View allAll Photos Tagged shrubs

...designed, built, laid out and maintained by Dad himself....in Southeastern Massachusetts

Better known as Holly and the most popular Evergreen Shrub that is associated with Christmas,

Yellow flowers of a shrub

 

====== Feliz quinta flower! ====== Happy Thursday flower! ======

 

Gracias por pasar con su flor. Sus comentarios y favoritos son apreciados!

Thanks for stopping by with your flower. Your comments and faves are appreciated!

Agradecimentos para parar perto com sua flor. Os seus comentários e favoritos são apreciados!

Merci pour votre visite avec votre fleur. Vos commentaires et vos faves sont appréciés!

Vielen Dank für das Stoppen mit Ihrer Blume. Ihre Kommentare und Favoriten sind willkommen!

 

====== Feliz quinta flower! ====== Happy Thursday flower! ======

May 28th is Bill DuPree's Birthday and I wanted to wish him a happy... If you would like to do the same his location is HERE!!!!

Banana shrubs (Magnolia figo; formerly Michelia figo) are drought tolerant, evergreen shrubs with beautiful, creamy yellow flowers, which are edged in purple and look like miniature Southern magnolia blooms. This great similarity of the banana shrub flowers to those of magnolias is the reason for the recent taxonomic change to Magnolia figo.

I came across this shrub on my walk today - was intrigued by the shape of these leaflets.

 

ODC - Beneficial moments

 

Thank you in advance for your views, comments, and faves. They are much appreciated!

Sony a7r3, Sony FE 200-600G

 

...DOF in the bush. One of two Olympus primes I own and this is a nice close-up lens.

* Canon EOS M50 camera

* Olympus Zuiko 50mm f/3.5 lens

* Fotga OM-EOSM lens adapter

at the UC Botanical Garden--Eastern North America section where I'm a volunteer gardener/helper once a week.

 

iPhonography and FDsFlickrtoys.

With many thanks to all those who have helped so much in trying to identify this. Safia girl, Molly, Keith and Jindrich have all made helpful suggestions. Natalija finally has made one that looks right in all ways when checking on Google images. Thank you Natalija.

  

Thank you for your friendship and comments etc. Due to chronic poor health I'm unable to take on new contacts but do my best to reply to comments. More of my shots can be seen on

 

www.ipernity.com/home/351433

  

66061 Working 6V92 10:34 Corby B.S.C. to Margam T.C.

passing Worcester Shrub Hill 27/03/23

The 6V92 was diverted via Kidderminster and Worcester all week.

This colourful in bloom shrub is slowly taking over a decaying outbuilding in the County Durham countryside, 8th June 2025.

  

I shot of a flowering shrub in the backyard. Finally we are starting to see colour all around as all the shrubs and flowers to to bloom.

In the yard, Haywood County, North Carolina.

The shrub life form of Juniper communis has been developped due to death of the apex of the main axis

I took a shot of a purple flowering shrub. The flowers only last a few days on this shrub.

A desert shrub has lost the battle in the extreme environment along the Dog Canyon Trail of Big Bend National Park.

I love this little shrub!

74|365

reversed LB/S50|f/4

juniper shrub through window

It is by no means bush jewellery. They are 115 mm large and 2.5 mm thick aluminium spacers between the front wheel rim and brake disc for a 525 EXC KTM Supermoto

Worcester Shrub Hill station has been serving passengers for over 165 years and today retains a remarkable number of surviving period features, most maintained in excellent condition, the GWR semaphore signalling adding further period railway appeal. On 28th March 2019, DB Cargo 66053 trundles past the 1935-built station signal box, and through platform 1, in charge of the 6M41 11:52 Margam (Train Care) to Round Oak loaded steel.

 

© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission

Cardiff's dmu set C852, A Metro Cammell class 101 unit, W51463 nearest the camera W51533 at the front, leaves Worcester Shrub Hill for Birmingham New Street on a very wet Saturday morning. 10/10/1987

At this time 51463 was reported to be running centre car 59168 or 59812. Not sure that the centre car here is either of these two. Perhaps a Derby 116 car?

Sony a7r3, Sony FE 200-600G

 

I have seen these before but do not know what the cone like flowers are.

I will try and find this shrub in my big Flower Book and if I do I can name it.

Thanks to Carolin, this is the correct species:

"Rhus typhina dissecta - Tiger Eyes - Staghorn Sumac"

 

We traveled from Seattle to Utah for our vacation this year. It was amazing at every turn!

 

Location: Utah

 

Established: November 12, 1971

 

Size: 76,359 acres

 

This park contains more than 2,000 natural arches—the greatest concentration in the country. But numbers have no significance beside the grandeur of the landscape—the arches, the giant balanced rocks, spires, pinnacles, and slickrock domes against the enormous sky.

 

Perched high above the Colorado River, the park is part of southern Utah's extended canyon country, carved and shaped by eons of weathering and erosion. Some 300 million years ago, inland seas covered the large basin that formed this region. The seas refilled and evaporated—29 times in all—leaving behind salt beds thousands of feet thick. Later, sand and boulders carried down by streams from the uplands eventually buried the salt beds beneath thick layers of stone. Because the salt layer is less dense than the overlying blanket of rock, it rises up through it, forming it into domes and ridges, with valleys in between.

 

Most of the formations at Arches are made of soft red sandstone deposited 150 million years ago. Much later, groundwater began to dissolve the underlying salt deposits. The sandstone domes collapsed and weathered into a maze of vertical rock slabs called "fins." Sections of these slender walls eventually wore through, creating the spectacular rock sculptures that visitors to Arches see today.

 

The land has a timeless, indestructible look that is misleading. More than 700,000 visitors each year threaten the fragile high desert ecosystem. One concern is a dark scale called biological soil crust composed of cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, and lichens that grow in sandy areas in the park. Footprints tracked across this living community may remain visible for years. In fact, the aridity helps preserve traces of past activity for centuries. Visitors are asked to walk only on designated trails or stay on slickrock or wash bottoms.

The bright sun this morning lights up water and shrubs surrounding the silver maples.

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