Monday, May 18, 2009

to boldly go












This one is another import, its ancestry goes back to Europe as does mine, and now it's widely naturalized in North America as is my species.

The perennial creeps along slowly, often growing in cracks of rocks or masonry, in little or poor soil or no soil. Does it even need soil? You have to admire its fortitude, its insistence to live; its ability to thrive where another plant could not, would not, should not. But it does. You know, "boldly go where no one has gone before," (cue the Star Trek theme), perhaps that's why its yellow flowers are star shaped, like an open cluster in a far off galaxy.

Different sources give it a variety of common names: goldmoss stonecrop, goldmoss sedum, biting stonecrop, mossy stonecrop or even wallpepper. But in this case, perhaps its Latin name works best “Sedum acre," from the Latin "sedo" meaning "to sit." And left alone, in time, it just might fill an acre.

- Photo taken at Ijams Nature Center

2 comments:

Kathy McGinnis-Craft said...

Thank you, thank you, thank you for posting this! We have a ton of this, mainly in flower beds, but other places as well. While I thought it was sedum of some sort, I kept putting off looking it up because I figured it would take forever to find out exactly what species it is. The photo in The AHS Encyclopedia of Garden Plants is nowhere near as good as yours.

Stephen Lyn Bales said...

Kathy.

You are welcome. It grows on a big rock near the staff entrance here at Ijams. That's where the photo was taken.