Goats Beard

Goats Beard, Vancouver Island, BC
Goats Beard, Vancouver Island, BC, Photo By Bud Logan

A graceful member of the Rose family, Goats Beard grows freely in the western portion of the Pacific Northwest including all of the BC coast, in damp openings in the woods and close to streams and pools.

Many of the first people groups used Goat’s beard medicinally. The Olympic Peninsula’s Klallam people made a salve of root ashes to rub on sores. The Quinault and Quileute people made a poultice from scraped roots to apply to sores. The Makahs made an infusion from the roots for rheumatism and a dye out of the roots. The Skagit peoples used the perennial as an infusion of roots for sore throats, as well as for sores. As a cure for smallpox, the Lummi people chewed the leaves. The Kwakiutl from British Columbia soaked the root and held it in the mouth for coughs, and used it as a love charm. The Nitinat  made an infusion from pounded roots for fevers

The male plants bear creamy white, showier flowers, while the female plants produce a smaller, greenish-to-white flower. Goat’s beard spreads from underground runners, albeit slowly, so it is not a problem. Include this plant in your native wildlife garden because it provides nectar for hummingbirds, bees, and butterflies.

Goatsbeard, also sometimes called Bride’s feathers, is a member of the rose family found in moist woodlands of Europe, northern Asia, and North America. In the woodlands, it usually grows as randomly spaced individuals and not in large colonies.

Goats Beard, BC Coastal Region
Goats Beard, Photo By Bud Logan

Goatsbeard grows as an herbaceous perennial reaching 1.5 to 2 m tall with a similar spread given enough time and good growing conditions. It has twice, or thrice pinnately compound leaves reaching a foot or more in length with leaflets 5 to 7.5 cm long. It develops a modest display of yellow leaves in the fall. In late spring and early summer, white, finger-like trusses of flowers in terminal clusters to 0.4 m or more in length.  Females have more slender and open florets and are not as showy as male plants. Male flowers also persist longer in the garden, usually providing a better display.

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