View allAll Photos Tagged MISTLETOE

Gloomy dark winter daylight + Photoshop =Christmas card!

Beware of kissing locals and druids...

Taken at Glenagra, Kynuna, Queensland,

Australia.

Apple trees with mistletoe

My Dad laying one on Michelle on Christmas Eve.

Mistletoe Cactus, Purchased at Secret Garden, 12/9/07

My first ever sighting of the Needle-leaf Mistletoe (Amyema cambagei), aka the She-oak Mistletoe. This one was growing on a tree at the Putta Bucca Wetlands in Mudgee. There was quite a lot of it about.

Curator & Photographer: Caesandra Seawell

Curator & Photographer: Caesandra Seawell

Boutonniere using Fresh US Mistletoe

Submitted for a Winter Themed Contest,

Love : is the secret

 

Art © Leena Parvin/Blacvamp

Do NOT modify/edit, sell or claim artwork as your own

 

The Mistle toe is now considered a tradition. And the bridge is now host to locks along it's banisters.

Mistletoe (Viscum album) seeds, Felmingham

Phoradendron serotinum ssp. tomentosum (P. villosum)

OAK MISTLETOE. Fallen oak branch showing structure of attached clump of mistletoe. The green-colored mistletoe branches grow right out of the oak. Deer have probably already eaten most of the leaves. Road F, sector 34 C5.

Viscum album

 

(Crawley Camera Club took advantage of the weekend of photography organised by the National Trust at Petworth House to go on a jolly - seven members took part :)

Image from a disposable camera adapted to black and white using iPhoto software.

 

This is on of many trees on the Rye with a good crop of mistletoe. High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire.

The mistletoe card with it's matching envelope, although mailing in that envelope is not advised due to the berries.

 

For more information see my profile: www.flickr.com/people/mrsdragon/

wants to come shopping

October 2013

Superdomain: Neomura

Domain: Eukaryota

(unranked): Archaeplastida

Kingdom: Plantae

Subkingdom: Tracheobionta

Superdivision: Spermatophyta

Division: Magnoliophyta

Class: Magnoliopsida

Subclass: Rosidae

Order: Santalales

Family: Santalaceae

Genus: Viscum

Species: V. album

Female mistletoe on an apple tree. In an orchard in Herefordshire, November 2006

Found these two hearts of mistletoe in an oka tree in Stallion Springs, Ca.

Prolific branching and swelling of western hemlock caused by hemlock dwarf mistletoe. USDA Forest Service photo by Robin Mulvey.

1 2 ••• 49 50 52 54 55 ••• 79 80