Everybody’s doin’ it. Put your purdie flaars here. :)
My flaaars.
Everybody’s doin’ it. Put your purdie flaars here. :)
My flaaars.
Well done. I like the ones in the first pitcher best.
I like lilies
More purdie flaaars. :)
Oh, those flaars.
I thought you were talking about our late 60’s trousers.
Woodie said:
Everybody’s doin’ it. Put your purdie flaars here. :)My flaaars.
Bubblecar said:
Well done. I like the ones in the first pitcher best.
Hippy Astrums, Parpyone.
More hippies. :)
>>I thought you were talking about our late 60’s trousers.<<
so did I. And I thought we might get crocheted pants again. Fortunately we didn’t. Hang on, I have to turn on the networked computer that has the pictures on it. I don’t have a lot of flaars at the moment, but I did photograph the miniature irises today.
OK, I can do miniature irises and bluebells:
And honesty. It’s a bit ragged now, just making its money seedpods. But there are lots of baby plants around the yard.
And my darling little bees are working away in the apple blossum.
I can do you a couple of bush flowers….love creeper:
And running postman:
And I’ll stop now. I think that will do.
Nice.
:)
Self-planted lupins, a couple years ago.
Woodie said:
Yer flouers r lookin good Mr Woo..
I’ve got those two in flewr as well.
Ian said:
Woodie said:
Yer flouers r lookin good Mr Woo..
I’ve got those two in flewr as well.
The bees here love that Callistemon at the bottom. Citrinus?
My floowers..
.. well not all floowers
buffy said:
Ian said:
Woodie said:
Yer flouers r lookin good Mr Woo..
I’ve got those two in flewr as well.
The bees here love that Callistemon at the bottom. Citrinus?
It does look like citrinus.
>The bees here love that Callistemon at the bottom.
And little Scarlet Honeyeaters.
>Citrinus?
Think so
Ian said:
>The bees here love that Callistemon at the bottom.And little Scarlet Honeyeaters.
>Citrinus?
Think so
The clue is citrus scented leaves.
Most of my flowers look like this atm…
Not a floweor ^ …. an orse >
Ian said:
Most of my flowers look like this atm…
Not a floweor ^ …. an orse >
First on Hymenosporum?
Third one definitely a ‘orse, a very purdie ‘orse.
Ian said:
Most of my flowers look like this atm…
Not a floweor ^ …. an orse >
nice ‘orse.
I don’t usually tag them as flowers but if you can access Flickr, try this search. https://www.flickr.com/search/?path=roughbarked&nsid=&page=&details=1&w=99559986@N00&q=flower
Yeah.. Hymenosporum flavum but I just call it native frangipani
Very nice Crabbet Arabian stallion type orse.. with the temperament of gelding
:)
Ian said:
Yeah.. Hymenosporum flavum but I just call it native frangipaniVery nice Crabbet Arabian stallion type orse.. with the temperament of gelding
:)
Crabbet Arabians….real Arabs. Such a special breed.
roughbarked said:
I don’t usually tag them as flowers but if you can access Flickr, try this search. https://www.flickr.com/search/?path=roughbarked&nsid=&page=&details=1&w=99559986@N00&q=flower
Nice album..
(not sure about the purple curses tho)
Ian said:
roughbarked said:
I don’t usually tag them as flowers but if you can access Flickr, try this search. https://www.flickr.com/search/?path=roughbarked&nsid=&page=&details=1&w=99559986@N00&q=flower
Nice album..
(not sure about the purple curses tho)
They’d be in the weed sections.
roughbarked said:
Ian said:
roughbarked said:
I don’t usually tag them as flowers but if you can access Flickr, try this search. https://www.flickr.com/search/?path=roughbarked&nsid=&page=&details=1&w=99559986@N00&q=flower
Nice album..
(not sure about the purple curses tho)
They’d be in the weed sections.
To narrow the search. https://www.flickr.com/search/?user_id=99559986%40N00&page=&view_all=1&text=eremophila
At this time of year it was what it was on the fields of Flanders.
Life is a struggle. Particularly in my footpaths. If it wasn’t a flanders poppy, it wouldn’t have survived.
Ian said:
Yeah.. Hymenosporum flavum but I just call it native frangipaniVery nice Crabbet Arabian stallion type orse.. with the temperament of gelding
:)
My Hymenosporum is in full bud. Should open very soon, especially with these couple of warm days.
Flowers or flairs?
Got some flairs last night.
Rule 303 said:
Flowers or flairs?Got some flairs last night.
Tell me about this photograph
dv said:
Rule 303 said:
Flowers or flairs?Got some flairs last night.
Tell me about this photograph
It is f ing lairy
I have one similar to this, great for small nails. Dunno how old it is.
ChrispenEvan said:
I have one similar to this, great for small nails. Dunno how old it is.
U R hitting on wong fred.
dv said:
Rule 303 said:
Flowers or flairs?Got some flairs last night.
Tell me about this photograph
Have I mentioned that MrsRule has been getting into photography a bit lately? There’s not much to tell. Straight out of the camera. Aurora Australis shot from the beach at the south end of the street.
(last night)
Rule 303 said:
:)
dv said:
Rule 303 said:
Flowers or flairs?Got some flairs last night.
Tell me about this photograph
Have I mentioned that MrsRule has been getting into photography a bit lately? There’s not much to tell. Straight out of the camera. Aurora Australis shot from the beach at the south end of the street.
Something I want to witness some time.
Rule 303 said:
dv said:
Rule 303 said:
Flowers or flairs?Got some flairs last night.
Tell me about this photograph
Have I mentioned that MrsRule has been getting into photography a bit lately? There’s not much to tell. Straight out of the camera. Aurora Australis shot from the beach at the south end of the street.
Nothing like my view of the same from my backard @ 34.17°S,
Michael V said:
Something I want to witness some time.
I couldn’t see it with the naked eye, but I’m colourblind AF.
Rule 303 said:
dv said:
Rule 303 said:
Flowers or flairs?Got some flairs last night.
Tell me about this photograph
Have I mentioned that MrsRule has been getting into photography a bit lately? There’s not much to tell. Straight out of the camera. Aurora Australis shot from the beach at the south end of the street.
Very noice.
kii said:
Rule 303 said:
dv said:Tell me about this photograph
Have I mentioned that MrsRule has been getting into photography a bit lately? There’s not much to tell. Straight out of the camera. Aurora Australis shot from the beach at the south end of the street.
Very noice.
It is a very good camera.
I’d love one like that.Rule 303 said:
(Me too.) Maybe that’s the reason I’ve never seen it. Even when I lived further south.
Michael V said:
Something I want to witness some time.
I couldn’t see it with the naked eye, but I’m colourblind AF.
Hmmm. Perhaps I shouldn’t waste money on an Alaskan or Icelandic holiday.
Michael V said:
Rule 303 said:(Me too.) Maybe that’s the reason I’ve never seen it. Even when I lived further south.
Michael V said:
Something I want to witness some time.
I couldn’t see it with the naked eye, but I’m colourblind AF.
Hmmm. Perhaps I shouldn’t waste money on an Alaskan or Icelandic holiday.
I’ve pretty much stayed in the same place all my life and have still managed to see the aurora twice without having to go anywhere.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Rule 303 said:(Me too.) Maybe that’s the reason I’ve never seen it. Even when I lived further south.I couldn’t see it with the naked eye, but I’m colourblind AF.
Hmmm. Perhaps I shouldn’t waste money on an Alaskan or Icelandic holiday.
I’ve pretty much stayed in the same place all my life and have still managed to see the aurora twice without having to go anywhere.
Colourblind or not. You would be aware of the whole southern sky changing out here in the mallee.
roughbarked said:
kii said:
Rule 303 said:Have I mentioned that MrsRule has been getting into photography a bit lately? There’s not much to tell. Straight out of the camera. Aurora Australis shot from the beach at the south end of the street.
Very noice.
It is a very good camera.
I’d love one like that.
Entry level Nikon body with a 2nd hand lens from the next model up. I taught her (as I think you probably could, too) the nuts and bolts of how photos are made, but she has an ‘eye’ that makes people stop and stare and utter profanities.
roughbarked said:
Colourblind or not. You would be aware of the whole southern sky changing out here in the mallee.
I see it as a dull glow on the horizon.
Michael V said:
Rule 303 said:(Me too.) Maybe that’s the reason I’ve never seen it. Even when I lived further south.
Michael V said:
Something I want to witness some time.
I couldn’t see it with the naked eye, but I’m colourblind AF.
Hmmm. Perhaps I shouldn’t waste money on an Alaskan or Icelandic holiday.
Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
Rule 303 said:
roughbarked said:
kii said:Very noice.
It is a very good camera.
I’d love one like that.Entry level Nikon body with a 2nd hand lens from the next model up. I taught her (as I think you probably could, too) the nuts and bolts of how photos are made, but she has an ‘eye’ that makes people stop and stare and utter profanities.
My camera is pretty much similar. It is a Nikon. The one I used for the aurora shot was a Nikon FM. It was like, before digital man and I’m still using the same lenses on a Nikon D80.
kii said:
Really? Like what?
Michael V said:
Rule 303 said:(Me too.) Maybe that’s the reason I’ve never seen it. Even when I lived further south.I couldn’t see it with the naked eye, but I’m colourblind AF.
Hmmm. Perhaps I shouldn’t waste money on an Alaskan or Icelandic holiday.
Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
Rule 303 said:
roughbarked said:
Colourblind or not. You would be aware of the whole southern sky changing out here in the mallee.
I see it as a dull glow on the horizon.
Clearly many don’t even notice that. OK they were under party lights but there were fifty people at a party behind my camera. There was nothing outside those lights other than the southern sky. It was supposed to be dark but the entireity of the southern view was pink with orange and white waves flowing as if in a breeze blown by music.
When I got my prints developed I asked the man who I’d known for decades as the CSIRO photographer, “have you seen any other photos of this?” he said, “no. yours are it.”
Michael V said:
kii said:Really? Like what?
Michael V said:(Me too.) Maybe that’s the reason I’ve never seen it. Even when I lived further south.Hmmm. Perhaps I shouldn’t waste money on an Alaskan or Icelandic holiday.
Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
Heaps of shit. I could learn from you while I was showing you.
roughbarked said:
Rule 303 said:
roughbarked said:
Colourblind or not. You would be aware of the whole southern sky changing out here in the mallee.
I see it as a dull glow on the horizon.
Clearly many don’t even notice that. OK they were under party lights but there were fifty people at a party behind my camera. There was nothing outside those lights other than the southern sky. It was supposed to be dark but the entireity of the southern view was pink with orange and white waves flowing as if in a breeze blown by music.
