Geranium solanderi
Carolin
Native carrot, Austral Crane’s Bill
(c) goomburrup_aboriginal_corp, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)
no rights reserved, uploaded by Peter de Lange
(c) James Bailey, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by James Bailey
What to Eat
Edible parts: Tuber, Root, Leaves, Flowers
The carrot-shaped root can be eaten raw or cooked, but is starchy, slightly bitter, and not very palatable. A form with turnip-shaped roots exists and may prove more agreeable to eat.
Where to Find It
It is a temperate plant. It grows in open grassland. It grows in drier situations. It will grow on most soils except alkaline soils. It becomes a problem in permanently moist soils. Tasmania Herbarium.
Australia, New Zealand*, Norfolk Island, Tasmania,
How to Identify
A herb which keeps growing from year to year. It can lie along the ground or be slightly upright. It can be 40 cm high. The stems are coarsely hairy. They are 50 cm long and arise from a swollen taproot. They can root at the nodes. The leaves are 1-3 cm long and 2-5 cm across. They are divided into 5-10 lobes. Each lobe is again divided or toothed near the tip. The leaves at the base are larger. The flowers are pink and spreading. They are 1.5 cm across. There are 5 overlapping petals and the centre is more pale. They occur in pairs on slender stalks 5 cm long. The fruit is beaked and 2.5 cm long.
Nutrition Score: 12/100
| Part | Moisture | kJ | kcal | Protein | Vit A | Vit C | Iron | Zinc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TapRoot | 80.8 | 99 | 24 | 0.7 | — | — | — | 0.7 |
How to Grow
We have almost no information on this species and do not know if it will be hardy in this country. The following comments are based on the general needs of the species. Succeeds in any moderately fertile retentive soil in a sunny position. Tolerates a wide range of soil types. Members of this genus are rarely if ever troubled by browsing deer or rabbits.
Propagation: Sow seed in spring in a cold frame. Once seedlings are large enough to handle, prick them out into individual pots and plant out during summer. Divide clumps in spring or autumn — larger clumps can go directly into permanent positions, but smaller ones are best potted up and grown on in a cold frame until well rooted, then planted out in spring.
Medicinal Uses
None known
Other Uses
None known
Wikipedia
Source ↗Geranium solanderi (common names - native geranium, Australian cranesbill, Austral cranesbill, Cut-leaf cranesbill, native carrot, and hairy geranium) is a species of plant in the family Geraniaceae. It is native to Australia (New South Wales, Queensland, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia, and Tasmania), and to New Zealand. It was first described in 1800 by Daniel Solander as Geranium pilosum, from a specimen found in New Zealand. However, the name was illegal (having already been used in 1787 by Antonio José Cavanilles) and it was renamed in 1965 by Roger Charles Carolin, with the species epithet, solanderi, honouring Solander.
Notes
There are about 300-400 Geranium species. They are mostly temperate.
Names & Synonyms
Kawurn-kallumbarrant, Kullumkulkeetch, Matua-kumara, Terrat
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