Last fall I discovered some yucca plants growing in one of the yards down in the village. It surprised me because I think of yucca as a desert plant, not one found in northeast gardens! But they have a wide distribution across the US and even up into the southern Atlantic states. 
 The cool thing about yucca plants is that their leaves have lots of fibers curling off - I wrote about them in a previous post.
Those fibers look fragile, but if you spin them together they can make a pretty sturdy string.
As fascinated as I am about yucca fibers (and I am, because I enjoy 
twining and spinning anything from milkweed to grasses), I found their 
seedpods even more interesting. 
The seeds themselves are flat, round-ended triangles, and thinner than I expected. I planted a bunch this spring and managed to get half-a-dozen seedlings (about 50% germination). The seeds took a long time to germinate, and the seedlings are slow-growing. On the plus-side, they seem to tolerate benign neglect. 
Though I may have to bring them inside for winter ...
Those pods are fascinating! I think my mother used to bring them in for dried arrangements.
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