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California Buttercup




California Buttercup

California Buttercup
California Buttercup
Ranunculus californicus
(Photos copyright Brother Alfred Brousseau, F.S.C. )

The California Buttercup, Ranunculus californicus, is one of the most common of our spring flowers. Buttercups like grassy slopes that are consistently wet in spring. Our best displays can usually be found between the chairs and the park, shortly after you begin heading down hill. One of the first spring flowers, with blooms as early as mid February, lasting into May. The leaves have a lot of structure, and are easy to recognize well before the flowers come. This Buttercup has 7-22 lemon-yellow petals forming a little cup. Maybe they should be called Lemoncups!
The latin name, Ranunculus, means "little frog", because you can often find frogs, or tadpoles at least, nearby (its true!). Indians boiled the roots (like potatoes) and roasted the seeds (like popcorn). The raw seeds are poisonous. The Indians also extracted yellow dye from the flowers. Western settlers pickled the young flowers. The cultivated Ranunculus is a wonderful garden flower around here--easy to grow from seedling or corm. Plant them in October for rose-like blooms in March.


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