View allAll Photos Tagged Robusta

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Random Wednesday

 

Let's get some coffee! OK... but which one?!

Digging though some old photos, I found this one from March 2013. It was captured with iPhone 4 and Olloclip.

 

I remember this day well, me and the cats sitting around a bunch of full open crocus with the sun beating down on them. The ground all warm from a day full of sun. The crocus were lit up like jewels and stained glass.

 

I decided to revisited the image with an edit on the iPad, first in Snapseed to crop and then in Hipstamatic's Oggl App.

 

Used the Lowy Lens & Robusta Film combo for this image.

 

I must have made 20 versions of this in Oggl, half in color half in black and white.

 

In some ways the process reminds me of playing around in the darkroom.

 

The experimenting with settings, different treatments/toning, and the element of some surprise with your mixing results, but without the chemicals.

 

The only thing missing is the magic of the image appearing before your eyes in the bath.

 

But, I think there is also an app for that too.

Zephyranthes robusta (Herb.) Baker, Handb. Amaryll.: 35 (1888).

Homotypic Names:

* Habranthus robustus Herb. in R.Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. 4: t. 14 (1829).

Amaryllis robusta (Herb.) Sweet ex Steud., Nomencl. Bot., ed. 2, 1: 74 (1840).

 

* Basionym/Replaced Synonym

Heterotypic Synonyms:

Amaryllis berteroi Spreng., Syst. Veg. 2: 49 (1825).

Habranthus berteroi (Spreng.) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 4: 102 (1847).

Zephyranthes taubertiana Harms, Notizbl. Königl. Bot. Gart. Berlin 1: 81 (1895).

Zephyranthes taubertii Harms, Gartenflora 44: 386 (1895).

Atamasco taubertiana (Harms) Greene, Pittonia 3: 188 (1897).

Habranthus quilmesianus Ravenna, Onira 1: 54 (1988).

Hippeastrum berteroi (Spreng.) Christenh. & Byng, Global Fl. 4: 58 (2018).

Hippeastrum quilmesianum (Ravenna) Christenh. & Byng, Global Fl. 4: 63 (2018).

Its Spring and the Gravillea Robusta's have started to bloom!

Alpes de Haute Provence, South East of France.

PER ME E' VITE VERGINE...

  

il Parthenocissus tricuspidata Veitchii Robusta è un rampicante esuberante e rapido nello sviluppo, capace di rivestire in poco tempo ampie superfici alle quali aderisce mediante radici aeree provviste di piccole ventose. Una volta esaurito lo spazio a disposizione la crescita si ferma e la vegetazione non sormonta mai su se stessa, come avviene in caso di Parthenocissus Veitchii. Si può vedere cosi un intera parete ricoperta da grandi foglie, tutte uguali con un effetto pulito e armonico.

  

Note tratte dal sito:

donnadipiante.com/rampicanti-a-foglia-caduca/706-partheno...

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FOR ME IT IS VIRGIN VINE...

  

Parthenocissus tricuspidata Veitchii Robusta is an exuberant and rapidly developing climber, capable of covering large surfaces in a short time to which it adheres via aerial roots equipped with small suckers. Once the available space is exhausted, growth stops and the vegetation never overlaps itself, as happens in the case of Parthenocissus Veitchii. Thus you can see an entire wall covered with large leaves, all the same with a clean and harmonious effect.

  

CANON EOS 6D Mark II con ob. CANON EF 24-70 f./2,8 L USM

   

Am Rosarium #stairs #stairsandsteps #tree #house #bricks #Göttingen #goestagram #igers_goettingen #goestern #hipstamatic #robusta #akira

 

71 Likes on Instagram

  

Mexican fan palms or Mexican Washingtonia (Washingtonia robusta). Dried leaves of the Washingonia palm form a thick skirt or petticoat.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Schillerglocken #spring #flora #blossom #yearly #cyclus #goestern #Göttingen #goestagram #Südstadt #iphone #hipstamatic #robusta #akira #hipstamaticmagic

 

79 Likes on Instagram

 

2 Comments on Instagram:

 

lailabrunsell: Si

 

lailabrunsell: So lovely!

  

Washingtonia robusta (Mexican fan palm or Mexican washingtonia) is a palm tree native to western Sonora, and Baja California Sur in northwestern Mexico. It is reportedly naturalized in Spain, the Canary Islands, Italy, Réunion, Hawaii, Florida, North Carolina and California.

