Wildflower Woods

Wild Ones Louisville Transforms WILDFLOWER WOODS into a Premier Eco-Restoration Site

Wildflower Woods, located in Cherokee Park, is a six acre ecological restoration project in which Wild Ones Louisville has played a key role.

This area is most notable for its display of native wildflowers in April and May, when you can find spring ephemerals such as Dutchman’s breeches, mayapple, Jack-in-the-pulpit, Solomon’s seal, Jacob’s ladder, wood poppy, coralberry.

The area had remained largely undisturbed except for the 1974 tornado. Unfortunately every large tree except one tulip poplar came down that day and allowed bush honeysuckle and tree of heaven to come in. Wintercreeper, English ivy and Japanese vine followed. 

Wildflower Woods restoration started in 1998 by the Louisville chapter of Wild Ones when the chapter was organized by Portia Brown and her husband Jerry of Metro Parks. Every fourth Saturday from 1998 to 2012 a group of Wild Ones members would cut and treat or remove the invasives, mostly by Ward Wilson, Jerry Brown and Alan Nations.

Matt Spalding with Olmsted Parks Conservancy continued the removal of invasives with large groups occasionally coming in to pull the wintercreeper, English ivy and honeysuckle vine. One year a large group from Ford helped establish paths using wood chips. Master Gardener and Park Steward Scott Osbourne has also contributed his time and talent for quite a few years. 

In March 2020 with Covid, Barbara Berman and Hart Hagan went many times to pull the invasives in Wildflower Woods. In the summer of 2022 Matt had an intern use an expensive organic geranium spray on large areas of wintercreeper and English ivy resulting in the emergence of Dutchman’s breeches, fragile fern, Solomon’s seal, mayapple and even cross vine. 

Barbara Berman contributed 69 hours in 2023 and 68 hours so far in 2024, as of July 19. Thanks also to contributions from Cassandra Culin, Sara MacLean, Hart Hagan, Carol Savkovich, Julie Speedy, Katie Cunningham, Jacquelyn Hawkins-McGrail, Sara Ceresa and Nancy Beasley.

If you would like to join Barbara for a tour and/or an invasive species removal session, please email [email protected].

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DID YOU KNOW THAT YOU CAN HELP US INVENTORY THE SPECIES THAT ARE IN WILDFLOWER WOODS? 

If you use iNaturalist, you can upload your photos of plants, animals and fungi taken in Wildflower Woods to iNaturalist.  It will then automatically place your photo in the Wildflower Woods Project.  Go here to see it!  https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/wildflower-woods-ky-usa

You can also join that project once you are in iNaturalist.  

To use iNaturalist, download the app to your phone from your Google Play Store or Apple Store. Then once you’ve taken a photo of a species from anywhere, upload using the app.  You can also visit  iNaturalist.org using your computer to learn how it all works.

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In the photo, this area in Wildflower Woods was covered with wintercreeper but is largely free of the invasive vine thanks to the efforts of Barbara Berman and Hart Hagan in 2020.

The following wildflowers have emerged as a result of invasive species removal in Wildflower Woods.

Dutchman’s breeches

Blood root

Virginia bluebells

Trout lily

Trillium

Wood poppy

Sharplobe hepatica 

For Barbara Berman’s birthday, she invited people to join her to remove invasive species in Wildflower Woods. Pictured here top row: Carol Savkovich, Julie Speedy, Katie Cunningham, Jacquelyn Hawkins-McGrail, Sara Ceresa, Barbara Berman and Nancy Beasley. Bottom row: Cassandra Culin and Hart Hagan.

Map of Wildflower Woods