The three-flowered avens is one of those lucky plants known by several common names, including prairie smoke and, yes, old man"s whiskers. The hardy perennial blooms across North American prairies in the springtime, setting off purple-tinged, closed bell-shaped buds that hang downward in clumps of three. After bees go to work pollinating the buds, the fertilized flowers open and turn skyward transforming their pistils into soft swirling tendrils that are said to resemble an old man"s whiskers. Take a good look at our image and decide if that"s what comes to mind for you. As summer marches on, the plants continue their spectacular show as the fuzzy seed heads take on a pink-tinged cast resembling low-lying prairie smoke.
Old man s whiskers growing wild
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Glacial rivers in Iceland
-
Daintree Rainforest and Noah Beach, Queensland, Australia
-
National Lighthouse Day
-
Maya site of Copán
-
An icy extravaganza
-
Lake Peipus, Estonia
-
Fallen but not forgotten
-
A tower of light
-
National Park Week: Olympic National Park, Washington
-
Mercury in retrograde
-
A different kind of dive
-
A day to take a moment
-
Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve in Costa Rica
-
National Park Service anniversary
-
National Merry-Go-Round Day
-
A cry for independence
-
Village of Santa Maddalena, Dolomites, Italy
-
International Dark Sky Week
-
Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch on the institution s 175th anniversary
-
Bromo Tengger Semeru National Park, East Java, Indonesia
-
Canada s $20 view
-
Wind Cave National Park celebrates 120 years
-
Hemingway’s Keys
-
An unlikely friendship in the wild
-
Look before you leap
-
In the belly of Fat Bear Week
-
The frog prince?
-
Sandstone formations in the badlands near Caineville, Utah
-
How Quảng Ngãi got its grove back
-
50 years of the Endangered Species Act
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

