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Digitally restored from a late 19th Century encyclopedia.
Cow parsnip at Milgara Ridge  Golden Gate National Recreation Area  on a foggy spring day.
The pretty spotted beebalm flowers in the forest
Queen Anne's lace side view, taken in a meadow in a Connecticut nature preserve. Note the purple-red floret in the center. The name arises from the legend that Queen Anne of Great Britain pricked her finger with a needle while making lace, and a drop of blood fell on it.
In the field a small Spermacoce verticillata bush with flowers
Sesame in successive blooming in china.
decoration plant
The 12 constellations of the zodiac drawn on an old paper.
A closeup of Xanthium Spinosum or Bathurst Burr, showing the sharp thorny spikes. An invasive pest weed, otherwise known as spiny cockleburr,
Aesculus hippocastanum (horse chestnut) leaves
Cassiopeia constellation on the starry sky
Epipactis helleborine, the broad-leaved helleborine, is a terrestrial species of orchid with a broad distribution. It is a long lived herb which varies morphologically with ability to self-pollinate. \nDescription:\nEpipactis helleborine can grow to a maximum height of 1 m or more under good conditions, and has broad dull green leaves which are strongly ribbed and flat The flowers are arranged in long drooping racemes with dull green sepals and shorter upper petals. The lower labellum is pale red and is much shorter than the upper petals. \nFlowering occurs June–September. \nHabitat:\nFound in woods and hedge-banks and often not far from paths near human activity. It is one of the most likely European orchids to be found within a city, with many sites for example in Glasgow, London and Moscow. Sometimes spotted beside car parks. \nEpipactis helleborine is known for its successful colonization of human-made or anthropogenic habitats such as parks, gardens or roadsides. These roadside orchids exhibit special features such as large plant size and greater ability to produce flowers. Pollination plays a huge role as pollinators such as Syrphidae, Culicidae, Apidae etc. possess greater species diversity and visits the flowering sites more in anthropogenic habitats as compared to native ones. The visitation rates along with the reproductive success of these orchids are higher in large populations as they are more attractive to pollinators. \n\nDistribution:\nThis species is widespread across much of Europe and Asia, from Portugal to China, as well as northern Africa (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis is a very common Species in the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
White bunch of Sweet autumn clematis called \
Fruits of masterwort (Peucedanum ostruthium). Pennine Alps. Piedmont. Italy.
The great flowering cow parsnip - a poisonous plant, growing on the edge of a birch grove
Grassland background.
Dill hand-drawn black, graphic, isolated, round bloomed dill umbrella, field grass, for printing on paper and fabric.
Wood anemones in a nature reserve woodland.
Dendrobium speciosum, commonly known as the rock orchid or cane orchid, is a species of Australian orchid. Its varieties can be found in a range of habitats as epiphytes (on branches or trunks of trees) or lithophytes. It has a continuous distribution along the east coast of Australia and in distinct populations along the Tropic of Capricorn.
Love-In-A-Mist flower
Zurich, Switzerland, May 22, 2023 Faba bean or Vicia Faba at the botanical garden
Very Rare, Beautifully Illustrated Antique Engraved and Hand Colored Victorian Botanical Illustration of Whitlow Pepperwort, Lepidium Draba, 1863 Plants. Plate 158, Published in 1863. Source: Original edition from my own archives. Copyright has expired on this artwork. Digitally restored.
Pair of giant onion wild herbs seen growing in a botanical gardens in early summer. Pollen can be seen coming out of the stork heads.
Leaf and branch - grayscale.
Photography of Euphorbia heterophylla weed flowers on a blurred background
Flowers of Strawberry Tree (Arbutus unedo). Cinque Terre. Liguria. Italy.
cartoon image of oat plant
Swathes of beautiful Bulbinella Hookeri flower in the Cobb Valley, Kahurangi National Park, in New Zealand's South Island. Named after Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker (born 1817), a world famous botanist who travelled on the Antarctic expedition of 1839 under the command of Sir James Ross. Bulbinella is a genus of plant in the family Xanthorrhoeaceae, first described as a genus in 1843. It is also known by the names Golden Wand, Maori Onion, Anthericum Hookeri, Chrysobactron Hookeri.
Fraxinus ornus in bloom
Fresh green maple in springtime against clear sky.
Free Images: "bestof:Astragalus cicer Taub121a.png Illustration from book Leguminosae in <br/>Engelmann ed Natürliche Pflanzenfamilien Vol III 3 1891 Paul Hermann Wilhelm Taubert"
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