
ID this please?
Moderator: Chris_W
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ID this please?
I'm sure everyone knows this but me. It's like asking someone to ID a dandelion!
But, I don't know what it is so pleeze elp me! It's growing in my meadow, which is a mix of wildflowers and "domesticated" flowers. People give me things and I have no idea what they are and a year or two later I have a mystery flower!

- Old earth dog
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- Posts: 348
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- Location: Outside of Philadelphia
- Old earth dog
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- lazygardner
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- Location: Fenton, MI
L. punctata or L. vulgaris?
Well, I am in the same boat, or, um... field here. I have the same plant as the picture above, and a neighbor who would love to have some. However, Lysimachia vulgaris is considered an invasive, and Lysimachia punctata is considered a native wildflower in Maine.Okanagan wrote:Lysimachia punctata I believe
So, can anyone tell me for sure which is which? From my own research I believe, that with the whorled leaves and flowers close to an single stalk, that my specimen is L. punctata. However, I don't want to take the chance and accidently distribute a harmful invasive!
Any ideas?
- Chris_W
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The picture above looks more like pictures I looked at of Lysimachia vulgaris. I grow Lysimachia punctata 'Alexander', a variegeted cultivar, and the flower and foliage is held differently from the picture here. Like you described, they are more whorled and closer to the leaves along the stem on punctata.

- Tigger
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This site http://www.ct-botanical-society.org/gal ... index.html has pretty clear pictures of the two (as well as lots of others: definitely a site to bookmark!). Yours looks exactly like l. punctata.
It's not a U.S. native and will spread, but I guess not as aggressively as the other.
Chris, we have Alexander planted and like it a lot. Does yours sport green a lot? In reality, the flowers show up better on the all-green bits, but the variegated plant is nice season-long.
It's not a U.S. native and will spread, but I guess not as aggressively as the other.
Chris, we have Alexander planted and like it a lot. Does yours sport green a lot? In reality, the flowers show up better on the all-green bits, but the variegated plant is nice season-long.
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This is very cool, to see a thread I posted a year ago come back to life! I'm pretty sure mine is L. punctata. I saw from the Connecticut website that they are both introduced from Europe, but I guess the punctata is more polite. I love that variegated one!
Becky in PA
(slowly getting back to thinking about gardening)
Becky in PA
(slowly getting back to thinking about gardening)
- Gardendollee
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No one else wants to address this, then I will.
Yellow loosestrife is very invaisive
in the right conditions.
Not even the heavy clay soil mine is growing in can hold it back. If you want to erradicate it, use Round up or make sure you dig out every centimeter of root because it regenerates from root cuttings easily.
Good Luck!
Yellow loosestrife is very invaisive

Not even the heavy clay soil mine is growing in can hold it back. If you want to erradicate it, use Round up or make sure you dig out every centimeter of root because it regenerates from root cuttings easily.
Good Luck!