When I got my prints developed I asked the man who I’d known for decades as the CSIRO photographer, “have you seen any other photos of this?” he said, “no. yours are it.”
Michael V said:
kii said:Really? Like what?
Michael V said:(Me too.) Maybe that’s the reason I’ve never seen it. Even when I lived further south.Hmmm. Perhaps I shouldn’t waste money on an Alaskan or Icelandic holiday.
Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
cold
reindeer
culture
whales
stuff
Michael V said:
kii said:Really? Like what?
Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
Well, it’s not Alaska, but the largest island in a lake on an island in a lake on an island in the world is in Canada, in Nettilling Lake on Baffin Island.
btm said:
Michael V said:
kii said:Really? Like what?
Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
Well, it’s not Alaska, but the largest island in a lake on an island in a lake on an island in the world is in Canada, in Nettilling Lake on Baffin Island.
oooo……….I needs to Google.
kii said:
(Sorry, I forgot to use the emoticon.)
Michael V said:
kii said:Really? Like what?Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
cold
reindeer
culture
whales
stuff
;)
btm said:
Nice…
Michael V said:
kii said:Really? Like what?
Um…there’s lots of other stuff to see and feel and hear and experience :P
Well, it’s not Alaska, but the largest island in a lake on an island in a lake on an island in the world is in Canada, in Nettilling Lake on Baffin Island.
Turtles, I tells ya. It’s turtles all the way down.
;)
Michael V said:
kii said:(Sorry, I forgot to use the emoticon.)
Michael V said:
Really? Like what?cold
reindeer
culture
whales
stuff;)
It’s hard to know with the people in here.
So what is a better plan than a clan energy target?
roughbarked said:
So what is a better plan than a clan energy target?
> clan energy target
That would be an event at the Highland Games.
roughbarked said:
So what is a better plan than a clan energy target?
What does clan energy have to do with Purdie flaars?
Some Babianas and some roadside South Africans that I dug up and brought home. And a stunning red anemone.
****
And the mauve lilac bush is out.
And the mauve irises.
The orange tree is budded, not out yet. That smells wonderful once the blossoms open.
These things are everywhere, literally..
Bogans!
Had to go back a bit to find this. I did a bunch of what was left of the roses after the stormy weather and took them to Mum yesterday. Included in there are Blue Moon, Gold Bunny, and Remember Me. And some others that I don’t know the names of.
buffy said:
Had to go back a bit to find this. I did a bunch of what was left of the roses after the stormy weather and took them to Mum yesterday. Included in there are Blue Moon, Gold Bunny, and Remember Me. And some others that I don’t know the names of.
Lovely.
But wait…there’s more! Heliotrope (smells of vanilla):
And kangaroo apple:
I had to google to find this thread, but I’ve got my Christmas flowers organized on the woodheater. Christmas lily and a red and green weed that we have always considered a Christmas flower in my family.
……….
And because I photographed them, some roses.
………
………
buffy said:
I had to google to find this thread, but I’ve got my Christmas flowers organized on the woodheater. Christmas lily and a red and green weed that we have always considered a Christmas flower in my family.
……….
Looks good.
I bought some LED lights for $10. They look shit.
buffy said:
I had to google to find this thread, but I’ve got my Christmas flowers organized on the woodheater. Christmas lily and a red and green weed that we have always considered a Christmas flower in my family.
……….
Very Christmassy. The red and green weed is Alstroemeria. Love how hardy they are but oh so weedy.
Alstromeria. That’s what the red and green thing is.
Whoops, should have read first! My memory clicked in. I have them in an “enclosed” garden bed. I mow all around the outside. Sort of like you have to control raspberry canes and thing. I have in my mind that that one is a New Zealand native. I should look it up.
buffy said:
I had to google to find this thread, but I’ve got my Christmas flowers organized on the woodheater. Christmas lily and a red and green weed that we have always considered a Christmas flower in my family.
……….
There’s a lot of mistakes there, Buffy.
We’ll start with the clock.
buffy said:
Alstromeria. That’s what the red and green thing is.
I had a mental block on the name, even though I have a fair few (self seeded pesky ones) in my garden.
Didn’t know they are a bit of a hazard though-https://www.childrens.health.qld.gov.au/poisonous-plant-peruvian-lily-alstroemeria/
Well there you go, they are Brazilian.
http://www.strangewonderfulthings.com/166.htm
What is wrong with the clock?
Here’s my front garden.
Divine Angel said:
Here’s my front garden.
Wrong hemisphere…
:)
Sigh, I never get it right.
Divine Angel said:
Sigh, I never get it right.
Have to orient them before you upload them.
Here’s DA’s front garden.
Bubblecar said:
Here’s DA’s front garden.
:) I hope she gets another punnet for christmas.
Divine Angel said:
Here’s my front garden.
At least nobody’s going to steal your flowers.
PermeateFree said:
Divine Angel said:
Here’s my front garden.
At least nobody’s going to steal your flowers.
They aren’t tall enough?
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
Here’s DA’s front garden.
:) I hope she gets another punnet for christmas.
The allyssum could take over. It will self seed all over the place.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
Here’s DA’s front garden.
:) I hope she gets another punnet for christmas.
The allyssum could take over. It will self seed all over the place.
Statice can be cut back when finished and will come back thicker next year.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said::) I hope she gets another punnet for christmas.
The allyssum could take over. It will self seed all over the place.
Statice can be cut back when finished and will come back thicker next year.
Yes…I would have commented on that if my memory hadn’t got stuck on the name. I haven’t grown statice for years. Is that one sea statice?
Some new additions to my front garden. Sun jewels and a purply flaar, variety Archangel, can’t remember the actual plant’s name 🙄
Divine Angel said:
Some new additions to my front garden. Sun jewels and a purply flaar, variety Archangel, can’t remember the actual plant’s name 🙄
Tiny flaaaaars. :)
Divine Angel said:
Some new additions to my front garden. Sun jewels and a purply flaar, variety Archangel, can’t remember the actual plant’s name 🙄
Portulacca
Michael V said:
Divine Angel said:
Some new additions to my front garden. Sun jewels and a purply flaar, variety Archangel, can’t remember the actual plant’s name 🙄
Portulacca
Bless you
Michael V said:
Divine Angel said:
Some new additions to my front garden. Sun jewels and a purply flaar, variety Archangel, can’t remember the actual plant’s name 🙄
Portulacca
Spelling, Michael.
Portulaca
Divine Angel said:
Some new additions to my front garden. Sun jewels and a purply flaar, variety Archangel, can’t remember the actual plant’s name 🙄
Purply flaar….possibly Angelonia?
ruby said:
Divine Angel said:
Some new additions to my front garden. Sun jewels and a purply flaar, variety Archangel, can’t remember the actual plant’s name 🙄
Purply flaar….possibly Angelonia?
Bingo, that’s the one.
bump
They’re purdy, buffy. I love jonquils
Divine Angel said:
They’re purdy, buffy. I love jonquils
Nice’n neat. :)
buffy said:
bump
Nice.
Divine Angel said:
They’re purdy, buffy. I love jonquils
They are bella donna lilies…
:)
buffy said:
Divine Angel said:
They’re purdy, buffy. I love jonquils
They are bella donna lilies…
:)
Mine are more pink.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Divine Angel said:
They’re purdy, buffy. I love jonquils
They are bella donna lilies…
:)
Mine are more pink.
I’ve got pink ones too. Mostly they are pink. At the house at Hawkesdale there were these white ones. So when we moved, I dug some up and brought them here. And they turned out to be pink bulbs I managed to dig up. From the mixed clump. So I went back to the lady who bought the Hawkesdale house and I begged some white ones. Now they have multiplied and I have the beginnings of a drift. They are really quite stunning. And then the nice lush leaves come up.
And bumpity bump. I had to take some more photos for a Letter to the Parents.
A pale pink belladonna lily.
Cornflowers in the corn. I planted the seed. This was the only clump that bothered to germinate. I’ll let it seed there and next year I guess it will be a weed.
Marigold and friends
And a closer one of one of the friends. I still haven’t got around to hunting down what this bug is.
I had to Google to find this thread. So here are today’s offerings:
The Mermaid rose. Vicious thing she is.
Zephyrin Drouin. A much nice lady. Smells beautifully rosey, very sweet. And she has hardly any thorns.
That one is from a cutting. The original is here, and and also a cutting climbing along the Casterton verandah. With some of her friends.
And a poppy. I just threw the old plants into the garden bed and there seems to be a mix of singles and doubles come up. I hope the bee knows what it is doing…
…..
……….
I noticed a different colour over on the other side of town. I might haunt that part on my walks and get some seed from there too.
buffy said:
Zephyrin Drouin. A much nice lady. Smells beautifully rosey, very sweet. And she has hardly any thorns.
That one is from a cutting. The original is here, and and also a cutting climbing along the Casterton verandah. With some of her friends.
That lawn looks about right, about the right height.
I’ve seen a lot of lawns where the blades are set too low, it’s false economy, damaged stolons, whole lawn can be lost at the next dry spell.
Young’uns mostly, no idea.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Zephyrin Drouin. A much nice lady. Smells beautifully rosey, very sweet. And she has hardly any thorns.
That one is from a cutting. The original is here, and and also a cutting climbing along the Casterton verandah. With some of her friends.
That lawn looks about right, about the right height.
I’ve seen a lot of lawns where the blades are set too low, it’s false economy, damaged stolons, whole lawn can be lost at the next dry spell.
Young’uns mostly, no idea.
Lawns are a 17th century time waster.
poikilotherm said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Zephyrin Drouin. A much nice lady. Smells beautifully rosey, very sweet. And she has hardly any thorns.
That one is from a cutting. The original is here, and and also a cutting climbing along the Casterton verandah. With some of her friends.
That lawn looks about right, about the right height.
I’ve seen a lot of lawns where the blades are set too low, it’s false economy, damaged stolons, whole lawn can be lost at the next dry spell.
Young’uns mostly, no idea.
Lawns are a 17th century time waster.
But they drop the temperature around the house, and they are a fire break. And the dogs just love to roll around on the grass.
poikilotherm said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Zephyrin Drouin. A much nice lady. Smells beautifully rosey, very sweet. And she has hardly any thorns.
That one is from a cutting. The original is here, and and also a cutting climbing along the Casterton verandah. With some of her friends.
That lawn looks about right, about the right height.
I’ve seen a lot of lawns where the blades are set too low, it’s false economy, damaged stolons, whole lawn can be lost at the next dry spell.
Young’uns mostly, no idea.
Lawns are a 17th century time waster.
You do have purdy flowers Buffy.
And I am pondering on whether to get in a few loads of chippings and burying my lawn forever.
poikilotherm said:
Lawns are a 17th century time waster.
Couldn’t agree more.
