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Gardening > Plants > Re: Plant ID
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Re: Plant ID

by Big John <watson6918@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 23, 2007 at 04:38 PM

Molly Day wrote:
> Hi -
>   I sent the photo to a friend who is an herbalist and here is her
response -
>    --------------------------------------
>   Well, that didn't take long - from the photo it appears flowers only
have 4 petals, which why I thought it might be a phlox, BUT - NOT.  
>    
>   From my reference book's photo & plant description I think it is:
>    
>   SPECTACLE POD Dithyrea Wislizenii (mustard family).  These are grayish
plants that branch near the top & are 1-5 ft tall. Leaf blades are broad,
taper to the tips & without petioles. The flowers grow in terminal racemes
that may be a ft long in the fruiting state. Each flower has 4 light blue
or purplish petals (although in the book & in your photos the flowers look
almost white to me). Each fruit is shaped like the two lenses of a set of
spectacles.  They are found on sandy slopes throughout the western 1/2 of
the state.  Bloom time is May - August.
>    
>    
>   NOTE: The book I bought & use is out of print now.  It's Roadside
Flowers of Oklahoma by Doyle McCoy
>   
> 
> Stephen Sentoff <steve30401@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>   Big John wrote:
>> No one there has any idea 
>> what they are, so I will appreciate any clues. 
>>
>> Thanks --
>>
>> http://i167.photobucket.com/albums/u138/xjohn7015/CIMG0171.jpg
>>
>> p.s. I know what the little red ones are -it's the large white ones I'm

>> interested in.
>>
>> Big John
> 
> I'd say it's a mustard of some sort. Maybe that's enough to get you 
> pointed in the right direction.
> 
Thanks Molly--

I think we must conclude that it's a mustard of some sort - not sure we 
have hit on th exact Genus and specie, but close enough!  It is shown 
here  growing on what we call "blow sand" - the mound it's shown on is a 
ridge of sand where a fence once stood, that was built by blowing sand 
during the dust bowl (Stonewall County, Texas).  Interesting, in that 
the people who where trying to farm it lost everything and abandoned it. 
'Twas years later developed into the "Old Glory" oil field -- worth 
million$ !!

Big John.
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
Re: Plant ID
Molly Day <mollyday1@[  2007-05-17 09:39:44 
Re: Plant ID
Big John <watson6918@[  2007-05-23 16:38:40 

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tan12V112 Tue Dec 2 1:26:36 CST 2008.