Oregon, Oregon...(you're so lucky in your variety of wildflowers out there, by the way)...that reminds me of some wild foxglove that I saw listed in one of my childhood nature guides on wildflowers -- could be wrong, though!
Ahhh, thank you for that. When you don't travel a lot it's hard to know what everyone has and what's unique to your area. I shall be even more appreciative on this summer's hikes then. XD
I looked on enature and this is what they show for the true foxglove (http://www.enature.com/fieldguide/showSpeciesGS.asp?sort=1&curGroupID=99&display=1&area=99&searchText=foxglove&curPageNum=4&recnum=WF0354). It is different, but pretty darn close. Much closer than the other foxgloves they show. In my experience with horses, dogs and birds..there are lots of varieties within the breed that don't always appear in a guide. So that does look very likely! Neat. Thanks so much! :o)
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Date: 2004-03-13 09:25 pm (UTC)From:I bet if you found a flower community you could get an answer. You could even try
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Date: 2004-03-14 04:43 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2004-03-14 09:22 am (UTC)From:Thanks for the tips! If I can't find it elsewhere I may have to look for a flower community. Good idea! XD
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Date: 2004-03-14 09:26 am (UTC)From:I looked on enature and this is what they show for the true foxglove (http://www.enature.com/fieldguide/showSpeciesGS.asp?sort=1&curGroupID=99&display=1&area=99&searchText=foxglove&curPageNum=4&recnum=WF0354). It is different, but pretty darn close. Much closer than the other foxgloves they show. In my experience with horses, dogs and birds..there are lots of varieties within the breed that don't always appear in a guide. So that does look very likely! Neat. Thanks so much! :o)