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Tall, green, not mealy perennial; stems erect, hairy. Basal leaves oval to oblong, with a heart-shaped base, long stalked, dark green above, paler beneath, thinly hairy; upper leaves smaller, almost unstalked. Flowers yellow (sometimes white), 18-25mm, in racemes, sometimes with one or two branches below; stamens 5, the stalks all with violet hairs.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
lilac purple lupine flower bloom in the garden. blurred green natural garden background.
goldenrain tree flowers in the garden
Needle Plant
A male migrant hawker hanging from a bramble in the English countryside.
Top of tree bush background in mangrove forest for decoration on nature ans tropical outdoor landscape.
Salvia leucantha, commonly called Mexican bush sage, is an evergreen perennial that is native to Central America and Mexico. It is grown as an annual in average. This sage is noted for producing a very attractive late summer to autumn bloom of showy bi-color flowers consisting of white corollas and longer-lasting purple calyxes. Flowers appear in dense, arching, terminal spikes.
Mantis is a type of mantis originating from the island of Borneo. It has a unique body shape and is colored like dried leaves to disguise itself for prey.
Pinus sibirica
at Ashikaga flower park
Field characters: Tot 56-64mm, Ab 43-54mm, Hw 37-42mm. Distinctly smaller than most Aeshna species.\n\nThe commonest small hawker. Numerous in much of our area, and although it can be on the wing during most months in the Mediterranean, further north it is especially associated with late summer and autumn, when it may appear in massive migrations. It is usually identified by its size, relative dull colours and the diagnostic yellow \
Green and orange grass and weeds. Flat lay.
photo of green fly on plant stem. selective focus
Tulasi, plants, green,natural, Ayurveda
Linaria vulgaris common toadflax yellow wild flowers flowering on the meadow, small plants in bloom in the green grass
Fly on cornflower,Eifel,Germany.
Salvia farinacea also called 'Victoria Blue' (Mealy Cup Sage)
Low to medium, rather variable, rhizomatous, hairless perennial with fans of fleshy, sword-shaped leaves, basal often orange-tinged; stem leaves small and bract-like, the upper larger than the lower. Flowers greenish-yellow or orange-yellow, 10-16mmstarry, in a rather lax spike like raceme; filaments of stamens densely hairy. Fruit a small narrow, elliptical capsule, to 12mm long.\nHabitat: Bogs and wet acid heaths and moors, to 1200m.\nFlowering Season: July-September.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except the far north.\nGenerally regarded as poisonous, especially to livestock.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation to Ireland in July 2022.
A closeup of cute Plumbago auriculata blossoms with blurred background
Pear trees in blossom, mid April, springtime in Switzerland!
Beauty Hawthorn tree in the park
Scotch broom is a pretty, yellow wildflower similar to gorse. Here it is planted deliberately as part of an urban floral garden display. We think of a broom as a brush or besom, but in Scotland, a brush called a sguab could be made from Scotch broom bound with wire and fitted to a birch handle. Broom is a toxic plant. A Scottish farm lady named Maggy Johnston was famed for her intoxicating brew: Some said it was the pith of Broom, That she stow'd in her masking-loom, Which in our heads rais'd sic a foom; Or some wild seed, Which aft the chaping stoup did toom, But fill'd our head. (From (Elegy on Maggy Johnston), who died in 1711.).
purple flowers on a vine
Flowering weigela
Flowers of an Aloe vera plant
Short perennial, the stem with several brown sheaths at the base. Leaves oblong, keeled, shiny-green, the upper leaves smaller and bract-like. Bracts membranous, shorter than the ovary. Flowers greenish-yellow, often with reddish margins and streaks, borne in a slender spike, often many-flowered, each flower manikin-like, with the sepals and petals forming a close hood; lip 12-15mm, pendent, the lateral lobes forming short, narrow ‘arms’ and the central lobe divided into narrow legs; spurless.\nHabitat: Grassland, field boundaries, abandoned quarries, banks and open scrub, rarely along woodland margins, on calcareous soils, to 1500m.\nFlowering Season: May-June.\nDistribution: S & SE Britain, Belgium, Holland, France and Germany.\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the Eifel (Germany) in June 2019.
Fresh green dill in the garden close-up. Organically grown dill in the soil. Organic farming in rural are
wild fly
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