View allAll Photos Tagged CalystegiaSepium

Planta vivaz, trepadora, que alcanza hasta los 5 m de alto. Crece en bordes de bosques, matorrales, vallados y trepando sobre otras plantas, nativa de gran parte del Hemisferio norte. Fotografiada en el Parque de Pagoeta, Aia, Gipuzkoa, norte de España, a 120 m de altitud.

 

Perennial, climbing plant that reaches up to 5 m high. It grows on the edges of forests, bushes, fences and climbing on other plants, native to much of the Northern Hemisphere. Photographed in the Parque de Pagoeta, Aia, Gipuzkoa, northern Spain, at an altitude of 120 m.

 

Bindweed, Calystegia sepium. With its pure white trumpet flowers, Bindweed is a familiar sight, choking plants in borders and twining around any plant shoot, cane or any available support.

Hedge bindweed.

Calystegia sepium.

Windrush

 

The bane of gardeners and farmers alike, but in its natural setting we get a chance to admire its beauty.

The large creamy-white trumpet flowers with sepals half hidden by two large bracts adorn the summer hedgerows.

 

Its relative Large Bindweed (C. sylvatica) has flowers up to four inches across making it the largest native wildflower.

Apart from the flower size the two can be distinguished by the leaves which are more heart shaped on Hedge and more arrowhead on Large. Also the sepal bracts on Large are inflated and extend the length of the bud.

 

I imagine if this was a difficult flower to cultivate instead of an invasive weed with the ability to rejuvenate from every tiny piece of broken root rhizome then it would be a national treasure!

Hedge bindweed growing in a wooded riparian corridor along the East Gallatin River, Glen Lake Rotary Park, Bozeman, Montana. Red-osier dogwood (Cornus sericea) is the common shrub on which hedge bindweed scrambles.

Barneveld Prairie

Wisconsin State Natural Area #405

 

Iowa County

I was taking a shot of this flower when a bonus happened by. I think it's a Tawny-edged Skipper. Anybody better at butterflies than I am?

Flume Creek Cedars

Wisconsin State Natural Area #586

 

Portage County

Boulevard Park, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A.

Calystegia sepium

Grows rampantly through my yard and gardens.

Introduced plant in North America.

Kingdom: Plantae (Plants)

Subkingdom: Tracheobionta (Vascular Plants)

Superdivision: Spermatophyta (Seed Plants)

Division: Magnoliophyta (Flowering Plants)

Class: Magnoliopsida (Dicotyledons)

Subclass: Asteridae

Order: Solanales

Family: Convolvulaceae (Morning-glory Family)

Genus: Calystegia (False Bindweed)

Species: sepium

(Calystegia sepium) Hedge False Bindweed

Bindweed and Nettle

Brickfield Pond

Rhyl

On a birch by the Nillsee parkinlot / An einer Birke auf dem Nillsee Parkplatz

Calystegia sepium (hedge bindweed) in bloom on the banks of the Souris River, southwest of Wawanesa, Manitoba

Hedge bindweed growing in a wooded riparian corridor along the East Gallatin River, Glen Lake Rotary Park, Bozeman, Montana. Red-osier dogwood (Cornus sericea) is the common shrub on which hedge bindweed scrambles.

Common names; pispotje, draaiwinde, hemdsbloem, onze lieve vrouwe hemdeke, bindweed, white smock, our lady's smock.

De haagwinde (Calystegia sepium) is een vaste meerjarige plant en behoort tot de Convolvulaceae of windefamilie. Deze familie bevat zo'n 55 geslachten en ongeveer 1650 soorten. Ze komen wereldwijd in gematigde streken voor. In de volksmond wordt de haagwinde vanwege zijn vorm en witte kleur ook wel pispotje genoemd. De plant vraagt een natte tot vochtige, voedselrijke grond waar flink wat zonlicht komt. Bovendien groeit de haagwinde graag omhoog naar het licht toe. De plant vormt ondergronds wortelstokken. De stengels van de plant zijn rechtswindend en winden zich om andere planten of palen en omheiningen. De niet-windende stengel kan met de top in de grond dringen en daar een knolletje vormen, dat kan overwinteren en tot een nieuwe plant kan uitgroeien. De plant kan een hoogte van 150-300 cm bereiken.

