View allAll Photos Tagged elastica

Y para despedir el año, he preparado este tutorial que espero os sirva para evitar tener que deshacer esas anillas que nunca son lo suficientemente grandes o pequeñas...¡¡¡que disfrutéis de una feliz cena y que el 2010 venga cargado de muy buenas sorpresas!!. ¡Hasta el año que viene!

DAVID VENTO, STRELITZIA & FICUS ELASTICA BI-HEMISPHERIC ART PERFORMANCE

www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWnO0sJvrJg

INSTITUCIÓN LIBRE DE ENSEÑANZA

HONEVO PHOTO

www.honevo.com

Nada como las fiestas de pueblo

3 and 5 units node detail

 

30 pieces of oval module unit

t=0.2 mm paper, 240 x 240 x 240 mm

Czech Republic - Mushroom (Helvella elastica - Chřapáč pružný) in Ore Mountains (Erzgebirge - Krušné Hory) - Hill Pramenáč (Bornhauberg)

omg, it's raining a lot.

I hope that I don't have the geograph test tomorrow :~

These Living Root Bridges are made of the Indian rubber tree Ficus elastica which thrives and flourishes alongside the streams and rivers at the southern slopes of the Khasi and Jaintia hills.

cultivated, Boynton Beach, Florida, USA.

Una feria, una cama elástica y unas gomas y ahí la tenéis, la felicidad hecha niña.

 

A fair, a trampoline and two elastic wires and here you have it, the personified happiness.

Here's a weird grab bag of photos dating back many many decades.

 

On the top, left to right, we have two shots I took with a disposable camera of an early Red Hot Chili Peppers show. Flea is first, followed by Anthony Kiedis and Hillel Slovak, a guitar player I loved not only for his style, but because he was born within 24 hours of me. Same year, less than one day later. Aries brother! R.I.P.

Next is Kim Colleta of Jawbox, standing with her bass in the hallway at WHFS, against the very famous autograph wall. They were recording songs on a weekend for Dave Marsh's Garage. Nice kids. J.Robbins has a recording studio very close to the building I work in now, in Baltimore.

 

2nd row, it's Eric Bachmann of Archers of Loaf, backstage at a mid-90s Reading Festival. It was during my "disposable camera/give me the finger" period of rockstar photography.

Moving to the right, I'm interviewing Justine Frischmann of Elastica at a very hot and dusty Lollapalooza stop.

 

Bottom row: Gwen Stefani outside of her dressing room door at an HFStival appearance at RFK Stadium.

Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow of The Posies flank Melissa and my friend and bandmate Pat Ferrise. (I was a member of his band Trampoline, and he was a member of my band Cinnamon Toast.)

Last but not least is a shot of me with Noel Gallagher of Oasis. I wore my Coca-Cola shirt hoping it would seem ironic in photographs. Because, well, Noel and I bonded over a love of the drink.

This was an interview that he wanted a copy of, and ended up using pieces of on their Oasis Interview CD that only came as an extra exclusively included with their Singles box set.

 

PROBLEMA :

Se cere rezolvarea rostului din pardoseala.

REZOLVARE:

Pentru acoperirea rostului trebuie tinut seama de urmatoarele date:

– Dimensiunea rostului este de 100mm

– Traficul va fi pietonal

– Miscarea este de 50mm.

Pentru dimensiunea data si incarcarea care trebuie...

 

www.hidroplasto.ro/rosturi-pardoseala.html

Moraceae (mulberry family) » Ficus elastica

 

FY-kus or FIK-us -- from the Latin for fig

ee-LASS-tih-kuh -- meaning, stretchable, rubbery, referring to latex sap

 

commonly known as: Assam rubber tree, caoutchoue tree, Indian rubber tree, karet tree, ornamental rubber tree, rambong, rubber fig, rubber plant, rubber tree • Assamese: অথা বৰ athabor • Kannada: ರಬ್ಬರ್ ಮರ rabbar mara • Khasi: diengjri • Konkani: रबराचो वड rabracho vad • Malayalam: ഇന്ത്യന്‍ റബ്ബര്‍ inthyan rabbar • Tamil: சீமையால் cimaiyal • Telugu: రబ్బరు rabbara, సాగుబంక segubanka

 

Native to: Indian subcontinent, Myanmar, Malesia; widely cultivated

  

References: Flowers of IndiaTopTropicalsDave's GardenM.M.P.N.D.DDSA

trying some new kinds of compositions...

Vous connaissez cette plante d'appartement sous le nom de "caoutchouc", ici vous voyez son développement en climat tropical

 

fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus_elastica

 

Nouméa

Nouvelle-Calédonie

on the South Downs, South Downs National Park, West Sussex England

 

Again these are a few of the many images we have from this past autumn fungi season, of which we are trying to post the photos as we catch up after a long period away from Flickr.

