Dave Powell, USDA Forest Service (retired), Bugwood.org
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[edit] Description: English: Veratrum viride Ait. - green false-hellebore - Flowers - Vinegar Hill area, North Fork John Day Ranger District, Umatilla National Forest, north-eastern Oregon. Date: 13 January 2005. Source: http://www.forestryimages.org/browse/detail.cfm?imgnum=1359069. Author: Dave Powell, USDA Forest Service (retired), Bugwood.org.
Description: Veratrum viride Aiton Thalictrum occidentale A. Gray 20090624.161 & 98 Mount Stearns, Willmore Wilderness, Alberta (Thanks to Curtis Bjork for ID of the Thalictrum.). Date: 12 August 2009, 19:54. Source: Corn-Lilies amid Meadow Rue Uploaded by Amada44. Author: Jason Hollinger.
Summary[edit] Description: I took this hike to Green Lake on Powerline Pass in July 2009. This trail starts from the Glen Alps parking lot in the Chugach State Park, in Anchorage, Alaska. Most people head to Flattop. On this day I had the trail to myself and saw about 10 people - mostly mountain bikers.Green Lake is about 5 miles from the trail head; Powerline Pass is not much further. There are also a number of trails that branch off from Powerline Pass - go check them out!. Date: 16 August 2009, 10:39. Source: False Hellebore (Nature's toilet paper?) - thanks ddgann. Author: Frank Kovalchek from USA.
Summary[edit] Description: Veratrum viride. Family: Liliaceae (commonly known as the Lily family). This liliaceous beauty can grow up to 2 meters tall (6.6 feet)! Grows in moist forest openings, meadows, and avalanche slopes; from montane to subalpine zones. Date: 14 August 2014, 13:03. Source: American False Hellebore. Author: Forest Service Northern Region from Missoula, MT, USA. Camera location46° 24′ 34.16″ N, 111° 11′ 56.29″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 46.409488; -111.198970.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Veratrum viride Aiton var. viride - American false-hellebore, Green false-hellebore Original caption: American White Hellebore; Indian Poke Veratrum viride Linnaeus. Date: 1918. Source: Wild Flowers of New York Part 1, Plate 11. University of the State of New York, State Museum, Albany. Author: Homer D. House, New York State Botanist. Walter B. Starr of the Matthews-Northrup Company, Buffalo, and Harold H. Snyder of the Zeese-Wilkinson Company, New York, photographers.