Hairy Vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) — main view
Hairy Vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) — detail
Hairy Vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) — close-up
Hairy Vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) — in setting
Hairy Vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) — additional view
Hairy Vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) — additional view
Hairy Vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) — additional view

Plant Guide

Hairy Vetchling

Child Safe Edible Family & Genus
Oasislink Garden & Outdoor Team March 24, 2026 5 min read

Hairy vetchling (Vicia hirsuta) is a delicate, scrambling annual legume that trails and climbs through nearby grasses using little tendrils at the tips of its feather-like (pinnate) leaves. From late winter into summer—depending on your climate—it opens tiny pea-shaped flowers in soft whitish to pale lilac tones. After flowering, it forms flat pods that are famously bristly-hairy, a key trait for identification. You’ll most often meet it along field edges, roadsides, and other “rough” ground, where it quietly enriches the soil like many legumes do. In some places, very young shoots have been gathered as a seasonal wild green (only with confident ID and local safety knowledge).

Scientific Name Vicia hirsuta
Family / Genus Fabaceae / Vicia
Origin Native to Europe and western Asia; widely naturalized in temperate regions including North America and East Asia. Common in disturbed habitats such as field margins, roadsides, riverbanks, ditches, grassland, and waste ground.
Aliases Hairy Tare, Hairy Vetch, Tiny Vetch

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