Plants of Tamilnadu (India)(115)

சீமை ஆலமரம்

Botanical name- Ficus elastica

Tamil name – சீமை ஆலமரம் ( ‘foreign Indian banyan tree’)

Common name – Indian banyan tree

Importance - A decoction of the aerial rootlets is used as a vulnerary !

Author – Dr.S.Soundarapandian

ssoundarapandian.blogspot.in

Place of plant : Chennai - 93(Tamilnadu, India)

Date : 3 - March – 2016

 

From my set entitled “Morning Glory”

www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/sets/72157607213945288/

In my collection entitled “The Garden”

www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/collections/7215760718...

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_glory

 

Morning glory is a common name for over 1,000 species of flowering plants in the family Convolvulaceae, belonging to the following genera:

Calystegia

Convolvulus

Ipomoea

Merremia

Rivea

 

As the name implies, morning glory flowers, which are funnel-shaped, open in the morning, allowing them to be pollinated by Hummingbirds, butterflies, bees, and other daytime insects and birds as well as Hawkmoth at dusk for longer blooming variants. The flower typically lasts for a single morning and dies in the afternoon. New flowers bloom each day. The flowers usually start to fade a couple of hours before the petals start showing visible curling. They prefer full sun throughout the day and mesic soils. In cultivation, most are treated as perennial plants in tropical areas and as annual plants in colder climates, but some species tolerate winter cold. Some moonflowers, which flower at night, are also in the morning glory family.

 

Morning glory is also called asagao (in Japanese, a compound of 朝 asa "morning" and 顔 kao "face"). A rare brownish-coloured variant known as Danjuro is very popular. It was first known in China for its medicinal uses, due to the laxative properties of its seeds. It was introduced to the Japanese in the 9th century, and they were first to cultivate it as an ornament. During the Edo Period, it became a very popular ornamental flower. Aztec priests in Mexico were also known to use the plant's hallucinogenic properties. (see Rivea corymbosa).

 

Ancient Mesoamerican civilizations used the morning glory species Ipomoea alba to convert the latex from the Castilla elastica tree and also the guayule plant to produce bouncing rubber balls. The sulfur in the morning glory's juice served to vulcanize the rubber, a process pre-dating Charles Goodyear's discovery by at least 3,000 years.[1]

Because of their fast growth, twining habit, attractive flowers, and tolerance for poor, dry soils, some morning glories are excellent vines for creating summer shade on building walls when trellised, thus keeping the building cooler and reducing heating and cooling costs.

 

Popular varieties in contemporary western cultivation include the Morning Glory "Sunspots" "Heavenly Blue", the moonflower, the cypress vine, and the cardinal climber. The cypress vine is a hybrid, with the cardinal climber as one parent.

In some places such as Australian bushland morning glories develop thick roots and tend to grow in dense thickets. They can quickly spread by way of long creeping stems. By crowding out, blanketing and smothering other plants, morning glory has turned into a serious invasive weed problem.

 

Ipomoea aquatica, known as water spinach, water morning-glory, water convolvulus, Ong-Choy, Kang-kung, or swamp cabbage, is popularly used as a green vegetable especially in East and Southeast Asian cuisines. It is a Federal Noxious Weed, however, and technically it is illegal to grow, import, possess, or sell. See: USDA weed factsheet. As of 2005, the state of Texas has acknowledged that water spinach is a highly prized vegetable in many cultures and has allowed water spinach to be grown for personal consumption. This is in part because water spinach is known to have been grown in Texas for more than fifteen years and has not yet escaped cultivation.[2] The fact that it goes by so many names means that it easily slips through import inspections, and it is often available in Asian or specialty produce markets.

 

The seeds of many species of morning glory contain ergot alkaloids such as the hallucinogenic ergonovine and ergine (LSA). Seeds of I. tricolor and I. corymbosa (syn. R. corymbosa) are used as hallucinogens. The seeds can produce similar effect to LSD when taken in the hundreds. Though the chemical LSA is illegal to possess in pure form, the seeds are found in many gardening stores, however, the seeds from gardening stores may be coated in some form of mild poison in order to prevent ingestion or methylmercury to retard spoilage.[3] They should not be taken by people with a history of liver disorders or hepatitis. They should not be taken by pregnant women as they can cause uterine contraction which can lead to miscarriage. Individuals with a history of cardiovascular disease (Heart attack, blood clot, and stroke) or a family history of such problems, and the elderly should avoid consuming these seeds due to their vasoconstrictive effects.[4][5][6]

 

Note that the plant known as Korean morning glory, Datura stramonium, is of a different species, is poisonous, and also produces hallucinogenic effects.

