Ebooks and Articles Gardening Articles Butterfly Garden Edible Flower Plant Hardiness Roses
Cat Repellent Gardening Gift Protecting Plants Tomatoes Shade Garden Soil Preparation
Tree Ferns Grow Organic Soil Improvements Fruit Trees Orchids Bonsai Gardens
Butterfly Activity Hummingbird Nectar Lawn Care Greenhouse Vermicomposting Compost Tea
Vegetable Gardening Mulch Compost Tumbler Soil Perennials Seed
Succulents Fertilizers Nature Hills Nursery Items Internet Links

Wild Flowers
 

Native Wildflowers


By Alison Cole

Wild flowers are Nature’s miracle of miracles. They bring color, perfume, and distinction to the diverse environments in which they grow.

Wildflowers, however, can be as ecologically devastating as they are beautiful. Some wildflowers are native to the countries in which they are found. Others are migratory transplants, introduced either accidentally or purposefully into new landscapes. Wildflowers are often ecological opportunists, capable of proliferating in a wide variety of environments, sometimes at the expense of less-hardy indigenous plant species.

The rate of multiplication of wildflowers is affected by the latitude, soil composition, heat, and moisture of their environments. Even sunburnt plots and gravelly highways can be home to these rugged species.

There are perennial, biennial, and season wildflower species. They come in shades of green, purple, pink, red, blue, yellow, orange, lavender and white. Always a treat to the eye, some are carnivorous insect eaters while others are poisonous to livestock.

Wild flower juices have been used for a variety of medicinal purposes by Native Americans, gypsies, and Australian aborigines. Fever, bronchitis, enlarged livers, ulcers, intestinal worms, allergies, cramps have traditionally been fought with wild flowers. To this day, science seeks to unravel their many closely held secrets that might help us fight cancer, high blood pressure, asthma, and arthritis.

Wildflowers have also been made into dyes, insect repellants, sunburn ointments, and cooking accoutrements. Cooked as greens, brewed as substitutes for tea/coffee, or consumed as jams, jellies, syrups, or wines--wild flower varieties cover the gamut.

Naturalists, scientists, doctors, gardeners or besotted flower enthusiasts . . . wildflowers have them all enthralled!

Flowers provides detailed information about flowers, flower gifts, flower delivery, floral arrangements and more. Flowers is the sister site of Silk Wedding Flowers.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Alison_Cole


Visit my collection of most beautiful flowers picture from my actual flower garden.


Google
Web www.gotta-grow.com

jim ellison enterprises
342 broken arrow
floresville, texas 78114
info@basic-info-4-organic-fertilizers.com






|Ebooks and Articles| |Gardening Articles| |Butterfly Garden| |Edible Flower| |Plant Hardiness| |Roses| |Cat Repellent| |Gardening Gift| |Protecting Plants| |Tomatoes| |Shade Garden| |Soil Preparation| |Tree Ferns| |Grow Organic| |Soil Improvements| |Fruit Trees| |Orchids| |Bonsai Gardens| |Butterfly Activity| |Hummingbird Nectar| |Lawn Care| |Greenhouse| |Vermicomposting| |Compost Tea| |Vegetable Gardening| |Mulch| |Compost Tumbler| |Wild Flowers| |Soil| |Perennials| |Seed| |Succulents| |Fertilizers| |Nature Hills Nursery Items| |Internet Links|