From Thimbleweed to Canada Anemone: Wildflower Photography in the Finger Lakes

White anemones at Malloryville and Treman reveal thimbleweed and Canada anemone through intimate portraits, shifting light, woodland edges, and quiet transformation from bloom to seed.

Along the long defunct railroad right of way at the O. D. von Engeln Preserve in Malloryville, Tompkins County, my 2005 photographs in the following gallery show thimbleweed, Anemone virginiana, in a world of green stillness. Made with a tripod-mounted Sony DSC-F828, they have the patient intimacy of deliberate looking. The camera holds close to one flower, then another stage of the same life, as if time itself had paused among the stems. One bloom faces the lens like a small moon with a green-gold sun at its center. Buds stand nearby, closed and expectant, like folded letters. Later frames reveal the flower after weather and time have touched it: sepals lifted and worn, stamens loosened, dew clinging to the stem, the seed head beginning its bristling ascent. The plant is caught mid-transformation, a white flame becoming a green lantern.

These Thimbleweeds are not white anemones in the soft sense of a spring flower, but tall anemones, thimbleweeds, plants of height, poise, and aftermath. Their most memorable structure is already waiting at the center of the flower: the green cone that will remain when the white sepals have gone. Freshly opened the flower is tender and stippled, ringed by yellow stamens; later it rises alone, armored in fine points, a little tower of continuance. The flower has not vanished. It has changed its language.

My 2005 photographs are portraits, each built from closeness and quiet restraint. The shallow focus turns the surrounding vegetation into a green tide, leaving the thimbleweed suspended in its own clear weather. The tripod’s steadiness gives the images a contemplative gravity. Nothing feels seized. Everything feels attended to. The thin stems become vertical measures in the dim woods, and the pale flowers seem to shine not by brightness alone but by contrast with the shaded world behind them.

More than twenty years later, on June 13, 2026, the photographs from Robert H. Treman State Park near Ithaca offer another kind of seeing. These images, made with an iPhone 14 Pro Max, show Canada anemone, Anemonastrum canadense, along the Gorge Trail. The style is wider, more immediate, more ecological. Instead of isolating a single flower in formal portrait, the camera gathers the colony: white blossoms scattered among sharply cut leaves, stone wall, leaf litter, and the living green of the gorge. The plant is here a constellation at ground level.

These photographs from the Gorge Trail of Robert H. Treman park have the fluency of a walk. They bring us into the place where the flowers grow, letting the eye move from blossom to leaf, from wall to moist soil, from one white face to another. In the close views, the Canada anemone opens with a rounder, simpler grace than the thimbleweed: white petals surrounding a modest green center and delicate yellow anthers. In the wider frames, its leaves make a bright, serrated fabric over the ground, a many-handed greenery receiving the light.

The contrast between the two sets is also a contrast between eras of photography. The Sony images feel like field studies made with ceremony: tripod, fixed attention, a single subject lifted from the woodland dimness. The iPhone images feel like discoveries carried in the hand, the eye moving freely through a living patch of plants. One approach gives us the flower as emblem; the other gives us the flower as citizen of a community. Together they make a fuller truth.

Across a twenty-one-year span, the technology changed dramatically. The 2005 Malloryville series has the patient, close-focus attention of a dedicated camera: ISO 64, small aperture, long exposures, the photographer leaning into stillness. The 2026 Treman images arrive through a phone camera, quick and bright, able to record both blossom and habitat with effortless clarity. Yet the flowers themselves refuse to become dated. These anemone are older than both cameras and indifferent to their sophistication. It keeps its own calendar: bud, bloom, seed, root, return.

Yet the kinship between the plants persists. Both hold white blooms above finely divided leaves. Both belong to the cool, green margins of the Finger Lakes landscape. Both take the ordinary materials of summer, water, shade, stone, soil, and passing light, and make from them a brief astonishment. The thimbleweed raises its solitary green future on a long stem. The Canada anemone spreads its brightness in company. One is a sentence written upward; the other, a page of scattered stars.

The wonder of these anemone is partly structural. Their “petals” are actually petal-like sepals, often five, sometimes more, white and slightly irregular, as if each flower has been hand-torn from light. The yellow stamens ring a green central cone, a small workshop of pollen and future seed. Insects visit for what the flower offers, while the plant asks only for suitable ground and enough room to run. It is not timid. Gardeners know they can spread vigorously, but in the wild that vigor reads differently: not aggression, but insistence. It is the plant saying, “Here is moisture, here is light, here is my chance.”

The photographs also show how much of wildflower beauty lies in context. The pristine frontal bloom is lovely, yes, but so is the closed bud held among vertical stems; so is the aging seed head with spent sepals hanging like weathered pennants; so is the colony rising from a gorge-side floor. Wonder does not reside only in peak bloom. It lives in the before and after, in the green machinery of leaves, in the “almost,” the “not yet,” and the “still becoming.”

To look at the anemone in this way is to be reminded that native plants are actors in the ecological drama of a place: stabilizing soil, feeding insects, responding to light gaps, marking moisture, stitching disturbed edges back into life. Their beauty is functional, and their function is beautiful. A wildflower is never only its moment of bloom. It is bud and blossom, seed and stem, place and weather, memory and return.

These photographs understand that. They show not just flowers, but the disciplined patience of plants: the hush before opening, the radiance of full display, the quiet labor after beauty has done its visible work. In Malloryville, a white flame becomes a green lantern. At Treman, small moons gather beside the stone. And through both, the green world keeps speaking in its oldest memorable phrase: nothing delicate is merely fragile.

