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Looks like verbascum (mullein).Can anyone identify this plant for me ?
Can anyone identify this plant for me ?
Looks like verbascum (mullein).
Yes, Sue is right. Also called hunters toilet paper, for obvious reasons.
Precarious. That is along some southern NJ river system?
So it is native to the Pinelands? If left alone, will this grow 8 feet ?
Lot's of things pop up there that don't grow in the pines. Probably local farm influence.
Good to know. I always wondered why it didn't grow back in subsequent years. I always let them go in my garden, I love them.Mullein is biannual.Produces the rosette of leaves the first year then the flower spike the second year. I"ve smoked it to break up chest congestion. Tobacco will do the same thing if you aren't already abusing it in which case it will cease to work the way it should. I have also heard of folks getting rash from wiping with the stuff.Always preferred the under side of scrub oak leaves myself but then again Toilet paper does beat anything you'll find in the woods
Oh you meant the plant, not the leaning tree...Duh.
No, I"m sorry, I should have been clear. I did not mean the moth mullein was not pinelands, I meant all that green ground cover at the base of the broken tree is not really pines stuff.
Interesting. You obviously know your plants. Please elaborate. The tree is located on Hawkin Road, just before the Joint Base. I know the line between Colliers Mills and the Western Monmouth County farm landscape if very sudden. There is rich soil, crops, and horse farms on one side of a street just outside the WMA and sugar sand and scrub pine on the other side. Would be interested in your assessment, thanks.