Golden-beard penstemon

Penstemon barbatus

''Penstemon barbatus'', known by the common names golden-beard penstemon, and beardlip penstemon, is a flowering plant native to the western United States. In Spanish-speaking New Mexico and southern Colorado, it is called ''varita de San Jose'' – "St. Joseph's staff".

The plant has spikes of clustered, tubular, scarlet blossoms with yellow hairs on their lower lip; the flowers are very attractive to hummingbirds. It is commonly grown in Xeriscape and conventional gardens, and several cultivars of different colors have been developed.

The late-summer flowering of ''Penstemon barbatus'' coincides with the southern migration of the Rufous hummingbird, and the hummingbirds use the Scarlet buglers as "filling stations" for their long trip south.
Goldenbeard  Geotagged,Penstemon barbatus,Summer,United States

Uses

The Zuni people rub the chewed root of the ''torreyi'' subspecies over the rabbit stick to insure success in the hunt.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderLamiales
FamilyPlantaginaceae
GenusPenstemon
SpeciesP. barbatus