Life On and Off an Acreage

In-sights into moving from an Acreage back to Town, plus a few things I find of interest.

Two things that horses are scared about:


1. Things that move
2. Things that don't move




Old enough to be eccentric, but not rich enough

September 8, 2013

Fall is approaching Fast!

These plants are the first indication that fall is coming! I knew the natives used the berries for dye, but never knew they were edible. Think I will pass on the taste test!


Summary courtesy of "Prairie Wildflowers"

Strawberry Blite: Red berry flowers

The Strawberry Blite flowers form in clusters where each leaf meets the stalk. They begin minuscule and green, with five sepals and no petals. As the sepals mature, the clusters turn red and enlarge to resemble berries.

(Raspberries, I'd say, but the experts — includingVance/Jowsey, source of that info above — see them instead as strawberries.)

These plants are members of the very large Goosefoot family. (The weed — or pseudocereal — Lambsquarters is related, though far from as brightly coloured.)

The berry-like clusters of Strawberry Blite flowers are, in fact, edible, though very bland, according to the webpage for the Royal Saskatchewan Museum's Native Plant Garden.


Habitat for Strawberry Blite: Waste places, garden edges and moist roadsides across the continent, 











8 comments:

  1. I'm not much of a flower/plant person, so I'd never of Strawberry Blite. Very interesting post!

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  2. Hmmm, must not be a California native, never seen any before.

    Hope life is returning to normal at your house.

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  3. They sure are pretty though!

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  4. At least they seem attractive with great color! You took some great shots!

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  5. I love their bright color. Maybe they feed the birds?

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  6. I think I'd call them raspberries too...but they're beautiful regardless of their name!

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