As July winds down in the Puget Lowlands, there is good news and bad news. The berries are ripening on the native plants, but many of the flowers blooming are noxious weeds.
Noxious Weeds
In the public right-of-ways, vacant parcels, native growth protection areas, and other poorly managed lands, a legion of invasive plants produce flowers that uninformed citizens might call “wildflowers.” Below are a dozen “noxious weeds,” which I found recently along the Lowell Riverfront Trail. The direct quotes and information about biological control agents come from the Washington State University Integrated Weed Control Project. Other notes are based on Arthur Lee Jacobson’s Wild Plants of Greater Seattle, Ronald Taylor’s Northwest Weeds, or Turner and Gray’s Weeds of the Pacific Northwest.
I’m delighted by the berries ripening on the native plants, but I don’t eat them. I save them for the native animals, especially the fledgling birds, who need them more than I do. Also, there are more than a few ripening berries that are not safe to eat, including some of those shown below.