View allAll Photos Tagged Geranium

A very fine and beautiful colored geranium flower,,, // 'n Erg mooie, prachtig gekleurde geraniumbloem

These were one of my grandmother's favorites. She always planted them in front of the house, and we kept up the tradition.

Geranium pratense?, Untersberg Mountain, Berchtesgaden Alps, SW of Salzburg, border of Austria and Germany, 14 Jul 2014.

Blutroter Storchschnabel im Naturschutzgebiet "Mainzer Sand"

Geraniums lovely in hanging baskets.

In a garden in Great Urswick this morning.Taken with my Raynox DCR-250 macro converter.

Thursday afternoon on the deck

From our garden, earlier in the year of course

One of my favorites in my flower garden. Doesn't it just make you smile?

aka meadow cranesbill

Watercolour efect of pink geranium flower

It's always nice to see these late Spring wildflowers blooming in the local woodlands. In this population the petals are light pink, with the pink coloration concentrated along the veins and lots of white showing between the veins. In other populations the petals are a deeper, nearly uniform pink. Eno River State Park, Durham County, NC.

A woodland geranium with a smooth green background

The Mesquakie Indians brewed a root tea for toothache and for painful nerves and mashed the roots for treating hemorrhoids

© All rights reserved R K ERTUG. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.

not so different from the old "Nora bremner" ???

© Pascal BRODZIAK - Merci de me contacter pour toute utilisation de cette image.

Art. L. 122-4. du Code de la Propriété Intellectuelle : "Toute représentation ou reproduction intégrale ou partielle faite sans le consentement de l'auteur ou de ses ayants droit ou ayants cause est illicite."

 

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Meadow crane's-bill or meadow geranium (Geranium pratense) at Hahn Horticulture Garden, Virginia Tech.

First established in 1828, the gardens have been enjoyed as a public park by the people of Belfast since 1895. There is an extensive rose garden and long herbaceous borders and the tree enthusiast can seek out the rare oaks planted in the 1880s, including the hornbeam-leafed oak. Situated near Queens University Belfast, the Botanic Gardens is an important part of Belfast’s Victorian heritage and a popular meeting place for residents, students and tourists.

 

Charles McKimm came to the Royal Botanic Gardens in 1874, and was eventually appointed as Head Gardener. His enthusiasm caused many improvements to be made and the gardens were transformed. Belfast Corporation purchased the Gardens and renamed it as the Belfast Botanical Gardens Park. In 1903 McKimm was appointed to a newly created post of General Superintendent of Parks for Belfast.

 

Palm House history

 

Designed by Charles Lanyon, the Palm House is one of the earliest examples of a curvilinear cast iron glasshouse. Its construction was initiated by the Belfast Botanical and Horticultural Society in the 1830s. The two wings were completed in 1840, and were built by Richard Turner of Dublin, who later built the Great Palm House at Kew Gardens. The cool wing houses all year round displays of colour and scent using plants such as geranium, fuchsia, begonia and built displays. Construction of the Palm House began in 1839, and the Tropical Ravine, or Fernery, completed in 1889, is a fine example of horticultural Victoriana.

 

Tropical Ravine

 

The Tropical Ravine has had a £3.8m transformation and the listed building which dates back to 1887 has been restored with many of its original Victorian features reinstated and preserved. Split over two levels with an open reception area on the ground floor, the building has been modernised to make it more energy efficient with new triple-glazed windows installed to retain heat and create the right environment for the tropical plants it is home to. Visitors will now be able to learn about the conservation work and plant collection thanks to new interactive and digital exhibits. Accessibility has also been improved with the introduction of sensory facilities for sight and hearing-impaired visitors.

This is from a true geranium, the perennial plant. My original one was a small piece that came from my grandmothers house. I learned later that hers had come from her mothers house. I love that flower and am always glad to see the plant start sprouting leaves every year.

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