Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Hedge Morning Glory (Calystegia sepium)

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This beautiful native morning glory can be found in every state and province in North America in scattered populations across the United States and Canada. Commonly associated with salt or freshwater marshes and ranging in colors from pink, white with pink stripes to pure white, these beautiful summer bloomers grow on long herbaceous (non-woody) vines. This one was found growing in a thick patch next to a creek that was emptying into Henderson Inlet near Olympia, Washington, which is connects to the Puget Sound.

Copyright
©2020
Image Size
7360x4912 / 31.4MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
Angiosperms, Asterids, Calystegia, Calystegia sepium, Convolvulaceae, Convolvulus sepium, Eudicots, Olympia, Plantae, Solanales, Thurston County, Tracheophytes, Washington, Woodard Bay Conservation Area, bearbind, beautiful, beauty, bellbind, bellbine, belle of the ball, bindweed, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bride's gown, bud, bugle vine, color, devil's guts, dicot, flora, flower, flowers, forb, fresh, granny-pop-out-of-bed, greater bindweed, green, heavenly trumpets, hedge bindweed, hedge convolvulus, hedge false bindweed, hedgebell, herb, hooded bindweed, large, large bindweed, morning-glory, native, natural, nature, old man's night cap, old man's nightcap, perennial, plant, plants, rutland beauty, subcosmopolitan, summer, vine, wedlock, white, white witches hat, wild, wild morning glory, wildflower, wildflowers
Contained in galleries
Convolvulaceae (Morning Glories), White Wildflowers
This beautiful native morning glory can be found in every state and province in North America in scattered populations across the United States and Canada. Commonly associated with salt or freshwater marshes and ranging in colors from pink, white with pink stripes to pure white, these beautiful summer bloomers grow on long herbaceous (non-woody) vines. This one was found growing in a thick patch next to a creek that was emptying into Henderson Inlet near Olympia, Washington, which is connects to the Puget Sound.