I mentioned my Sarracenias were in flower a couple of weeks ago; I took a photo in case anyone wanted to see them.
roughbarked said:
poikilotherm said:Lawns are a 17th century time waster.
Couldn’t agree more.
It’s funny that there were no grasses even up til the Jurassic. The ground cover was mostly club mosses and such.
Tamb said:
roughbarked said:
poikilotherm said:Lawns are a 17th century time waster.
Couldn’t agree more.
They make getting to the clothes line much easier though.
That’s the only bit of lawn I’ve got really.
dv said:
It’s funny that there were no grasses even up til the Jurassic. The ground cover was mostly club mosses and such.
Not really. It has a lot to do with whether there is tree cover. Grasses don’t do so well if there is forest. Also has to do with temperatures and regularity of water supply.
roughbarked said:
Tamb said:
roughbarked said:Couldn’t agree more.
They make getting to the clothes line much easier though.That’s the only bit of lawn I’ve got really.
I have some mown areas around the house. Easier to see & extinguish ember attack.
There won’t be any flowers here until the delayed Wet arrives in the new year.
Tamb said:
roughbarked said:
Tamb said:They make getting to the clothes line much easier though.
That’s the only bit of lawn I’ve got really.
I have some mown areas around the house. Easier to see & extinguish ember attack.
There won’t be any flowers here until the delayed Wet arrives in the new year.
Wouldn’t matter how good my fire prevention was. There is only enough water pressure fro a dribble from the town water supply.
roughbarked said:
Tamb said:
roughbarked said:That’s the only bit of lawn I’ve got really.
I have some mown areas around the house. Easier to see & extinguish ember attack.
There won’t be any flowers here until the delayed Wet arrives in the new year.
Wouldn’t matter how good my fire prevention was. There is only enough water pressure fro a dribble from the town water supply.
Tamb said:
roughbarked said:
Tamb said:I have some mown areas around the house. Easier to see & extinguish ember attack.
There won’t be any flowers here until the delayed Wet arrives in the new year.
Wouldn’t matter how good my fire prevention was. There is only enough water pressure fro a dribble from the town water supply.
We use plastic garden rakes for a lot of spot fires. Light, quick & cheap to replace.
They can also be used to make a small firebreak.
Went off topic there. Sorry.
Tamb said:
roughbarked said:
poikilotherm said:Lawns are a 17th century time waster.
Couldn’t agree more.
They make getting to the clothes line much easier though.
And, from experience, I’d rather have grass under the prop line. If I drop something, I don’t have to rewash it. My prop line is about 20m of prop line. I used to have more, but we decided, when one section broke, that we really didn’t need 30m.
And, in defensive mode…the amount of time I spend pushing a mower is the time other people spend in the gym or jogging. I only have to pay for a little bit of petrol for the mower and I get a cooler garden out of it. So nyah…
;)
btm said:
I mentioned my Sarracenias were in flower a couple of weeks ago; I took a photo in case anyone wanted to see them.
But back to the real thing…those flowers are very impressive.
roughbarked said:
dv said:
It’s funny that there were no grasses even up til the Jurassic. The ground cover was mostly club mosses and such.
Not really. It has a lot to do with whether there is tree cover. Grasses don’t do so well if there is forest. Also has to do with temperatures and regularity of water supply.
As Mary E White called it: “After the Greening”
I deadheaded the Double Delight this morning and found a few still worth a few days inside.
buffy said:
I deadheaded the Double Delight this morning and found a few still worth a few days inside.
Does your stoneware jar have any branding on it? I have one that looks nearly identical!
Michael V said:
buffy said:
I deadheaded the Double Delight this morning and found a few still worth a few days inside.
Does your stoneware jar have any branding on it? I have one that looks nearly identical!
“This jar is the absolute property of and must be returned to SHARPE BROS. Australia & New Zealand…something something something brewers. CAUTION Persons Damaging, Wilfully Retaining, Trading with or Misappropriating the us of this jar WILL BE PROSECUTED” And a Sharpe Bros signature.
It probably came from the Gill side of the family, my Mum’s lot, and could be very old. I haven’t got the stopper for that one, but it does still have its wire handle.
I’ve got another unbranded one of a different design, also from Mum’s lot, which still has a (broken) stopper. I’ll do a photo for you.
For MV…this is the unbranded vinegar jar (are they vinegar jars? We’ve always referred to them as vinegar jars)
I’ve also got a pottery thing that has been relegated to the garden for years. I presume it once had a lid. The spikey plant is something I dug up at our bush block from the swampy area. It’s in a black plastic pot in there, and the earthenware keeps it nice and soggy. It seems to like it.
And I’m afraid the Gill milk can was a bit beyond much when I got it with rust, so it serves stick tidying duty.
I could probably put the emu garden into purdie flaars, although at the moment there aren’t really any flowers in it. I’ve got the low use sprinkler on there for the birds. I’ll keep moving it over the next few hot days and it will serve to keep the wildlife happy, and keep some green around the back door.
Hmm, you can see behind that bed where I’ve done some weeding and chucked the weeds out on the grass to be mown in. And then not got around to mowing it. I might do that bit tomorrow. Or maybe now, while it’s still in the shade…
buffy said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:
I deadheaded the Double Delight this morning and found a few still worth a few days inside.
Does your stoneware jar have any branding on it? I have one that looks nearly identical!
“This jar is the absolute property of and must be returned to SHARPE BROS. Australia & New Zealand…something something something brewers. CAUTION Persons Damaging, Wilfully Retaining, Trading with or Misappropriating the us of this jar WILL BE PROSECUTED” And a Sharpe Bros signature.
It probably came from the Gill side of the family, my Mum’s lot, and could be very old. I haven’t got the stopper for that one, but it does still have its wire handle.
I’ve got another unbranded one of a different design, also from Mum’s lot, which still has a (broken) stopper. I’ll do a photo for you.
It looks so similar. The original wire handle is on mine, too.
“Brewed and Aerated Beverages
Reg trade mark WT-WY Coy.”
“CAUTION. This jar is the property of the WY-WY Coy.and must not be detained or filled for any purpose whatever or proceedings will be taken.”
And an indented stamp near the neck, in the porcelain, below the glaze (I take it that this is the potter’s mark):
“R. Fowler Ltd. Sydney. 1920”
A second porcelain jar (with non-original wire-and-wood handle) is labelled:
“10 Lbs.
Swift’s Arsenate of Lead
Manufactured only by the Merrimac Chemical Co., Boston. U.S.A.”
And near the neck in relief from the porcelain, under the glaze:
“POISON”
buffy said:
For MV…this is the unbranded vinegar jar (are they vinegar jars? We’ve always referred to them as vinegar jars)
I’ve also got a pottery thing that has been relegated to the garden for years. I presume it once had a lid. The spikey plant is something I dug up at our bush block from the swampy area. It’s in a black plastic pot in there, and the earthenware keeps it nice and soggy. It seems to like it.
And I’m afraid the Gill milk can was a bit beyond much when I got it with rust, so it serves stick tidying duty.
:)
buffy said:
For MV…this is the unbranded vinegar jar (are they vinegar jars? We’ve always referred to them as vinegar jars)
I’ve always thought mine was a ginger beer bottle.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
For MV…this is the unbranded vinegar jar (are they vinegar jars? We’ve always referred to them as vinegar jars)
I’ve always thought mine was a ginger beer bottle.
I have various smaller earthenware bottles of that kind, including a ginger beer one made by Bendigo potteries.
buffy said:
For MV…this is the unbranded vinegar jar (are they vinegar jars? We’ve always referred to them as vinegar jars)
I’ve also got a pottery thing that has been relegated to the garden for years. I presume it once had a lid. The spikey plant is something I dug up at our bush block from the swampy area. It’s in a black plastic pot in there, and the earthenware keeps it nice and soggy. It seems to like it.
And I’m afraid the Gill milk can was a bit beyond much when I got it with rust, so it serves stick tidying duty.
Jar.. moonshine?
Tray of water.. been doing that since winter for birds, roos, wallabies.. funny when mum or dad magpie is having a bath and youngster is trying to drink while cat inside is freaking out at the sight.
Milk/cream can needs rust treatment as does mine.
We used have a Double Delight rose too.. looks great
More pictures – obviously I am writing to Mum again!
The first of the Christmas lilies to flower (they are late this year), very pretty rose and the last of the mock orange flowers.
……
buffy said:
More pictures – obviously I am writing to Mum again!The first of the Christmas lilies to flower (they are late this year), very pretty rose and the last of the mock orange flowers.
……
Gorgeous rose. Do you know the variety?
EEEEK…… better keep the doors shut. makes note don’t open the doors yet.
30.5C & 47% indoors
39.4C & 20% outdoors
Little or no breeze.
Woodie said:
EEEEK…… better keep the doors shut. makes note don’t open the doors yet.30.5C & 47% indoors
39.4C & 20% outdoorsLittle or no breeze.
Not good for my purdie flaaaars.
Woodie said:
Woodie said:
EEEEK…… better keep the doors shut. makes note don’t open the doors yet.30.5C & 47% indoors
39.4C & 20% outdoorsLittle or no breeze.
Not good for my purdie flaaaars.
I’m really amazed that your hanging baskets look so good after this many months of over the top hot.
Woodie said:
Woodie said:
EEEEK…… better keep the doors shut. makes note don’t open the doors yet.30.5C & 47% indoors
39.4C & 20% outdoorsLittle or no breeze.
Not good for my purdie flaaaars.
sarahs mum said:
Woodie said:
Woodie said:
EEEEK…… better keep the doors shut. makes note don’t open the doors yet.30.5C & 47% indoors
39.4C & 20% outdoorsLittle or no breeze.
Not good for my purdie flaaaars.
I’m really amazed that your hanging baskets look so good after this many months of over the top hot.
Couple of them starting to look a bit scungy. Water EVERY day or they wilt by breakfast time.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
More pictures – obviously I am writing to Mum again!The first of the Christmas lilies to flower (they are late this year), very pretty rose and the last of the mock orange flowers.
……
Gorgeous rose. Do you know the variety?
It was in the garden at the Casterton house when we bought it for the practice in 1995. Going through the books of roses available in Australia, I suspect it is something called Princess de Monaco. It’s not a big rose, flowerwise or bush wise. Can you grow roses? I know it strikes from cuttings, I could send you some and you could have a go. I don’t do anything special…I dig up some dirt from the garden, and shove the bits of rose in. And if they take, they take.
:)
buffy said:
More pictures – obviously I am writing to Mum again!The first of the Christmas lilies to flower (they are late this year), very pretty rose and the last of the mock orange flowers.
……
They’re all pretty.
Woodie said:
sarahs mum said:
Woodie said:Not good for my purdie flaaaars.