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Queen Anne’s Legacy: A Wildflower’s Role in the Finger Lakes Ecosystem and History

Amid the rolling hills and meadows of the Finger Lakes, Queen Anne’s Lace stands tall, its delicate white blooms weaving a tapestry of nature’s resilience and beauty. Discover the rich history, legends, and ecological importance behind this elegant wildflower.


In the Finger Lakes region of New York State, fields come alive with the delicate beauty of Queen Anne’s Lace—a wildflower that embodies nature’s elegance. Scientifically known as Daucus carota, its flowering umbels resemble intricate lace, lending poetic charm to the landscapes it graces. Beyond aesthetics, the history and mythology behind Queen Anne’s Lace, combined with its ecological importance and cultural significance, reveal a plant deeply intertwined with both nature and human culture.

The Name and Its Myths


The name Queen Anne’s Lace derives from English legend. According to the tale, Queen Anne, consort to King James I, was challenged to create lace as beautiful as the flower. While sewing, she pricked her finger, and a single drop of blood stained the lace—represented by the tiny purple floret at the center of many Queen Anne’s Lace blossoms. This intricate network of white flowers surrounding a central floret mirrors the lacework attributed to Queen Anne, giving the plant a royal and historic association.

Scientifically known as Daucus carota, Queen Anne’s Lace is also known by several other common names, including wild carrot and bird’s nest, the latter inspired by the way the flower head curls inward as the seeds begin to develop, resembling a nest. The flower is closely related to the cultivated carrot, and its roots, though much smaller and woodier, share the familiar carrot scent. In fact, Queen Anne’s Lace is considered the wild ancestor of the domestic carrot, with a lineage stretching back thousands of years.

In the meadows of the Brock-Harvey Forest Preserve, Queen Anne’s Lace thrives among the native flora, showcasing its delicate beauty. The function of the central dark florets of D. carota has been subject to debate since Charles Darwin speculated that they are a vestigial trait. It has been suggested that they have the adaptive function of mimicking insects, thus either discouraging herbivory, or attracting pollinators by indicating the presence of food or opportunities for mating. Research conducted in Portugal suggests that the dark central florets of Daucus carota mimic insects, attracting pollinators like the varied carpet beetle (Anthrenus verbasci). Inflorescences with more dark florets experienced increased visitation, indicating these florets may enhance pollination efficiency.

Queen Anne’s Lace in Finger Lakes Ecology


Beyond its rich mythology, Queen Anne’s Lace plays a significant role in the ecology of the Finger Lakes region. Throughout the expansive landscapes of the Finger Lakes, from lush meadows to roadsides, Queen Anne’s Lace stands tall, its delicate blossoms dotting the green with clusters of white. This wildflower can be observed in various stages of its life cycle, from budding umbels to the intricate ‘bird’s nest’ formation.

The fields around the Finger Lakes, often framed by rolling hills and ancient forests, offer the perfect habitat for Daucus carota. The plant thrives in well-drained soils and open sunlight, often outcompeting other flora. Its deep taproots, a characteristic inherited from its cultivated cousin, the carrot, allow it to flourish in the rocky soils of the region.

In these fields, Queen Anne’s Lace performs a vital ecological role. The plant attracts a variety of pollinators, including bees, butterflies, and beneficial insects like lacewings, which help to control aphid populations. The wide, flat umbels provide an ideal landing platform for these insects, who in turn pollinate the flowers, ensuring the plant’s continued spread.

A History of Use


The plant’s ecological importance is matched by its historical uses throughout human civilization. Queen Anne’s Lace has long been a part of human history, both for its beauty and for its practical applications. The plant’s medicinal uses stretch back to ancient times. The seeds and roots were used by the ancient Greeks and Romans as a natural remedy for a variety of ailments, including digestive issues and inflammation. The seeds, when chewed, were believed to prevent conception and were used as a natural form of birth control.

For Native American tribes in the Finger Lakes region, Queen Anne’s Lace was a valuable plant. The roots were often used in the preparation of poultices to treat minor wounds and skin irritations. Additionally, the seeds were used for their diuretic properties, often in teas to help with urinary tract issues. The plant’s close relation to the domestic carrot also meant that its roots could be used as food, though they required careful preparation due to their tough texture and strong flavor.

A Symbol of Resilience and Elegance


The symbolism of Queen Anne’s Lace is steeped in both the fragility and strength it represents. Like the lace it mimics, the flower appears delicate and ephemeral, yet it is a hardy species that thrives in even the most inhospitable conditions. Its deep taproot enables it to survive droughts and poor soil, symbolizing resilience and perseverance in the face of adversity.

In Cayuga County, near Fillmore Glen State Park in Moravia, New York State, farm fields are often adorned with the intricate blooms of Queen Anne’s Lace.

Each summer, the fields of the Finger Lakes burst forth with Queen Anne’s Lace, their towering stalks reaching upward, crowned with intricate blossoms that sway gently in the breeze. As the season progresses, the once-flat umbels curl inward, forming a tight bird’s nest—a final act of elegance before the plant disperses its seeds to ensure future generations.

In capturing the essence of this flower in photographs that accompany this essay, the delicate yet persistent nature of Queen Anne’s Lace is evident. Whether standing tall against a backdrop of green hills, or growing alongside weathered hay bales, Queen Anne’s Lace offers a moment of reflection on the intersection of beauty, history, and nature. Its quiet presence in the Finger Lakes is a reminder that even the smallest, most unassuming plants can carry with them deep histories, enduring stories, and a legacy of utility and elegance.

As golden hues of sunset bathe the rolling hills of the Finger Lakes, the ethereal silhouettes of Queen Anne’s Lace stand as a testament to the region’s natural splendor. Whether admired for its aesthetics, revered for its medicinal uses, or simply appreciated for its ecological role, Queen Anne’s Lace remains an iconic and beloved part of the Finger Lakes’ wildflower tapestry.

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