Flowers
Aspidistra - Fiona tips Claire's undrunk tea into the aspidistra (V, chapter 7)
Asters - in Outlander Claire wears white asters in her hair when she marries Jamie (Outlander only, chapter 14)
Bluebells - Claire sees bluebells growing on the side of the road near Cocknammon Rock (Cross Stitch only, chapter 3)
Bougainvilleas - Father Fogden's house has cracked plaster walls overrun by bougainvilleas and guavas Ermenegilda is buried under the bougainvilleas (V, chapter 50)
Buttercups - Mr Crook picks Claire up early so they can "catch the dew on the buttercups" (Outlander, chapter 2)
Celandine - used by Davie Beaton in a treatment for jaundice (Outlander, chapter 7)
Chrysanthemums - in a vase in Jared Fraser's house in Paris (DIA, chapter 18)
Clover - Claire smells clover after she first falls through the stones (Outlander, chapter 3)
Columbine - growing on the grounds at Helwater (V, chapter 14)
Crocus - grown in the herb garden at Castle Leoch (Outlander, chapter 6)
Crown Vetch - Claire promised to find some crown vetch for Joe Abernathy for his research (DIA, chapter 4)
Daisies - growing on top of the hill where Jamie & Claire first meet Hugh Munro ((Outlander, chapter 17)
Eglantine - Claire looks for eglantine as she and Jamie walk to the mill in Lallybroch. (Outlander only, chapter 28)
Fat Hen - growing along the roadside in Inverness (Cross Stitch only, chapter 1)
Forget-me-Not - Claire spies a plant in the stone circle at Craigh na Dun after the dancers have finished that she thinks might be myositis (a Forget-me-not), but before she has a chance to take a closer look one of the dancers returns and she and Frank have to leave. This is the flower that Claire returns to the stone circle to look at before she falls through the stones (Outlander, chapter 2)
Foxglove - Claire makes Alex Randall a digitalin extract from dried foxglove leaves to help his cough and heart palpitations (DIA, chapter 39)
Hyacinth - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11)
Jasmine - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11)
Jonquils - there is a trough of yellow jonquils outside Gillian Edgars flat in Inverness (DIA, chapter 48)
Lamb's-quarters - growing along the roadside in Inverness (Outlander only, chapter 1)
Lavender - the air in Geillie's stillroom is thick with the scent of lavender (Outlander only, chapter 9)
Lily of the Valley - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11) Jenny gives Claire French soap perfumed with lily of the valley (V, chapter 38)
Lotus - Mr Willoughby describes the beauty of women as "blooming like lotus flowers, floating like milkweed on the wind" (V, chapter 45)
Mallow - According to Mrs Baird Claire had 'made some lovely bits' out of mallow blossom (Outlander only, chapter 1)
Marigolds - Mrs FitzGibbons advises that marigolds will keep bugs away from other plants (Outlander, chapter 6)
Milk thistle - Jamie gathers these at Ardsmuir for the men to eat (V, chapter 8)
Milkweed - Mr Willoughby describes the beauty of women as "blooming like lotus flowers, floating like milkweed on the wind" (V, chapter 45)
Myosotis - Claire spies a plant in the stone circle at Craigh na Dun after the dancers have finished that she thinks might be myositis (a Forget-me-not), but before she has a chance to take a closer look one of the dancers returns and she and Frank have to leave. This is the flower that Claire returns to the stone circle to look at before she falls through the stones (Outlander, chapter 2)
Nasturtiums - Claire gives nasturtium syrup to children who've overindulged in sweets at the Gathering (Outlander only, chapter 10)
Ox-eye Daisy - Growing in the Highlands (Cross Stitch only, chapter 17)
Poppies - used to make opium
Primrose - the flower with a thorny stem found in the ill-wish bundle left under Claire's pillow (Outlander only, chapter 24)
Primulas - growing on the path to the saint's pool that Dougal takes Claire to after she's seen Jack Randall (Cross Stitch only, chapter 13)
