View allAll Photos Tagged weeding
Baltimore butterfly sipping nectar from a Milkweed floret.
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Type of potato flowers. This one is very tiny.
Probably Solanum Nigrum (wiki)
I was amazed to learn potatoes, eggplants, tomatos are all included in this Solanum family and flowers are all very similar.
* I like birds but this is not a bird
You will never find this flower in a shop....or a bride's bouquet...it's a quiet weed not much loved
www.youtube.com/watch?v=H5efutDTaQo&list=PLB0CF641C50...
LODE Chicory
ZIBSKA Noir Pack #5 Eyemakeup
Inkheart Blue & Green Eye
back to reality,
back to work,
"back to school orders",
back to 12 hrs shift almost every day
~ see you then when I can ...
My neighbor in back of my yard has an very large lot full of every kind of weed known to man, I think. Consequently, the garden in the corner of my yard is very hard to maintain, always full of unwanted plants (i.e. "weeds") that creep over, blow over or, are carried over by birds.
Here, a Green Bottle Fly rests on a dandelion amid a sea of rhizomous plants that are very hard to remove.
I don't know why I thought it was a good idea to stand in the drizzle to take this picture, but the water droplets may look interesting.
A close-up of Butterfly Weed, a type of milkweed with clusters of bright orange flowers that attract numerous butterflies. Photographed at Thomas Mitchell Park near Mitchellville, Iowa.
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A little weed in a crack between the asphalt and concrete at the entrance of a city carpark. There's a trace of green, so it's still hanging on.
Het hoogovencomplex werd in 1902 door de "Rheinische Stahlwerke zu Meiderich bei Ruhrort" gebouwd, en werd later overgenomen door de Thyssen-groep. Tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog raakte het zwaar beschadigd, maar het werd in de jaren 50 weer opgebouwd. In 1985 waren de hoogovens van het complex te klein geworden om nog rendabel te zijn, en werd het complex gesloten. Tussen 1991 en 2002 werd het terrein als openbaar park ingericht.
I went to the park to take flower pictures but it was closed. So, I photographed this weed from my yard.
Playing again this morning with saved treasures from the summer. I am using my an old i-pad as the background and light. Experimenting is fun and frustrating.I need to find a better technique to place the drops I put one on and it drips off. There are some amazing photos of weed or dandelion seeds so I used those as inspiration. I am sure I'll try this some other day.
Formosa Lily Lilium formosanum.
I pull the flower heads off whenever I see them but I took a photo of this one first.
Having always admired the soft white flowers of a newly blossomed Queen Anne's Lace weed, I was stunned at the intricate structure of the plant in its later stage of life. The tiny seeds are covered in tiny barbed hooks so they can attach to passing animal fur or even people's clothes. As the plant begins to die, the flower head will eventually break off and the cluster of seeds will become a tumbleweed....moving along the ground by the force of the wind. Talk about spreading the wealth!
A good ole South Georgia weed - I was going for Bahia grass, but I think this is something a little different.
HMM