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Botany Photo of the Day
In science, beauty. In beauty, science. Daily.

Paeonia peregrina

Paeonia peregrina

A special thank you to those who commented on yesterday's photograph. I appreciate the gist of what you've expressed, and I'll not forget or ignore it. I'm keeping my word re: today's photograph though, as I could use a bit of colour myself. We're likely to have the coldest temperature we've had in a long while in Vancouver in the next couple days, so it's particularly delicious (and escapist) to revisit summertime now. Today's photograph was taken half a revolution ago.

Paeonia peregrina seems to have a few English common names. Balkan peony is a reference to its distributional range in southeastern Europe and Turkey. Dr. Allan Armitage calls it “poison peony” in his set of horticultural stock images, but that name doesn't appear elsewhere online. Personally, I'd opt to use a translation of the epithet peregrina to create the common name, which doesn't seem to have been done in English. This seems to have been the practice in French, though: pivoine étrangère, or strange peony. Such a common name would demand an explanation of why this particular species was considered strange or foreign to botanists of the time. Unfortunately, I don't have an answer today, but I'll check some reference works tomorrow to see if I can figure it out.

Photographs of the foliage and fully open flowers are available from both the Pacific Bulb Society and Floral Images.

Lastly, a head's up. I've decided to take a “vacation” from BPotD between December 16 and January 14. Although there will still be a daily photograph, two things will be different: 1) the photographs will be a series of abstracts and 2) I am going to post without scientific comment (the vacation part). Many of the abstracts have literal counterparts previously featured on BPotD, so I will reference those if available. If you're not a fan of abstracts, I hope you'll be able to be patient until mid-January.

7 Comments

Natalie Gómez commented:

I recently downloaded the widget from U.B.C. and am always happily surprised by everything I see. I am Vancouver-born living in Spain and love all kinds of flora and photography. How can I send you photos and what type are you interested in ? Keep the beauty coming. Thank you, Natalie

Laura Loewen commented:

I've been looking at this site daily for about a year, now, and I really love it. I do sometimes wish the common name of that day's plant were easier to find, though. Thanks

christian STAEBLER commented:

I agree with Laura Loewen, I love this site, and for the common names, ok too, but then also in french (and maybe spanish, german, italian, portuges…) ;-)

max commented:

In antiquity, peregrinus meant "strange" mostly in the literal sense: a foreigner. Also probably the best translation for étrangère, but I defer to Canadians on this point. Since late antiquity, however, the word meant much more specifically a pilgrim. Difficult to know exactly what Miller had in mind without reading his description.

See also the entry in Carsten Burkhardt's peony database.

Anthony commented:

I second Max on the Latin, and I think Pilgrim Peony is a handy name.

Alex Jablanczy commented:

As in peregrine falcon of course it means migratory, and is of course the origin of the word pilgrim, and also means foreign strange imported non local accidental wandering travelling etc.
Stranger rather than strange.

Mike Miles commented:

Thanks for the facinating info. I have several of these plants in my Seattle garden. I'm going to add "Pilgrim Peony" to the plant label and give credit to you all to anyone that asks.

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