 

Flammulina elastica (Sacc.) Redhead & R.H. Petersen, Synonymy: Agaricus elasticus Lasch, Collybia elastica Sacc., Flammulina elastica f. longispora (Bas) Redhead & R.H. Petersen, Flammulina velutipes f. longispora Bas

EN: no name found, DE: Weiden-Samtfußrübling, Langsporiger Samtfußrübling

Family: Physalacriaceae

Slo.: no name found

 

Dat.: Dec. 8. 2019

Lat.: 46.358774 Long.: 13.705412

Code: Bot_1271/2019_DSC01961

 

Habitat: river bank, at the base of moderately inclined mountain slope, southeast aspect; calcareous, alluvial, stony ground (pebbles); cool, humid, mostly shady place; exposed to direct precipitations; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, air temperature during last few days about -5 deg C during the night and 0-4 deg C during the day; average year temperature 6-8 deg C, elevation 530 m (1.740 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.

 

Substratum: dead, still standing trunk of an old Salix eleagnos.

 

Place: Lower Trenta valley, between villages Soča and Trenta; right bank of river Soča, upstream entrance in a small river gorge between farmhouses Otokar, Trenta 4 and Matevž, Trenta 1; East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.

 

Comments: Flammulina elastica is a beautiful, winter growing species very similar to well-known and common Velvet Shank (Flammulina velutipes). The name Flammulina is based on the yellow-orange caps, which shine like little flames in the murky winter colored habitats. It is a rather newly separated species (1999). Several differences in the morphology between Flammulina velutipes and Flammulina elastica (however, very variable) are described in literature, but many, if not most of, authors consider both species indistinguishable solely on morphology. Only DNA analyses, sexual incompatibility and spore shape (particularly Q) and dimensions (mostly their length) separate them.

 

Currently Flammulina elastica appears a rare species in Slovenia and elsewhere. It is not included neither in the Boletus Informaticus data base (Ref.: 6) nor in the Operational List of Fungi of Slovenia (Ref. 7). Because Flammulina elastica cannot be separated from Flammulina velutipes without microscopy, hundreds of historical field observations of the latter can actually be the former. Therefore, published distribution maps of both species seem questionable.

 

More than 15 pilei were observed on the trunk from 30 cm above to about 2 m above the ground, most of them were old and hence of very dark color. Pilei diameter 4 - 7.5 cm, stipe length 2.8 - 4 and their diameter 0.5 - 1.4 cm; stipe pliant, firm, like made of soft rubber; taste and smell mild, indistinctive, eventually weakly mushroomy; SP abundant, white, oac909. Photographed in frozen state.

With average (at N=44) spore length 9.1 µm, about 25% of spores longer than 10 µm instead of 'a few only' for Flammulina velutipes according to (Ref.: 5) and Qe = 2.6 this determination seems quite reliable.

 

Spores dimensions: (7.4) 8.2 - 10.6 (11.5) × (2.9) 3.2 - 4 (4.1) µm; Q = (2.2) 2.3 - 2.8 (3.3); N = 44; Me = 9.1 × 3.5 µm; Qe = 2.6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil; in water, fresh material, spores from spore print. AmScope MA500 digital camera.

 

Herbarium: Index Herbariorum LJF @ Mycotheca and lichen herbarium of Slovenian Forestry Institute.

 

(1) Personal communication Mr. Bojan Rot, www. gobenabovskem.si

(2) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 3., Ulmer (2001), p 245.

(3) www.123pilzsuche.de/daten/details/LangsporSamtfussrueblin... (accessed Dec. 10. 2019)

(4) www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?trie=F&l=l&nom=Flammul... (accessed Dec. 10. 2019)

(5) T. Lӕssøe, J.H. Petersen, Fungi of temperate Europe, Vol. 1., Princeton University Press (2019), p 300.

(6) N. Ogris (ed), Boletus Informaticus, Slovenian Forestry Institute www.zdravgozd.si/bi_index.aspx (accessed Dec. 11. 2019)

(7) S. Šerod et all (eds.), Operativni Seznam Gliv Slovenije (Operational List of Fungi of Slovenia), Association of Mycol. Soc. of Slovenia (2013) (in Slovenian).

(8) www.first-nature.com/fungi/flammulina-elastica.php (accessed Dec. 12. 2019) (9) www.pilzepilze.de/cgi-bin/webbbs/parchive2011.pl?noframes... (accessed Dec. 12. 2019)

  

Not only Jacaranda, but Buenos Aires has many tropical and exotic plants growing.

 

This "rubber fig (ficus elastica) was one of these - we thought we might've seen them in Vietnam too, and they grow so tall - 30-50 metres or so at maximum. These are crazy large trees! I read that these are originally from India - Indonesia areas in Asia then they got planted in different countries, from south America to warm areas of North America, like Florida.

 

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Justine Frischmann

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