View allAll Photos Tagged MISTLETOE
The Mistletoe was the first yearbook at the University of Oklahoma, published first in 1905. The name changed in 1909 to the Sooner.
This picture does not belong to OU Marketing and Communications. If you want this image please contact the OU Western History Collections' Photographic Archive at libraries.ou.edu/content/western-history-collections-phot...
the clue of this manual is something you can fill in yourselves... ;)
Merry Christmas dear Flickr friends!
MistletoeViscum album, growing in a hawthorn Bushy Park, there are also large bunches growing in the Lime trees there.
"Who knew there was mistletoe growing close to home? Jim McCloskey, that's who. Jim spotted this growth of mistletoe north of Garden Road near the Maurice River. Mistletoe grows in clusters attached to the branches of several different species of trees. The mistletoe shown above is about 50 to 60 feet above the ground."
That's some holly out of focus in the foreground. The mistletoe is 50 yards or so from the camera. I focused manually, because there was too much detail in the foreground.
Camera: Nikon D300
Exposure: 0.003 sec (1/320)
Lens: Nikkor 70-300 VR
Aperture: f/11.0
Focal Length: 250 mm
ISO Speed: 200
A list of places I went to, in search of mistletoe.
I never did find any.
Blogged here: cw3283.blogspot.com/2008/12/christmas-party.html
Couldn't find any products with mistletoe in my stash, so printed this image off the internet to enter the Merry Monday challenge. The sentiment is by Penny Black. Details on my blog: www.ggnursecreations.blogspot.com/2014/04/mistletoe.html
A simple card using the Merry Kiss-mas stamp set by PTI and the Fine Check BG stamp by MFT.
Visit my blog for more info.
No, thats not just an off colored juniper bough, its a Juniper Mistletoe (Phroadendron juniperinum), growing on a Utah Juniper. Too bad there weren't any pretty girls around.