Wayfaring tree (Viburnum lantana) flowers. Top: a cyme of wayfaring tree flowers in early May. Bottom: a close-up of wayfaring tree flowers. The five white petals make a showy display, but the distinguishing characters are the green ovary with a multilobed stigma in the center of the flower and the five long stamens with tan anthers.
Wayfaring tree flowers occur in flat-topped cymes about 4″ across; they are cream-colored with five petals, five stamens with white filaments and tan anthers, and a green ovary with a short (1 mm) style with a large, lobed stigma. The fruit is an oval, flattened drupe, initially red, turning black with maturity, and containing a single seed. They are not toxic but can induce vomiting it eaten when unripe. Wayfaring tree is said to be so named because it grows close to paths (and presumably other natural edges).
Wayfaring tree (Viburnum lantana) leaves. Top left: a typical leaf of wayfaring tree on a new twig. Bottom left: the leaves of wayfaring tree are always opposite. In this image you can see five pairs of leaves in various stages of development. Right: two images of a single wayfaring tree leaf. The upper image shows the upper surface of the leaf; the lower image shows the underside of the same leaf.
Wayfaring tree is an exotic, multistemmed shrub from western and southern Europe that is considered invasive in Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. It can get up to 15 feet tall, but the ones I’ve seen in Jackson Park were less than half this size. The bark is initially smooth and gray with numerous lenticels but becomes scaly with age. The leaves are opposite, oval, up to 5″ long and 3.5″ across, thick, leathery, rough-textured, with finely serrated margins and 1/2-1.25″ long petioles; the underside of the leaf blade is densely covered with gray hairs.
A wayfaring tree (Viburnum lantana) shrub on the east shore of East Lagoon in the middle of Bobolink Meadow.
Wayfaring tree is an exotic, multistemmed shrub from western and southern Europe that is considered invasive in Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. It can get up to 15 feet tall, but the ones I’ve seen in Jackson Park were less than half this size. The bark is initially smooth and gray with numerous lenticels but becomes scaly with age. The leaves are opposite, oval, up to 5″ long and 3.5″ across, thick, leathery, rough-textured, with finely serrated margins and 1/2-1.25″ long petioles; the underside of the leaf blade is densely covered with gray hairs. The flowers occur in flat-topped cymes about 4″ across; they are cream-colored with five petals, five stamens with white filaments and tan anthers, and a green ovary with a short (1 mm) style with a large, lobed stigma. The fruit is an oval, flattened drupe, initially red, turning black with maturity, and containing a single seed. They are not toxic but can induce vomiting it eaten when unripe. Wayfaring tree is said to be so named because it grows close to paths (and presumably other natural edges).


