CWF Conservation
This Week in Our Garden

Photo: wild geranium (Geranium maculatum)
Around the area, crabapples are fading but the soft pink and white blush of apple blossoms are peaking, with lilacs and honeysuckles joining the show. At the CWf wildlife-friendly demonstration garden, many flowers continue to bloom, such as columbines, Virginia bluebells, barren-ground strawberry and choke cherry. Our red trilliums are finished and our white trilliums are fading. See how they turn a pretty pink as their bloom finishes.
New bloomers this week are highlighted below.
Above is the mayapple flower. It is gorgeous, but not easily notices as it hangs below its large leaves, as shown below.
I love the native geraniums...they form a small bushy mound that adds colour and shape to partially-shaded areas.
Above is one of our violets. We also have blue-purple violets and white (below) ones too, seen with columbines, Virginia bluebells and prairie smoke flowers.
These star-flowered Solomon's seals are pretty in our woodland garden. In the background is a tree that fell in a storm last year - an attractive accent in this natural setting that will slowly return nutrients to the soil. These plants start more curved over and gradually raise themselves. Their spike of white flowers always seems to point upwards.
One of our Solomon's seals. Some grow daintily by our pond, others are in the woodland garden.
Above and below are Geum rivale - water avens. They grow in a low clump that stays nice and tidy, never trying to take over the bed like our ostrich ferns. Aren't their flower heads neat?!
This is one of our Jack-in-the-pulpits. It has a stricking flowerhead that can be overlooked as it blends in with its green surroundings.
Our starflowers are a new addition to our woodland garden. They are lovely little perennials that prefer to grow in rotting wood. These are growing out of the bark of an old paper birch.
These are shooting stars. They have basal leaves (leaves that grow at the base of their stem, just at ground level) with a long stem that has pretty pink flowers that resemble shooting stars.
And for our animal fix this week, look at this little toad that was in the woodland garden, in the moss on a rotting log. Very cute!
For more information on these and other plants, check in with our Native Plant Encylopedia and our on-line garden maps. We hope to fill in any blanks and add in more entries over the summer, so stay tuned!
Photos: Sarah Coulber
This Week in Our Garden