Washingtonia robusta grows to 25 m (82 ft) tall, rarely up to 30 m (98 ft). The leaves have a petiole up to 1 m (3.3 ft) long, and a palmate fan of leaflets up to 1 m long. The inflorescence is up to 3 m (9.8 ft) long, with numerous small pale orange-pink flowers. The fruit is a spherical, blue-black drupe, 6–8 mm (0.24–0.31 in) diameter; it is edible, though thin-fleshed.

WIKIPEDIA

A grey and windless day at Hen & Chicken Bay. No blue skies, lots of blank spaces in this photo.

 

The three planted trees on the right are Eucalyptus robusta. A shame the sun didn't come out. It would be a better picture with blue skies.

 

French speaking Canadian refugees arrived here in 1840. Today, the local government area is known as "City of Canada Bay".

 

The still waters were regularly broken by jumping mullet. Signs nearby said that due to dioxin poisoning, it is not recommended that fish or crustaceans caught here be eaten.

 

The "splash" made by the jumping fish was the loudest sound. They really like to jump.

Crows Nest National Park, South-East Queensland

swamp mahogany or swamp messmate, tree native to eastern Australia. Uncommon, found as a street tree in Brisbane, only one, loaded with blossom.

Common Redshank, Tringa totanus robusta, 24 - 27 cm. / 9 - 10.6 in. COMMON on inland and coastal marshes, wet meadows and moorland. Photographed in June 2008.

 

Cley-next-the-Sea, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom.

 

©bryanjsmith.

Sobennikoffia robusta - Brookside Orchids

Grevillea robusta, commonly known as the southern silky oak, silk oak or silky oak, or Australian silver oak

Zephyranthes robusta (Herb.) Baker, Handb. Amaryll.: 35 (1888).

Homotypic Names:

* Habranthus robustus Herb. in R.Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. 4: t. 14 (1829).

Amaryllis robusta (Herb.) Sweet ex Steud., Nomencl. Bot., ed. 2, 1: 74 (1840).

 

* Basionym/Replaced Synonym

Heterotypic Synonyms:

Amaryllis berteroi Spreng., Syst. Veg. 2: 49 (1825).

Habranthus berteroi (Spreng.) M.Roem., Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 4: 102 (1847).

Zephyranthes taubertiana Harms, Notizbl. Königl. Bot. Gart. Berlin 1: 81 (1895).

Zephyranthes taubertii Harms, Gartenflora 44: 386 (1895).

Atamasco taubertiana (Harms) Greene, Pittonia 3: 188 (1897).

Habranthus quilmesianus Ravenna, Onira 1: 54 (1988).

Hippeastrum berteroi (Spreng.) Christenh. & Byng, Global Fl. 4: 58 (2018).

Hippeastrum quilmesianum (Ravenna) Christenh. & Byng, Global Fl. 4: 63 (2018).

Pyramids of Güímar . Tenerife.

 

VIDEO OF THE PARK ON YOU TUBE

 

Mysterious and controversial, but still worth a visit, especially for the very nice garden next to it, the great documentary about adventurer Thor Heyerdahl and his travels and the Rapa Nui exhibition.

The site is very well maintained and organized, but they emphasize a little too much on the Thor Heyerdahl theory, ignoring pretty much all other theories about the origins of the Pyramids.

 

From Wikipedia.

The Pyramids of Güímar refer to six rectangular pyramid-shaped, terraced structures, built from lava stone without the use of mortar. They are located in the district of Chacona, part of the town of Güímar on the island of Tenerife in the Canary Islands. There are claims that the structures have been dated to the 19th century and their original function explained as a byproduct of contemporary agricultural techniques. However, results of excavations have so far proved inconclusive.

 

Other pyramids employing the same methods and materials of construction can be found in various sites on Tenerife. In Güímar itself there were nine pyramids, only six of which survive.

read more en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramids_of_G%C3%BC%C3%ADmar

 

Grevillea robusta, commonly known as the southern silky oak, silk oak or silky oak, or Australian silver oak, is the largest species in the genus Grevillea of the family Proteaceae. It is not closely related to the true oaks, Quercus. It is a native of eastern coastal Australia, in riverine, subtropical and dry rainforest environments receiving more than 1,000 mm per year of average rainfall.

ゼフィランサス・ロブスタ

Zephyranthes robusta (Herb.) Baker, 1888

This name is Accepted.

Confirmation Date: 12/08, 2022.

