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Phacelia crenulata (Desert
Phacelia) Hydrophyllaceae (Waterleaf Family) Semi-desert.
Canyons, openings, sand. Spring. Phacelia crenulata varies greatly in the size of the plant and the number and size of flowers. Although it is most often 6-14 inches tall, it is commonly 16-24 inches tall. Flower heads can be quite small or luxuriously large. Flower clusters are always in a curling scorpion tail and this gives rise to the common name "Scorpionweed", a name shared with a number of other species (some are members of the Waterleaf Family, some are in other families). In good spring flowering years, such as 2003 and 2005, thousands of plants color rocky/ sandy flats and slopes in lavender-blue. More Phacelia crenulata photographs. The Latin "Cren" ("notches") and "lat" ("wide") refer to the leaf shape. |
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Phacelia glandulosa Hydrophyllaceae (Waterleaf Family) Subalpine,
alpine. Rocky openings, talus. Summer. This lovely Phacelia is both sticky and strongly scented. It enjoys open rocky areas where its colors really stand out. It grows to a maximum of fifteen inches tall and typically spreads seven-ten inches wide. Leaves are deeply cut and are both basal and along the stem (cauline). Thomas Nuttall collected this species (probably in the mid 1830s) in Wyoming and named it in 1848. |
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Phacelia
integrifolia Hydrophyllaceae (Waterleaf Family) Semi-desert.
Shrublands, grasslands. Spring. Phacelia integrifolia flowers are a most delicate, porcelain-like violet-pink. The plant grows four to twenty inches tall and flowers for many weeks. It typically inhabits dry, sandy soil and dunes. John Torrey named this species in 1826 from a specimen that Edwin James collected, probably in 1820, on the "banks of the Platte". (Quotation from Intermountain Flora.) |
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Phacelia sericea
(Silky Phacelia) Hydrophyllaceae (Waterleaf Family) Subalpine,
alpine. Meadows, openings, tundra. Summer. Silky Phacelia is a favorite of many wildflower enthusiasts; it is certainly one of my favorites. Flowers are lovely light-to-dark purple with protruding stamens tipped in gold-coated anthers. The plant is usually about ten inches tall but can be eighteen inches. It is common in meadows above tree line and on high mountain passes from mid-June through August. More Phacelia sericea photographs. "Phacelus" is Greek for "bundle" and refers to the clusters of flower branches. "Sericea" is Greek for "silk". Thomas Drummond was the first to collect this lovely plant; he found it in the late 1820s in the northern Rocky Mountains. |
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