A dizzying array of new plants for the home landscape and garden are promoted every year, and several of them originated along our roadsides and ditches.
Horticulturists often say that many of our landscape plants are only a step or two out of the ditch. One of my favorite ditch-loving varieties that blooms each spring is Queen Anne’s Lace. Some people consider this plant a weed, but I believe it has many worthy qualities.
Introduced to North America by European settlers, Queen Anne’s Lace is sometimes called wild carrot, and indeed, it does develop a yellowish-white taproot that is edible. Our modern carrots were selected from this plant. Carrots are orange because plant breeders of the 16th century wanted to honor the royal family of the Netherlands, known as the House of Orange. However, modern garden carrots come in many colors, even the original white and yellow.
Queen Anne’s Lace is a biennial, which means it takes two years for the pretty flower heads to develop. The flower stems can reach up to 4 feet tall and readily sway in the wind from either Mother Nature or cars zooming past. I consider Queen Anne’s Lace a true 55 mph (or faster) flowering plant.
The flower head is a delicate white to pale yellow-white, flat-topped structure. Each lacey flower is composed of up to a thousand or more tiny individual flowers. Each flower head can produce many thousands of seeds, so you can see its potential to spread.
A curiosity I find interesting is that most, but not all, have a single, dark red or maroon sterile flower in the center of the flower head. Like many botanical oddities, there is an interesting story about this single red flower.
Since the flower is lace-like, it was popular to use the flower as a hobby pattern to tat lace doilies. Queen Anne, who was an avid tatter, pricked her finger one day, and a single drop of blood dripped onto the center of her doily.
There’s disagreement about which Queen Anne is the flower’s namesake. Two potential sources were members of the Stuart royal family: Anne of Scotland (1574-1619) or Anne (1665-1714), the daughter of William and Mary. A more gruesome story involves Anne Boleyn (1507-1536), who had the misfortune of losing her head after marrying King Henry VIII. The flat-topped flower head represents her lace collar, and the red flower in the center represents the obvious.
Most home gardeners probably won’t plant Queen Anne’s Lace on purpose in their gardens, but there are benefits. Eastern Black Swallowtail butterflies lay their eggs on the plant, and the colorful caterpillars eat the leaves. The flower heads also attract pollinating bees and other insects with their nectar.
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