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Bulbophyllum ambrosia (Hance) Schltr., Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. Beih. 4: 247 (1919).
Expositora: Marilda Rodrigues Cardoso do NĆŗcleo Orquidófilo de SĆ£o LourenƧo ā MG.
XVII Exposição Nacional de OrquĆdeas do CĆrculo Orquidófilo de Juiz de Fora - MG, realizada no ColĆ©gio dos JesuĆtas, de 25 a 27 de agosto de 2017 pelo CĆrculo Orquidófilo de Juiz de Fora ā MG.
Floração de agosto de 2017. Inverno.
The roadside is the classic habitat for the native annual Ambrosia acanthicarpa. The inflorescence comprises pistillate heads that sit below the staminate heads. The pistillate head develops into a spheroid cluster of burrs at maturity. This site lies along the Madison River near Bear Trap Canyon, Madison County, Montana.
Ambrosia artemisiifolia growing in a private garden below a bird feeding area filled up with a commercial mix of seeds for birds
I first heard her song "Goodnight Moon" during the end credits of Kill Bill 2 (which was the highlight of either of those movies, btw) and explored her music from there, loved all of it.
Introduced, warm-season, annual, erect herb to 2 m tall. Leaves form a rosette when young; they are grey-green, deeply 2- to 3- divided, hairy underneath and up to 16 cm long. Cream to pale-green male flowers occur in terminal spikes or racemes above the female flowers, which are few in number. Flowering is from late summer to early winter. A native of North America, it is a weed of bare or disturbed areas, such as roadsides, stockyards and stream banks, occasionally pastures; more abundant in the northern half of the region. Can invade and suppress overgrazed pastures, especially if grazed by horses. Seed is spread by water, stock or in fodder. An indicator of disturbance and bare ground. Unpalatable; forms a serious human health hazard, causing hay fever and worsening asthma. Maintaining vigorous pastures with good ground cover is the simplest control method in pastures. Burning, herbicides, hand-pulling, slashing and biological agents can also aid control.
Introduced, warm-season, annual, erect herb to 2 m tall. Leaves form a rosette when young; they are grey-green, deeply 2- to 3- divided, hairy underneath and up to 16 cm long. Cream to pale-green male flowers occur in terminal spikes or racemes above the female flowers, which are few in number. Flowering is from late summer to early winter. A native of North America, it is a weed of bare or disturbed areas, such as roadsides, stockyards and stream banks, occasionally pastures; more abundant in the northern half of the region. Can invade and suppress overgrazed pastures, especially if grazed by horses. Seed is spread by water, stock or in fodder. An indicator of disturbance and bare ground. Unpalatable; forms a serious human health hazard, causing hay fever and worsening asthma. Maintaining vigorous pastures with good ground cover is the simplest control method in pastures. Burning, herbicides, hand-pulling, slashing and biological agents can also aid control.
Modern take on ambrosia made with segments of pomelo, tangelo minneola, cara cara orange, navel orange, blood orange, pineapple, and fresh shaved coconut. Served with creamy coconut Greek yogurt. Finally, this retro dessert lives up to its name.
Get the recipe from Dessert By Candy.
To the victor goes the spoils and the sweet smell of success. This was the winner of the bull fight. You can see a cut along his side from the other bull hitting him with his horns. Better him than me for sure. His reward for winning the battle is to follow this cow around the pasture and maybe get lucky.
Introduced, warm-season, annual, erect herb to 2 m tall. Leaves form a rosette when young; they are grey-green, deeply 2- to 3- divided, hairy underneath and up to 16 cm long. Cream to pale-green male flowers occur in terminal spikes or racemes above the female flowers, which are few in number. Flowering is from late summer to early winter. A native of North America, it is a weed of bare or disturbed areas, such as roadsides, stockyards and stream banks, occasionally pastures; more abundant in the northern half of the region. Can invade and suppress overgrazed pastures, especially if grazed by horses. Seed is spread by water, stock or in fodder. An indicator of disturbance and bare ground. Unpalatable; forms a serious human health hazard, causing hay fever and worsening asthma. Maintaining vigorous pastures with good ground cover is the simplest control method in pastures. Burning, herbicides, hand-pulling, slashing and biological agents can also aid control.
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Okinawa Summer Fes 2019
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***Ambrosia***2019Summer KIMONO[dots] ~Maitreya
This native species is common along roads and trailsides but does not occur in the adjacent sagebrush steppe in the Boise foothills, Ada County, Idaho. The pistillate heads sit below the staminate heads and the involucral bracts of each pistillate head fuse into a bur.
The roadside is the classic habitat for the native annual Ambrosia acanthicarpa. The inflorescence comprises pistillate heads that sit below the staminate heads. The pistillate head develops into a spheroid cluster of burrs at maturity. This site lies along the Madison River near Bear Trap Canyon, Madison County, Montana.