Snowy coneflower. |
While we were in the backyard, I looked over the flower heads that are visible through the snowbanks and noticed something I didn't recognize right away. I had forgotten that we got several bunches of purple coneflower from a good friend of mine during our plant-swap party last summer. We got a big rainstorm during the party and so we did a lot of swapping in hurried trips to and from the backyard and we mainly sat on the front porch and drank wine. No wonder I'd forgotten the coneflower!
But it's got a distinctive spiky head and after looking dumbly at it for a moment or two, I thought --- coneflower! I've always wanted some and Lynne has it in abundance so it made for a good swap. Not only is the flower hardy, long-blooming and lovely for arrangements, it's also an herbal remedy. Echinacea seems to be everywhere these days, most people taking it in pill form to help fight colds and flus. Coneflower was used by Native American tribes in the Great Plains to treat lots of things including sore throats, toothaches, tonsillitis and lymph diseases. I love the thought that something so lovely in the garden can have such a potent health benefit as well. I might even try making some of ours into tea to give it a try.