I’m really amazed that your hanging baskets look so good after this many months of over the top hot.
Couple of them starting to look a bit scungy. Water EVERY day or they wilt by breakfast time.
They’re all pretty too.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:
More pictures – obviously I am writing to Mum again!The first of the Christmas lilies to flower (they are late this year), very pretty rose and the last of the mock orange flowers.
……
Gorgeous rose. Do you know the variety?
It was in the garden at the Casterton house when we bought it for the practice in 1995. Going through the books of roses available in Australia, I suspect it is something called Princess de Monaco. It’s not a big rose, flowerwise or bush wise. Can you grow roses? I know it strikes from cuttings, I could send you some and you could have a go. I don’t do anything special…I dig up some dirt from the garden, and shove the bits of rose in. And if they take, they take.
:)
We’ve never had any luck with roses, so I think it’d be a waste of good postage stamps…
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:Gorgeous rose. Do you know the variety?
It was in the garden at the Casterton house when we bought it for the practice in 1995. Going through the books of roses available in Australia, I suspect it is something called Princess de Monaco. It’s not a big rose, flowerwise or bush wise. Can you grow roses? I know it strikes from cuttings, I could send you some and you could have a go. I don’t do anything special…I dig up some dirt from the garden, and shove the bits of rose in. And if they take, they take.
:)
We’ve never had any luck with roses, so I think it’d be a waste of good postage stamps…
Thanks for the offer!
:)
So what if I don’t know what “Armageddon” means? It’s not the end of the world.
I picked flaars again this morning. Vase of Christmas Lily, Feverfew and Budleia sitting on the woodheater.
buffy said:
I picked flaars again this morning. Vase of Christmas Lily, Feverfew and Budleia sitting on the woodheater.
Refreshing arrangement.
I’ll have to give Mr Tunks a call today, the garden needs attention.
Got some more flaars for this week’s letter to Mum. Iochroma and Feverfew:
…………….
Pomegranate:
White Buddleia and Black Knight Buddleia. The garden is just full of butterflies at the moment because of the Buddleia and the gum trees being in flower. And bees. We’ve got bees.
Not much around at the moment. But here is a purdie bottlebrush flower.
buffy said:
Not much around at the moment. But here is a purdie bottlebrush flower.
C citrinus?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Not much around at the moment. But here is a purdie bottlebrush flower.
C citrinus?
Yes.
I’ve got a shy sunflower that doesn’t want to look at the sun…
It’s quite an interesting colour, that one.
From chat: transition said:
some color from mummy’s garden shortly ago, to bring some cheer to your day
while i’m wandering around watering, drop few here..
My shy sunflower (which is a Prado) has some companions now. They are more interested in looking at the sun.
………….
buffy said:
My shy sunflower (which is a Prado) has some companions now. They are more interested in looking at the sun.
………….
Pretty.
buffy said:
My shy sunflower (which is a Prado) has some companions now. They are more interested in looking at the sun.
………….
Spectacular.
I’m taking some flower photos for my Letter to Mum for next week. Chocolate mint and lemon thyme.
………………..
buffy said:
I’m taking some flower photos for my Letter to Mum for next week. Chocolate mint and lemon thyme.
………………..
Chocolate mint.. Pennyroyal?
And the Yarrow is in flower. I don’t know why I grow it really. I don’t use it for anything. It’s a bit specky with the flowers. And as it grows like a weed you can just rip out what you don’t want and put it under the mower.
A couple of the ducks came back at Casterton this morning. I know, they amn’t flowers, but they just popped into this thread to see what was on offer…
buffy said:
And the Yarrow is in flower. I don’t know why I grow it really. I don’t use it for anything. It’s a bit specky with the flowers. And as it grows like a weed you can just rip out what you don’t want and put it under the mower.
A couple of the ducks came back at Casterton this morning. I know, they amn’t flowers, but they just popped into this thread to see what was on offer…
You got the herbs and now you have the main course.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
I’m taking some flower photos for my Letter to Mum for next week. Chocolate mint and lemon thyme.
………………..
Chocolate mint.. Pennyroyal?
No, I’ve got pennyroyal too. This was sold as chocolate mint. I didn’t buy it. It’s a memory plant. Our friend Kelly who killed herself years ago gave me the plant, almost dead and asked if I thought I could revive it. I did. And now I keep it in her memory. It does look dead pretty much every Winter and I’m always pleased when it throws out some new leaves.
buffy said:
And the Yarrow is in flower. I don’t know why I grow it really. I don’t use it for anything. It’s a bit specky with the flowers. And as it grows like a weed you can just rip out what you don’t want and put it under the mower.
A couple of the ducks came back at Casterton this morning. I know, they amn’t flowers, but they just popped into this thread to see what was on offer…
Just checked yarrow out, it was introduced into Aus/NZ as a stock feed, apparently.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And the Yarrow is in flower. I don’t know why I grow it really. I don’t use it for anything. It’s a bit specky with the flowers. And as it grows like a weed you can just rip out what you don’t want and put it under the mower.
A couple of the ducks came back at Casterton this morning. I know, they amn’t flowers, but they just popped into this thread to see what was on offer…
You got the herbs and now you have the main course.
And I’ve got the oranges too! Hang on…I didn’t put up a picture of the sage! (My sage is a baby plant. I had to start a new one because the old one got gangly)
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
And the Yarrow is in flower. I don’t know why I grow it really. I don’t use it for anything. It’s a bit specky with the flowers. And as it grows like a weed you can just rip out what you don’t want and put it under the mower.
A couple of the ducks came back at Casterton this morning. I know, they amn’t flowers, but they just popped into this thread to see what was on offer…
Just checked yarrow out, it was introduced into Aus/NZ as a stock feed, apparently.
I’m not overly fond of the smell of yarrow. It’s just one of the herbs grown by the witches in my family. Oh, hang on…grown by my great aunts.
buffy said:
And the Yarrow is in flower. I don’t know why I grow it really. I don’t use it for anything. It’s a bit specky with the flowers. And as it grows like a weed you can just rip out what you don’t want and put it under the mower.
A couple of the ducks came back at Casterton this morning. I know, they amn’t flowers, but they just popped into this thread to see what was on offer…
Yarrow is a great groundcober where it can get water. It also is a great herbal tea mixer. I regularly have yarrow and thyme tea or lemon thyme, sometimes with a squirt of lime juice. All from right at my back door.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
I’m taking some flower photos for my Letter to Mum for next week. Chocolate mint and lemon thyme.
………………..
Chocolate mint.. Pennyroyal?
No, I’ve got pennyroyal too. This was sold as chocolate mint. I didn’t buy it. It’s a memory plant. Our friend Kelly who killed herself years ago gave me the plant, almost dead and asked if I thought I could revive it. I did. And now I keep it in her memory. It does look dead pretty much every Winter and I’m always pleased when it throws out some new leaves.
I keep plants or varieties of plants for reasons quite similar as most of the memories are of people now dead.
I’ve done some photos for this week’s Letter to Mum. (Yes, that is a toy Pug. Mum gave it to us years ago and it has been sitting on a shelf in the shed. I thought it should probably be out on the verandah)
………….
The cabbage whites have been doing this to my Brassicas. I’m not going to even consider eating those broccoli side shoots. I don’t like the bitter taste of steamed green caterpillar (they steam to white, by the way). I’ll rip that plant out and give it to the chooks tomorrow. They looove those caterpillars.
So my Brussels sprouts, and a Romanesco broccoli plant are in a “cage”. Which works well for the sprouts, but not so well for the Romanesco, as it wants to grow too tall. And the dill is also trying to get out.
Also, the possums have discovered my apple tree…apparently the leaves and apples at the top are yummy, but the hanging down branches are a bit dodgy to climb along.
I have repurposed some Christmas decorations I found in a cupboard at Casterton. I wonder if it will work. It looks pretty anyway.
And a tomato report: San Marzano and Periforme
…………
And the jalapenos are getting quite big now.
sm, if you enjoyed the gaelic song posted earlier you may also enjoy this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxjvNUNXhkU&list=RDzxjvNUNXhkU&start_radio=1
sibeen said:
sm, if you enjoyed the gaelic song posted earlier you may also enjoy this.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxjvNUNXhkU&list=RDzxjvNUNXhkU&start_radio=1
Oh, and MV, this ain’t an over-produced pop song.
:)
sibeen said:
sm, if you enjoyed the gaelic song posted earlier you may also enjoy this.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxjvNUNXhkU&list=RDzxjvNUNXhkU&start_radio=1
wrong thread
buffy said:
I’ve done some photos for this week’s Letter to Mum. (Yes, that is a toy Pug. Mum gave it to us years ago and it has been sitting on a shelf in the shed. I thought it should probably be out on the verandah)So my Brussels sprouts, and a Romanesco broccoli plant are in a “cage”. Which works well for the sprouts, but not so well for the Romanesco, as it wants to grow too tall. And the dill is also trying to get out.
You appear to have a very active spider.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
I’ve done some photos for this week’s Letter to Mum. (Yes, that is a toy Pug. Mum gave it to us years ago and it has been sitting on a shelf in the shed. I thought it should probably be out on the verandah)So my Brussels sprouts, and a Romanesco broccoli plant are in a “cage”. Which works well for the sprouts, but not so well for the Romanesco, as it wants to grow too tall. And the dill is also trying to get out.
You appear to have a very active spider.
I really wish I could train them so well…
:)
M&D’s today
transition said:
M&D’s today
I see they have a couple of Eremophilas in the garden.
One of my cactuses is in flower. I haven’t got many succulents, and this one has flowered before. I think I got the original plant from a great aunt about 45 years ago. The hairs are horrible, they get into your skin.
……..
buffy said:
One of my cactuses is in flower. I haven’t got many succulents, and this one has flowered before. I think I got the original plant from a great aunt about 45 years ago. The hairs are horrible, they get into your skin.
……..
cactus have some very beautiful flowers, often impresses me
When we called into the bush block yesterday, Mr buffy found a hyacinth orchid (Dipodium roseum). I’m pleased with that, it’s right near the shed. It will be encouraged – by me leaving it space when I cut the bracken and sedge down around that area. I wonder if it’s got any friends as well. I’ve seen one of them in another part of the block before. The bud comes up like a deep red asparagus shoot.
…………
buffy said:
When we called into the bush block yesterday, Mr buffy found a hyacinth orchid (Dipodium roseum). I’m pleased with that, it’s right near the shed. It will be encouraged – by me leaving it space when I cut the bracken and sedge down around that area. I wonder if it’s got any friends as well. I’ve seen one of them in another part of the block before. The bud comes up like a deep red asparagus shoot.
