The Fivespot

Fivespots

Of these things, I’ve seen a few, but I’ve not seen many more.
Thus what follows is based instead o
n little bits of lore

The fivespot, Nemophila maculata, a California wild flower, is said to likely feel at home in:

  • sandy, somewhat alkaline soils which drain fast, or, at least, not slowly.
  • temperatures between 24° F and 77° F / -4.444° C and 25° C.
  • low humidity.
  • the shade, for a while, when it’s hot.
  • open spaces in grasslands, on foot hills, and in forests.

It is said that the fivespot is:

  • often comfortable being watered only once or twice a month in summer.
  • spreading in form.
  • fast in growth, but limited to a foot or so in size.
  • in bloom in late winter, throughout spring, and, perhaps, even into summer.
  • able to survive cold down to 0° F / -17.8° C.
  • an annual.
  • attractive to bees, the funereal duskywing, the alfalfa looper moth, Viridiseptis marina, and Annaphila depicta.
  • often to added to bee gardens.
  • in the borage family – a member of the waterleaf subfamily, specifically.

There is also the desert fivespot, Eremalche rotundifolia, but those are different.

Sources:

https://calscape.org/loc-california/Nemophila%20maculata()
https://www.calflora.org/cgi-bin/species_query.cgi?where-taxon=Nemophila+maculata
https://www.wildflower.org/plants/result.php?id_plant=NEMA

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