Pulicaria dysenterica, or Fleabane, is not your usual garden flower and I can just imagine you thinking – “That figures!” I thought hard about bringing it into the garden as I was worried that it might be difficult to control as it seems to pop up on the roadside here in the summer time without any problem. Actually it has grown taller and more shrub like in the garden and is quite attractive in the wilder part. Time will tell if I have difficulty in controlling it.
This is the reason I have it in the garden. I love this green-eyed bee, which in turn loves the Fleabane. However, this is my first picture of it this year but having the Fleabane in the garden may have saved me from heatstroke if I had been searching for it, as usual, outside. July has been very hot and sunny.
There are lots of other bees that come along, like this little Megachilae which I can recognise from a distance as it bobs its tail up and down on the flower to pick up the pollen on the hairs under her abdomen. I think this is a very efficient method to gather pollen but this is the only time I’ve seen it used.
The different Halictes come in droves but my green-eyed bee remains elusive.
As I wait I get restless and snap at the butterflies that visit. It is a very useful plant if you are keen to have a focal point to watch a lot of the pollinators around your garden. As for herbal uses, it would seem to have been effective as a treatment against dysentery and the dried plants were among those used for strewing on the floors to deter fleas. Perhaps not as useful nowadays, when we are not looking for a cure for cholera or something to control the fleas from a garden plant.
This year again I have decided to let some lettuce flower. Last year I let lettuce flower to see what bees were attracted to it and again this year I found only some tiny bees bothered to visit the flowers, although it is hardly surprising as they are competing with the lavender and origano flowers. This year I have let the lettuce flower because I want to collect the seeds.
The lettuce flowers only last for one morning and then close in the afternoon.
The seed heads are like little dandelion clocks and I pinch the seed heads off each day. I decided to collect the seeds of our red and green leaf lettuce as lovely plants appeared in the front garden in the spring, obviously arriving with the garden compost. However, we have had difficulty in getting the bought seeds to germinate so I am going to try DIY lettuce seeds.
I have had several Mullein plants (Verbascum thapsis) self seed in the garden this year and I have found that they fit in very well and I like their tall candelabra shape. This picture was taken in July.
Now in August, most of the flowers are finished but I have decided to let it go to seed. It is a biannual and is very easy to remove by cutting it at the base. It has a tap root and its roots do not wander through the garden. Its seeds do like some open ground and it prefers an open spot with plenty of sun. I can think of a few suitable spots if I can harvest the seeds.
It is also regarded as a medicinal plant and the flowers can be added to tisanes. The young leaves can also be used if taken before the flowering but in any case the tisanes should be well strained to remove and tiny leaf hairs which could cause irritation.
The reason I want to have a steady supply of the Mullein is to be able to watch all the different kind of bees that come each morning to gather the bright orange pollen.
As I take note of the flowers that attract the bees I notice how many of these flowers have been regarded as medicinal herbs in the past.