…………
They are not a common orchid anywhere where I have seen them so it may be the only patch you have since again, you haven’t seen them popping up everywhere. Cherish it. If you do have one, there may well be others. Take care of your little patch of bush, it may well be important.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
When we called into the bush block yesterday, Mr buffy found a hyacinth orchid (Dipodium roseum). I’m pleased with that, it’s right near the shed. It will be encouraged – by me leaving it space when I cut the bracken and sedge down around that area. I wonder if it’s got any friends as well. I’ve seen one of them in another part of the block before. The bud comes up like a deep red asparagus shoot.
…………
They are not a common orchid anywhere where I have seen them so it may be the only patch you have since again, you haven’t seen them popping up everywhere. Cherish it. If you do have one, there may well be others. Take care of your little patch of bush, it may well be important.
They are apparently a reasonably common orchid in Victoria.
https://bie.ala.org.au/species/https://id.biodiversity.org.au/name/apni/117422
Right, as I am writing letters to Mum every second or third day, because she needs input, you lot get to see my flowers more often. Some yellow roses (Gold Bunny):
Iochroma:
And not The Pug – this is Bruna, Esme and Lizza.
buffy said:
Right, as I am writing letters to Mum every second or third day, because she needs input, you lot get to see my flowers more often. Some yellow roses (Gold Bunny):
Iochroma:
And not The Pug – this is Bruna, Esme and Lizza.
really nice
We need lightening up. As I am presently trying to produce a couple of letters a week to Mum, here are some more flowers from the garden. I’m photographing things she used to grow. Cosmos, santolina and yarrow. A bit cottage gardeney in that bed. There is also Heliotrope, dill, chervil and chives, all messed in together.
The last flowers on the lemon verbena bush for the year, and the Heliotrope. Smells beautifully vanilla-y.
…
Pomegranates forming. Not too long and they will split and I’ll have to try to remember who it was in town that told me they would like some pomegranate fruit…
And the sunflowers are now going to seed. I must remember to put some away for next year, that flower is so very spectacular.
A red rose.
Here we go…some more piccies. A weed.
MV’s chilli flower. MV’s chilli flower progressing
buffy said:
Here we go…some more piccies. A weed.
MV’s chilli flower. MV’s chilli flower progressing
:)
Need some brightening up in here. Just picked these.
buffy said:
Need some brightening up in here. Just picked these.
When you did that arrangement what sprigs did you use?
buffy said:
Need some brightening up in here. Just picked these.
flash diffuser benefit
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Need some brightening up in here. Just picked these.
When you did that arrangement what sprigs did you use?
It’s a bit of asparagus that has gone to fern. Quite useful at this time of year.
:)
Anyone want to help me with an ID? I think this is Stachys macrantha. The leaves are strongly scented. It’s in flower now. The colour rendition on here is not perfect, it’s a deeper clear blue.
Or is it a blue sage of some sort? I think the leaves are too round.
buffy said:
Anyone want to help me with an ID? I think this is Stachys macrantha. The leaves are strongly scented. It’s in flower now. The colour rendition on here is not perfect, it’s a deeper clear blue.
Or is it a blue sage of some sort? I think the leaves are too round.
Looks like a blue salvia although I don’t know if they have a blue variation
I would like to put a lavender bush into my garden here but lavender bushes don’t really like humid climates.
monkey skipper said:
Yes, I’ve been looking at the online photos. Mine has no leaves up amongst the flowers. And the flowers are more separated, less ruffled.
monkey skipper said:
I would like to put a lavender bush into my garden here but lavender bushes don’t really like humid climates.
No, they don’t. They don’t like flooded roots either…all the ones at Casterton die off each time there is a flood. Although I’ve only been growing the really tough old French Lavender (Lavendula dentata). It does grow easily from cuttings (bits stolen through garden fences). Have you seen any lavneders around the neighbourhood that are surviving? Maybe ask for a cutting (or nick a bit through the fence?)
Ooh, ms….this suggests it might grow for you if you can source it.
https://www.gardenweb.com/discussions/2789833/which-lavender-for-hot-and-humid-climates
Autumn crocuses are out too. Season change.
……….
buffy said:
monkey skipper said:
I would like to put a lavender bush into my garden here but lavender bushes don’t really like humid climates.
No, they don’t. They don’t like flooded roots either…all the ones at Casterton die off each time there is a flood. Although I’ve only been growing the really tough old French Lavender (Lavendula dentata). It does grow easily from cuttings (bits stolen through garden fences). Have you seen any lavneders around the neighbourhood that are surviving? Maybe ask for a cutting (or nick a bit through the fence?)
You sound like my grandmother she would so often tip prune a neighbours bush and to her credit she would put the cutting into a milk bottle with water to strike a root and then pot the cutting up.
My grandfather was exceptional with grafting and also propagating many varieties of begonias and African violets. He would take a leaf and put the African leaf with a small stem into a pot and get the cutting to grow each time into a new plant.
buffy said:
Ooh, ms….this suggests it might grow for you if you can source it.https://www.gardenweb.com/discussions/2789833/which-lavender-for-hot-and-humid-climates
Oh thanks.
monkey skipper said:
buffy said:
monkey skipper said:
I would like to put a lavender bush into my garden here but lavender bushes don’t really like humid climates.
No, they don’t. They don’t like flooded roots either…all the ones at Casterton die off each time there is a flood. Although I’ve only been growing the really tough old French Lavender (Lavendula dentata). It does grow easily from cuttings (bits stolen through garden fences). Have you seen any lavneders around the neighbourhood that are surviving? Maybe ask for a cutting (or nick a bit through the fence?)
You sound like my grandmother she would so often tip prune a neighbours bush and to her credit she would put the cutting into a milk bottle with water to strike a root and then pot the cutting up.
My grandfather was exceptional with grafting and also propagating many varieties of begonias and African violets. He would take a leaf and put the African leaf with a small stem into a pot and get the cutting to grow each time into a new plant.
With lavender (and I’ve done it with lilacs and rosemary and geraniums/pelargoniums too) I just surreptitiously acquire a bit of botanical material and when I get home I fill a pot with dirt and cut my ill gotten gains into appropriate bits and stick them in the soil. Some grow. Some don’t.
monkey skipper said:
buffy said:
monkey skipper said:
I would like to put a lavender bush into my garden here but lavender bushes don’t really like humid climates.
No, they don’t. They don’t like flooded roots either…all the ones at Casterton die off each time there is a flood. Although I’ve only been growing the really tough old French Lavender (Lavendula dentata). It does grow easily from cuttings (bits stolen through garden fences). Have you seen any lavneders around the neighbourhood that are surviving? Maybe ask for a cutting (or nick a bit through the fence?)
You sound like my grandmother she would so often tip prune a neighbours bush and to her credit she would put the cutting into a milk bottle with water to strike a root and then pot the cutting up.
My grandfather was exceptional with grafting and also propagating many varieties of begonias and African violets. He would take a leaf and put the African leaf with a small stem into a pot and get the cutting to grow each time into a new plant.
We grew lavender in Brisbane. Slow growing, but smelt good.
Michael V said:
monkey skipper said:
buffy said:No, they don’t. They don’t like flooded roots either…all the ones at Casterton die off each time there is a flood. Although I’ve only been growing the really tough old French Lavender (Lavendula dentata). It does grow easily from cuttings (bits stolen through garden fences). Have you seen any lavneders around the neighbourhood that are surviving? Maybe ask for a cutting (or nick a bit through the fence?)
You sound like my grandmother she would so often tip prune a neighbours bush and to her credit she would put the cutting into a milk bottle with water to strike a root and then pot the cutting up.
My grandfather was exceptional with grafting and also propagating many varieties of begonias and African violets. He would take a leaf and put the African leaf with a small stem into a pot and get the cutting to grow each time into a new plant.
We grew lavender in Brisbane. Slow growing, but smelt good.
I’m always making cuttings grow. Hard part is finding somewhere to plant them.
buffy said:
Ooh, ms….this suggests it might grow for you if you can source it.https://www.gardenweb.com/discussions/2789833/which-lavender-for-hot-and-humid-climates
A more important factor is the soil type, which must be very well drained. A heavy clay soil is not good. Alternatively, place sand over your clay and do not dig into it where water can collect. Also do not mulch anywhere near the stem and do not over-water, just one good soak a week.
Rosemary is similar and if anything tougher than lavender.
AwesomeO said:
Rosemary is similar and if anything tougher than lavender.
that true, for sure, around here
though should say lavender needs trimming/pruning, which I never do
AwesomeO said:
Rosemary is similar and if anything tougher than lavender.
Yeah , my daughter put a vote in for me to plant some rosemary as well.
monkey skipper said:
AwesomeO said:
Rosemary is similar and if anything tougher than lavender.
Yeah , my daughter put a vote in for me to plant some rosemary as well.
Just what I needed. Someone to take rosemary cuttings off my hands.
AwesomeO said:
Rosemary is similar and if anything tougher than lavender.
Tough as nails.
When you prune the Heliotrope and you get a lovely bunch of vanilla smell. They won’t last, but we’ll get a vanilla-y kitchen for a few hours.
buffy said:
When you prune the Heliotrope and you get a lovely bunch of vanilla smell. They won’t last, but we’ll get a vanilla-y kitchen for a few hours.
Don’t let PWM see them.
Some of the natives that we get around here…
I recognize some of those. Are they all out now? We’ve got very little out yet. The rains haven’t come yet.
fsm said:
Some of the natives that we get around here…
You live in a beautiful natural garden mate.
roughbarked said:
You live in a beautiful natural garden mate.
We are surrounded by Brisbane Water National Park. The bush is a bit thin at the moment because of the drought, but there are always flowers of some sort.
I’m doing another letter to Mum. So you lot get some pictures. This rose is a bit ragged and it’s very, very prickly. But quite pretty.
And here is my only set white capsicum coming along amongst its friends.
buffy said:
![]()
I’m doing another letter to Mum. So you lot get some pictures. This rose is a bit ragged and it’s very, very prickly. But quite pretty.
And here is my only set white capsicum coming along amongst its friends.
Wow! A capsicum with giant yellow flowers.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
![]()
I’m doing another letter to Mum. So you lot get some pictures. This rose is a bit ragged and it’s very, very prickly. But quite pretty.
And here is my only set white capsicum coming along amongst its friends.
Wow! A capsicum with giant yellow flowers.
Nice take on it. (Actually the capsicum is rather small yet…)
:)
bump for transition
Speedy said:
bump for transition
thankyou
transition said:
Speedy said:
bump for transition
thankyou
I can smell them from here.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
Speedy said:
bump for transition
thankyou
I can smell them from here.
roses were strong, very beautiful
The hot pink Nerines are out in Casterton.
buffy said:
The hot pink Nerines are out in Casterton.
