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Marsha Wade

Spring Wildflowers in the Parks

​Spring wildflowers can be seen in almost every park.

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  • Spring Wildflowers in the Parks

Spring Wildflowers in the Parks

  • ​Posted April 5, 2021

By: Lake Metroparks Interpretive Staff

Spring wildflowers are one of nature’s most anticipated events as winter fades away. These plants have a burst of growth and bloom after the snow melts, before the trees leaf out and block the nourishing sunlight. These colorful signs of spring last a short time, so explore Lake Metroparks and enjoy the show! Click here to download a spring wildflower scavenger hunt!

Blooms begin in early April and last into June, but typically the best times to view large numbers or a good variety of wildflowers are the last week of April and the first week of May. To see the greatest variety of flowers, visit the parks more than once during their short blooming season.

Spring wildflowers can be seen in almost every park, but the following have the best displays or easiest access:

  • Hogback Ridge Park (HR): Follow the boardwalk on Hemlock Ridge Loop Trail or venture down 140 steps to the floodplain and the Bluebell Valley Path.
  • Indian Point Park (IP): Make your way along Seeley Road by the bridge over Paine Creek for the best views of Virginia bluebells.
  • Big Creek at Liberty Hollow (LH): The short trail along the Big Creek floodplain hosts a wide variety of spring wildflowers.
  • Penitentiary Glen Reservation (PG): A short paved trail leads to the Wildflower Garden near the gorge overlook deck; others bloom along the Kirtland-Connector Trail.

Wildflower descriptions are listed according to their blooming times, starting with the earliest:

Bloodroot blooms in early April and gets its name from its red sap. IP, LH, PG • April 1–20

Spring beauty is one of the more hardy spring wildflowers and may be found growing in untreated lawns as well as their traditional woodland home. HR, IP, LH, PG • April 1–May 10

Trout lily leaves are mottled, with a pattern similar to a trout. Another common name is Adder’s tongue, referring to the fruit that resembles a snake’s head. HR, IP, LH, PG • April 15-May 1

Squirrel corn, with lacy fernlike leaves, has nodules on the roots that look like corn kernels. This flower is a wild cousin of the garden variety bleeding heart. HR, IP, LH • April 15–May 5

Large-flowered trillium, Ohio’s state Wildflower, is a favorite food for deer and is rarely found in areas with large deer populations. HR, IP, LH, PG • April 15–May 15

Virginia bluebells are often seen as a blue sea of flowers, carpeting floodplains near streams. The flower buds are pink and become blue as they open. HR, IP, LH, PG • April 20–May 15

Wild geraniums prefer floodplain areas and are also known as spotted cranesbill, because the stamen resembles the bill of a crane. The word “geranium” means crane in Greek. HR, IP, LH, PG • April 25–May 15

Wild blue phlox is a distant ancestor of the garden phlox. It was taken back to Europe by early settlers, cultivated there, and brought back as a garden plant. HR, IP, LH, PG • May 1–20

Jack-in-the-pulpit can live in drier woods where other flowers don’t thrive. They are not a favorite food for deer, so they are often found in parks that have few other wildflowers. HR, IP, LH, PG • May 1-June 1
The umbrella-like leaves of the Mayapple are often seen in April, but the blooms don't normally arrive until mid-May. Its fruit is a preferred wildlife food. HR, IP, LH, PG • May 5–June 1

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