The Castles are the high points of a curious landscape—a mix of flat to rolling grassy surfaces and very steep barren slopes. Erosion has obviously played a role, but why the flat grassy surfaces? And why do underlying strata tilt discordantly? The puzzling geology of northern Slim Buttes will be the subject of a later post (not promising any answers). What I offer here is much easier to understand—the appeal of wildflowers.
The isolated patch of grassland on the little butte pictured below was filled with Grassy Death Camas, Zigadenus venenosus var. gramineus (1). As both the common and scientific names indicate, this is a poisonous plant. In fact it is one of the most toxic plants of the American West for livestock, and is highly resistant to herbicides. Dried plants may remain toxic for as long as twenty years (USDA Forest Service).
In bloom, Geum triflorum is easily recognized by its nodding reddish flowers, three per stem. These are the Three Sisters, and the basis for the specific epithet, triflorum. The small petals are cream to yellow, and usually are mostly hidden inside the reddish sepals. On each sepal is a slender spreading to recurved bract.
Notes
(1) Some readers familiar with this plant may be tisk-tisking. The accepted name now is Toxicoscordion venenosum var. gramineum. But because more than a few of us are still trying to remember the new genus name, I used the older one here. Note that the new name doubly emphasizes the plant's toxicity.
(2) Maybe you're like I was, curious as to whether grasses—one of the largest families of monocots—have trimerous flowers. I checked. Sure enough, the much-evolved grass flower is still a bit trimerous, with three stamens and a three-parted ovary.
(3) Native plants master gardener Claude Barr had an eye for variety, and collected and cultivated novel forms that he found in the field. This may explain his lengthy list of flower colors for our spiderwort.
Sources
Barr, Claude A. 1983. Jewels of the Plains. U. Minnesota Press.
Clark, Frances. What’s in Bloom on Sageflats and Sunny Foothills – Late June 2022. Teton Chapter, Wyoming Native Plant Society.
Flora of North America online.
Missouri Botanical Garden. Plant Finder.
Ode, David J. 2006. Dakota Flora; a seasonal sampler. SD State Historical Society Press.
USDA Forest Service. Fire Effects Information System (FEIS, online).