





| Wood Lily Lilium philadelphicum |
| Wild Cammomile |
| Cow Vetch |

| Spotted Touch-Me-Not |
| This lily grows to a height of approximately 30 to 90 centimeters, and produces red or orange blooms between June and August. It is widely distributed across North America, found in all Canadian provinces except the Martimes, as well as in most eastern and central states. |
| Same as above |
| Wood Lily Lilium philadelphicum |
| Anthemis Cotula |
| This is a too common annual weed, throughout the United States and Canada, along the roadsides and elsewhere, growing thickly to the height of about ten to fifteen inches. In general habit and appearance, it resembles the garden camomile; but it is more dense, branched, and leafy. Flowers solitary, terminating the branches, disk yellow, ray white; rays standing horizontal during the day, reflexed at night. |
| Brown-Eyed Susan Rudbeckia triloba Aster family (Asteraceae) |
| This is a biennial or short-lived perennial plant up to 5' tall. It branches frequently at the leaf nodes and has a rather bushy appearance when mature. The stems are dark red and have conspicuous white hairs, particularly in the upper half of the plant. The alternate leaves are up to 4" long and 2" across. |
| Vicia cracca |
| The Cow Vetch flower grows in large clusters and has a tublar shape. Flowers are irregular or regular. Flowers grow off of a long-stalked vein. Flowers do not encircle the vine, but rather only grow along one side. |
| Impatiens capensis |
| Jewelweed offers great poison ivy relief and is often seen growing near posion ivy. If you have an itch rubbing the juice of the stems on the affected skin offers some relief. |
