is stunning!

American Skunk-cabbage,Lysichiton americanus

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus, Buckenham, Norfolk, 5th April 2025.

There is something almost alien about American Skunk-cabbage’s big, bright yellow flowers, which emerge in April, slightly ahead of the leaves. It is bigger and bolder than our own Cuckoo Pint, Arum maculatum, which I wrote about in March 2018, though clearly related.

Both plants are members of the family Araceae and have flowers borne on an inflorescence known as a spadix, partially enclosed in a sheath (a leaf-like bract known as a spathe).

The spadix emits a scent to attract pollinators and in Lysichiton americanus this is a musky smell to attract adult rove beetles. The smell resembles the spray of skunks (note 1), hence “Skunk-cabbage”. I’ve never seen or sniffed a skunk so the smell reminded me of plastic with an added top note of Fox and I found it intriguing rather than unpleasant. (The Oxford Plants 400 website is less complimentary, describing the scent as “unpleasant, faeces-like, indole-rich“.)

Insects are often attracted to yellow objects and the bright yellow spathes of the plants at Buckenham were attracting sunbathing flies, including Eristalis hoverflies. I also noticed a few Owl Midges inside one flower (note 1).

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus, attracting flies.

The genus name Lysichiton is derived from two Greek words: lysis, meaning dissolve, and chiton, meaning a cloak or armour. These describe the way that spathe enclosing the inflorescence withers soon after flowering (note 2).

Lysichiton flowers are hermaphrodite but individual plants have male and female phases. The spathe is protogynous – the flowers start off functionally female and then become male.

Lysichiton americanus is, as the specific name suggests, native to America, particularly western North America  from Alaska south to California, where it is known as Western Skunk-cabbage (note 3).

Native American tribes would sometimes eat parts of the plant but not raw. Like our native Cuckoo Pint, American Skunk-cabbage contains calcium oxalate crystals (raphides). Thorough cooking or drying can make it edible but I’m not tempted. Statements like “the native North American Indian tribes would cook [the leaves] in several changes of water, the end result being a tasteless mush” don’t make me want to experiment.

Encounters with Skunk-cabbage

American Skunk-cabbage has been introduced to several European countries: Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Great Britain, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland. It is a plant of stream sides, boggy places and swampy woodland in both its native and introduced range.

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus, in the bog garden at Forde Abbey (27th April 2008). Some of the spathes have withered.

My first encounter with American Skunk-cabbage was in the wonderful Cruickshank Botanic Garden in Aberdeen, when I was studying Botany in the early 1980s. I often visited the garden at lunchtimes and sometimes shared a sausage roll with the gardener’s dog, a golden retriever with an expression that even a penniless, hungry student couldn’t refuse. In spring, the stunning yellow flowers of Lysichiton americanus were one of the many highlights of the garden (note 4).

I have vivid and happy memories of my time in Aberdeen but sadly no pictures of Lysichiton americanus. But when I saw the plant in 2008, when we visited Forde Abbey, near Chard in Somerset, I did take some photographs. It was late April and Lysichiton americanus was flowering in the bog garden. The clumps of glossy, leathery foliage give the plant a passing resemblance to a cabbage.

Even when Lysichiton americanus has finished flowering, its leaves are very distinctive and noticeable. When we stayed in Oban in May 2018 we recognised American Skunk-cabbage plants on the banks of a stream on the road north of the town to Ganavan Sands. Plants had clearly spread along the stream – probably from an ornamental pond higher up the hillside – and were heading down through a bog towards the coast (note 5).

American Skunk-cabbage

American Skunk-cabbage spreading, near Oban. 19th May 2018.

Invasion!

The Oban plants illustrate some of the story of Lysichiton americanus in the British Isles.

American Skunk-cabbage was introduced to cultivation here in 1901 and, like many introductions, decided it liked being here. It escaped into the wild in 1947, in Surrey. Since 2000 it has been recorded in roughly 1,000 new sites (an eight-fold rate of increase compared with the previous 40 years). It is now considered invasive and has been banned from sale since 2016. It is now illegal to plant (or otherwise cause to grow) Lysichiton americanus in the wild and gardeners must prevent any Skunk-cabbage growing in their garden from escaping into the wild.

Lysichiton americanus can spread by its rhizomes and by seed. A large seed bank can build up in the soil and can remain viable for around 8-9 years. Unchecked, the plant can eventually dominate large areas, especially in swampy woodland.

American Skunk-cabbage now has its own page on the Scottish Invasive Species Initiative website, where you can report sightings. There is also a PDF file on the GB Non-native Species Secretariat website.

Herbicides are often used to control American Skunk-cabbage but they should only be used by qualified people when the plant is growing near water (as it usually is) because of the harm they can cause to aquatic life. A safer but more labour intensive method is to dig out the rhizomes by hand. You will probably have to wear wellies (or even a full waterproof suit) to do this. Tiny pieces of rhizome can grow into plants but the good news is that the plants only flower when three or more years old. Cutting off flowers will prevent established plants from setting seed.

Mixed Feelings

I have mixed feelings about invasive, non-native plants. They do need to be controlled but it is no accident that they are growing here – they are magnificent. I can understand why they were introduced into gardens in the first place, particularly before we understood they could have a detrimental effect on our native flora.

