Error message
Unable to fetch location details at this time.
Queen Anne's Lace
Daucus carota
40.6997, -73.3523
Field Notes
Description:
Queen Anne's Lace, also called "Wild Carrot," is a common plant. Queen Anne's Lace grows up to four feet tall. Its leaves are two to eight inches long and fern-like. This plant is best known for its flowers, which are tiny and white, blooming in lacy, flat-topped clusters. Each little flower has a dark, purplish center.
The fruits of Queen Anne's Lace are spiky, and they curl inward to build a "birds' nest" shape. This plant blooms from May to October. It is a biennial plant, which means it lives for two years. It will spend the first year growing bigger, and then bloom the second year.
Habitat:
dry fields, ditches, and open areas
Notes:
It was introduced from Europe, and the carrots that we eat today were once cultivated from this plant. People can eat the large taproot, which of course, is a carrot.
Comments (1)