Purdie…
:)
Today’s “flaars” are really my fractal veg for tea tonight. Romanesco broccoli. The plant got distorted by the covering I had on it for keeping off the cabbage white butterflies. So it’s lots of little fractals this time.
This is what they look like if you don’t grow them peculiarly (one I prepared earlier – 2015)
Sometimes you get a purple one (2012).
Cabbage whites are still around.
Red nerines are coming out. Apparently this is the “original” colour from which the whites and pinks more usually grown came.
A couple of roses. Remember Me and Double Delight. Last flowers I think. I will start the pruning shortly.
………………..
And nice clear blue Stachys macrantha flower.
Not many flowers around at the moment.
buffy said:
Not many flowers around at the moment.
Ooh honeysuckle.
Trail mix with chocolate here. Dlietician recommended.
buffy said:
Not many flowers around at the moment.
Those’ll do.
AwesomeO said:
Trail mix with chocolate here. Dlietician recommended.
I’m not sure what that means; it’s almost lucid.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Not many flowers around at the moment.
Ooh honeysuckle.
Sorry, nup. White nerines, red Peruvian lilies/Alstromeria and some rose hips.
sibeen said:
AwesomeO said:
Trail mix with chocolate here. Dlietician recommended.
I’m not sure what that means; it’s almost lucid.
It means he was looking at my picture and meant to post in Chat but forgot to swap across…
sibeen said:
AwesomeO said:
Trail mix with chocolate here. Dlietician recommended.
I’m not sure what that means; it’s almost lucid.
Need more weight but nuts are bad due to potassium, which I knew. So dietician devised a trail mix with chocolate which I feel is slightly dodgy. And mostly pumpkin seed anyway.
buffy said:
sibeen said:
AwesomeO said:
Trail mix with chocolate here. Dlietician recommended.
I’m not sure what that means; it’s almost lucid.
It means he was looking at my picture and meant to post in Chat but forgot to swap across…
out in garden very briefly, too cold. Not much flowers at moment
transition said:
out in garden very briefly, too cold. Not much flowers at moment
![]()
I like the white one.
Got a nice photo of the red nerine today. And also of the blue butterfly bush (Clerodendrum ugandense). That was from a cutting from Mum.
…..
buffy said:
Got a nice photo of the red nerine today. And also of the blue butterfly bush (Clerodendrum ugandense). That was from a cutting from Mum.
…..
Lubly.
I think this is probably the last of the roses (accompanied by white nerines), although there are still 2 buds on this bush. We will see if they manage to come to anything. I won’t prune that bush yet. I’ve started on the pruning.
Something a bit lightweight – some white Nerines and a pretty little miniature rose.
Wonga Wonga in my backyard.
Some flowers from a large private garden we visited a little while ago.
fsm said:
Some flowers from a large private garden we visited a little while ago.
Pick the odd one out that isn’t a daisy form!
:)
fsm said:
Some flowers from a large private garden we visited a little while ago.
Nice. Is the lowest one a ginger?
These photos were taken back in October 2018. I still have these Thysanotus tuberosus plants, unplanted and in tubestock. They have since spread to other pots nearby. These flowers only open for one day and in mid-afternoon they close up again. It is amazing to watch those fringes tuck away neatly into their little pods as though nothing had even happened.
Speedy said:
These photos were taken back in October 2018. I still have these Thysanotus tuberosus plants, unplanted and in tubestock. They have since spread to other pots nearby. These flowers only open for one day and in mid-afternoon they close up again. It is amazing to watch those fringes tuck away neatly into their little pods as though nothing had even happened.
Strange as it may seem. I have seen people dig these up and take them home but it appears that those who take the existing earth and keep them in it, in contained spaces, outlive those wh take them home and plant them in their own garden soil.
roughbarked said:
Speedy said:
These photos were taken back in October 2018. I still have these Thysanotus tuberosus plants, unplanted and in tubestock. They have since spread to other pots nearby. These flowers only open for one day and in mid-afternoon they close up again. It is amazing to watch those fringes tuck away neatly into their little pods as though nothing had even happened.
Strange as it may seem. I have seen people dig these up and take them home but it appears that those who take the existing earth and keep them in it, in contained spaces, outlive those wh take them home and plant them in their own garden soil.
Can you tell me if they need pollinators while they are flowering? I think on the day I took these photos, there were seven little flowers open, but they only opened for a few hours (from 10am-ish to about 3pm). That’s not much of an opportunity to get their groove on.
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:
Speedy said:
These photos were taken back in October 2018. I still have these Thysanotus tuberosus plants, unplanted and in tubestock. They have since spread to other pots nearby. These flowers only open for one day and in mid-afternoon they close up again. It is amazing to watch those fringes tuck away neatly into their little pods as though nothing had even happened.
Strange as it may seem. I have seen people dig these up and take them home but it appears that those who take the existing earth and keep them in it, in contained spaces, outlive those wh take them home and plant them in their own garden soil.
Can you tell me if they need pollinators while they are flowering? I think on the day I took these photos, there were seven little flowers open, but they only opened for a few hours (from 10am-ish to about 3pm). That’s not much of an opportunity to get their groove on.
That is the habit of Fringe Lilies, they go to sleep at night or rainy or even cloudy days but most will open again during the next day if conditions permit and will do so for several days. They do need pollination to maintain species vigor even if self-pollinating, and obviously the pollinator would need to be around during daylight hours. I would say it would mostly be flies locally, although buzz pollination would probably work too, but would require a native bee or similar (Hover-flies maybe) of which around me are few and far between, yet these plants are common.
PermeateFree said:
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:Strange as it may seem. I have seen people dig these up and take them home but it appears that those who take the existing earth and keep them in it, in contained spaces, outlive those wh take them home and plant them in their own garden soil.
Can you tell me if they need pollinators while they are flowering? I think on the day I took these photos, there were seven little flowers open, but they only opened for a few hours (from 10am-ish to about 3pm). That’s not much of an opportunity to get their groove on.
That is the habit of Fringe Lilies, they go to sleep at night or rainy or even cloudy days but most will open again during the next day if conditions permit and will do so for several days. They do need pollination to maintain species vigor even if self-pollinating, and obviously the pollinator would need to be around during daylight hours. I would say it would mostly be flies locally, although buzz pollination would probably work too, but would require a native bee or similar (Hover-flies maybe) of which around me are few and far between, yet these plants are common.
Thanks PF. Yes, they are surprisingly common.
while sitting here eating my hot chips, we did have a surplus of potatoes
few from mummy’s garden today
transition said:
while sitting here eating my hot chips, we did have a surplus of potatoes
few from mummy’s garden today
That’s a really early jonquil at bottom right.
Well, not so many flowers just yet, but soon…
buffy said:
Well, not so many flowers just yet, but soon…
Not to mention the garden ornaments made from vesicular basalt.
;)
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Well, not so many flowers just yet, but soon…
Not to mention the garden ornaments made from vesicular basalt.
;)
No shortage of that around here.
:)
These were about the only flowers anywhere in the garden – red, white and blue.
Alstromeria (Peruvian Lily), Agapanthus (Aggie’s Pants around here and in many places), feverfew, Nerine and the very first snowflake of the season right there in the front and almost invisible.
I thought I’d found all the final roses. But now I remember that when I was pruning I left this bud. It smells as good as it looks like it should. I don’t know what its name is.
buffy said:
I thought I’d found all the final roses. But now I remember that when I was pruning I left this bud. It smells as good as it looks like it should. I don’t know what its name is.
added some color to my day
not had any roses here for a while, last ones I saw were mum’s she pruned, and missy sheep ate them, stems and all I reckon
The Helleborus that one of my patients gave me as a goodbye present this time last year has flowered.
And this is going to look alright when those daffodils get to the flowering stage – those are grape hyacinths on the left, between the single daff leaves is another row of later double daffs, and along the right side are deep red Aquilegia:
(Yes, composing another Letter to Mum)
Snowflakes coming out around the garden:
Doing another Letter to Mum. Have some flowers:
White Daphne has broken out and the first stinky jonquils:
……………..
And there is pretty much always some feverfew somewhere in the garden. Looks good against the gumtree trunk.
buffy said:
Doing another Letter to Mum. Have some flowers:White Daphne has broken out and the first stinky jonquils:
……………..
And there is pretty much always some feverfew somewhere in the garden. Looks good against the gumtree trunk.
Nice photos. :)
Another Helleborus is out.
And perhaps I should remove the sign now the daffodils on Bess’ grave are wakening again.
Just noticed, because I smelt it as I walked past, that the winter honeysuckle is out. It’s a delicate thing on an unruly bush. Smells divine.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lonicera_fragrantissima
My plant is cutting grown from the one Mum had at the family home. I don’t know if she bought the plant originally, but I’m inclined to think it was probably also a cutting plant, and likely from my great aunt Mollie. I don’t really agree that the scent is lemony as wikipedia would have it. It’s quite sweet smelling.
……
transition said:
Ooh, Billbergia. I haven’t got that one, I’ve got B. nutans which is something my mother’s family grow.
buffy said:
transition said:
Ooh, Billbergia. I haven’t got that one, I’ve got B. nutans which is something my mother’s family grow.
It looks like a colourful crêpe paper creation.
buffy said:
transition said:
Ooh, Billbergia. I haven’t got that one, I’ve got B. nutans which is something my mother’s family grow.
looks like the one, my bromeliad friend
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billbergia
OK people, I’ve done some more flower picture. The paperwhites are coming out:
And the Hardenbergia has been out forever:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
buffy said:
OK people, I’ve done some more flower picture. The paperwhites are coming out:
And the Hardenbergia has been out forever:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
Not much in the way of flaars ATM.
buffy said:
OK people, I’ve done some more flower picture. The paperwhites are coming out:
And the Hardenbergia has been out forever:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
Think you showed the greenhood looking flower some time ago and its name was mentioned, although I can’t remember it. I recall it as I was impressed with its similarity to Pterostylis.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
OK people, I’ve done some more flower picture. The paperwhites are coming out:
And the Hardenbergia has been out forever:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
Think you showed the greenhood looking flower some time ago and its name was mentioned, although I can’t remember it. I recall it as I was impressed with its similarity to Pterostylis.
Yes, I did. I’ve just never got to the bottom of which Arisaema it is.
Tamb said:
buffy said:
OK people, I’ve done some more flower picture. The paperwhites are coming out:
And the Hardenbergia has been out forever:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
Not much in the way of flaars ATM.
Strelitzia
buffy said:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
Ahhh yes. That would be Arisaema sockpuppetae.
250 different Arisaema, this could take a while.
ruby said:
buffy said:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
Ahhh yes. That would be Arisaema sockpuppetae.
250 different Arisaema, this could take a while.
