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Sunday, 10 July 2022

Bristly Oxtongue

Bristly Oxtongue (Helminthotheca echioides)
In a few of the rougher corners of the garden, Bristly Oxtongue (Helminthotheca echioides) plants have begun to open their yellow flowers to the sun. While these look very like the flowers of a dandelion, the plants themselves look totally different. For one thing, they're quite tall (stretching up to almost a metre/yard high) and roundly bushy, with multiple stems and dozens of flowerheads per plant. For another, they're incredibly bristly, as you can see in the picture above. Stiff bristles march up all sides of the plant's stems. The leaves are covered with whitish, blister-like bumps, with bristles arising from each bump. The phyllaries – the bracts which surround the flowerhead, holding it together as it develops and supporting it once it's open – are also bristly. And very large. Those large, bristly phyllaries make the Bristly Oxtongue easy to distinguish from other superficially similar plants. Like all Asteraceae (members of the daisy family), its "flower" is actually a flowerhead made up of dozens of tiny flowers. These bloom from June through November across lowland England, particularly near the coast. Native to the western Mediterranean, the plant was introduced to the UK many centuries ago, and has also spread (generally by accident) throughout much of the rest of the world as well. It likes rough grassy areas, field edges, streamsides and "waste places"; I'm not sure what that latter says about our garden!

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