View allAll Photos Tagged RedStems
I had to fit the summerhouse round this large acer - beautiful leaves and flowers in Summer and Autumn and red stems in Winter. It was worth it. No sun now though - we had to accommodate Chris's enormous cabin/studio!
A tiny hoverfly on small redstem filaree blooms covered in raindrops in the greenbelt park today. I ventured out into drizzle and light rain to get some photos. Most of the birds and bugs were in hiding. I didn't even see the hoverfly when I took the photo.
Clematis seed head.
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Dogwood growing along the path along the stream above Roughlock Falls in Spearfish Canyon, South Dakota.
Cornus sericea, syn. C. stolonifera, Swida sericea, (red osier dogwood) is a species of flowering plant in the family Cornaceae, native throughout northern and western North America from Alaska east to Newfoundland, south to Durango and Nuevo León in the west, and Illinois and Virginia in the east. Other names include red willow, redstem dogwood, redtwig dogwood, red-rood, American dogwood, creek dogwood, and western dogwood.
Was surprised to find that this little belly flower is actually the same introduced species we have here in NJ. It's a lot smaller in the desert! (see below)
Peony 'Chippewa' 23W22 Lactiflora G3- (Murawska, 1943) (3-DB-R) Lactiflora Cultivar Peony, Mature plant size: 36in., RED, tall, dark red double, red stems, sidebuds, visible stamens, midseason bloomer, USDA Hardiness Zone 3-8, Michigan Bloom Week ISO WW22, In Garden Bed G3 for 16.7 YEARS (Wild). Planted in 2006.
Peony 'Chippewa' (Murawska, 1943) is a double, lactiflora cultivar: tall at ~40”, dark black red, velvety texture, some stamens visible, midseason bloomer, long red stems, side-buds, strong grower, good cut flower, needs support. Not offered in recent nursery catalogs. Bred by A.L. Murawska (1893-1968) River Grove, Illinois who has 42 peonies listed with APS. His focus was on lactiflora cultivars that not only did well at shows, but performed well in the garden: 'Moonstone' and 'Princess Margaret' are highly rated.
Does not do well in the rain. The long stems bend and flowers hit the ground.
Photo by F.D.Richards, SE Michigan. Link to additional photos of this plant from 2014, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23:
www.flickr.com/search/?user_id=50697352%40N00&sort=da...
#Michigan, #49236, #usdaZone6, #week4, #Perennial, #Peony, #Double, #RedStems, #Chippewa, #Lactiflora, #23W22
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceanothus
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Rosales
Family: Rhamnaceae
Genus: Ceanothus
redstem ceanothus, Oregon teatree
biology.burke.washington.edu/herbarium/imagecollection.ph...
Saxifraga lyallii (redstem saxifrage)
Naches Peak Loop Trail
about 1700 meters (5600 feet elevation)
William O. Douglas Wilderness
12q3 598
Rough ground (subsoil) beside the ball-field fence, off Paradise Lane, Peoria Arizona. I could barely see this little critter (midge as it turns out) - just something there.
The pink flower is Erodium cicutarium, a storks-bill (named after the seedpod) or filaree, which is native to Europe.
Shell Creek Rd., eastern San Luis Obispo Co., CA
i think this is plantago rugelii because of the purple-red base of the stem.
**anyone want to confirm or deny?** are there any other plantains in north america that have a purple-red stem?
these were found in a picnic area on a gradual hillside near planted conifers in the upper midwest- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Midwest
common names are blackseed plantain, red-stemmed plantain, and rugel's plantain.
i believe the previous photo from a completely different area is the same species.
plant profile and range map:
Taken in October 1993 with my first Pentax SLR camera. Even back then, I was attracted to close up photos of nature! I think this is a lowbush Blueberry or a Dogwood shrub?? Photo was scanned into my computer so clarity is not the best.
Redstem filaree ( Erodium cicutarium ) flores têm 5 pétalas rosadas. Flores geralmente ocorrem em grupos de dois.
I noticed five blooms on our hike. They are, clockwise from top left:
Coastal Heron's Bill, Redstem Stork's Bill, Red Stemmed Filaree, Redstem Filaree (erodium cicutarium) - Invasive non-native Weed
Cultivated Radish, Wild Radish, Jointed Charlock (Raphanus sativus) - Invasive non-native Weed
Sourgrass, Bermuda Buttercup (oxalis pes-caprae) - Invasive non-native Weed
Sticky Monkeyflower, Island Monkeyflower, Bush Monkey Flower (mimulus aurantiacus)
Rape Mustard, Field Mustard, Common Mustard (brassica rapa) - Invasive non-native Weed
LA: Erodium circutarium
EN: Common sotrk's bill / pinweed / redstem filaree
DE: Gewöhnliche Reiherschnabel
HU: Bürökgémorr
Worldwide spread little plant. Prefers dry, semi-dry meadows.
Pretty common, small flowers.
Red 365 out take
I was sitting on the deck one this particular morning, coffee in hand, the sun on my back, taking in the sights and sounds of the ocean when this bush from the garden caught my eye with its vibrant reddish stems! I haven't seen anything like it before and have no idea what kind of plant it is but it was just beautiful!
aka Redstem Filaree, Common Stork's Bill or Pinweed
Erodium cicutarium
Found in the San Gabriel neighborhood, Tucson, AZ.