Yeah, I sort of stopped looking. I thought the wide variegated leaves would be helpful, and the flower is fairly distinctive…but…so many!
buffy said:
ruby said:
buffy said:
But this one I’d like some help with. I know it must be an Arisaema (Jack in the pulpit). I’ve done a Google image search and I can’t find anything that really matches. It’s a plant I got from Mum’s garden years ago. She probably put it into her garden in the 1970s, from where it was planted.
…………………….
Ahhh yes. That would be Arisaema sockpuppetae.
250 different Arisaema, this could take a while.
Yeah, I sort of stopped looking. I thought the wide variegated leaves would be helpful, and the flower is fairly distinctive…but…so many!
Heh, I wonder if they hybridise. I can find right flower, wrong variegated leaf.
ruby said:
buffy said:
ruby said:Ahhh yes. That would be Arisaema sockpuppetae.
250 different Arisaema, this could take a while.
Yeah, I sort of stopped looking. I thought the wide variegated leaves would be helpful, and the flower is fairly distinctive…but…so many!
Heh, I wonder if they hybridise. I can find right flower, wrong variegated leaf.
They do. Mark Jury in NZ is doing them (as well as some lovely Magnolia breeding).
https://jury.co.nz/tag/arisaema/
Ah.
I’ll be back shortly. I need to watch the news.
I bought a new lens a while ago – well, new to me. Manufactured c.1976, it was a bit of an extreme optical design (135 f/1.5) so has trade-offs. The colours are weird, the bokeh is harsh, and the sharpness is non-existant. But it takes beautiful photos of flowers.
ruby said:
ruby said:
buffy said:Yeah, I sort of stopped looking. I thought the wide variegated leaves would be helpful, and the flower is fairly distinctive…but…so many!
Heh, I wonder if they hybridise. I can find right flower, wrong variegated leaf.
They do. Mark Jury in NZ is doing them (as well as some lovely Magnolia breeding).
https://jury.co.nz/tag/arisaema/
I’ve got an old piece of paper in one of my gardening books with Aricaema proboscidium written on it. The leaves might be right..single leaves, you can pick them like violet leaves to put around the base of a posy…but A. proscidium should have a long snout.
buffy said:
ruby said:
ruby said:Heh, I wonder if they hybridise. I can find right flower, wrong variegated leaf.
They do. Mark Jury in NZ is doing them (as well as some lovely Magnolia breeding).
https://jury.co.nz/tag/arisaema/I’ve got an old piece of paper in one of my gardening books with Aricaema proboscidium written on it. The leaves might be right..single leaves, you can pick them like violet leaves to put around the base of a posy…but A. proscidium should have a long snout.
Mouse tail plant, I think I need a clump of these in my garden, just for fun.
I think I have your plant, slightly different name- Arisarum. I reckon vulgare. And if memory serves me correctly, Ian has the same plant and came here for an ID.
Something random from my garden when I lived in the the rainforest – no idea what it is.
ruby said:
buffy said:
ruby said:They do. Mark Jury in NZ is doing them (as well as some lovely Magnolia breeding).
https://jury.co.nz/tag/arisaema/I’ve got an old piece of paper in one of my gardening books with Aricaema proboscidium written on it. The leaves might be right..single leaves, you can pick them like violet leaves to put around the base of a posy…but A. proscidium should have a long snout.
Mouse tail plant, I think I need a clump of these in my garden, just for fun.
I think I have your plant, slightly different name- Arisarum. I reckon vulgare. And if memory serves me correctly, Ian has the same plant and came here for an ID.
Yes, you are quite right…looking at the pictures, Arisarum vulgare looks just right. I’ll label it properly!
Dark Orange said:
Something random from my garden when I lived in the the rainforest – no idea what it is.
You need sharp photos for identification.
Dark Orange said:
I bought a new lens a while ago – well, new to me. Manufactured c.1976, it was a bit of an extreme optical design (135 f/1.5) so has trade-offs. The colours are weird, the bokeh is harsh, and the sharpness is non-existant. But it takes beautiful photos of flowers.
![]()
Are you using 35 mm lenses?
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:I bought a new lens a while ago – well, new to me. Manufactured c.1976, it was a bit of an extreme optical design (135 f/1.5) so has trade-offs. The colours are weird, the bokeh is harsh, and the sharpness is non-existant. But it takes beautiful photos of flowers.
![]()
Are you using 35 mm lenses?
135mm @ f/1.5
Dark Orange said:
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:I bought a new lens a while ago – well, new to me. Manufactured c.1976, it was a bit of an extreme optical design (135 f/1.5) so has trade-offs. The colours are weird, the bokeh is harsh, and the sharpness is non-existant. But it takes beautiful photos of flowers.
![]()
Are you using 35 mm lenses?
135mm @ f/1.5
I think you mean 35mm format, MV?
roughbarked said:
Dark Orange said:
Michael V said:Are you using 35 mm lenses?
135mm @ f/1.5
I think you mean 35mm format, MV?
If so, yes. Full frame 35mm Sony A7R3.
Dark Orange said:
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:I bought a new lens a while ago – well, new to me. Manufactured c.1976, it was a bit of an extreme optical design (135 f/1.5) so has trade-offs. The colours are weird, the bokeh is harsh, and the sharpness is non-existant. But it takes beautiful photos of flowers.
![]()
Are you using 35 mm lenses?
135mm @ f/1.5
But was the lens for a 35 mm camera?
If so, what mount?
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:
Michael V said:Are you using 35 mm lenses?
135mm @ f/1.5
But was the lens for a 35 mm camera?
If so, what mount?
Have you got lenses to sell?
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:135mm @ f/1.5
But was the lens for a 35 mm camera?
If so, what mount?
Have you got lenses to sell?
I have a Ricoh 35 mm camera with several lenses and many accessories (including close-up rings) – Pentax K-mount.
28 mm
55 mm
70-210 +macro mm
I forget the f-stops. I need to climb a ladder to check, and I don’t need that at the moment.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:But was the lens for a 35 mm camera?
If so, what mount?
Have you got lenses to sell?
I have a Ricoh 35 mm camera with several lenses and many accessories (including close-up rings) – Pentax K-mount.
28 mm
55 mm
70-210 +macro mmI forget the f-stops. I need to climb a ladder to check, and I don’t need that at the moment.
My Ricoh (long gone) had a screw thread mount. I could look for a Pentax to Nikkor coupler.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:But was the lens for a 35 mm camera?
If so, what mount?
Have you got lenses to sell?
I have a Ricoh 35 mm camera with several lenses and many accessories (including close-up rings) – Pentax K-mount.
28 mm
55 mm
70-210 +macro mmI forget the f-stops. I need to climb a ladder to check, and I don’t need that at the moment.
Just noticed the f1.5 after the 135 mm.
I didn’t even know you could get f1.5 135 mm lenses.
Not that I’ve actually looked at these things for about 20 years or so.
The Rev Dodgson said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:Have you got lenses to sell?
I have a Ricoh 35 mm camera with several lenses and many accessories (including close-up rings) – Pentax K-mount.
28 mm
55 mm
70-210 +macro mmI forget the f-stops. I need to climb a ladder to check, and I don’t need that at the moment.
Just noticed the f1.5 after the 135 mm.
I didn’t even know you could get f1.5 135 mm lenses.
Not that I’ve actually looked at these things for about 20 years or so.
I have 1:4 lenses from the 70’s.
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:
Michael V said:Are you using 35 mm lenses?
135mm @ f/1.5
But was the lens for a 35 mm camera?
If so, what mount?
Yes, T2 mount. The beauty of the new mirrorless cameras is the short flange distance allows space for adaptors to be used.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:But was the lens for a 35 mm camera?
If so, what mount?
Have you got lenses to sell?
I have a Ricoh 35 mm camera with several lenses and many accessories (including close-up rings) – Pentax K-mount.
28 mm
55 mm
70-210 +macro mmI forget the f-stops. I need to climb a ladder to check, and I don’t need that at the moment.
you have my contact details. ;)
The Rev Dodgson said:
Just noticed the f1.5 after the 135 mm.
I didn’t even know you could get f1.5 135 mm lenses.
Not that I’ve actually looked at these things for about 20 years or so.
This was an expensive lens in its day. Also heavy. (2.7kg)
Dark Orange said:
The Rev Dodgson said:Just noticed the f1.5 after the 135 mm.
I didn’t even know you could get f1.5 135 mm lenses.
Not that I’ve actually looked at these things for about 20 years or so.
This was an expensive lens in its day. Also heavy. (2.7kg)
Primary lens would need to be at least 90mm across.
Dark Orange said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:Have you got lenses to sell?
I have a Ricoh 35 mm camera with several lenses and many accessories (including close-up rings) – Pentax K-mount.
28 mm
55 mm
70-210 +macro mmI forget the f-stops. I need to climb a ladder to check, and I don’t need that at the moment.
you have my contact details. ;)
Mail sent.
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:
Michael V said:I have a Ricoh 35 mm camera with several lenses and many accessories (including close-up rings) – Pentax K-mount.
28 mm
55 mm
70-210 +macro mmI forget the f-stops. I need to climb a ladder to check, and I don’t need that at the moment.
you have my contact details. ;)
Mail sent.
Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:you have my contact details. ;)
Mail sent.
Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
The 28 mm is Tamron, IIRC. The 70-210 is something else (starting with V?).
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Mail sent.
Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
The 28 mm is Tamron, IIRC. The 70-210 is something else (starting with V?).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vivitar
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Dark Orange said:you have my contact details. ;)
Mail sent.
Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
I’ve got one of those lying around. You use it with your digital camera?
Ian said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Mail sent.
Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
I’ve got one of those lying around. You use it with your digital camera?
Yes I do.
roughbarked said:
Ian said:
roughbarked said:Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
I’ve got one of those lying around. You use it with your digital camera?
Yes I do.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
The 28 mm is Tamron, IIRC. The 70-210 is something else (starting with V?).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vivitar
Yeah, that’s it, I think.
roughbarked said:
Ian said:
roughbarked said:Is the 70-210 macro a Tamron? If so, I’m still using the same lens.
I’ve got one of those lying around. You use it with your digital camera?
Yes I do.
I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
Ian said:
roughbarked said:
Ian said:I’ve got one of those lying around. You use it with your digital camera?
Yes I do.
I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
I’m lucky perhaps in that I purchased the tamron to nikon converter way back then and the Nikon D80 mount is still the same mount as on the old Nikons FM and FE and F3 that I had.
roughbarked said:
Ian said:
roughbarked said:Yes I do.
