OUR WEEDS

Welcome to the weed atlas!

The Weed Atlas compiled here is hardly complete and subject to review and update. I'm including those weeds that I found in New York City -in yards, in the cracks of sidewalks, in parks, on piers. NYC enjoys most of the weeds common to eastern North America, so that if you find yourself here and the weed you are trying to identify is in, say Clearfield, PA or Springfield, MA, the atlas may be of use to you.

Many of us go to the Web or an phone app when we want to identify something, and that is no less true for the weeds in our yards. For years I depended on the book Northwest Weeds as my weed ID source because no proper book had been published for the Northeast. Today, that is no longer the case, so that some of what I publish here has been cross-referenced with the excellent Weeds of the Northeast by Uva, Neal, and DiTomaso.

Deciding what is a weed and what is not is a fool's errand. But for the sake of limits, I define weeds to be those plants that grow of their own accord in areas disturbed by the activities of humankind, and are, by my definition, regionally and often globally, ubiquitous. Some weeds can also be distinguished as invasive, not always alien, to a region. Weeds go wherever we do.

The atlas follows in alphabetical order, with the botanical name first when I can accurately state it. All listings have at least one photo, which can be clicked for a larger image to help in identification. Some of the plants listed are noted as edible, but please don't eat anything unless you have positively identified and properly prepared it.

OUR WEEDS

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Achillea millefolium, Common Yarrow, Milfoil, or Field Yarrow

Common Yarrow is a perennial plant often associated with old cultivated fields and sometimes lawns. When mowed, it can form mats of fine foliage close to the ground. Of course, field yarrow is related to the garden Yarrow, but its flowers are generally white, sometimes with a pinkish tinge, and its foliage is very finely cut. Garden Yarrow has been bred to have many colors and in some strains, soft gray foliage. I grow both kinds in my garden, but beware, the field Yarrow spreads rampantly.

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Ailanthus altissima, Tree of Heaven

Young tree, often found growing on fencelines and in pavement cracks.

Ailanthus will grow almost anywhere -roofs, windowsills, cracks in pavement. It has an extremely aggressive nature and is incredibly resistant to permanent removal. I once removed a concrete pad from a backyard in Brooklyn. Underneath this old concrete, hundreds of little Ailanthus roots waiting for the right opportunity. Can be taken out, but requires perseverance. Often confused with Sumac. Ailanthus will get much taller than sumac, in fact Ailanthus will be a tall tree in short time. The sumac has deep red, upright seed heads, the Ailanthus drooping pale yellow seed clusters.

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Alliaria petiolata, Garlic Mustard

Garlic mustard.

I spied thousands of Alliaria petiolata, or 'Garlic Mustard,' plants and hundreds of Hesperis matronalis or 'Dame's Rocket' from a Metro North train window. I saw several good looking clumps of Garlic Mustard in Cadman Plaza Park this spring, where I pulled some leaves and crumpled them in my hands to catch the faint release of garlic/onion scent they're named for. Garlic Mustard is an edible, invasive plant of woods, hedgerows, and fields. But it is the woodlands where it does the most damage. It many locales it remains green all winter, grows early and quickly, and is known for crowding out woodland spring ephemerals.

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Hesperis matronalis, Dame’s Rocket

Dame's rocket -also a mustard.

A relative of garlic mustard, the cottage garden Dame's Rocket is seen here blooming alongside garlic mustard. I first became aware of weedy mustards when I lived in southern New Mexico -it was the plant growing along all the ditches in winter. Mustards tend to be cool weather biennials, and in our region that means you'll see them green up early in spring and flower by May, but they will also green up in autumn in preparation for the next spring. If you want to pull them, make sure to grab under the horizontal part of the stem, just beneath the leaf litter, to get the whole root or they are very likely to come back.

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Amaranthus spp., Pigweed

Amaranth comes in many forms, some weeds, some cultivated for their leaves, roots, seeds or ornamental uses. There is a woman who comes by late spring into summer pulling the amaranth from the fence line along the sidewalk, I presume, to eat. There are several varieties of this plant and so are easy to misidentify. All have the telltale inflorescence, although with variations in length, bushiness and color. It is an annual plant that tolerates dry conditions. Dig it up early and don't let it go to seed as thousands of seeds per plant can last up to thirty years in the soil.

Amaranth gone to seed.