Ragweed - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11)
Ragwort - growing in the Highlands (Cross Stitch only, chapter 17)
Roses - In Cross Stitch Claire wears white roses in her hair when she marries Jamie (ch.14), in Outlander they are yellow roses (ch. 14) the white rose is one of Bonnie Prince Charlie's emblems (DIA, chapter 4) Ellen Fraser planted a late-blooming rose by the door of the Lallybroch house (DIA, chapter 31)
Spikenard - Geillie's clothes smell of spikenard (Outlander only, chapter 24)
Stock - the scent of stock wafts into the stables at Castle Leoch (Outlander, chapter 24)
Stone bramble - the flower with a thorny stem found in the ill-wish bundle left under Claire's pillow (Cross Stitch only, chapter 24)
Sweet William - the scent of sweet William wafts into the stables at Castle Leoch (Outlander only, chapter 24)
Teasel - Claire looks out for teasel heads when she and Jamie walk to the mill at Lallybroch (Outlander only, chapter 28) Claire has teasel heads all through her hair when she and Jamie arrive at Castle Beaufort to see Lord Lovat (DIA, chapter 40)
Thistle - the ubiquitous Scottish symbol (Outlander, chapter 17) Claire tries this as a febrifuge at the Abbey of Ste. Anne de Beaupre (Cross Stitch only, chapter 39)
Tulips - Claire takes a pink tulip to place on Faith's grave when she visits after returning through the stones (V, chapter 40)
Vetch - Jamie made a poultice of chewed vetch leaves mixed with honey to fix a horse's cracked hoof (DIA, chapter 36)
Violets - According to Mrs Baird Claire had 'made some lovely bits' out of violets (Outlander, chapter 1). Sweet violet was growing in the herb garden at Castle Leoch (Cross Stitch only, chapter 6) King Louis smells of violets (DIA, chapter 27)
Wisteria - Claire smells this outside her bedroom at Fontainebleu (DIA, chapter 28)
Wood anenome - According to Mrs Baird Claire had 'made some lovely bits' out of wood anenome (Cross Stitch only, chapter 1)
Woodruff - growing by the shores of Loch Ness (Cross Stitch only, chapter 19)
Asters - in Outlander Claire wears white asters in her hair when she marries Jamie (Outlander only, chapter 14)
Bluebells - Claire sees bluebells growing on the side of the road near Cocknammon Rock (Cross Stitch only, chapter 3)
Bougainvilleas - Father Fogden's house has cracked plaster walls overrun by bougainvilleas and guavas Ermenegilda is buried under the bougainvilleas (V, chapter 50)
Buttercups - Mr Crook picks Claire up early so they can "catch the dew on the buttercups" (Outlander, chapter 2)
Celandine - used by Davie Beaton in a treatment for jaundice (Outlander, chapter 7)
Chrysanthemums - in a vase in Jared Fraser's house in Paris (DIA, chapter 18)
Clover - Claire smells clover after she first falls through the stones (Outlander, chapter 3)
Columbine - growing on the grounds at Helwater (V, chapter 14)
Crocus - grown in the herb garden at Castle Leoch (Outlander, chapter 6)
Crown Vetch - Claire promised to find some crown vetch for Joe Abernathy for his research (DIA, chapter 4)
Daisies - growing on top of the hill where Jamie & Claire first meet Hugh Munro ((Outlander, chapter 17)
Eglantine - Claire looks for eglantine as she and Jamie walk to the mill in Lallybroch. (Outlander only, chapter 28)
Fat Hen - growing along the roadside in Inverness (Cross Stitch only, chapter 1)
Forget-me-Not - Claire spies a plant in the stone circle at Craigh na Dun after the dancers have finished that she thinks might be myositis (a Forget-me-not), but before she has a chance to take a closer look one of the dancers returns and she and Frank have to leave. This is the flower that Claire returns to the stone circle to look at before she falls through the stones (Outlander, chapter 2)
Foxglove - Claire makes Alex Randall a digitalin extract from dried foxglove leaves to help his cough and heart palpitations (DIA, chapter 39)
Hyacinth - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11)
Jasmine - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11)
