View allAll Photos Tagged ROSEMARY

I wish I could include the wonderful fragrance from the rosemary leaves in this image of its blossoms.

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PS: Mi scuso con gli amici e i visitatori, ma sono costretta a venirvi a trovare solo un po' per volta ...

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Once in summer night.

Easy choice to me for portraying a name, with this plant in flower on my balcony

for "Smile on Saturday" ;-)

ROSEMARY

This name has a lovely meaning:

From the Latin ros marinus, meaning "dew of the sea".

  

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Sorry, to me is very difficult to visit people that always only leave a fav without commenting...

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Do not use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.

All rights reserved - Copyright © fotomie2009 - Nora Caracci

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I found these two priceless gems - rosemary beetles, chrysolina americana, on our rosemary bush yesterday afternoon. Sadly, this species is classed as a pest but these metallic, dotty, stripy and colourful insects are very welcome in our garden. We have more than enough rosemary for everyone and I do not see any significant damage to the plants.

For Macro Monday Theme ‘Condiments’. Rosemary is a fragrant evergreen herb that is used as a culinary condiment (www.medicalnewstoday.com) it is member of the mint family along with oregano, thyme, basil and lavender.

The Rosemary is flowering again and I just love going up close to smell the scent. Little ant obviously likes it too!!

 

Much better viewed large.

 

Thank you for your favourites. :O)

Bright green healthy Rosemary Prostratus, a low-growing groundcover, outgrowing its assigned space and tumbling over the edge of a wall.

Rosemary is a fragrant evergreen herb that's native to mediterranean areas.

Rosemary can be used as a culinary condiment, it's a member of the mint family.

Rosemary leaves may be eaten fresh or dried, can also be brewed as tea.

In culinary ways it's used as a stuffing for roast meats with other herbs.

Lamb, chicken or turkey are some popular foods that certainly benefit from a little rosemary, other food are available too!

 

Vegan meat alternatives would also benefit from a little sprig or two I should image. 😂

 

Love & Peace everyone!

Happy Macro Monday! 😊

This is one of the Dickcissels that turned up in southern Ontario this summer and he was fortunate to find a mate, hope they will be successful in their nesting attempt.

If you live for fresh herbs in your cooking, you’ll probably know these beautiful tiny beetles. In fact they are pests who like to dine on the young shoots of the plants. A long living insect, they can have some overlap between the new and old generations, which means that adult beetles can be found almost any time of the year. Oh joy... ;-)

 

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rosemary and lemons from our garden!

Chrysolina Americana - Escarabajo del Romero

Or the posh name - Chrysolina Americana.

On lavender.

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Rosemary beetle is an insect that eats the foliage and flowers of various aromatic plants, such as rosemary, lavender, sage, thyme and some other related plants.

 

Rosemary beetle has spread rapidly since first being found breeding in central London in the late 1990s. It is now widespread throughout England and Wales. It is established in Scotland, present in Northern Ireland and may be established in parts of the Republic of Ireland.

 

Both the adult beetles and the larvae feed on the foliage and flowers of host plants, and are most active between late summer and the spring.

This appeared at the bottom of the wall, where it climbs and sprawls and flowers much earlier than the shrubs, so I wonder whether the prostrate form I lost to the frost might be one of its parents...

Rosemary Grevillea is a native Australian bush. They are named for their foliage which resembles the well known Mediterranean herb.

Back Garden - not the most obliging with its positioning (it was fine when it landed, but moved position before I had locked focus)

My Rosemary plant is in full flower at the moment. Spring is definitely in the air

Buttermilk, two sprigs of rosemary...

Rosemary (... I think) in front of a Christmas tree in Longwood Garden's Mediterranean Room.

Double exposures at Vanderbilt mansion and gardens, Hyde Park NY

 

Posted for Macro Monday Group theme: Garden Macro

There's rosemary, that's for remembrance ~ William Shakespeare, Hamlet

Rosemary beetle is an insect that eats the foliage and flowers of various aromatic plants, such as rosemary, lavender, sage, thyme and some other related plants.

 

Rosemary beetle has spread rapidly since first being found breeding in central London in the late 1990s. It is now widespread throughout England and Wales. It is established in Scotland, present in Northern Ireland and may be established in parts of the Republic of Ireland.

 

Both the adult beetles and the larvae feed on the foliage and flowers of host plants, and are most active between late summer and the spring. (RHS Gardening)

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Rosemary beetle is an insect that eats the foliage and flowers of various aromatic plants, such as rosemary, lavender, sage, thyme and some other related plants.

 

Rosemary beetle has spread rapidly since first being found breeding in central London in the late 1990s. It is now widespread throughout England and Wales. It is established in Scotland, present in Northern Ireland and may be established in parts of the Republic of Ireland.

 

Both the adult beetles and the larvae feed on the foliage and flowers of host plants, and are most active between late summer and the spring. (RHS Gardening)

Sharon found this on the Lavender in the garden today.

Bronica S2

Ilford FP4

Dev LC29 @home

Salvia rosmarinus, commonly known as rosemary, is a woody, perennial herb with fragrant, evergreen, needle-like leaves and white, pink, purple, or blue flowers, native to the Mediterranean region.[3] Until 2017, it was known by the scientific name Rosmarinus officinalis, now a synonym.

A dragonfly on the rosemary plants in the garden. France, 2022.

Groundcover rosemary in the foreground, and a stop sign in the background.

43/100 for "100x The 2020 Edition"

18/25 of Lockdown garden flowers (having had to change my subject for the 100x in 2020). I am trying to catch up in posting these as the National Trust gardens have now opened again. I just have to get better at planning ahead as we have to book a slot for visiting.

 

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