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Ambrosia artemisiifolia, Common Ragweed

Common Ragweed. Not many people see this culprit for their allergies. This hardly distinctive plant, flowers at the same time as showy Goldenrod, and Goldenrod gets the blame. Even allergy pill manufacturers show yellow flowering plants in their ads. The test is simple -bright and showy flowers are meant to attract pollinators because wind won’t carry the heavy or sticky pollen. Shake a ragweed plant in flower (you nor the pollinators will see the tiny yellow-green flowers) and a plume of “smoke” will fog the air beneath it.

The name Ambrosia is a mystery to me, but artemisiifolia refers to the leaf structure which is similar to many Artemisia plants like the mugwort found one entry below. To some the foliage looks similar to that of French marigold, a plant whose origin is really Mexico.

The stems of Ragweed are reddish and pubescent -meaning that there is hair present.

Ragweed flowering stems are straight, point upward, but sometimes leaning over. From above they look mostly green with hard to see flowers.

How to know that Ragweed is responsible for your allergies? The flowers all face the ground. Flowers that face the ground are less likely to attract pollen-spreading insects like bees and flies. Flowers that are bright and yellow, facing outward, attract insects. Ground-facing flowers depend on the swaying and shaking caused by the wind. The wind picks up this pollen as it drops out of the flower, spreading it several feet or yards or miles. Ragweed is wind pollinated, and that, my friends, is something to sneeze at.

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Artemisia vulgaris, Mugwort

Artemisia vulgaris is the weed of NYC metropolitan life. This is the plant that greens brownfields, empty lots, roadsides, sidewalk cracks, chain-link fence rows, and overpass embankments. One summer along the waterfront in Williamsburg, I witnessed thousands upon thousands of lady bugs crawling over a practical monoculture of mugwort. All that red and green, quite amazing.

Some confuse this plant's early growth with common Chrysanthemum. Please don't. The underside of Mugwort's leaves are fuzzy and light gray, and its foliage highly aromatic, where as the chrysanthemum foliage is not as distinctive. Mugwort leaves become thinner and elongated as the plant matures; its flowers are inconspicuous. Mugwort is perennial and spreads via vigorous rhizomes -so pull, pull, pull or enjoy the greenery. I have noticed one sidewalk garden in Red Hook that seems to have struck a fine balance between their perennials and the mugwort, but this charm is not the norm.

At flowering, mugwort will take on a rangy appearance -with small lanceolate leaves and small flowers.

Mugwort flowers up close.

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Asclepias syriaca, Common Milkweed

Milkweed jumps out thanks to its broad, fleshy leaves with pubescent undersides, mass of flowers, and erect habit in fields and meadows. A native to North America east of the Rockies, it is only considered a weed in disturbed areas like old farm fields by crabby old farmers. It likes sandy soil and is common among our community garden plots in Ft. Tilden.

The leaves have a light gray pubescence on the underside.

Asclepias syriaca

exudes a milky sap when any part is torn and is a favorite of the Monarch Butterfly in its larval stage. Milkweed is known to produce useful fibers, and its young shoots, buds, and flowers are edible when cooked. But do not confuse it with the

Dogbanes

, which look very similar if you are not looking closely.

Apocynum cannabinum

, Indian Hemp or Hemp Dogbane. Notice its reddish stems and different flowering character. Indian Hemp will produce a milky sap just like Milkweed.

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Celastrus orbiculatus

, Oriental Bittersweet

In summer the vine is green with small cream-colored spots. In autumn, the vine hardens and darkens.

Late autumn berries, commonly used for wreaths.

Oriental Bittersweet, native to eastern Asia, loves fence rows. I first came across this vine on the stockade type fence around our backyard and you'll probably find it on chain links just like the one above. The berries hang on long and are a favorite of birds, so despite their good looks, if you want it gone, get it before it sets fruit. Just make sure it's not the native variety,

American Bittersweet

,

Celastrus scandens

. The decorative possibilities of the vine in late autumn are well known, but selling it live or cut is illegal in some states. No wonder it is 'bittersweet.'

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Chenopodium album

, Lamb's Quarters, also Pigweed

Mature plant, streetside.

The 'goosefoot' name refers to its leaf shape.

Chenopodium

(the name: cheno-goose, podium-foot describes the leaf shape) is commonly known as Lamb's Quarters. Some call it Pigweed, confusing it with the

Amaranthus

species. The common name may hold water however, it seems taxonomists may be changing the

Chenopodiaceae

classification to

Amaranthaceae

. This weed grows everywhere in the city and is a common weed from my childhood yard. Drought, sandy soil, and compacted earth are favorite locations for this plant. It can stay compact and bushy, yet sometimes is open and willowy . Young leaves are eaten in salads or cooked and some make a meal out of the seeds -in this way it is similar to amaranth. I like it for its intense magenta leaves often found half way up the plant.

