gentletides
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moss and mushrooms ect count too! urm... i was going to upload a photo of rosemary flowers but it`s too large X3
the leafs are an interesting shape! are the berries edible?egor said:
Oh most definately. That is one of my favorite jams.gentletides said:the leafs are an interesting shape! are the berries edible?
they look like sakura. i`m not really sure though because it doesn`t look like the trees over here, but the flowers are exactly the sameBlueStringBean said:A pansy that I found blooming today!
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I don't know what this plant is, but the flowers were so pretty!
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The second picture looks to me to be a prunus nigraBlueStringBean said:A pansy that I found blooming today!
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I don't know what this plant is, but the flowers were so pretty!
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I vote for it being a plum tree.BlueStringBean said:A pansy that I found blooming today!
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I don't know what this plant is, but the flowers were so pretty!
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they look so sparkly! thanks for sharing the plants and info! super interesting. i`m a little curious how they evolved like that.starpup said:I took this pic at work back in August 2014 , that afternoon we had a light dusting of snow around town, (which is a rare occurrence here) as I was moving plants undercover and washing the snow of others to prevent them from freezing and being damaged I stopped get this pic of these snow covered plants that prefer fire over snow anyday!
(They readily release their seed after fire / extreme hot weather events)
In this picture are Australian natives called Xanthorea, or Grass trees, on average each centimetre of their blackened/charred trunks represents around a year of growth!
the last two are picture quality beautiful. how did you get the picture of the bee without it buzzing away?ade said:
those are super beautiful! we have some of the yellow flowers here too. those lavender colored bluebells are super pretty, even more interesting with your amazing photo editing!ade said:It's me again!
Just got back from shopping, but whilst waiting for the taxi to take me there, I noticed how beautiful the light was whilst looking at the flowers on our front. When I got back, I got snap-happy.
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Don't have a clue what they are; they're growing in bucket of limestone for the central heating.
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Bluebells now looking jaded, but with a bit of photo-majickeriness:
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Buttercup:
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More yellowiness:
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I should know the name of these cos they're everywhere, but I don't (or can't remember).
Phone pics, btw.
I had to check the exif data for this onegentletides said:how did you get the picture of the bee without it buzzing away?
i may try to do that when i get a good camera. why not raise the screen brightness before you take photos? that`s what i usually do.ade said:I had to check the exif data for this one
I was about a metre away, using a Tamron 70-300 telephoto-with-macro lens on a Nikon 5100d. The photo has been cropped a fair bit, too.
Bees are usually okay around people; they're too busy to get sidetracked and start having tantrums (says a lot about internetters, doesn't it?).
Glad you like the photos.
I was chuffed with today's phone pics as I couldn't see a thing on my screen as I took them.