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Bogbean (Menyanthes trifoliate)
The Bogbean is surely one of the most exotic blooms to be found in the New Forest, more akin to a plant of faraway places than one of central southern England. Yet it is perhaps unfortunate that Bogbeans, beautiful, creeping or aquatic perennials, usually grow in wet, relatively inaccessible places where not too many people are tempted to pick the flowers. The name, though, is something of a misnomer, for whilst Bogbeans can certainly be found in New Forest bogs, they’re more prevalent in the standing water of the area’s shallow pools where they sometimes form impressive sheets of densely clustered stems. Indeed, John Wise, writing in the mid-19th century, described Bogbeans as ‘Common in most of the New Forest pools on the south.’ Pinkish crimson when in bud; white, pink-tinged Bogbean flowers appear in May and June. They’re star shaped, five-petalled and fringed with extravagant white, cottony hairs. In the late 16th century, John Gerard described Bogbean flowers, saying: ‘Towards the top of the stalks standeth a bush of feather-like flowers of a white colour, dasht over slightly with a wash of light carnation.’ To help maximise the likelihood of cross-pollination between Bogbeans, two types of flower are found, with usually only one type present per plant. Each has slightly differently arranged pollination parts, so that visiting insects pick-up pollen from one type, but are more likely to deposit it on the other. Then, as a fail-safe to guard against an absence of cross-pollinating insects, provision is also made for self-pollination through smaller, non-opening flowers that have no option but to self-pollinate as insects have no effective access to the pollen. Bogbean seeds eventually disperse in the water, remaining viable for many months whilst afloat within their egg-shaped capsules. But out of sight, in the water’s depths, the Bogbean’s creeping underwater rhizome also spreads vegetatively, providing alternative propagation opportunities. The bean element of the name derives from the similarity of the leaves to those of broad beans. Alternative country names are buck bean and marsh trefoil, the latter surely as appropriate as bog bean. Bogbeans have been put to many uses. Bogbean rhizomes were sometimes used medicinally, whilst Bogbean leaves were added to beer to impart a bitter taste, as well as being used as a treatment for rheumatism and a cure for scurvy. Not even Bogbean seeds went to waste – they were used as a remedy for coughs and colds. Indeed, herbalists still use Bogbean leaves, gathered just after the flowering period, to encourage appetite and stimulate digestion, whilst in the past, large doses have been found to be an effective laxative! References:
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