Mature lamb's quarters with magenta leaves at its base.

Fruit in later summer.

Magenta fruit in autumn.

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Cynanchum nigrum

, Swallowwort

This one's called Swallowwort, cause it'll swallow anything in its path.

The fascinating flower, not quite black, more dark plum colored.

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Commelina communis

, Asiatic Dayflower

The

Commelina

species here is the non-native, asiatic variety. There are a few tell-tale traits to divine the two. In NYC, you probably have

Commelina communis

. It's called Dayflower because the flowers are with us only for a day. Its quite a beauty and I let it be in corners of the garden. It spreads but Dayflower is easy to pull.

Dayflower with a common garden companion, Smartweed.

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Draba verna

, Whitlow Grass

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Erigeron philadelphicus

, Common Fleabane

This specimen sprouted in early spring in my Brooklyn garden. It began blooming in mid-May. Fleabane is native to these parts, and belongs to the great family of Asteraceae.

It has a pleasing form until flowering, at which time the leaves begin to yellow and the stems get wily.

Pretty, pinkish-white daisy-type flowers. Is it the bane of fleas? I hope I'll never know.

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Fallopia japonica

, Japanese Knotweed

Attractive plants make successful weeds.

The heart shaped leaves on young red stems give it away.

Don't let those quaint and attractive leaves of the young Japanese Knotweed fool you -the bottom photo shows how large these can get when not attended to. An attractive herbaceous perennial, it escaped garden cultivation years ago to become a major weed of wetlands, roadsides and yards. The specimen above grows in a fence row in my Brooklyn neighborhood, and has sent its rhizomes to the sidewalk strip adjacent to it where it grows a similar height each year. Persistent, one must continually remove rhizomes, roots and stems. The young shoots are edible, making spring pulling more tolerable.

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Hedera helix

, English Ivy

English ivy scrambling up trees and across the ground in Prospect Park.

Hedera helix

may not be a weed to many, and I don't always consider it a weed myself. But this plant does escape and does get out of control. I think we may have all seen at least one tree with this plant growing all over it. For the many who have shady spots in front of or behind their homes, this has been the answer to concrete. However, there are many different varieties - so choose one that is attractive and less invasive to woodlands. To remove, simply pull it up. It roots from cuttings of the vine, so remember to pick up the pieces.

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Lamium purpureum

, Purple Dead Nettle

Purple Dead Nettle is common in fallow fields, disturbed areas, and even lawns. This specimen was found in a community garden plot in late March, having sprouted after the plot laid fallow over winter. It's similar to garden Lamium and a quick spreading ground cover.

Its flowers are attractive to bees because it blooms profusely when little else does. You'll often find Purple Dead Nettle blooming near a common look-alike,

Henbit

.

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Lamium amplexicaule

, Henbit

Henbit will bloom during cool weather, just like its cousin, Dead Nettle, and you'll often find them side by side, possibly confusing them because of their purple flowers. Henbit has a tap root, so pull when the soil is wet for greater effectiveness. Apparently the name Henbit reveals how chickens like to snack on some part of the plant, and some say it is an edible spring green for those folks not too chicken to eat it.

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Linaria vulgaris

, Butter and Eggs

This nice specimen of

Linaria vulgaris

was found on a fence line at the sidewalk's edge in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Likes well drained soil, so I suppose a demolished building's old site will do. Butter and eggs refers to the coloring of the flowers, but this lovely weed has dozens of colloquial names.

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Malva neglecta

, Common Mallow

Mallow leaf.

Malva neglecta

is a common roadside, lawn, and garden plant. It belongs to the large family of Mallows that includes Hollyhocks, Swamp Rose, even cotton. Some call Common Mallow by the name "cheeses" due to its round cheese-wheel like fruit. The flowers range from white to pink to purple and are often quite attractive, no doubt aiding this plant's success in some yards. To pull it, you should soak the ground first as it has a tough taproot. Apparently it has edible leaves and roots and a long association with humans.

Mallow patch.

Mallow flower.

