
Appearance
It is a herbaceous perennial speedwell that produces a creeping stem that roots at its nodes then ascends to flower, to 60 cm in length, using other vegetation as a scaffold. The paired leaves alternate in direction and are very narrow and pointed, stalkless, somewhat rigid, often with a yellowed or reddened hue, with obscure teeth, and curling under at the edges; it initially rises with its leaves vertical to push through vegetation and later opens them sideways to anchor its position. The alternating floral spikes emerge from the stem with the base of the leaf stalks, each a sparse array of several flowers, the flowers themselves on long thin stalks. The flowers are small diam), pale lilac, pale blue or whitish, although sometimes strongly coloured, with accentuated veins, which at maturity form flat capsules 3–5 mm long, deeply divided at the top. Although typically lacking in much hair, some forms are densely hairy usually with a mixture of glandular and non-glandular hairs, especially in drier habitats.Photographic examples can be seen on.

Distribution
It is native to Europe, North Asia, Most of North America and Algeria, and is not indicated as introduced to any country.Its habitat is marshes, shores, water banks and a wide range of other wet places, particularly acidic. In America its altitude range is 0–1800 m, in Turkey it is found along the north at 0–500 m.
Habitat
It is native to Europe, North Asia, Most of North America and Algeria, and is not indicated as introduced to any country.Its habitat is marshes, shores, water banks and a wide range of other wet places, particularly acidic. In America its altitude range is 0–1800 m, in Turkey it is found along the north at 0–500 m.
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