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This is what happen if you mix one pice and hobbit minifigure... a fisherman dwarf with his double axe
A Lodgepole Pine Dwarf Mistletoe (Arceuthobium americanum?). Notice the berries on it. So when a bird eats one, it delivers the seed, with a little fertilizer to another tree branch, were a new Mistletoe can start.
I think these are Tête-à -tête
Tatton Park, Knutsford, Cheshire, North West England. @NT_TheNorth
19/02/2020
These littles beauties really put on a show at my home this year.....I de-sharpened a bit for a dreamy effect.....because when I dream about flowers..they always look like this ;-)
Dwarf dogwood on slope across from Sheep Creek, Birch Creek Wild and Scenic River, Alaska
Photo by Craig McCaa, BLM
BLMAKND830
The Dwarf Minke Whale migrates from Antarctica to warmers waters of the Great Barrier Reef during the southern winter. Cod Hole Reef, Northern Great Barrier Reef. Australia.
dwarf azalea, salmon pink - with a faint tinge of orange, and black tips. hawick, scottish borders, scotland.
I recently uploaded a picture of a patch of Dwarf Cornel but that didn't show the flower detail so here's a macro shot of a single flower, which is only about 1cm across.
Dwarf Cornel (Cornus suecica) usually grows at altitude and is a rather uncommon plant in Britain. It is largely confined to Scottish mountains but it is found in England. Here it used to occur in three widely separated upland areas; West Pennine Moors in Lancashire, North Yorks Moors, and North Northumberland. But it has not been seen in Lancashire since the 1970s and it is only found at a tiny handful of highly localised sites in North Yorkshire, which is where I photographed this. It is in the same family as Dogwood, but it is not a woody plant, but a low-growing herbaceous one. I saw hundreds of plants growing in one dense patch spreading over several metres, but it seems to be quite shy of flowering as I only saw about twenty flowers. In the autumn it sports red berries which were apparently eaten by Scottish highlanders to give them an appetite, and the Gaelic name lus-a-chraois means herb of gluttony.