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Oxalis stricta

, Yellow Wood Sorrel

Yellow Wood Sorrel is one of those North American natives that is also native to Europe and Asia. It's therefore ubiquitous and most often considered a weed. It's often confused with, or called, clover because of its trifoliate leaves. With a somewhat lemony flavor, these may be edible, but consider that most Oxalis species have oxalic acids which in quantity will prove harmful.

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Phytolacca americana

, Pokeweed, Pokeberry or Poke

Pokeweed bush.

Phytolacca americana

is native to the North American continent. As a kid, I used to let the pokeweed grow tall in our backyard and then harvest the stalk, drying it in the sun for a week. Afterwards, I made spears with the woody, straight stalks. Us kids also made "wine" and dye with the berries. We never drank that wine, fortunately intuiting that this was a bad idea. And of course, it is a bad idea because all of this plant is poisonous. However, it is common to boil the young greens in the American South. You may still be able to buy cans of it down there.

Pokeweed in a can.

Poke berries are loved by many birds. While this plant is perennial, it also propagates via seeds dropping from all those happy birds. Pull to remove from the garden, but leave some in the wild parts for the birds. I find pokeweed to be attractive, but that may be just nostalgia.

Pokeweed leaves, berries and rose-colored stems.

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Plantago lanceolata

, Ribwort Plantain, Narrowleaf Plantain

Basal rosette.

Mature flowering plant.

Flowers.

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Plantago major

, Common Plantain, Broadleaf Plantain

Single plantain with seed stalk.

A patch of plantain.

Plantago major

is one of the most common weeds of roadsides, lawns, and pathways. This plant will grow in wet or dry compacted soil, areas little else can. There are native species of this plant in the area, but if it's in your garden it is likely to be this one. Best method for eradication is to pull it after a good soaking rain and keep your soil aerated. Otherwise, you'll just have to live with it.

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Polygonum caespitosum

, Long-bristled Smartweed, Oriental Lady's Thumb, Smartweed

There are several native and non-native forms of

Polygonum

and some are very invasive. The one we most commonly find in our gardens is

Polygonum caespitosum

. As I stated in

Our Weeds, part 1

, I often leave this weed in the garden for its ability to fill blanks with its attractive foliage and pink flowers. It self-sows abundantly so that there is never a shortage of plants. The young plants are distinctive and easy to pull.

A good sized patch of Smartweed.

It can be a nice garden plant -for a weed.

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Rumex acetosella

, Red Sorrel or Sheep Sorrel

I think Red Sorrel is really good-looking in a field of grass, where it is likely you'll find it. It is also found on other disturbed areas like roadsides or brownfields. It tolerates poor drainage and acid soils. If you have it, dealing with those conditions may be part of the mitigation process. Apparently it has a strong sour taste and has been known to be fatal to sheep.

Red Sorrel.

Red Sorrel flowers can also be yellow.

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Rumex crispus

, Curly Dock

This stand of Curly Dock has been getting stronger by the year. I think we lose neighbors to it. It may eat people.

Aphids enjoying the succulent stems of Curly Dock.

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Silene latifolia

(

alba

), White Campion

White Campion is an attractive, flowering weed of pastures, meadows, and other weed-filled places. Maybe you don't want to pull it, but if you do, it has a tap root. Wet the soil thoroughly first to make the pulling easier.

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Tragopogon dubius

, Western Salsify

You might think

Western Salsify

is a giant dandelion. Common throughout the American West, it is making inroads into the drier parts of the eastern states. Hard to get much more east than Long Island, NY.

Dandelion-like seed head can be up to 6 inches across.

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Trifolium repens

, White Clover

Trifolium repens

is a part of the Pea family of plants, and one of many Trifolium (clover) species including Red Clover and Hop Clover. If you do a web search of the word clover you'll get equal parts how to kill it in your lawn and how to grow it in your lawn. Either way you have it, clover is an introduced species commonly used as forage for livestock and honey production. White Clover is a perennial, spreading over ground and rooting at its stem nodes. Pull it or leave it. It does form patches, though some like it more than grass. Doesn't bother me one bit in a lawn.

A community of white clover.

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Trifolium pratense

, Red Clover

Red Clover is much like the white clover, but more upright and typically larger. It is often found in old farm fields and roadsides.

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Veronica persica

, Persian Speedwell, Birdseye Speedwell.

I found this specimen of Persian Veronica in an athletic field in Red Hook, growing at a bland time of the year, maybe late March. I yanked it up and planted it in a barren spot underneath a rose. Now it cannot be stopped, but is easy to pull should it go too far.

Flower.

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