Field thistle is a native weedy plant often found in disturbed areas, up to eight feet tall, but usually much shorter. Flowerheads occur on the tips of branches, are light pink, and about 2″ across. The base (involucre) of the flowerhead is vase-shaped and covered with multiple series of closely appressed, overlapping phyllaries/bracts (often said to look like fish scales). Each bract has a a medial white line and a single, sharp, 1/4″ long golden spine at the tip. Below the involucre are a few slender bracts that look like miniature versions of the stem leaves; these bracts curve upwards around the flowerhead.
Field thistle stems are light green and covered with white hairs, but lack spines (unlike C. vulgare). The leaves are up to 9″ long, about three times longer than wide, lance-shaped, pinnately lobed, and very spiny along the margins and lobe tips; the undersides are powdery white from numerous short, white, felt-like hairs. Field thistle can be distinguished from bull thistle by the white (not pale green) undersides of its leaves, the appressed (not spreading) phyllaries with slender, golden (not stout) spines around the involucre, the leaf-like miniature bracts immediately below the involucre, and the lack of spines on the stem.
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