Oregonian: Vern Nelson: Queen Anne's lace flowers make an unexpectedly lovely jelly
Question: We have so much Queen Anne’s lace on our property. We like it in the spring and summer, with its lacy white flowers. But in the fall, when the seeds set, it becomes a nightmare. The seeds ...
Queen Anne’s Lace gathered from a nearby roadside was transformed into a beautiful bouquet with the help of water and food colors. Queen Anne’s lace — a weed, a nuisance, or a flower? Well, you might ...
Des Moines Register: Beautiful flower or noxious weed? Queen Anne's Lace exploding in Iowa
Iowa is awash in a sea of delicate white flowers in nearly every roadside ditch, along bicycle trails and on the fringes of public parks. It’s called Queen Anne’s Lace, or wild carrot. It’s abundant ...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: IN THE GARDEN: When identifying Queen Anne’s lace, look for the smaller purple flower at the center of each white bloom
IN THE GARDEN: When identifying Queen Anne’s lace, look for the smaller purple flower at the center of each white bloom
If it’s a crime, it’s a violation I can live with. Someone fiddled with Queen’s Anne lace, whose flat-topped clusters of doily-shaped blooms turn meadows and roadsides to white in early summer. Now ...
Is it Queen Anne's Lace? Hemlock? Or something else? originally appeared on Dengarden. Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota) is an herbaceous weed native to Europe and parts of Asia, but can also be found ...
) -- the plant that caused Socrates' death -- has been mistaken for Queen Anne's lace, with fatal results. Here are the differences: Queen Anne's lace leaves smell of carrot, while poison hemlock ...