De bloeitijd is van juni tot de herfst. De bloemen bloeien maar een dag en sluiten zich als het donker wordt of als het gaat regenen. De bloemkroon is wit en varieert in grootte van 5 tot 7 cm. De bloemkroon is 5-lobbig. De vijf meeldraden zijn tot 25 mm lang en de helmknoppen 4-6 mm. Het vruchtbeginsel is bovenstandig en 2 hokkig. De vrucht is een doosvrucht met 1-4 zaden.

De haagwinde onderscheidt zich van de akkerwinde doordat de steelbladen groot zijn en de kelk bedekken. Bij de haagwinde zitten geen en bij de akkerwinde wel twee korte, smalle (draadvormige) schutblaadjes halverwege de bloemsteel. Ze geuren iets naar vanille. Verder is de bloemkroon van de akkerwinde 5 of meer malen langer dan de kelk.

Engels:Greater bindweed

Calystegia sepium (Larger Bindweed or Hedge Bindweed) is a species of bindweed, with a subcosmopolitan distribution throughout temperate Northern Hemisphere in Europe, Asia, northwestern Africa, and North America, and in the temperate Southern Hemisphere in Australia, and Argentina in South America.

It is a herbaceous perennial that twines around other plants, in a counter-clockwise direction, to a height of up to 2-4 m, rarely 5 m. The leaves are arranged spirally, simple, pointed at the tip and arrowhead shaped, 5-10 cm long and 3-7 cm broad. The flowers are produced from late spring to the end of summer. In the bud, they are covered by large bracts which remain and continue to cover sepals. The open flowers are trumpet-shaped, 3-7 cm diameter, white, or pale pink with white stripes. After flowering the fruit develops as an almost spherical capsule 1 cm diameter containing two to four large, black seeds that are shaped like quartered oranges. The seeds disperse and thrive in fields, borders, roadsides and open woods

  

Calystegia sepium (L.) R.Br., Søborg, Denmark, 16 June 2014

Schluckebier Prairie

Wisconsin State Natural Area #541

 

Sauk County

The petals of the flower in this photo are a bit washed out and not quite in focus but the two bracteoles outside the calyx are shown clearly.

Unlike C. silvatica, in this species the keels of the bracteoles are only slightly inflated and the bracteoles are usually flattened against the calyx.

Featuring two crab spiders that I missed when I took the photo.

Calystegia sepium is a species of bindweed, with a subcosmopolitan distribution throughout the temperate Northern and Southern hemispheres.

 

Snoqualmie WA

www.susanfordcollins.com

greater bindweed (Calystegia sepium) flourishes in a lignum (Muehlenbeckia florulenta) swamp beside the murray river near goolwa, fleurieu peninsula, south australia

 

taken on behalf of the adelaide and mount lofty ranges natural resource management board, coastal management branch

 

photograph by bill doyle

Echte Zaunwinde (Calystegia sepium) in Hockenheim

York Prairie

Wisconsin State Natural Area #348

 

Green County

The East Park Activities Officer and the Bilston LNP Constituency Support Officer with some of the volunteers from the event.

A beautiful climbing weed on fences and waste places. The flowers are white, but sometimes pink - especially in Ireland.

 

Scilly, June 2008

Hedge Morning Glory (Calystegia sepium). Along Marble Hot Springs Rd., near Beckwourth, Plumas Co., Calif.

A native perennial member of the Morning Glory family

Handaufnahme EOS 5D 105mm Makro

(Hedge Bindweed)

TK5408 Ahrweiler

Convolvulus sepium (= Calystegia sepium); haagwinde

Nearly cosmpolitan twining perennial vine. Shoreline thicket, Beach Road, Vineyard Haven, MA 8/6/09

Wollamai Point, north shore of Lake Illawarra, New South Wales

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