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Avocado flowers (Persea americana) blooming,  with green vegetation background
A patch of clover with focus on the foreground.
Flower of hogweed along roadside during flowering phase
Phacelia tanacetifolia blue tansy
White masterwort Astrantia major Large White in flower.
A plant whose roots are used as a sedative and to treat certain medical conditions. It is being studied as a way to improve sleep in cancer patients undergoing treatment. Also called garden valerian, Indian valerian, Pacific valerian, Mexican valerian, garden heliotrope, valerian, and Valerianae radix.
Cow Parsley in a field.
Alpine plants in Mount Kitadake ( Scientific name: Rhododendron brachycarpum ).Mount Kitadake is known as the second highest mountain in Japan.
A close-up image of a vivid white flower blooming in a lush, green grassy field
Close up of white flowers of whorled milkweed, Asclepias verticillata. Doolittle Prairie, Story County, Iowa, USA.
Queen Anne's Lace in full wild bloom.
Closeup detailed macro photo of the blooming flower in the summer.
Closeup of multicolored blossoming organically grown broad bean or Vicia faba plants.
House plant
Bloom in nature the white nettles are deaf (Lamium album)
Fools parsley in a grass meadow
White flower of a delicate legume seen growing amongst grass in pasture, showing individual flowers in flower-head
Lobularia maritima (L.) Desv.\nSweet alyssum\nBrassicaceae
Japanese spiraea ( Spiraea japonica ) white flowers. Rosaceae deciduous shrub, endemic to Japan. Flowers bloom from early summer to summer.
Robust tall, almost hairless perennial, to 2m; stems hollow, ridged, generally winged with purple. Leaves 2-3 pinnate, with oblong, sharply toothed segments; upper leaves reduced to large inflated sheaths and partially enclosing the developing umbels. Flowers white or pinkish, 2mm, in umbels 3-15cm across, with numerous rays; bracts few and soon falling, or absent. Fruit oval, (with 3 outstanding ridges) 4-5mm, with membranous wings.\nHabitat: Damp places, meadows, fens and woods.\nFlowering Season: July-October.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except for parts of the extreme north and Spitsbergen.\nSometimes cultivated as an ornamental plant.\n\nThe plant has also been used for dyeing (yellow color).\n\nAngelica sylvestris roots have been used in the traditional Austrian medicine internally as tea or tincture for treatment of disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, respiratory tract, nervous system, and also against fever, infections, and flu. In the Middle Ages  the plant was cultivated in Monastery Gardens with other plants as a medicine against Pest.
Close-up of white crown flower or giant Indian milkweed
Hemlock water dropwort (Oenanthe crocata) is a quite common riverside British wild flower, which may have originated in North Africa and south-western Europe. It is poisonous, and is seen here growing in a stream in a park in Merton, Surrey, England. 'There are numerous reports of people mistaking the extremely poisonous (Oenanthe crocata) for wild celery or parsnips and dying within a week or so.' One group of fatalities involved some French prisoners of war on parole in Pembrokeshire, Wales, who were unfamiliar with the local wild flowers.
flowers captured in Bohinj valley Slovenia
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.
white flowers in a garden coriander seeds
Fool's parsley in a wildflower meadow.
Picture of a summer delight flower - Ligusticum Scoticum
Short to medium; stem hairy above, purplish below. Leaves 4-8, oblong to lanceolate, pointed, folded lengthwise, decreasing in size upwards. Flowers 7-14; sepals greenish with faint violet or purplish-brown stripes; petals whitish with a pink base; lip white with a yellow blotch and purplish lines, the tip oval with a frilly margin. Fruit hairy.\nHabitat: Marshes, fens and other damp places, occasionally dune slacks.\nFlowering Season: July to August.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except the extreme North.\n\nThis nice Species is quite rare in the Netherlands. Most to be seen in the Coast Areas and scattered in the rest of the Country.
Lysimachia punctata alexander or yellow loosestrife green and white plant
upward view of Hogweed against sky on the cliffs around Pentire, Newquay, Cornwall on a June day.
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