Photo: eastern wild columbine (Aquilegia canadensis)
It seems most roads I drove along this week had at least one crabapple in full bloom, with gorgeous shades of pinks and some with early apple trees adorned with pink and white blossoms. In CWF's Wildlife Friendly Demonstration Garden, more blooms finish while other start. See below for the latest in our weekly update.
As for birds, all our regulars seem to have returned as staff see or hear the call of the catbird that follows us around the garden, the flickers that nest in a cavity (hole) of a snag by our parking lot and the pair of orioles that weave their nest in one of our mature deciduous trees on the property.
Animals shots typically require more patience or just great timing, so I don't tend to get many on my short walkabouts in the garden...this beautiful oriole photo is by Normand Watier, from CWF's Photo Club.
Plants still in bloom since last week include pasque flower, barren ground strawberry, trilliums, bellwort and Virginia bluebells. They have been joined by our lovely scented cherries that are replacing the quickly fading serviceberries.
The choke cherries above and below show the blooms along a spike type stem. The pin cherry at the very bottom grows in more of a rounded cluster, with blooms coming from the same point. They both smell wonderful!
The pin cherry above grows as a tall tree in the wild area behind our headquarters.
To see more photos, check out our Native Plant Encyclopedia and on-line maps, both of which have new photos uploaded each season.
Oriole photo: Normand Watier - CWF Photo Club
Plant photos: Sarah Coulber
The North Saskatchewan River
Here we are at the North Saskatchewan River. “Kisiskatchewan” or the “swift-flowing river” of the Cree begins in the Columbia Icefields of the Rocky Mountains, travels across Alberta into Saskatchewan where it meets up with the South Saskatchewan River and empties into Lake Winnipeg, a path of about 1,287 km.
The headwaters of the North Saskatchewan River are part of the Canadian Heritage Rivers System. This area is known for its glacial beginnings, wildlife, tributary valleys, rapids and rich history with mountain explorers. It is not uncommon to see grizzly bears, coyotes, mountain goats, elk, wolves and bighorn sheep. The high mountain areas of the river’s head-waters even provide breeding habitat for golden eagles.
The North Saskatchewan River and its surroundings provide great opportunities for hiking, camping, sightseeing and canoeing.
Definitely sounds like a river that has a lot to offer!
This Week in Our Garden
I've been seeing red admiral butterflies these past few weeks but today managed to get a few shots of one on our golden current (Ribes aureum). This photo shows it having a drink with its proboscis. There were other butterflies about, on this shrub as well as the neighbouring serviceberries...and the odd dandelion! While our little yellow friends have been flowering for a couple of weeks now, it seems they are at their peak right now. Many natives in our garden are still in bloom this week, such as hepaticas, pasque flower/prairie crocus, bellwort, prairie smoke, Virginia bluebells, bearberry honeysuckle and western bleeding heart.
The serviceberries are in full bloom, but the petals are starting to drop in the wind. It's quite fun having a springy shower of petals gently blow around me on my walkabout!
Red trilliums are blooming in our woodland area, just off the path from the parking lot.
So are our white trilliums.
Sensitive ferns are now opening up. They are tiny and delicate at the moment, with a reddy-brown tinge to them. Only 3 or 4 stems seem to come up per clump.
With our fluffy pussy willows finished the other week, another sort of willow begins to flower this week.
Here's another shot of the golden flowering current. This is an all-round winner of a bush, with attractive fruit that birds just love and then brilliant fall foliage in the autumn weeks.
Barren ground strawberry is now flowering. It is a pretty clumping plant that can make an attractive ground cover.
Melissa, our gardener extraordinaire, noticed a green frog lazing about the pond this week.
And we found another red berried elder in the woods, a litte one that is blooming before the more established bush from across the path.
Stay tuned for more visitors, blooms and other happenings at our wildlife-friendly demonstration gardens!
Photos: Sarah Coulber
This Week in Our Garden
It’s almost May and…it snowed. Yup. And it didn’t just sprinkle down…it stuck…for hours. For my friend in the Quebec Laurentians, it lasted days thanks to the cold temperatures we’ve been having. So much for the balmy (not to mention highly unusual) days of March! Nevermind, I live in Canada and the weather is a-changin’ so I know to be prepared for just about anything.
Despite the odd weather, spring plants are continuing their early show. This week, conventional plants like Forsythia are still blooming and daffodils are up in full force. See below for the photographic story of what’s happening in CWF’s Wildlife Friendly Demonstration Garden.
Some plants that bloomed last week are continuing on this week, such as prairie smoke, prairie crocus/pasque flower, hepaticas, Dutchman’s breeches and bloodroot. As we have different beds with varying conditions, some plants are fully up and opening while others are still thinking about it, such as our prairie crocus in our pollinator bed. Joining the crowd this week are:
Mitrewort (Mitella dyphylla), although similar to foamflower (Tiarella spp.) with its leaves and size, is very different in its snowflake-like flower. Thank goodness for macro lenses that allow me to share their magnificence online!
Western bleeding heart (Dicentra eximia). This plant is similar to Dutchman's breeches (Dicentra cucullaria) with the most obvious difference being its flower colour. It is a much smaller and more delicate version than the non-native species commonly seen in gardens.

These Virginia bluebells (Mertensia virginica) are just starting to flower. Even their buds are attractive - with pink-purple buds that open to blue-purple flowers, often displaying both colours at the same time, as above.
Ostrich ferns (Matteucia struthiopteris) are a few inches tall now, pretty much caught up with the others in the garden.
Bellwort (Uvularia spp.) is a plant that could easily be ignored if one walks by too quickly. But a close look reveals its beautiful blooms.
It's so blustery and grey outside that the photos I took of our serviceberries (Amelanchier spp.) weren't the most exciting. So here's a shot from a previous year that shows one of our serviceberries covered in flowers, with its leaves only just beginning to open. I'll include a close-up of its flowers next week.
Another flowering shrub this week is one of Canada's native plums (Prunus nigra or P. americana - this is a wild part of our property where we haven't finished identifying the plants growing there).

Bearberry honeysuckle (Lonicera involucrata) This little shrub has flowers that are less showy than the two above, but are lovely when close up. Once its warm enough, bees will be out enjoying these and other blooms, an important early food source for our pollinators.
For more information, check out our online gardens which we hope to complete this summer, or our Native Plant Encyclopedia, to which we add new photos and entries each year.
Photos: Sarah Coulber



