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Historic Lake Scott State Park at Scott Lake
The first forest flowers, snowdrops. In the east of Ukraine.
Biotope with waterlilies and reed.
Buckwheat, also known as common buckwheat, is a species of plant in the buckwheat genus of the knotweed family. Sometimes it is also classified in the genus Polygonum. Buckwheat is a pseudocereal. Flowers and green plant parts of buckwheat contain rutosides, which are used medicinally for venous disorders. The red pigment from the fruit skin, fagopyrin, can be slightly problematic. If eaten, it can make the skin more sensitive to sunlight. However, this is no longer the case with hulled buckwheat.
Wetlands with a scenic cloudscape in the background.
The stream \
Vincetoxicum hirundinaria subsp. hirundinaria, white swallow-wort. Wild plant shot in summer.
Ornithogahum dubium flower with rare white coloured tepals growing in the  Tienie Versveld nature reserve near Darling, Western Cape, South Africa
Yarrow thriving in a meadow in Pembrokeshire, Wales
Close up of bogbean (menyanthes trifoliata) flowers in bloom
Russian Landscape
Landscape with pond in the Horsterwold, a young forest located near Zeewolde in the province of Flevoland in the Netherlands. Mobilestock.
Close-up of an isolated head of white clover (Trifolium repens) flowers in the countryside. DrĂ´me, France.
White dactylorhiza incarnata subsp ochroleuca orchid on a meadow
Flooding of a river in Lombardy
Flowers of wild madder, Rubia peregrina, growing in Galicia, Spain
Variable short to tall, softly-hairy perennial; stems erect, with persistent basal leaf-rosettes. Leaves oblong to oval with a heart-shaped base, coarsely toothed, the uppermost unstalked. Flowers bright reddish-purple, occasionally pink or white, 12-18mm long, the whorls forming a dense oblong spike, sometimes interrupted below.\nHabitat: Permanent grassland, heaths, banks and open woodland, generally on rather light soils.\nFlowering Season: June-October.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe north to S Scandinavia; naturalized in Finland and Norway.\n\nThe Plant was widely used by medieval herbalists who believed that it possessed magical properties to ward off various evils. The dried leaves were formerly used as a substitute for snuff. The Plant can also be used as a herbal tea.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Long Weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2019.
Close up of buckwheat (fagopyrum esculentum) flowers in bloom
Mount Rundle in Banff National Park in the Canadian Rockies
flowers captured in Bohinj valley Slovenia
A flower umbel of Common Valerian (Valeriana officinalis) in the Scottish lowlands
white orchid in spring
Healing herbs plant - allium roseum - german: Rosenlauch
Forget-me-nots (Myosotis arvensis) blue Flowers. Rosette of the weed Forget-me-not Marsh semperflorens. High quality photo
Fools parsley in a grass meadow
Anacamptis pyramidalis flower close up
Untouched nature. When a small piece of cultivated land is left alone for a year during the summer, a remarkable transformation takes place. wildflowers begins to emerge, painting the landscape with vibrant hues. Native plants reclaim their territory and bring biodiversity back to the area. Buried seeds from seasons past awaken, shooting up.
Close up of a heath spotted orchid (dactylorhiza maculata) flower in bloom
Bunchberry in blossom, Alaska, USA
Free Images: "bestof:Olaus Magnus - On the Heathen Lithuanians Idolatrous.jpg s used with permission Published in 1555 Olaus Magnus Author died more than 70 years ago - public"
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