Yellow archangel

Lamium galeobdolon
  • Where it lives:

  • Non native species

About

The flowers of yellow archangel come into bloom just as the bluebells are fading, replacing the blue carpet of a spring woodland with a golden-yellow one. A plant of ancient woodlands and hedgerows, yellow archangel may well have got its common name from its virtue of not stinging, despite having leaves that resemble a stinging nettle.

How to identify

Looking a bit like a stinging nettle, yellow archangel is a hairy perennial with heart-shaped or oval, toothed leaves, and whorls of yellow, 'hooded' flowers that appear up the stem.

Did you know?

A widely planted garden variety of yellow archangel has the nickname of 'aluminium archangel' because of the silver streaks in its leaves. This variety has escaped into the wild in many places and is an invasive.