It's time to search for signs of spring in Minnesota. And what better signs than the first native wildflowers that pop up throughout our state?
Minnesota's flowers have already started blooming in the south and will begin blooming in the north in a few weeks. Bloom time and flower type also depend on habitat. Minnesota is home to several major habitats called biomes, including deciduous woods, prairie and coniferous woods. Here's a guide to which flowers you can expect where, and when. (All bloom times are approximate.)
Deciduous woods
With our mild March, snow trilliums have already popped their small white, three-petaled flowers above the ground at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum. Also blooming now are hepatica — purple, pink or white with about six petals, a small cluster of white stamens in the center, and evergreen leaves — and delicate white rue anemone. In late May and early June, mayapples, nodding trillium, large-flowered trillium and drooping trillium appear. Several lady's-slipper varieties bloom in late spring, including our state flower, the showy lady's-slipper.
Skunk cabbage may be blooming now at Battle Creek Regional Park in St. Paul, in puddles along the trail from the parking lot at Point Douglas Road near Hwy. 61. Get close, and it smells like carrion! After blooming, skunk cabbage sends up huge green leaves that persist all summer. Wild ginger will bloom in swales throughout these woods, dotted with Jack-in-the-pulpit, anemones and wild geranium.
Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden in Minneapolis' Theodore Wirth Park has several types of trilliums, including hybrids with fascinating color combinations. You'll also find native yellow and white trout lilies; wild ginger; bloodroot with leaves curved around its bud; white Dutchman's breeches, like pantaloons on a laundry line; delicate pink spring beauties; and showy and yellow lady's-slippers.
The endangered dwarf trout lily will likely bloom in May at Nerstrand-Big Woods State Park. Follow the steep trail into the ravine and Hidden Falls. The woods will soon be carpeted with yellow and white trout lilies. Look closely, and you can see the tiny white dwarf trout lily sprinkled among them. Spring beauties, anemones, hepatica, wild ginger, Jack-in-the-pulpit, toothwort, wild geranium, Dutchman's breeches, mayapples and bloodroot will all bloom here.
Whitewater State Park is also known for its beautiful spring wildflowers, and starting mid-May will have naturalist-led walks. The park's several habitats include bottomland forest, a Southern Oak Barrens with rare vegetation, and upland oak savanna and prairie.
Wildflowers at Itasca State Park will start blooming in late May, including hepatica, trilliums, marsh marigolds and large-flowered bellwort, followed by various lady's-slippers and wild columbine.