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Dear wild heart
Dear wild heart













Fernlike, finely dissected, ternately decompound leaves.This plant is classified as a NC Significantly Rare species.įamily name Papaveraceae (formerly Fumariaceae) All parts of this plant are toxic if consumed in large quantities. It can naturalize by seed dispersal by ants if happy so it does well in naturalized areas, native, rock and shade gardens. In hot climates, it may stop blooming in summer and rebloom in fall.

dear wild heart

The fern-like foliage and blooms appear in spring and bloom time can continue into summer. It prefers rich, moist, well-drained soil and does not like wet winter soil.

dear wild heart

See below Descriptionįringed bleeding heart is a beautiful, native perennial plant occurring on forest floors, rocky woods and ledges in the Appalachian Mountains. Phonetic Spelling dy-SEN-trah eks-IH-mee-ah This plant has low severity poison characteristics.















Dear wild heart