For me, American Skunk-cabbage occupies a similar place in my heart to other spectacular invasive plants such as the toweringly magnificent Giant Hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum). Yes, these plants are invasive, but I love them. (I am less keen on Japanese Knotweed, Reynoutria japonica.)

Fortunately Lysichiton americanus can still be seen in some gardens, including Cambridge University Botanic Garden, where it grows on its own small island in the middle of a pond. Maybe that’s the best compromise, though it doesn’t quite give the thrill of seeing those “wild” plants at Buckenham (note 6).

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus

American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus. Buckenham, Norfolk, 5th April 2025

Notes

Note 1 – Skunks are American mammals in the family Mephitidae (related to our Stoat, Weasel, Badger and Otter from the family Mustelidae). They are known for their ability to spray a liquid with a strong, unpleasant scent from their anal glands. Chemically, this is a mixture of sulphur compounds such as thiols , which can smell of garlic, cabbage or rotten eggs. (Thiols are added to natural gas, which is naturally odourless, to allow us to detect its presence.)

In contrast to American Skunk-cabbage, I think the smell of Cuckoo Pint is quite subtle – perhaps “slightly of decay”. It has also been described as “a mixture of mouse, lemon and rotting plant material” to “foul and urinous“. Cuckoo pint flowers attract pollinating Owl Midges rather than rove beetles.

Cuckoo Pint relies on a combination of heat and smell to attract Owl Midges but the spadix of Lysichiton does not heat up to attract insects.

Note 2 – There are two species of Lysichiton worldwide, the other being Lysichiton camtschatcensis, Asian Skunk-cabbage. It has a white spathe and is sometimes known as White Skunk-cabbage, Far Eastern Swamp Lantern or Japanese Swamp Lantern. It grows in northern Japan and on the Kamchatka Peninsula, the Kuril Islands and Sakhalin. Apparently, the flowers are scentless.

Note 3 – There is also an Eastern Skunk-cabbage, Symplocarpus foetidus, another member of the Araceae. Its spathes are mottled with varying amounts of yellowish-green and purple. The spadix emits a strong odour of “fresh cabbage with a slight suggestion of mustard” which attracts blowflies. Spiders often spin their webs at the the entrance to the flowers, to catch the flies.

Note 4 – Later in the year the bright yellow of the Skunk-cabbage was replaced by many other flowers, including the blues of  Himalayan Poppies (Meconopsis) and Gentians (such as Gentiana sino-ornata). Material from the Botanic Garden was extremely useful in Botany practicals. The garden’s Curator, Noel Pritchard, was one of my Botany lecturers and a great plantsman. His knowledge and love of plants inspires me to this day. (He died in 2004 but I’m glad to see there is an annual Noel Pritchard Memorial Lecture in his memory.)

Note 5 – I thought I remembered seeing the yellow flowers of Lysichiton americanus at Oban but of course I was a month too late. Memory plays tricks and my photograph sets the record straight.

Note 6 – The plants at Buckenham are being monitored and I’m told that the population is currently stable.

Posted in Ornamental | Tagged American Skunk-cabbage, Araceae, Lysichiton americanus, Western Skunk Cabbage

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Thirty latest posts

  • Goldilocks Buttercup, Ranunculus auricomus 5 June, 2025
  • Tree Lupin, Lupinus arboreus 28 May, 2025
  • American Skunk-cabbage, Lysichiton americanus 21 April, 2025
  • Cedar Cup, Geopora sumneriana 16 March, 2025
  • Cinnamon Bracket, Hapalopilus nidulans 13 February, 2025
  • Common Ragwort, Jacobaea vulgaris 13 January, 2025
  • Holly, Ilex aquifolium 7 December, 2024
  • Yellow Bird’s-nest, Hypopitys monotropa 24 November, 2024
  • Whiskery Milkcap, Lactarius mairei 8 November, 2024
  • Shaggy Bracket, Inonotus hispidus 25 September, 2024
  • Small Teasel, Dipsacus pilosus 24 August, 2024
  • Rothole Inkcap, Coprinopsis alnivora 1 August, 2024
  • Twinflower, Linnaea borealis 20 July, 2024
  • Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea 10 June, 2024
  • Beaked Hawk’s-beard, Crepis vesicaria 15 May, 2024
  • Thrift, Armeria maritima 17 April, 2024
  • Japanese Kerria, Kerria japonica 29 March, 2024
  • Golden Bootleg, Phaeolepiota aurea 12 March, 2024
  • Arched Earthstar, Geastrum fornicatum 22 February, 2024
  • Basil Thyme, Clinopodium acinos 3 January, 2024
  • Five Fungi from the Lanes of Norfolk 9 December, 2023
  • Five Fungi from the Streets of Norwich 21 November, 2023
  • Japanese Honeysuckle, Lonicera japonica 20 October, 2023
  • Tall Willowherb, Epilobium brachycarpum 28 September, 2023
  • Rooting Bolete, Caloboletus radicans 6 September, 2023
  • Marsh Sowthistle, Sonchus palustris 6 August, 2023
  • Bog Pimpernel, Lysimachia tenella 14 July, 2023
  • Giant Fennel, Ferula communis 6 June, 2023
  • Shining Crane’s-bill, Geranium lucidum 12 May, 2023
  • Wild Daffodil, Narcissus pseudonarcissus 1 April, 2023


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