Sunday, November 9, 2025

Disambiguation of Some Common Plant Names

I think the word disambiguation is cute. It means to remove uncertainty, and in this context and Google's, to point out when two different things have the same name and clarify which is which. Scientific names were created to address this problem in plants and animals, but not everyone understands this and certainly not everyone uses scientific names. 

Below are disambiguations for sage, hemlock, bergamot, and yam. (More in future posts)

sagebrush, Artemisia
sagebrush, Artemisia is not the same as culinary sage, Salvia

Sunday, November 2, 2025

Iceland in late September- Stunning

I had two nights in Iceland thanks to Iceland Air. It was the end of September and I signed up for a tour north and west of Reykjavik, to the Snaefellsnes Penninsula. It was spectacular. 

Iceland

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Plant Story -- Smooth Sumac, Rhus glabra

Sumacs are common shrubs in North America, and inconspicuous except in the fall, when the leaves turn a brilliant red. 

 sumac in autumn

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Travel Story--More of Wales

When I wrote a blog post about my visit to Wales a couple weeks ago (link), it got long before I had shared the full trip. Here are more pictures from Wales, starting at about Cardigan and continuing southward.

countryside in Wales
the countryside in Wales

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Plant Story--New England Aster, Symphyotrichum novae-angliae

The New England aster (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae aster family, Asteraceae) is very widespread; in North America it is found from the Atlantic to the Pacific, missing only very dry states like Nevada. Distribution maps show it as native across all that range, but it is an attractive plant that was brought into gardens long ago and may have escaped and naturalized. 

New England aster, Symphytotrichum novae-anglae
New England aster 

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Travel Story--Wales

I took a tour in Wales, mainly along the coast. Wales, the southwest corner of Britain, is about 170 miles long and 60 miles wide, but hills, mountains, and rivers make it a lot more complex.  My tour, with Road Scholar, began just north of Wales in Manchester, and circled south along the coast, finally turning east to Cardiff and then London. 

We saw lots of green pastures, with cows or sheep

Wales countryside from the bus

Sunday, September 28, 2025

American Squashes


zucchini and yellow summer squash
zucchini and yellow summer squash

Sorting out the squashes is a job for experts, which I am not. They are wonderfully confused.

“True squashes” are plants in the genus Cucurbita (Cucurbitaceae, cucumber family). About 15 species make up Cucurbita, all of them native to the Americas. 

Melons, such as cantalope genus Cucumis, watermelon, genus Citrullus (blog about watermelon) and others--all the melons--are from Asia, Africa or Europe.