urbpan: (dandelion)
IMG_0898

When my first wife and I moved to San Francisco in December 1998, our housing fell through and we were cast adrift. Our friend Jaina let us stay at her place until we got back on our feet. We never really did, and in May of 1999 came crawling back to Boston.

Jaina's genuine warmth and supernatural generosity in a trying and dramatic time saved us from descending into chaos. Jaina is a grounded center surrounded by people in eccentric orbits, many of whom are very talented artists. Her home is a living museum, an oasis of calm joy in a exhilarating maelstrom of creative overstimulation. It was so delightful to see her again, and to spend the better part of a day with her.

Jaina came east on a combination spiritual journey and family reunion. The reunion with living relatives came later, but while in Boston she looked up one who had passed. Here she is (excited to be part of the 3:00 snapshot) checking the Mt. Auburn Cemetery touchscreen kiosk to find the memorial of her "Uncle Anne."

come along on the journey )
urbpan: (Default)


Some of these are pictures I took for aesthetic reasons, and some are creatures I'm not confident enough of to use in my project. If anyone knows more specifically what these things are, let me know and it'll count as one of the hundred. Otherwise, just sit back and enjoy.

8 more )
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The first of the dandelions (Taraxacum officinale) to bloom along the foundation of our house.

The dandelion is an iconic part of urban nature. Why, look up at my icon! It has made itself useful to humans as a food plant and in herbal medicine, and if humans no longer cherish it as they used to, too bad. It is forever to stay with us in our cities and suburbs, along our roads and the edges of our carefully mowed lawns.

It was 365 urban species #82 in this blog before.
urbpan: (moai)

Urban species #082: Dandelion Taraxacum officinale

"All hail King Weed!"* That's what I thought to myself today after I photographed the first dandelion bloom I saw this year, in the crack of the sidewalk on Mass Ave in Cambridge. Other plants may be more pervasive, more troublesome, or possibly even more widespread than dandelion, but no urban plant captures the essence of what makes a plant a weed, than this familiar yellow flower.

One of the most surprising facts about dandelion is that it was deliberately grown as a food plant for centuries, before it became known as a spoiler of suburban lawns. The exceptionally nutritious (if bitter) foliage is available in high-end supermarkets as "fancy salad greens," and can be cooked and served like spinach. The roots can be eaten as a vegetable, or dried and roasted to extend or substitute for coffee. The flower tops can be deep-fried into fritters, or made into wine. It has herbal uses as a diuretic, mild laxative, and as a cleaner and strengthener for the blood (consult your local herbalist for details).

Dandelion is apomictic, meaning that an embryo can form from a seed that has not been fertilized. The seeds are borne on the wind (often with the encouraging breath of a human child) on a downy parachute. These two facts mean that dandelions can produce offspring a great distance from the parent, without needing to involve pollenating insects or seed-disseminating birds. Dandelion grows early in the season, grows quickly, and can grow in nearly any kind of soil, including, of course, in cracks in the pavement. It's easy to see why it is as widespread and successful as it is.

As a child, my first moment of understanding of how evolution could work (and how human use of the land can affect it) involved dandelion. I noticed that in the shortest-mowed grass, the dandelions flowers had very short stalks, while amongst tall grass around signposts and such, the flowers had very tall stalks. It occurred to me that only short-stalked dandelions would be able to reproduce in a short-mowed lawn. Lawn-mowing is a selective pressure that causes short-stalked dandelions to evolve.

Dandelion is originally native to Europe (possibly Greece), but is naturalized virtually everywhere. After I took the pictures below, I came to the conclusion that, if humans ever build colonies on Mars, within a year there will be dandelions there.

*With apologies to They Might Be Giants, whose song "King Weed" crowns Homo sapiens as the title monarch, but does acknowledge dandelion: "Seems like they grow best right under my shoe."

two more )

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