View allAll Photos Tagged hazelnut
Corylus cornuta var. californica -
small and odd
I think C. cornuta, using "Differentiating Corylus avellana & Corylus cornuta var. californica" by Wilbur L. Bluhm, p.34 in www.npsoregon.org/bulletin/2001/NPSO_0103.PDF particularly catkin with short peduncles and 1-2/cluster, but need to look at later date, or help from expert
my lichen photos by genus - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections/7215762439...
my photos arranged by subject, e.g. mountains - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections
The Yamhill variety nuts are growing and the trees are loaded this year. Perhaps too many for the tree to handle. Always the worry with farming. Look at the photo a second...you'll see more and more clusters.
Another day of Christmas holidays, and day 2 with the macro lens, so what better to do than bake some more cakes for practice....
Hazelnut weevil ( Curculio obtusus ) on Plume thistle ( Cirsium ) wild plant
Tech info: single exposure at f16 - mixed light | optic : Pentax SMC 28mm f/2.8 | camera body : sony
The small red dot is a flower which will become a cluster of hazelnuts ready to drop next September. The long catkins release pollen for the wind to move between trees.
Corylus avellana, the common hazel, is a species of flowering plant in the birch family Betulaceae. The shrubs usually grow 3–8 metres (10–26 feet) tall. Common hazel is native to Europe and Western Asia. The species is mainly cultivated for its nuts. The name 'hazelnut' applies to the nuts of any species in the genus Corylus, but in commercial contexts usually describes C. avellana. This hazelnut have edible seeds and can be used raw, roasted, or grinded for making cakes.
07012004_1
Smooth chocolate hazelnut mousse, flourless chocolate cake, hazelnut praline and milk chocolate ganache. Finished with roasted hazelnuts and chocolate shavings.
Blüten der Gemeinen Hasel (Corylus avellana). Alztal bei Truchtlaching, Oberbayern. 2/2024 // Industar 3.5/50mm an Balgengerät
It's THAT time of the year once again and every squirrel in Stanley Park zooms in on the delights of hazelnuts tumbling from the tree every few seconds; the wee animals were going NUTS!
The expression on the Eastern Gray squirrel's facesyas it all as he reaches the nut. The outer cover is so sharp and prickly - but they manage to chew through it with ease - I can barely stand to pick them up!
"Blackie" on the right had chased his treasure clear across the paved path and finally landed on it - he's a sub-species of the Eastern Gray that was introduced to Vancouver in 1909.
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