Wildflowers coil of 50 Permanent™ stamps

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          All stamps are shipped exclusively by Canada Post or its authorized suppliers, ensuring a reliable and secure source.

           

          In addition, this series of stamps uses an advanced UV anti-counterfeiting coating anti-counterfeiting system to effectively prevent counterfeiting and ensure the authenticity of each stamp. It not only conveniently meets your postage needs, but is also very suitable for formal communications or business purposes, combining quality and professionalism.

          This year’s issue in the annual Flowers series includes two stamps featuring the native wildflowers butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) and spotted beebalm (Monarda punctata).

          These wildflowers are important sources of food for a variety of pollinators, including hummingbirds and insects such as butterflies and bees.

          Good to know

          • Coil of 50 Permanent™ stamps.
          • The annual flower issue is a best-seller, primarily for its use on wedding stationery, including invitations.
          • Canada Post has issued pairs of commemorative stamps featuring flowers each year since 2007.
          • Flowers have also been featured on past issues of definitive stamps and other commemorative stamp issues, including Gardens (2006) and Tulips (2002).

          About the issue

          This year’s issue in the annual Flowers series features two native wildflowers – butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) and spotted beebalm (Monarda punctata).

          About the wildflowers

          Rich with nectar and pollen, the brilliant blossoms of butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) and spotted beebalm (Monarda punctata) are abuzz during blooming season, as hummingbirds and insects such as butterflies and bees stop by to feed.

          Butterfly milkweed boasts tall, flat-topped clusters of pale to dark orange flowers. Its glossy, lance-shaped leaves – and the leaves of other milkweeds – are the sole source of food for monarch butterfly caterpillars. A fragrant member of the mint family, spotted beebalm is known for its unique and intricate appearance. Whorls of purple-spotted tubular flowers alternate with rings of white to purple leaf bracts at various points along the upper stem. In Canada, the two wildflowers are native only to certain regions of southern Ontario and southwestern Quebec. In Quebec, they are designated as threatened and protected by law.

          Also grown commercially, these plants are a good choice for gardens, since they support pollinators and make beautiful ornamental and cut flowers.

          About the design

          These stamps feature the brilliant blossoms of butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) and spotted beebalm (Monarda punctata).

          The butterfly milkweed has lance-shaped green leaves and clusters of orange flowers. The spotted beebalm has light-purple leaf bracts and tubular yellow flowers at various points along its stem.