The first prairie flower that blooms in my Nebraska garden is always one
 that surprises me. I’m not even looking for blooms in early to mid 
April – instead, I’m counting the plants putting up new bits of green, 
wondering what’s made it through winter. Pasque flower always makes it, 
rising in a bulb of fuzz, some sort of thick cleaning pipe pushing it up
 through leaf litter and last year’s decay. In the afternoon sun the 
soft, fuzzy hairs around its emerging bud and few thin leaves reflect 
light like a halo. It is in every possible sense one of my favorite 
native wildflowers.
  
Pasque flower’s common name is derived from an Old French word for 
Easter, as it blooms around that time. Pulsatilla patens or Anemone 
patens – which goes by other common names like prairie crocus, twin 
flower, and sandflower – is native from Alaska south through Canada and 
down into Texas, blooming in high Plains elevations and open prairie, 
most often in dry or rocky soil. It gets about 1’ tall with a 2’ spread 
and is slow to expand or self sow. From bloom to seed head it easily 
puts on a full month show that, if you let it, opens your eyes to the 
garden’s season.
The Native American Dakota people believe that each species of plant and
 animal has its own song that expresses its life and soul. One 
translation of the twin flower or pasque flower song is this:
I
 wish to encourage the children / of other flowering nations now 
appearing all over the face of the earth; / So while they awaken from 
sleeping / And come up from the heart of the earth I am standing here 
old and gray-headed.
Since pasque flower can often begin 
blooming even before the snow has melted, it is fitting to think of it 
as old by the time the other spring flowers bloom, especially with its 
white seed head among the colorful prairie. The hairs along the stems 
and petals help to create a heat shield around it, much like what 
happens with the hairs on our arms when we are cold.
The Dakota name of twin flower is evident in this image, where up to 150
 yellow stamens surround a tuft of purple pistils. This duality leads to
 the story of an old Dakota man who sits by the first spring bloom and 
recounts his life’s joys, sorrows, hopes, and accomplishments. The bloom
 reminds him of his youth and old age all at once, the perfect circle of
 life, the duality of existence, and he is encouraged by that guiding 
principle of completeness and wholeness of beginnings and endings 
feeding each other. He picks the flower and takes it to his 
grandchildren to teach them the song he learned as a child.
While I do not have practical experience and make no suggestion that you
 try anything without consulting a professional, it is said that 
crushing the fresh leaves and applying on arthritic hands helps ease the
 pain, but if left on the skin too long will create a blister. Some 
other medicinal uses include a tincture to calm symptoms of menopause 
and insomnia, as well as to treat panic attacks.
I find beauty and metaphor in every stage of pasque flower, even as the 
petals desiccate and fall off to reveal the puffy seeds, which are 
reminiscent of prairie smoke (Geum triflorum). Native bees, ants, and 
other early spring pollinators visit with gusto. I wish I had more of 
these in my garden, entire swaths even – they’ll display far longer than
 non native crocus, iris reticulata, or tulip, and are very tough, 
long-lived plants. Knowing their history here in my prairie region makes
 me love them even more, and I appreciate what they mean in my garden – a 
small reflection of something much larger. 
so much more 'exotic' and appealing than the crocus, iris and tulips that 'everyone' grows.
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