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Question: Hello. Found this grasslike plant growing along the edge of Clarks Pond …
...find anything among your grasslike plants that looked like it. Can you help? Answer: Dear chaffee, you've photographed a species of burr-reed (genus Sparganium), a member of the Typhaceae (catta...
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Question: I have another sedge that I sent pictures of in May (Concord, …
...have a better camera I can use. Thank you! Answer: Dear llsrvd, This plant is mature enough to propose a hypothesis about the identification, but the images are too small for me to see details. Thi...
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Question: There are no flowers and only lateral buds on this plant I …
...took away the good ones) we could get to species? Thanks! Answer: Dear SunnyMona, good morning. This is a species of Swida (dogwood), and is like Swida amomum (silky dogwood). That is a characteris...
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Question: Thank you for your response. I'm sorry I did not provide the …
...Thank you again. Karen Answer: Karen, great--thank you for getting back to me. That helps immensely. It is certainly a hickory, and would be either Carya glabra (pignut hickory) or Carya ovata (sh...
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Question: Hi, Is this plant Lambs Quarters? It & others like it suddenly …
...started appearing in & around my neighborhood in Brookline MA about in mid-July. This specimen is from the curbstone area in front of our house which gets sun almost all day but no water save for ...
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Question: I've recently moved into a home on 2 acres in Vermont and …
...Vermont and found 40-50 of this plant at the border of our yard. I am concerned that it is lonicera maackii. Can you you tell me if I am correct and if so, what is the best way to get rid of it? Answ...
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Question: here are some of the best shots i got of the Jessup's …
...milkvetches at all. Answer: Dear ho2cultcha, as best I can tell from your image, the "runners" appear to be stolons from a species of Antennaria (pussytoes), such as Antennaria howellii sub...
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Question: Found in Cooperstown, NY in a wetland area/former farm field. I believe …
...vein and have a slightly leathery feel. Answer: Dear SunnyMona, your plant is most likely Salix discolor (pussy willow), a common native species of open areas and edges in the northeast. The leaf bl...
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Question: Wondering what this is, common in NY and southern Quebec hardwood forest, …
...to get bigger. I have not seen it bloom. Thank you! Answer: Dear KathyMcG, you've photographed Aralia nudicaulis (wild sarsaparilla), a native perennial that has a small, woody stem that is oft...
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Question: Hi, we have an old-fashioned Hydrangea arborescens cultivar. We don't think it's …
...have an old-fashioned Hydrangea arborescens cultivar. We don't think it's Annabelle because the blooms are not large enough. They get to be 4'-5" across at the most. Another possib...