Jonquils - there is a trough of yellow jonquils outside Gillian Edgars flat in Inverness (DIA, chapter 48)
Lamb's-quarters - growing along the roadside in Inverness (Outlander only, chapter 1)
Lavender - the air in Geillie's stillroom is thick with the scent of lavender (Outlander only, chapter 9)
Lily of the Valley - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11) Jenny gives Claire French soap perfumed with lily of the valley (V, chapter 38)
Lotus - Mr Willoughby describes the beauty of women as "blooming like lotus flowers, floating like milkweed on the wind" (V, chapter 45)
Mallow - According to Mrs Baird Claire had 'made some lovely bits' out of mallow blossom (Outlander only, chapter 1)
Marigolds - Mrs FitzGibbons advises that marigolds will keep bugs away from other plants (Outlander, chapter 6)
Milk thistle - Jamie gathers these at Ardsmuir for the men to eat (V, chapter 8)
Milkweed - Mr Willoughby describes the beauty of women as "blooming like lotus flowers, floating like milkweed on the wind" (V, chapter 45)
Myosotis - Claire spies a plant in the stone circle at Craigh na Dun after the dancers have finished that she thinks might be myositis (a Forget-me-not), but before she has a chance to take a closer look one of the dancers returns and she and Frank have to leave. This is the flower that Claire returns to the stone circle to look at before she falls through the stones (Outlander, chapter 2)
Nasturtiums - Claire gives nasturtium syrup to children who've overindulged in sweets at the Gathering (Outlander only, chapter 10)
Ox-eye Daisy - Growing in the Highlands (Cross Stitch only, chapter 17)
Poppies - used to make opium
Primrose - the flower with a thorny stem found in the ill-wish bundle left under Claire's pillow (Outlander only, chapter 24)
Primulas - growing on the path to the saint's pool that Dougal takes Claire to after she's seen Jack Randall (Cross Stitch only, chapter 13)
Ragweed - Claire comes back from an afternoon at Louise de Rohan's house smelling of jasmine, roses, hyacinth, lily of the valley and ragweed (DIA, chapter 11)
Ragwort - growing in the Highlands (Cross Stitch only, chapter 17)
Roses - In Cross Stitch Claire wears white roses in her hair when she marries Jamie (ch.14), in Outlander they are yellow roses (ch. 14) the white rose is one of Bonnie Prince Charlie's emblems (DIA, chapter 4) Ellen Fraser planted a late-blooming rose by the door of the Lallybroch house (DIA, chapter 31)
Spikenard - Geillie's clothes smell of spikenard (Outlander only, chapter 24)
Stock - the scent of stock wafts into the stables at Castle Leoch (Outlander, chapter 24)
Stone bramble - the flower with a thorny stem found in the ill-wish bundle left under Claire's pillow (Cross Stitch only, chapter 24)
Sweet William - the scent of sweet William wafts into the stables at Castle Leoch (Outlander only, chapter 24)
Teasel - Claire looks out for teasel heads when she and Jamie walk to the mill at Lallybroch (Outlander only, chapter 28) Claire has teasel heads all through her hair when she and Jamie arrive at Castle Beaufort to see Lord Lovat (DIA, chapter 40)
Thistle - the ubiquitous Scottish symbol (Outlander, chapter 17) Claire tries this as a febrifuge at the Abbey of Ste. Anne de Beaupre (Cross Stitch only, chapter 39)
Tulips - Claire takes a pink tulip to place on Faith's grave when she visits after returning through the stones (V, chapter 40)
Vetch - Jamie made a poultice of chewed vetch leaves mixed with honey to fix a horse's cracked hoof (DIA, chapter 36)
Violets - According to Mrs Baird Claire had 'made some lovely bits' out of violets (Outlander, chapter 1). Sweet violet was growing in the herb garden at Castle Leoch (Cross Stitch only, chapter 6) King Louis smells of violets (DIA, chapter 27)
Wisteria - Claire smells this outside her bedroom at Fontainebleu (DIA, chapter 28)
Wood anenome - According to Mrs Baird Claire had 'made some lovely bits' out of wood anenome (Cross Stitch only, chapter 1)
Woodruff - growing by the shores of Loch Ness (Cross Stitch only, chapter 19)