7 ? 
BEAUTIFUL 
NATlUE PLANTS 
FROM THE 
HIGH PLAINS, BADLANDS 
AND BLACK HILLS 
1941 
\ 
ERIGERON FLAGELLARIS IN COLONY 
To one who loves a Daisy the Whiplash Daisy, 
so-called from its long runner-like branches that 
root at the tips to “increase production,” makes in¬ 
stant appeal. iSnowy white or sometimes pink 
tinted, with glowing centers, there is an abundance 
in June to delight any gardener and scattered blos¬ 
soms all season. Flowers are an inch wide, leaves an 
inch or two long, grayish green. 
In lean gravelly soil in full sun the growth is less 
dense than here pictured and the gregarious fre¬ 
quency of the blossoms even more effective. Many 
new plants are set each season in mat formation 
about the old crowns and control is had by clipping 
the runners at the proper time, or the excess of 
plants, if any, is easily dispensed with. 
CLAUDE A. BARR 
PRAIRIE GEM RA|1nCH 
Smithwick, S*outh Dakota 
| ^ 1 13 *' ~A 
R E C E I V JED 
! * OCT 1 31961 * 
i U. S. Department of Agriculture 
