Part 5 (2/2)
The stem of the Crosswort is four-sided, and, like the leaves, it is covered with fine hairs.
2. BITING STONECROP
The Biting Stonecrop is common all over Britain. It is abundant in summer on rocks and in sandy places by the seaside, and you find it growing inland too.
The Stonecrop grows in large tufts close to the ground. It is a small plant with a great many little branches, and these branches are of two kinds. Some are thickly covered with fat, juicy leaves. These leaves are very tiny, and they are laid thickly all round the stem in the same way as the scales are laid on a fir-cone. Those leaves nearest the end of the branch are often tinged with red.
On the other branches of the Stonecrop the fat green leaves are not nearly so closely packed together, and near the end of each branch grow two or more flowers.
These flowers are golden yellow, and they have five pointed petals which resemble the rays of a star, and there are ten yellow stamens lying flat out, on and between these petals.
In the centre of the flower you see five fat little seed-vessels standing up. After the yellow petals have all fallen off, these seed-vessels lie down and show five points like a small green star.
3. YELLOW BEDSTRAW
The Yellow Bedstraw is to be found all over the country. It grows in pastures, and on the hedge-banks, and it is in flower all summer and autumn.
There is a white bedstraw as well as a yellow, and you will often find great ma.s.ses of both growing like a carpet on the gra.s.sy hedge-banks.
The stems of the Yellow Bedstraw are not strong, although they grow to a great length, and the plant is usually lying in a tangled ma.s.s near the ground.
The flowers are very tiny. They grow in dense cl.u.s.ters. Each cl.u.s.ter has a short stalk which branches opposite another stalk on the main stem.
The flowers have four petals and four stamens, and these stamens have almost no stalks. They look just like dots lying on the yellow petals.
The leaves of the Yellow Bedstraw are very tiny. They resemble small green straps, and they grow in circles, with eight to ten leaves in a circle round the main stem, close to where the flower cl.u.s.ters grow. You also find a circle of leaves growing on the short stalks which hold the cl.u.s.ters of flowers. These tiny leaves are hairy underneath.
4. MUGWORT
The Mugwort, or Wormwood as it is often called, is common all over the country. It grows in waste places and by the borders of the fields, and it blooms in autumn.
You will easily recognise this plant by its greeny-white woolly flowers, with their yellow or red centres. These flowers grow in short cl.u.s.ters, and each little woolly head is made up of a number of separate flowers shaped like tubes. These yellow or red tubes are grouped together as in the Daisy.
The stem of the Mugwort is pale green, and has red ridges running from end to end. The leaves are very handsome. They are large and broad and feather-shaped, with big leaflets in pairs opposite each other on the stem, and there is always a single long leaflet at the end. Each of these leaflets is deeply cut round the edges into large teeth.
The back of the Mugwort leaves is covered with silvery white down, and often the green edges are curled back on to this white underside.
PLATE XI: 1. WILD MIGNONETTE 2. COMMON DANDELION 3. TANSY
1. WILD MIGNONETTE
The Wild Mignonette does not grow close to the ground like the sweet-scented Mignonette we have in our gardens. It is a tall, spiked plant, which you find in summer-time on waste ground and among stone heaps, and it is not at all noticeable.
The flowers grow on short, thin stalks. Those flowers at the bottom open first, and the little buds are always at the top of the tall spike.
These flowers are little yellow b.a.l.l.s, which seem to be entirely made up of stamens. But if you gently pick one of these yellow b.a.l.l.s to pieces, you will find that there are six greenish-yellow petals.
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