Leighton Photography & Imaging

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StingingNettle2020-1.jpg

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This plant needs no introduction to most of us. I learned about it the hard way while unknowingly walking through a huge patch of it in shorts. While not native to North America, this "uncomfortable" is an unfortunate import from Europe, Asia and Western Africa where it has been stinging people and animals forever and now can be found growing in every state (except Hawaii) and province of the United States, Canada, and even in parts of Northern Mexico. As an act of delicious revenge, when the leaves of the stinging nettle are added to boiling water, the tiny stinging hairs break down resulting in a very healthy and nourishing food source, similar to cooked spinach. This one was found growing above the forrest cliffs of Whidbey Island in Washington State's Puget Sound.

Copyright
©2020
Image Size
4158x6230 / 26.1MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
American stinging nettle, Angiosperms, California nettle, Deception Pass, Deception Pass State Park, Eudicots, Plantae, Rosales, Rosids, Skagit County, Tracheophytes, Urtica, Urtica dioica, Urtica dioica spp. gracilis, Urtica gracilis, Urtica procera, Urtica viridis, Urticaceae, Washington, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bud, color, common nettle, dicot, flora, flower, flowers, food, forb, fresh, green, herb, herbaceous, medicine, native, natural, nature, nettle, nettle leaf, perennial, plant, plants, slender nettle, stinger, stinging nettle, summer, tall nettle, tall wild nettle, tea, textile, traditional, wild, wild nettle, wildflower, wildflowers
Contained in galleries
Green & Brown Wildflowers, Urticaceae (Nettles)
This plant needs no introduction to most of us. I learned about it the hard way while unknowingly walking through a huge patch of it in shorts. While not native to North America, this "uncomfortable" is an unfortunate import from Europe, Asia and Western Africa where it has been stinging people and animals forever and now can be found growing in every state (except Hawaii) and province of the United States, Canada, and even in parts of Northern Mexico. As an act of delicious revenge, when the leaves of the stinging nettle are added to boiling water, the tiny stinging hairs break down resulting in a very healthy and nourishing food source, similar to cooked spinach. This one was found growing above the forrest cliffs of Whidbey Island in Washington State's Puget Sound.