View allAll Photos Tagged weeding

Another interesting and pretty weed growing here and there around the yard. Does anyone know what this is? (thank you mtndust for identifying this for me. Now I will add its name.)

My mom weeding and the toad Simon

If anybody seeing this is involved with cemetery preservation or local history in Greenwood, Mississippi, you might want to find out what this blue gunk is that's on the grass and the bottoms of many of the tombstones in Old Greenwood Cemetery. My guess is weed killer -- and my guess is that it's not good for tombstones.

Sony SLT-A77V + Minolta 50mm 2.8 macro lens

 

Exposure - 1/100 s

Aperture - f/2.8

Focal Length - 50 mm

ISO Speed - 100

went out this morning, looked like it would be a dry day (for once) so a good time to get medieval on the local weed population's collective ass.

this one softened my heart a little, so it won a reprieve... this time.

Lowland rice weeds / ONAGRACEAE (evening-primrose family)

 

Weed name: Ludwigia octovalvis (Jacq.) Raven

 

books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=tqRtCQ9WMLUC&pg=PA1...

 

Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)

There may not be much grass, but there are plenty of these out there.

LOMO Smena 35

LOMO T-43 40mm 1:4

Kodak Gold 100

edited by Nelson Ball.

 

Toronto, Weed/Flower Press, september 1967.

 

24 pp/21 printed, mimeo in offset cover. 8-1/2 x 7, topstapled wrappers.

 

poetry by Carol Bergé, William Hawkins, Lynn Machan, Hans-Werner Tolle, Diane Wakoski; cover by Barbara Caruso; some editorial commentary by Ball with notes on David W.Harris's Fleye Press & bpNichol's Ruth.

 

ink smudges on front cover...

2o.oo

Agapanthus. The only good thing about them is the excuse to spend 6 weeks routinely breaking things, as we dead head what we can reach before it flowers.

Entertainingly, this one has had someone try to do just that, and a second flower head is trying to emerge from the break in the stem!

Ilford Pan F, ID-11 Nikon F2 Photomic, Nikkor-S Auto 1:1.4 f=50mm Nippon Kogaku

Neg digitised by DSLR with Takumar 50mm Macro and extension tube.

Lowland rice weeds / CYPERACEAE (sedge family)

 

Weed Name: Cyperus difformis L.

 

books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=tqRtCQ9WMLUC&pg=PA1...

 

Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)

Two football fields of weed......lol

What happened to the 'Weedex'?

My dream weed eater

Or maybe a flowering weed. Can weeds be flowers too?

Lowland rice weeds/POACEAE (grass family)

 

Weed name: Ischaemurn rugosum Salisb

 

books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=tqRtCQ9WMLUC&pg=PA1...

  

Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)

Lowland rice weeds / PONTEDERIACEAE (pickerel-weed family)

 

Weed name: Monochoria vaginalis (Burm. f.) Presl

 

books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=tqRtCQ9WMLUC&pg=PA2...

 

Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)

05-8-28 PENTAX Optio S50

the bugs are very tiny, pin head size maybe. the plant is also also called bishop's weed. Aegopodium podagraria.

same weed in fun times.....jus tryin to get better lightin/view......usa!!!

Just a weed and imperfect but still beautiful!

This is a weed. Check out the central black area.

Comparison photo at www.flickr.com/photos/mickyj_photos/8332257317/

 

EOS 600D, Full spectrum with Baader U, EL nikkor lens, Bellows

 

Auto White Balance(AWB)

ISO 400

1/4 sec

F4

 

2012

 

Img_7885

 

More UV info

www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrvViq2Y7OE&feature=youtu.be

 

blogs.msmvps.com/mickyj/blog/2013/01/12/canon-dslr-eos-ca...

 

www.flickr.com/groups/canon-uv/

1) because they are purple

2) because they are tiny

3) because they attract lots of butterflies,bees and bugs

 

Shame I have no idea what this pretty weed is called.

Network Rail MPV is seen heading through Pantyffynnon on the Heart of Wales line with a Margam T.C. - Llanwrtyd Wells and return weed killing train. 28/4/13.

Weed flower. Natural light. Focus stacked using zerene. Oddly these only seem to open for one morning

Evidently, our 3-year-old already has a grasp on personal finance. As we were working in the back yard, he declared that he, too, would work. He stated the amount of his desired compensation ($16) and told us what he would eventually spend it on (toy dump truck) with future funds from additional work.

 

In short, at 3, he's slightly ahead of where I was at 22.

Weeding a rice field

 

Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI).

A reed bee makes the most of the weeds infesting the start of a walking trail and takes what it can from Bidens pilosa. Generalist bees like Exoneura can handle weeds; it is the specialists bees that are in trouble because of them. [Lower Blue Mountains, NSW]

1 2 ••• 37 38 40 42 43 ••• 79 80