View allAll Photos Tagged weeding
Survival is prime, I know my place. A little weed, spindly
and week, no beauty or fine structure, no fruits to eat
I fight for my spot amongst my kin and not. Reach high I’m
driven as quick as I can, no time for views or panoramas here
Life is a struggle; you think I’ve time to look round. I must
look for weakness and strive for success you imbecile, for what else is there
Weed is a substance that remains unlawful while in the United States, but remains often utilized and generally accessible. According to the main researcher of one NIDA marijuana study, We'd no problem recruiting many people between your ages of 55 and 30 who've smoked marijuana atleast 5,000
MONDAY 23 APRIL
A WEED WORLD
As part of the SYDNEY'S ongoing Infotainment nights, local Nobody and german duo Iris-A-Maz will share
their weed experiences!
Nobody's ongoing project to reconnect people with plants (i.e. migrants with weeds) in an attempt to remind us all that the romantic view of an "Idillic Australian Landscape" is somewhat nationalistic.
And Iriz-A-Maz from Germany, have been touring the Antipodes look for the weedy global players that share their interests. Iriz-A-Maz write: "in the industrialized western countries everybody talks about the globalisation of world trade, Iriz-A-Maz want to show that plants already did it. Outside everybody's front door: the globalized urban vegetation."
Together, Nobody and Iris-a-Maz are inviting you to indulge in the weed world!
Weedy Tea served from 7.30pm | Presentation from 8pm
For more info:
Nobody: weedyconnect ion.com/
Iris-A-Maz: www.pioto.de.vu/
Weed by one of the lakes in Washington, Indiana's Eastside Park. Background is the lake.
BEST VIEWED LARGE
I was so happy to be out shooting today. My 40D is still out for service but I was jones-ing so I borrowed my friends Canon 1D. Yep the 1D from 2001 with the 4MP sensor. If anyone tells you that you need more than 4MP have them shoot with a 1D for a while. It's an amazing camera for being over 8 years old. I love the vertical grip. I might have to buy a battery grip for my 40D. If you could transplant the 3 inch high res screen from a 5D mkII onto it I would be happy to buy one.
Found this bouquet sitting on a picnic table in Knock Knolls FP, Naperville IL.
This it one of the downrigger weights we use for fishing. They take the fishing line down to where the fish are.
Today they were anywhere between 30 and 90 feet
Triplex na Galeria LOGO ano passado.
Video: vimeo.com/28392056
x-processed - expired (2008) - Kodak Elite Chrome 100
Upland rice weeds / POACEAE (grass family)
Weed name: Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers.
books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=tqRtCQ9WMLUC&pg=PA3...
Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)
Prickly - Our Daily Challenge
Note: My toe knocked the tripod halfway thru the shot. This was not created with Photoshop.
Taken at Appuldurcombe House where we are rehearsing for Terry Pratchett's Night Watch which goes on mid July.
When the house is promoted they usually show photographs of one side, where it displays its former glory. However, I prefer the other side which is gutted and ruined.
This is by the entrance to the tunnel that runs below the ground.
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