Coltsfoot (Tussilago farfara) is a flower in the daisy family that’s been used for medicinal purposes. However, research suggests there may be negative effects associated with it. Share on Pinterest ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. If you look carefully in the spring woods, you might be surprised to find what looks like a clump of small yellow dandelions. They ...
The plant imported as medicinal with horse hoof-shaped leaves appears in March, resembling dandelions with yellow flowers ...
Coltsfoot is popping up all over my new flower beds. Is there any way to get rid of it without resorting to chemical weedkillers, which I don’t want to use for environmental reasons? RJ, Kilkenny ...
SOME time ago, when I was carrying out some investigations concerning the behaviour of plants, I came across the statement, in Sir J. E. Smith's "English Flora" (1829), that the flowers of the ...
If you look carefully in the spring woods, you might be surprised to find what looks like a clump of small yellow dandelions. They’re pretty petty things. But look closer. There are no leaves.
It’s not supposed to be 79 degrees on March 10, but it was this past Tuesday afternoon. While I was out walking around the yard late in the day looking at my flower gardens, I found myself sweating ...
Coltsfoot, often mistaken for dandelions, blooms in early spring and lacks leaves during its flowering stage. Unlike dandelions with toothed leaves, coltsfoot develops heart-shaped leaves after ...