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Family: Amaryllidaceae (APG IV)

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Authors:

William Herbert (1778-1847)

John Gilbert Baker (1834-1920)

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Publication:

Handbook of the Amaryllideae

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Collation:

35

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Date of Publication:

Apr 1888

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Distribution:

E. & S. Brazil to N. Argentina

(27) nat (29) mau (78) fla (83) clm 84 BZE BZL BZS 85 AGE AGW URU

Lifeform: Bulb geophyte

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The native range of this species is E. & S. Brazil to N. Argentina. It is a bulbous geophyte and grows primarily in the seasonally dry tropical biome. It is has environmental uses.

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Distribution Native to:

Argentina Northeast, Argentina Northwest, Brazil Northeast, Brazil South, Brazil Southeast, Uruguay

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Basionym/Replaced Synonym:

Habranthus robustus Herb. in R.Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. 4: t. 14 (1829).

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Homotypic Synonyms:

Amaryllis robusta (Herb.) Sweet ex Steud. in Nomencl. Bot., ed. 2, 1: 74 (1840)

Habranthus robustus Herb. in R.Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. 4: t. 14 (1829)

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Heterotypic Synonyms:

Amaryllis berteroi Spreng. in Syst. Veg., 2: 49 (1825)

Atamasco taubertiana (Harms) Greene in Pittonia 3: 188 (1897)

Habranthus berteroi (Spreng.) M.Roem. in Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 4: 102 (1847)

Habranthus quilmesianus Ravenna in Onira 1: 54 (1988)

Hippeastrum berteroi (Spreng.) Christenh. & Byng in Global Fl. 4: 58 (2018)

Hippeastrum quilmesianum (Ravenna) Christenh. & Byng in Global Fl. 4: 63 (2018)

Zephyranthes taubertiana Harms in Notizbl. Königl. Bot. Gart. Berlin 1: 81 (1895)

Zephyranthes taubertii Harms in Gartenflora 44: 386 (1895)

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Publications:

An alternative taxonomy had been proposed by the following authorities:

Govaerts, R.H.A. (2011). World checklist of selected plant families published update Facilitated by the Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. [Cited as Habranthus robustus.]

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Catálogo de Plantas y Líquenes de Colombia:

Bernal, R., Gradstein, S.R. & Celis, M. (eds.). 2015. Catálogo de plantas y líquenes de Colombia. Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá. catalogoplantasdecolombia.unal.edu.co

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Kew Backbone Distributions:

Bosser, J. & al. (eds.) (1978). Flore des Mascareignes 177-188 IRD Éditions, MSIRI, RBG-Kew, Paris.

Flora of North America Editorial Committee (2002). Flora of North America North of Mexico 26: 1-723. Oxford University Press, New York, Oxford.

Germishuizen, G. & Meyer, N.L. (eds.) (2003). Plants of Southern Africa: an annotated checklist. Strelitzia 14.: i-vi, 1-1231. National Botanical Institute, Pretoria.

Ravenna, P. (1974). Contributions to South American Amaryllidaceae VI. Plant Life 30: 29-79.

Walderley, M.G.L., Shepherd, G.J., Melhem, T.S. & Giulietti, A.M. (eds.) (2005). Flora Fanerogâmica do Estado de São Paulo 4: 1-392. Instituto de Botânica, São Paulo.

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Useful Plants and Fungi of Colombia:

Bernal, R., Gradstein, S.R., & Celis, M. (eds.). (2020). Catálogo de Plantas y Líquenes de Colombia. v1.1. Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Dataset/Checklist. doi.org/10.15472/7avdhn

Diazgranados et al. (2021). Catalogue of plants of Colombia. Useful Plants and Fungi of Colombia project. In prep.

GRIN (2021). Germplasm Resources Information Network from the United States Department of Agriculture. www.ars-grin.gov

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Accepted By:

Forzza, R. C. 2010. Lista de espécies Flora do Brasil floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/2010. Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro.

Ulloa Ulloa, C., P. Acevedo-Rodríguez, S. G. Beck, M. J. Belgrano, R. Bernal, P. E. Berry, L. Brako, M. Celis, G. Davidse, S. R. Gradstein, O. Hokche, B. León, S. León-Yánez, R. E. Magill, D. A. Neill, M. H. Nee, P. H. Raven, H. Stimmel, M. T. Strong, J. L. Villaseñor Ríos, J. L. Zarucchi, F. O. Zuloaga & P. M. Jørgensen. 2018 [Onwards]. An integrated Assessment of Vascular Plants Species of the Americas (Online Updates).

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