How Much Do You Know About Four-Leafed Clovers? (2024)

Lucky clovers are popular good-luck charms. With a little luck and a lot of patience, you can find them in nearly any meadow or backyard. Clover hunting is easy enough for young children to do, but challenging enough that older kids and adults won't be bored. When you're done, you can press your four-leaf clovers and use them to remind yourself how lucky you are.

If you want to get fired up before your next clover hunt, check out this playlist of lucky songs.

Here are 11 fascinating facts about lucky clovers. How many of them do you already know?

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Many Clover-Like Plants Have Four Leaves, But Aren't Lucky Clovers

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Lucky clovers are a four-leafed variety of white clover, also known asTrifolium repens. "Trifolium" literally means three-leafed, which shows how rare the four-leafed variety is. That means that other kinds of clover, as well as any plants that always have four leaves, are not lucky clovers.

Many other plants, including Pepperwort, Water Clover, and Oxalis (also known as Burgundy Shamrock), are marketed as lucky clovers due to their strong resemblance. Though they are not genuine luck-bringers, if you enjoy them, feel free to use them. They're beautiful plants and a pleasure to have around!

One way to be sure you have a true four-leafed clover is to check if the leaves are all the same size. If so, you're out of luck. True lucky clovers have three leaves that are the same and one that's slightly smaller.

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Why Are Four-Leafed Clovers Lucky, Anyway?

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There are many different theories about the origin of the lucky clover superstition. Some legends say that the four leaves stand for faith, hope, love, and luck. Others say that four-leaf clovers granted the power to see fairies, or that they're lucky because St. Patrick used the shamrock to explain the trinity to the Irish.

Of course, it's also possible that four-leafed clovers are lucky simply because they are rare enough to be unusual, but not so rare that they're impossible to find.

Difference Between Shamrocks and Four-Leafed Clovers

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So you've heard about the "luck of the Irish" and seen plenty of leprechauns with shamrocks on St. Patrick's Day, so it's easy to think that shamrocks and four-leaf clovers are the same... but they're not.

Shamrocks are your standard three-leafed clovers. They're associated with Ireland due to the legend that St. Patrick used shamrocks to illustrate how God could be both one entity and three at the same time.

Some people say that the four-leafed clover adds God's grace to the metaphor of the Holy Trinity. But no matter what, a shamrock only properly refers to a clover plant with three leaves.

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The Fourth Leaf Is Caused by a Genetic Mutation. Probably.

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Given that white clovers are specifically defined by having three leaves, it's strange that any are lucky. Why do some clovers have four leaves, anyway?

Like blond hair, blue eyes, and straight hair in humans, the four-leafed clover is a recessive trait in the white clover plant. That means that, for a stem to have four leaves, it must have inherited the recessive trait from both of its "parents."

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But Nailing Down the Exact Genetic Mutation Is Surprisingly Hard

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Given how much progress humanity has made in identifying the effects of genes on our own make-up, you'd think it would be easy to figure out why some white clovers have three leaves and others four. However, it's surprisingly difficult.

Wired has a fascinating article about why the genetic makeup of clover is so weird.

To start with, clover has twice as many chromosomes as humans and most other creatures. As Wired puts it:

"...white clover has double the amount of chromosomes as humans, mangoes, pill bugs, and most other organisms...each pair of the white clover’s chromosomes comes from a different species."


While it's hard to narrow down which mutation causes some white clovers to sprout four leaves, scientists are making progress in figuring it out. Along the way, their research is yielding interesting information, such as which conditions encourage four-leafed mutations.

Some (Four-Leafed Clovers) Like It Hot

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One of the things that scientists have discovered by studying the gene mutation that causes clovers to grow four leaves is that warm weather tends to encourage the lucky four-leaf mutation.

If you're hoping to find yourself a lucky charm, searching in summertime or in warm climates can improve your odds.

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And They're Pretty Social, Too

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While you're anthropomorphizing lucky clover by making them lucky, you can also remind yourself that they like to hang out with their friends. In other words, if you find one four-leaf clover, immediately look around for more.

The reason isn't actually because clover is a social plant, but because if one plant has the lucky mutation, more of its stems might bear four leaves.

So if you're searching for clovers, multiply your luck by looking more intensely anywhere you find a single four-leafed clover.

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The Odds of Finding a Four-Leafed Clover Are Long... But Not Too Long

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So what are your odds of "looking over a four-leafed clover," as the song goes? Approximately one in 10,000 clover stems will have a four-leafed mutation.

That might sound daunting, but according to the Minitab Blog, it's actually not that rare. If you are in a field full of clover, you can find that many plants in a three-by-four-foot area. So you don't need a crazy number of plants to have good odds of finding lucky clovers.

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The Scientifically-Proven Way to Find More Four-Leafed Clovers

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If you try to check 10,000 individual leaves to see if one of them is a lucky clover, you'll waste a lot of time and energy. Luckily, there's a better way.

Let your eyesscan a limited area (an area about the size of an office desk works well, according to Scientific American). Don't try to look for individual leaves, just try to see if something stands out as looking a little bit different from the surrounding clover.

If that doesn't work for you right away, try using your shoe to gently brush over the clover, and see if turning the plants to a different angle gives you a better perspective.

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Lucky Clovers Can Have More than Four Leaves!

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The mutation that causes more leaves to grow in some white clover plants most commonly results in four-leaf clovers. But sometimes, you end up with even more leaves, which is supposed to be even luckier.

For example, six-leafed clovers are supposed to bring faith, hope, love, extra luck, money, and good fortune.

But even six leaves is just a start. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the white clover with the most leaves ever recorded was found byShigeo Obara of Japan. In 2009, Shigeo Obara found a single white clover with a whopping 56 leaflets!

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Tempted to Grow Your Own Lucky Clovers?

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If you think that cultivating lucky clovers is easier than finding them in a field, wait a second. Although there are many lucky clover kits available to buy, in most (or all) cases, all you're paying for is a batch of plain white clover seeds. The plants that grow from those seeds may or may not have the recessive gene that will result in four-leafed clovers.

So while it might be fun to give it a try (and you may well end up with the lucky clovers you desire), you should be aware that you might also end up with a standard whiteclover in a pot.

You can achieve the same goal and save some money while you're at it by buying regular clover seeds not marketed to luck-seekers.

How Much Do You Know About Four-Leafed Clovers? (2024)
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