View allAll Photos Tagged weeding
Another stereo shot from my floor and I've pretty much exhausted my the flora in my yard. Too much contrast and separation to be a very good anaglyph but the free view pairs are kinda neat.
Parallel on the top left, cross on the top right, and anaglyph on the bottom.
Today I took a drive through the woods behind my house to my dads pond. I snapped this shot of a weed that looks like a sparker. The view back there is amazing as you will see in upcoming pics.
About a dozen botanists from the BLM and U.S. Forest Service descended upon the Wild and Scenic Rogue River to remove invasive weeds, May 21-25, 2018. Photos: Stacy Johnson, BLM
There is a weed invasion happening on the Rogue River, and the federal government is getting strategic about battling the threats to public land.
Two weeks ago, about a dozen botanists from the BLM and the U.S. Forest Service rafted the Wild and Scenic Rogue in remote southwest Oregon to spray, pull and wrench as many weeds as possible.
Yes, a weed wrench is a thing.
The timing of the river trip was key, going after the invasive plants when they are flowering and before most of the seeds come.
One noxious weed, Dyer’s woad, can have a thick taproot that extends 5 feet deep and has the ability to produce a lot of seed.
“One plant left on site could easily be a hundred plants next year,” said BLM botanist Stacy Johnson.
Hand or wrench-pulled weeds were bagged and thrown in the rafts to carry out, while others, like Japanese knotwood, can only be killed with herbicide.
In some areas of the Wild and Scenic Rogue River, of which the team covered about 35 miles, they found untouched weeds that were multiple feet taller than the botanists.
“There are always more invasive species than we have time, really, to remove,” said Johnson.
Scotch broom, French broom, Spanish broom, shiny geranium, yellow star thistle, knapweed, yellow water primrose and parrots feather are among the other noxious weeds removed by the BLM-USFS team.
If left to proliferate, the noxious weeds would outcompete the native vegetation, taking over the beaches, gravel bars and all the other features that make the river and surrounding wilderness distinctive. The weeds also affect wildlife by decreasing food options and water quality.
“There are a lot of non-native plants out on the river,” said Kailey Clarno, district botanist for the Forest Service. “We go after species that are making a large impact on the river.”
📍 Visit: goo.gl/QFWTtq
Archive: goo.gl/CiBTZ4
👷 Read about the restoration of the historic Rogue River Ranch, completed last year: goo.gl/HtJN31
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...but it's oh so pretty:)
I don't know what this is called. It came up after the turf was laid
The delicate mauve flower emerges from a case that looks like a Gooseberry.
Not sure what the dark spots are; it might have been super-saturated from rinsing perhaps. But I am happy with it how it came out anyways.
Model/MUA: Emilee K.
Featuring: #VidaVelvet #HUF #IslesJewelry
Photo: #Yourlittlewildchild
Instagram @yourlittlewildchild
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The weather forecast for ČR is not positive at all :-( my last weekend before USA journey and it´ll be raining... Well at least I´ll be with my family ;-)
I braved the heat and ventured into the Boondal Wetlands in Brisbane today. I didn't see too much and almost overheated, but there was a weedy looking grass that I saw a lot of.
Besides shooting some on site where it was quite windy, I brought a piece home to do some more macros.
This is almost straight out of the camera, except for some small light level adjustment.
The cream and pink background colours are done with coloured gift wrapping paper behind and keeping the DOF shallow so that it is out of focus.
The border was created by applying photoshop-edit-stroke 3 times.
1st in black 90pixels wide
2nd in colour using eyedropper tool to pick up content colour 60pixels wide
3rd in black again 30pixels wide
each subsequent step each overlays the previous one
Where grass and weeds grow through drainage holes in the concrete banks of this filthy stream, the blowing wind twirls them around to form patterns in the dirt.
Inkweed (Phytolacca octandra) - before ripening.
The poisonous parts are the berries, leaves and roots. The toxicity is due to phytolaccatoxin and phytolaccigenin which are poisonous to mammals.
- The symptoms are vomiting and diarrhoea occurring two hours after ingestion. Convulsions and difficulty in breathing may occur.
Source: www.terrain.net.nz
The rain last week gave the weeds a head start. The garden at the far side has been weeded, more work to go to finish this round of weeding.
About a dozen botanists from the BLM and U.S. Forest Service descended upon the Wild and Scenic Rogue River to remove invasive weeds, May 21-25, 2018. Photos: Stacy Johnson, BLM
There is a weed invasion happening on the Rogue River, and the federal government is getting strategic about battling the threats to public land.
Two weeks ago, about a dozen botanists from the BLM and the U.S. Forest Service rafted the Wild and Scenic Rogue in remote southwest Oregon to spray, pull and wrench as many weeds as possible.
Yes, a weed wrench is a thing.
The timing of the river trip was key, going after the invasive plants when they are flowering and before most of the seeds come.
One noxious weed, Dyer’s woad, can have a thick taproot that extends 5 feet deep and has the ability to produce a lot of seed.
“One plant left on site could easily be a hundred plants next year,” said BLM botanist Stacy Johnson.
Hand or wrench-pulled weeds were bagged and thrown in the rafts to carry out, while others, like Japanese knotwood, can only be killed with herbicide.
In some areas of the Wild and Scenic Rogue River, of which the team covered about 35 miles, they found untouched weeds that were multiple feet taller than the botanists.
“There are always more invasive species than we have time, really, to remove,” said Johnson.
Scotch broom, French broom, Spanish broom, shiny geranium, yellow star thistle, knapweed, yellow water primrose and parrots feather are among the other noxious weeds removed by the BLM-USFS team.
If left to proliferate, the noxious weeds would outcompete the native vegetation, taking over the beaches, gravel bars and all the other features that make the river and surrounding wilderness distinctive. The weeds also affect wildlife by decreasing food options and water quality.
“There are a lot of non-native plants out on the river,” said Kailey Clarno, district botanist for the Forest Service. “We go after species that are making a large impact on the river.”
📍 Visit: goo.gl/QFWTtq
Archive: goo.gl/CiBTZ4
👷 Read about the restoration of the historic Rogue River Ranch, completed last year: goo.gl/HtJN31