Mexican Hedge Nettle

Stachys mexicana

Plants can grow upright or form sprawling clumps, branching readily from the upper part of the main stem. Leaves and stem are hairy, sometimes glandular. Leaves are large in relation to the flowers; they have prominent veins and rounded teeth along the edges.

Flowers form small, whorled clusters from the upper leaf nodes. Calyces are covered by quite long hairs, and divided into five lobes, about half as long as the fused part of the calyx tube. The corolla has a covering of shorter hairs, and is colored pink to purple, with white patches. The lower corolla lip bends downwards, generally by less than 90 degrees, and is about equal in length (0.3 inches) to the corolla tube. Stamens are exserted.
Mexican Hedge Nettle I'm not sure exactly why it's called Mexican.. the range doesn't appear to extend down further than California. Geotagged,Mexican Hedge Nettle,Spring,Stachys mexicana,United States

Appearance

Plants can grow upright or form sprawling clumps, branching readily from the upper part of the main stem. Leaves and stem are hairy, sometimes glandular. Leaves are large in relation to the flowers; they have prominent veins and rounded teeth along the edges.

Flowers form small, whorled clusters from the upper leaf nodes. Calyces are covered by quite long hairs, and divided into five lobes, about half as long as the fused part of the calyx tube. The corolla has a covering of shorter hairs, and is colored pink to purple, with white patches. The lower corolla lip bends downwards, generally by less than 90 degrees, and is about equal in length (0.3 inches) to the corolla tube. Stamens are exserted.

Distribution

Washington, Oregon and northwest California

Habitat

Shady woodland, damp hillsides, below 1,500 feet; mostly near the coast

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

http://www.americansouthwest.net/plants/wildflowers/stachys-mexicana.html
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderLamiales
FamilyLamiaceae
GenusStachys
SpeciesStachys mexicana