Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Red Elderberry

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The common red elderberry is found throughout most of North America, excluding the Gulf coastal plain and the states of South Carolina, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Kansas. Not as often used as it once was in the past, elderberries are known to make fantastic jellies and wines. The very fragrant white flowers in spring attract many species of hummingbirds and butterflies. Traditionally used medicinally by Native Americas - the inner bark was sometimes used as a diuretic or as a way to induce vomiting. These were found and photographed in the North Cascades just east of Mount Baker in Washington State.

Copyright
© 2013
Image Size
2848x4288 / 15.9MB
Keywords
Adoxaceae, America, Angiosperms, Asterids, Dipsacales, Eudicots, National Forest, National Park, North Cascades National Park, PNW, Pacific NW, Pacific Northwest, Pacific red elder, Pacific red elderberry, Plantae, S. racemosa, S. racemosa subsp. racemosa, Sambucus, Sambucus racemosa, Skagit County, USA, United States, Washington, arborescens, background, beautiful, beauty, berries, berry, botany, color, conservation, deciduous, edible, elderberry, environment, evergreen, field, flora, flower, flowers, food, food source, forage, foraging, forest, fresh, garden, green, habitat, honeysuckle, leaves, light, macro, meadow, native, natural, nature, park, plant, plants, pubens, red, red elder, red elderberry, red-berried elderberry, ripe, rural, scene, scenery, scenic, serene, shrub, spring, stinking elderberry, summer, sweet, tasty, tranquility, trees, view, wild, wilderness, wood, woodland, woods, yummy
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Elderberries
The common red elderberry is found throughout most of North America, excluding the Gulf coastal plain and the states of South Carolina, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Kansas. Not as often used as it once was in the past, elderberries are known to make fantastic jellies and wines. The very fragrant white flowers in spring attract many species of hummingbirds and butterflies. Traditionally used medicinally by Native Americas - the inner bark was sometimes used as a diuretic or as a way to induce vomiting. These were found and photographed in the North Cascades just east of Mount Baker in Washington State.