Please help identify this plant.
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Douglas Hunt on Jul 03, 2013Pat, where are you? It would help to know where this plant is growing.Helpful Reply
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Pat C on Jul 03, 2013New York - 20 min north of NYCHelpful Reply
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360 Sod (Donna Dixson) on Jul 03, 2013White Campion (Silene latifolia)Helpful Reply
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Heather (New House New Home) on Jul 05, 2013I think Donna is right - campion is my first thought - I have a deep pink one that has exactly the same foliage and flower shape.Helpful Reply
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Christine Wyffels-Rader on Jul 05, 2013I am in upstate NY, near Rochester, and it grows all over around here...I think it's a native "weed", at least it's pretty!Helpful Reply
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Lori J on Jul 05, 2013The line between weed and wildflower is in the eye of the beholder.Helpful Reply
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Kat on Jul 05, 2013A weed is just a wildflower growing in the wrong place. May all your weeds be wildflowers!Helpful Reply
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Carole Crawford-Evon on Jul 05, 2013Sorry this is a weedHelpful Reply
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Tracey T on Jul 05, 2013and a pretty weed at that!Helpful Reply
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Barb Rosen on Jul 05, 2013I believe you have rose campion which can bloom in white or pink. In some areas it is quite aggressive. Here's a link about it http://wimastergardener.org/?q=RoseCampionHelpful Reply
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Deborah Kay-Morgan on Jul 05, 2013I love white flowers...would you be willing to share some seeds?Helpful Reply
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Brenda De Lair on Jul 05, 2013I live in Ontario Canada and we have a weed here that I unfortunately don't know the name of. It looks just like your flower. My belief is though that if you like it in your garden, than it is a flower not a weed. Lord know there are enough "flowers" that become invasive like weeds. Enjoy your garden.Helpful Reply
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Brenda De Lair on Jul 05, 2013The foliage isn't right for campion.Helpful Reply
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Peg on Jul 05, 2013BINGO Donna! evening lychnis/white campion, let's call it a wild flower opposed to a weed!! There's another that's similar, "bladder campion" but the flower fronts are not as nice as this one.Helpful Reply
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Cindy tustin on Jul 05, 2013White Campion had one sprout in our garden this year so glad we decided to wait and see what it was. As soon as it flowered I got out my wildflower book and there it was. Have only one but it has been blooming for weeks. I moved it out of the garden to a flower bed and it transplanted very good.Helpful Reply
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Cindy tustin on Jul 05, 2013If you study botany you will find that perennials are a weed somewhere or a cross of weeds. And yes weed or flower is in the eye of the beholder. for me anytthing that blooms is a flower and yes maybe I will have to control it or maybe i can find a spot and let it do its thing.Helpful Reply
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Cherie Wallace on Jul 05, 2013According to the link Barb Rosen put on here, it doesn't look like the Campion to me. It looks more like in the daisey family....it has more clean and rounded edges than the picture of the Campion on Barbs link......Helpful Reply
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Jeannette House on Jul 05, 2013there are several kinds of campion, and i've found that the leaf structure changes from it's early stages to the mature plant. i am plagued by the stuff and root it out as much as i'm able but it's been impossible to get rid of. wild mint is my other nemesis.Helpful Reply
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360 Sod (Donna Dixson) on Jul 05, 2013@Cherie Wallace , take a look at this one http://www.aphotoflora.com/d_silene_latifolia_white_campion.htmlHelpful Reply
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The French Gardener on Jul 05, 2013It is definitely from the genus silene, there are 5 petals deeply cleft for at least 1/4 of their length. Hard to say if L. alba (they open on the evening) or a S. cucubalatus, S. noctiflora flowers are smaller (3/4" wide). It can be a L. Dioica if flower have some rose-colored and open in the morning. Good luck on the ID.Helpful Reply
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Judy on Jul 05, 2013White Campion...here are some pictures for comparison: https://www.google.com/search?q=silene+latifolia+ssp+alba&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=OpfXUbXONqyIigLP7IGQAg&ved=0CIcBEIke&biw=1024&bih=650Helpful Reply
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Maggie Lais on Jul 06, 2013I too think that sometimes a flower is a weed is a flower, and is welcome... however, some weeds are really Weeds, like the English ivy seen all over the place in central and Southern California, the Vinca major, and the many grass weeds brought in accidentally with cattle feeds... to name but a few. What we consider a true Weed, is generally something not native to the area, and spreads aggressively either by seeds, broken plant parts, or by root structures, and it is hard to control or eradicate. One real issue is when these pretty invaders come into an area, they crowd out the native plants, which in turn changes the composition and timing of food sources to the native critters, and eventually can be attributed with changing, say a woodland meadow, into a woodland monoculture, one that doesn't feed the butterflies, bees, field mice, moles and voles, and the worms in the soil, the birds of prey, and even the soil itself can change major attributes like pH... which affects the beneficial microbes... causing those creatures which are perfectly evolved for that woodland meadow to wither and die, or starve, or move on seeking a more hospitable home. All of this major usurping of land and habitat goes on right under our unsuspecting feet... or in the treetops, or in the watersource running through the ground under this woodland area. It is not always easy for us to recognize these epic battles, however, when we do become alerted to the plight of so many species suffering and losing a long fought battle, we are reminded that every action has implications that ripple outward, seen or unseen, some good, some not so good. I am not commenting on this particular plant, nor certainly I am not criticizing the choices of gardeners from Kansas to Ontario! I just wanted to put it out there that weeds, when studied and formally designated as weeds, are really Weeds - with a capital W! Especially considering the people doing the studies are plant-lover's and flower-appreciators from all walks of life, people who would much prefer to declare a species as beneficial and welcome, than to tell everyone that the pervasive and pretty thistle is not good for our monarchs, and must be eradicated! Hopefully, we shall all become aware of, and concerned about, controlling those things we can control when it comes to our impact on our mother earth. Thanks for letting me lecture/ramble on! Consider it Food For Thought, and not a scolding!Helpful Reply
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