View allAll Photos Tagged sarsaparilla?
Waraburra (Hardenbergia violacea)
For my 100 Flowers Project - 2023.
Growing in the native garden outside our train station. Very similar to the Native Wisteria that Flickr mate Graham www.flickr.com/photos/105795663@N04/with/53082729484/ posted recently.
Hardenbergia violacea is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to Australia. It is known in Australia by the common names False Sarsaparilla, Purple Coral Pea, and Waraburra.
...how about a pickled egg instead?
A food stand seen at the 2017 Iowa State Fair
I had lots of trouble uploading this shot, and I know others have been having problems too. I hope that Flickr gets this fixed soon.
Feux d'artifice de bleuets ou Bleus d'artifice!
Aralia nudicaulis - Aralie à tige nue (aralie chassepareille) - Wild sarsaparilla (false salsaparilla, shot brush, small spikenard, wild liquorice, rabbit root).
Also commonly known as native lilac, lilac vine, waraburra.
Hardenbergia is a small genus of three species, the most common and best known of which is Hardenbergia violacea. This is a widespread species occurring here in New South Wales, also Queensland, Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia. Occurs in a variety of habitats, usually in open forest/woodland and sometimes in heath.
Presenting as a climbing plant whose branches twist around the stems of other plants but it rarely covers other plants so extensively as to cause damage. The leaves are dark, flat, glossy green and lanceolate, 75 to 100 mm in length. The flowers, which appear in late winter and spring, are usually violet in colour but pink, white and other colours are sometimes found. The flowers are the typical 'pea' shape seen in plants within family Faboideae.
Each tiny flower measures just 7 mm in diameter. Photographed in situ.
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Waraburra (Hardenbergia violacea)
For my 100 Flowers Project - 2024
Erin went back to work today after a four week break due to her eye surgery. She let me know that the Waraburra down by the train station is flowering so I wandered down in the sunshine to get some images.
Hardenbergia violacea is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to Australia. It is known in Australia by the common names False Sarsaparilla, Purple Coral Pea, and Waraburra.
Thank you for all your support and for helping me reach four million views today.
"The essence of all beautiful art, all great art, is gratitude." - Friedrich Nietzsche
WOODLAND NATIVE
The plant was used in the 18th and 19th centuries for tea and a medicinal spring tonic.
aka Smilax, Bull Briar, Horse Briar, Sarsaparilla Vine, Wild Sarsaparilla, Dwarf Smilax, Dwarf Greenbriar
WOODLAND NATIVE
Flowers are on a separate stem below the leaves of the main plant. The root can be used as a flavoring in tea and root beer drinks.
Prices:
Beer .05
Whiskey .25
Bottle 2.00
Sarsaparilla .05
Hangings Free
Chloride, founded in 1860s as a silver mining camp in Mohave County, Arizona, and is considered the oldest continuously inhabited mining town in the state.
WOODLAND NATIVE
Flowers bloom on a single stem beneath the leaf stalk. The roots have been used as a substitute for true Sarsaparilla in herbal medicine.
Photos tagged with Flora e Fauna della Sardegna
Alcuni nomi dialettali in Sardegna; Tintioni, Arrù krabiu, Teti, Tetti, Tetu Asmila, Breddula aresta.
SMILAX ASPERA
Liliacea. Genere di circa 300 specie di piante rampicanti, erbacee, suffruticose o completamente legnose, che sono diffuse nelle zone temperate, subtropicali o tropicali di tutto il mondo.
I fiori, piccoli, di colore bianco o verdastri, riuniti in ombrelle o in cime ascellari, sono piuttosto insignificanti.
Regioni mediterranee. Altezza 0,5 cm - 2 m. Pianta spinosa, rampicante per mezzo di viticci,con foglie persistenti, ovato astate o cuoriformi-triangolari, talvolta con macchie bianche e nere, spinose lungo le nervature della pagina inferiore e ai margini.
In autunno si formano, nella piante femminili, piccoli frutti globosi, rossi.
dal sito
Dal sito di botanica a cura di MG ..................."languana "
A better view of the dress after the makeover :D I even added a headband now she's ready for some Sarsaparilla tea and maybe a parasol :D
Found and captured as me and Patches were on our afternoon stride out.
Stacksteads
Lancashire
Dandelion & Burdock - a great drink. Fond childhood memories drinking this pop. Can’t say which I prefer, Dandelion & Burdock or Sarsaparilla.
Used to love the boiled sweets - sarsaparilla tablets too.
As seen at Mad Rock Trail, Bay Roberts, Newfoundland
A small valley near the head of Mad Rock Trail. I was impressed by the different earthy tones of colour in the undergrowth. These include typical boreal species: bracken fern, clintonia, bunchberry, partridgeberry, blueberry, creeping snowberry, juniper, wild sarsaparilla, goldthread and young Balsam fir.
A Mourning Dove sits in the sun to stay warm at the Sarsaparilla Trail in Ottawa. Thursday February 29 2024.
The Sarsaparilla Trail is part of the Stony Swamp network of trails in Ottawa. This one is a short trail (1.5 km), the centrepiece of which is the viewing platform overlooking the Swamp.
Salsepareille (Smilax aspera L.), liseron épineux. La salsepareille d'Europe est une liane ligneuse, grimpante, volubile et dioïque, qui pousse essentiellement autour du bassin méditerranéen, dans la garrigue et les sous-bois. ... On ne mange pas les baies mais on peut consommer les jeunes pousses comme des asperges.
Sarsaparilla (Smilax aspera L.), thorny bindweed. The European sarsaparilla is a woody, climbing, twining and dioecious liana, which grows mainly around the Mediterranean basin, in the scrubland and the undergrowth. ... We do not eat the berries but we can eat the young shoots like asparagus.
Some funky stuff at the NC Farmers Market.
This is a detail of that soda fountain reproduction, showing the decal on the sarsaparilla flavor.
Part of a set taken while visiting over the Thanksgiving holiday. Snapped with a Pentax K10D camera with the smc P-FA 50mm F1.4 lens.
This is an old sarsaparilla bottle made in Mexico that has a gunfighter entering a saloon. I've taken an extreme close-up of the hat, head and shoulders with a light source from the front.
HMM.