Following in Botanical Footsteps at Rocky Face Mountain
…we had never even set foot in Alexander County in the nearly 3 decades we’ve lived in North Carolina. Alexander County (in red) is in the upper Piedmont of North…
…we had never even set foot in Alexander County in the nearly 3 decades we’ve lived in North Carolina. Alexander County (in red) is in the upper Piedmont of North…
…in the Piedmont of North Carolina, as I would imagine that there are substantial differences in the insects present in North Carolina and Québec. In 2011, my husband and I…
…people I know simply call it Youngia. As its specific epithet hints, it is a native plant in Japan (and elsewhere in Asia). If you are not already acquainted with…
…from the area in 2003… We would be interested in a sample from each of these specimens if possible. Our overall aim is to show the value of herbaria in…
…live outside our region, we recommend you seek out advice from the wildflower or native plant society in your state. This list is is by no means complete or static,…
…that culminated in weekend-long camping trips to identify the flowers of the region. In 1986 [she] received the first “Excellence in Teaching Award” from Western Piedmont Community College and [in…
…embarrassed to admit that it is still in a plant press, awaiting identification! A few steps farther, and we stopped to examine a plant which I suspected was southern barren-strawberry…
…Carolina website.3 “I was totally unfamiliar with Green Dust Lichen,” said Gary. “When I saw it I thought it was just an alga, but I thought I saw some fungal…
…that it is impossible to read the inscriptions. The immediate family have all either died or removed to other parts the country, and, hence, his grave is thus neglected. It…
…One of the requirements was that one take a general botany course in the education spread. I was happy to do so because of my lifelong interest in plants… I…