Balsamorhiza sagittata
Asteraceae (Sunflower family)
Quick ID
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Flowers like these are known as "composites" and are actually made up of two different types of inflorescence. Tiny tubular disc flowers cluster together to form the central eye, while the "petals" are actually a ring of ray flowers. Some species in the Asteraceae family have only ray flowers (like dandelion), some have only disc flowers (like rabbitbrush) and some have both together!
Range
Native to western North America, you can find arrowleaf balsamroot growing in meadows, sagebrush steppe and conifer forest openings at low elevations (most commonly 3500-7000') as far east as the Dakotas, south to Arizona and north at least to BC and Alberta.
What's in a Name?
Nice and straightforward. The leaves are shaped like arrows. Sagittata comes from the Latin word for arrow, "sagitta". Balsamorhiza is named for the large woody taproot, which produces a thick sap that smells like balsam fir. "Balsam" basically indicates any nice-smelling plant, and rhiza is the Latin word for root.
Tidbits
Did you know that arrowleaf balsamroot, with its cheery flowers up to 4" wide, is our biggest wildflower here in Montana? And such an important species in western landscapes. Balsamroot is rich in protein, providing excellent graze for deer, elk, bighorn sheep and pronghorn. The nutritious oily seeds are important to birds and rodents, and the open-faced flowers are perfect for native pollinators. Every part of the balsamroot plant is edible, and has been used as food and medicine across its native range for thousands of years. The massive taproot, which can be eight feet deep and as wide as your hand, makes it especially well-equipped to withstand fire, grazing, weeds and drought. I love looking up at a hillside blooming in full force, picturing the massive roots drilling into the earth deeper than I am tall, opening tunnels for underground excavators, lending a foothold to the sloping soil, casting about for that fleeting sip of moisture. If I had x-ray eyes, I have a feeling I'd keep them trained downward.
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As a tremendously showy, long-lived specimen plant that can withstand nature's brutality with the best of us, arrowleaf balsamroot should be a wild gardener's dream. This is not, however, a species for the weak-willed or fickle-hearted. Balsamroot requires steadfast determination and cooperation. The massive taproot makes transplanting nearly impossible. They can be grown from seed, but like many of our native wildflowers, they need to go through cold stratification. No worries though; this isn't as technical as it sounds.
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