View allAll Photos Tagged firecrackers

💓POSE FROM:

.:LAVAROCK POSES:.m/f Couples Bento Pose-140

 

· · • • • 💟 • • • · ·

 

➡️Lavarock InWorld Mainstore

➡️Lavarock Flickr

➡️Lavarock Marketplace

➡️My Blog

From the July 2020 Holst&Holst Gallery exhibit

This is the first year that I have a Cuphea ( Firecracker ) plant. The Ruby-throated Hummingbird's love it. My happy backyard.

Colourful view of a tranquil canal with diminishing perspective towards a bridge.

The challenge was to capture the essence of autumn at sunset. Not an easy combination but I hope this covers the brief.

A real Zinger! not sure what this is exactly, a type of succulent...?

ˢʰᵉ ʰᵃᵈ ᵃ ᵐⁱⁿᵈ ˡⁱᵏᵉ ᵃ ᵇᵒˣ ᵒᶠ ᶠⁱʳᵉʷᵒʳᵏˢ ᵃⁿᵈ ʰᵃⁿᵈˢ ᵗʰᵃᵗ ᵖˡᵃʸᵉᵈ ʳᵉᶜᵏˡᵉˢˢˡʸ ʷⁱᵗʰ ᵐᵃᵗᶜʰᵉˢ

For Macro Mondays Theme: Handle With Care

 

Sorry still behind with everyone - slowly catching up

~Having a 4th of July Dance at Muddy's 🇺🇸

youtu.be/lPOTQBEe2eA

Crossandra infundibuliformis, the "Firecracker flower", is a species of flowering plant native to southern India and Sri Lanka.

It is an erect, evergreen subshrub growing to 1 m with glossy, wavy-margined leaves and fan-shaped flowers, which may appear at any time throughout the year.The flowers are unusually shaped with 3 to 5 asymmetrical petals. The colours range from the common orange to salmon-orange or apricot, coral to red, yellow and even turquoise.

This plant requires a minimum temperature of 10 °C, and in temperate regions is cultivated as a houseplant.

The flowers have no perfume but stay fresh for several days on the bush.

The common name "firecracker flower" refers to the seed pods, which are found after the flower has dried up, and tend to "explode" when near high humidity or rainfall. The "explosion" releases the seeds onto the ground, thereby creating new seedlings.

 

Informations from Wikipedia

 

Photo from the archives

 

Also known as Red Rocket. Russelia sarmentosa is a wildflower in Costa Rica.

A pair of firecrackers. Definitely couldn't be ignored.

Red monarda in the garden...

Helianthus annus, yellow and red bicolor flowers

If a flower could be like a firecracker this would be it.

 

Volunteer Park Dahlia Garden, Seattle, Washington State, USA

Russellia equisetformis, from the central americas, is known by several common names but none of them rival this one for metaphorical soundness. These plants have a weeping habit and grow prolifically and are perfect for shrouding a bank. This one is from my Gold Coast hinterland garden.

Polaroid SX-70 / color i-type film

New year firecrackers mimic seeing stars in your eyes...

National Arboretum, Washington D.C.

Just playing editing tricks with one of our Mexican Birds of Paradise in honor of July 4 Independence Day.

 

Samsung NX1 & Helios 44M - 58mm f/2

f/4 | Manual Focus | Available Light | Handheld

Kunming | Yunnan Province | China

 

All Rights Reserved. © Nick Cowling 2020.

While the Flame Skimmer and Cardinal Meadowhawk are still visible on this page, I thought the one shot I have of the reddest of all dragonflies, the Firecracker Meadowhawk should be posted so you can see the three shades. I came very close to blowing out the reds, but I had no idea what to do to prevent it and still have a true representation.

 

This was one of the very few not taken at the swamp, but just four miles away at a marsh that I usually go to for sparrows.

Lunar New Year in Melbourne's Chinatown

Hawaii Botanical Garden

The reds and whites of my Rowan tree TODAY

This little firecracker is a male rufous hummingbird at Beatty's Guest Ranch, in Miller Canyon near Sierra Vista, Arizona. He was very busy aggressively defending his feeder, chasing off all other bird species. Unfortunately we were a few weeks late and many of the more unique hummingbird species had moved on. But I did get a glimpse of a Rivoli's Hummingbird. But mostly it was rufous, Anna's and black-chinned hummingbirds. Beatty's Guest Ranch is known for it's hummingbirds and has a formal viewing area. Unfortunately the viewing area was closed for the season, but the owner did have a couple of feeders up where we could watch and photograph.

Another flower at Frederik Meijer Gardens

 

Thanks for views, comments and favs :)

A photo of Crossandra infundibuliformis, the firecracker flower taken at the Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden in Des Moines, Iowa.

 

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0.

Like most warblers, this migrating male Blackburnian Warbler was a bundle of energy, constantly flitting through the wet branches and leaves, gleaning gnats.

Here is another of the flowering plants that seems to do well in Florida, the Firecracker Plant. though possibly less full and lush than its cousins in different climates, it is still a pretty pop seen in gardens around the area.

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80