Thursday, June 17, 2010

4/12/11: Cleavers, Clivers, Goosegrass, Stickywilly, Stickyjack, Stickyweed, Stickyleaf, Catchweed, Robin-run-the-hedge or Coachweed


Little itty bitty white flowers.

I think brianheagney, see comments, has ID'ed it. These are all the common names used for this weed, according to Wikipedia. Galium aparine. 4/21/12 update: A new vote has come in. Patricia Newport (see comments) says this might be Galium tricornulum. I need to do some close examination to see which one it is. Does it produce 2-7 tiny white flowers OR 3 drooping tiny white flowers? This plant may be confused with other weed species of Galium, especially Galium tricornutum and Galium divaricatum. G. aparine has 2-7 tiny white flowers on erect stems up to 2.5 cm long, G. tricornutum has usually only 3 drooping tiny white flowers on shorter stems, up to about 1.5 cm long, and G. divaricatum, a more erect plant, has 3-12 yellowish red flowers. From here. The International Environmental Weed Foundation, in Sydney, Australia.

4 comments:

  1. I'm wondering if this one isn't related to spotted spurge.

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  2. I have this one, too. It might be a type of chickweed.

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  3. I believe it's a type of "cleaver"/"goosegrass"/"bedstraw":
    http://www.survival.org.au/bf_galium_aparine.php
    it's most edible when it's young, as it gets older it gets stickier and is swallowed more difficultly.

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  4. Galium tricornutum. Also known as "Cleavers". It's in the coffee family, and primarily found in gardens.

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