I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
I’m lucky perhaps in that I purchased the tamron to nikon converter way back then and the Nikon D80 mount is still the same mount as on the old Nikons FM and FE and F3 that I had.
or should I say, still have.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Ian said:I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
I’m lucky perhaps in that I purchased the tamron to nikon converter way back then and the Nikon D80 mount is still the same mount as on the old Nikons FM and FE and F3 that I had.
or should I say, still have.
All of these were taken with it. https://www.flickr.com/photos/roughbarked/albums/72157624491510810
Ian said:
roughbarked said:
Ian said:I’ve got one of those lying around. You use it with your digital camera?
Yes I do.
I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
The mirrorless cameras make it easy and cheap.
Dark Orange said:
Ian said:
roughbarked said:Yes I do.
I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
The mirrorless cameras make it easy and cheap.
Takes a while to get used to how a digital camera reads the old lenses though.
Dark Orange said:
Ian said:
roughbarked said:Yes I do.
I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
The mirrorless cameras make it easy and cheap.
Nice to see you DO.
I’ve spent many thousands on nice 5Ds with mirrors in recent times. That might have to wait a while.
What are your favourite lenses? Please supply a complete list with comments :)
roughbarked said:
Dark Orange said:
Ian said:I looked at Tamron to Canon converter mounts and decided it was a PIA. Might have to look again.
The mirrorless cameras make it easy and cheap.
Takes a while to get used to how a digital camera reads the old lenses though.
Having only ever used a hand held light meter in the old days. Had to rely on how my eye sees the light. It was when I got this image that I realised my eye was correct.
Daffodils at Mount Tomah today
Mount Tomah – unknown species
.
.
I think the Banksia is Birthday Candles, but I don’t know what the other plants are
Speedy said:
Mount Tomah – unknown species
.
.I think the Banksia is Birthday Candles, but I don’t know what the other plants are
Pleasing plants. All look very clean and healthy.
Speedy said:
…/cut/….I think the Banksia is Birthday Candles, but I don’t know what the other plants are
beautiful
Speedy said:
Mount Tomah – unknown species
.
.I think the Banksia is Birthday Candles, but I don’t know what the other plants are
Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii (Mediterranean Spurge)
Euphorbia characias, the Mediterranean spurge or Albanian spurge, is a species of flowering plant in the family Euphorbiaceae typical of the Mediterranean vegetation. It is an upright, compact evergreen shrub growing to 1.2 m tall and wide. Wikipedia
PermeateFree said:
Speedy said:
Mount Tomah – unknown species
.
.I think the Banksia is Birthday Candles, but I don’t know what the other plants are
Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii (Mediterranean Spurge)
Euphorbia characias, the Mediterranean spurge or Albanian spurge, is a species of flowering plant in the family Euphorbiaceae typical of the Mediterranean vegetation. It is an upright, compact evergreen shrub growing to 1.2 m tall and wide. Wikipedia
Yet another useless weed.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
Speedy said:
Mount Tomah – unknown species
.
.I think the Banksia is Birthday Candles, but I don’t know what the other plants are
Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii (Mediterranean Spurge)
Euphorbia characias, the Mediterranean spurge or Albanian spurge, is a species of flowering plant in the family Euphorbiaceae typical of the Mediterranean vegetation. It is an upright, compact evergreen shrub growing to 1.2 m tall and wide. Wikipedia
Yet another useless weed.
Apparently a popular garden plant.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii (Mediterranean Spurge)
Euphorbia characias, the Mediterranean spurge or Albanian spurge, is a species of flowering plant in the family Euphorbiaceae typical of the Mediterranean vegetation. It is an upright, compact evergreen shrub growing to 1.2 m tall and wide. Wikipedia
Yet another useless weed.
Apparently a popular garden plant.
Yes it is but not one for my garden.
Got some more piccies for you. I pruned/tidied the Cape Gooseberry plants. Then realized how many flowers and impending fruit I’d cut off. Doesn’t matter.
…….
The scarlet flowered broad beans are now flowering and the nasturtiums obviously enjoy their spot under the apple tree.
……….
And there are many more Helleborus flowers out now.
buffy said:
Got some more piccies for you. I pruned/tidied the Cape Gooseberry plants. Then realized how many flowers and impending fruit I’d cut off. Doesn’t matter.
…….
The scarlet flowered broad beans are now flowering and the nasturtiums obviously enjoy their spot under the apple tree.
……….
And there are many more Helleborus flowers out now.
Nice.
:)
For DO’s bookmarks. roughbarked said:
Dark Orange said:
I can’t find the fleurs thread, so I’ll drop these here.
Dendrobium biggibum and that all pervasive Lantana.
My first Jetfire daffodil for the season has popped.
The Tete-a-tete aren’t too far behind. They are the ones in the middle with buds. The grassy stuff to the left is hoop petticoat daffodils.
buffy said:
My first Jetfire daffodil for the season has popped.
The Tete-a-tete aren’t too far behind. They are the ones in the middle with buds. The grassy stuff to the left is hoop petticoat daffodils.
Purdy nice.
:)
bump
thanks….
when we went for a bush hike last week I found these lovely little wild flowers.. I suppose they are some kind of orchid, but who knows with Australian plants…
I think members of this forum might be the only ones who appreciate them.
Arts said:
thanks….when we went for a bush hike last week I found these lovely little wild flowers.. I suppose they are some kind of orchid, but who knows with Australian plants…
I think members of this forum might be the only ones who appreciate them.
They’re donkeys:
Donkey (Diuris species)
These orchids with their golden yellow ears and burgundy to brown centre are widely distributed and standing taller than nearby grasses you should see them clearly. They’re common, so knowing donkey orchids will make you instantly seem an expert to your friends.
https://www.inspirationoutdoors.com.au/9-must-see-west-australian-orchids/
Bubblecar said:
Arts said:
thanks….when we went for a bush hike last week I found these lovely little wild flowers.. I suppose they are some kind of orchid, but who knows with Australian plants…
I think members of this forum might be the only ones who appreciate them.
They’re donkeys:
Donkey (Diuris species)
These orchids with their golden yellow ears and burgundy to brown centre are widely distributed and standing taller than nearby grasses you should see them clearly. They’re common, so knowing donkey orchids will make you instantly seem an expert to your friends.
https://www.inspirationoutdoors.com.au/9-must-see-west-australian-orchids/
excellent, thank you
Arts said:
Bubblecar said:
Arts said:
thanks….when we went for a bush hike last week I found these lovely little wild flowers.. I suppose they are some kind of orchid, but who knows with Australian plants…
I think members of this forum might be the only ones who appreciate them.
They’re donkeys:
Donkey (Diuris species)
These orchids with their golden yellow ears and burgundy to brown centre are widely distributed and standing taller than nearby grasses you should see them clearly. They’re common, so knowing donkey orchids will make you instantly seem an expert to your friends.
https://www.inspirationoutdoors.com.au/9-must-see-west-australian-orchids/
excellent, thank you
No worries.
Arts said:
thanks….when we went for a bush hike last week I found these lovely little wild flowers.. I suppose they are some kind of orchid, but who knows with Australian plants…
I think members of this forum might be the only ones who appreciate them.
Diuris. They belong to the group commonly known as donkey orchids.
Though these may be called rabbit’s ears?
Arts said:
Bubblecar said:
Arts said:
thanks….when we went for a bush hike last week I found these lovely little wild flowers.. I suppose they are some kind of orchid, but who knows with Australian plants…
I think members of this forum might be the only ones who appreciate them.
They’re donkeys:
Donkey (Diuris species)
These orchids with their golden yellow ears and burgundy to brown centre are widely distributed and standing taller than nearby grasses you should see them clearly. They’re common, so knowing donkey orchids will make you instantly seem an expert to your friends.
https://www.inspirationoutdoors.com.au/9-must-see-west-australian-orchids/
excellent, thank you
Beaten by bubblecar.
roughbarked said:
Arts said:
Bubblecar said:They’re donkeys:
Donkey (Diuris species)
These orchids with their golden yellow ears and burgundy to brown centre are widely distributed and standing taller than nearby grasses you should see them clearly. They’re common, so knowing donkey orchids will make you instantly seem an expert to your friends.
https://www.inspirationoutdoors.com.au/9-must-see-west-australian-orchids/
excellent, thank you
Beaten by bubblecar.
My locals which we call leopard orchid. Diuris maculata.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Arts said:excellent, thank you
Beaten by bubblecar.
My locals which we call leopard orchid. Diuris maculata.
OOps, they were probably WA species. This is Diuris maculata.
Here you go Arts. Looks like there are rather a lot in WA. Permeate is our best orchid ID person.
http://chookman.id.au/wp_orchids/?page_id=946
buffy said:
Here you go Arts. Looks like there are rather a lot in WA. Permeate is our best orchid ID person.http://chookman.id.au/wp_orchids/?page_id=946
Yes. There are a lot of Diuris and most of the other terrrstrial orchids, in WA.
buffy said:
Here you go Arts. Looks like there are rather a lot in WA. Permeate is our best orchid ID person.http://chookman.id.au/wp_orchids/?page_id=946
There are many species, differing in small detail. The leaves also play a part with the ID, so trying via a couple of photos has many hazards.
Here we go…Tete a tete is now coming out more. I think I might need to look for flatter light, it’s a bit glary at the moment.
And more Jetfire blooms.
Some quick snaps at a local park with a new lens.
Not technically a flaar:
Dark Orange said:
Some quick snaps at a local park with a new lens.
![]()
Not technically a flaar:
Which lens?
roughbarked said:
Dark Orange said:
Some quick snaps at a local park with a new lens.
![]()
Not technically a flaar:
Which lens?
The prince of “swirly bokeh” – c/ 1950 Carl Zeiss Jena Biotar 50/1.4 that looks like it has been adapted for a cropped sensor, so has significant vignetting. I like the look.
Dark Orange said:
roughbarked said:
Dark Orange said:
Some quick snaps at a local park with a new lens.
![]()
Not technically a flaar:
Which lens?
The prince of “swirly bokeh” – c/ 1950 Carl Zeiss Jena Biotar 50/1.4 that looks like it has been adapted for a cropped sensor, so has significant vignetting. I like the look.
Yes. So do I.
Dark Orange said:
roughbarked said:
Dark Orange said:
Some quick snaps at a local park with a new lens.
![]()
Not technically a flaar:
Which lens?
The prince of “swirly bokeh” – c/ 1950 Carl Zeiss Jena Biotar 50/1.4 that looks like it has been adapted for a cropped sensor, so has significant vignetting. I like the look.
Oooh…Carl Zeiss Jena. The bestest lenses. I had a Carl Zeiss Jena slit lamp biomicroscope in my consulting room.
Daffodil “Ice Follies”
And Tete a Tete, now in full bloom.
Grape hyacinths just beginning.
buffy said:
Grape hyacinths just beginning.
Do Hyacinths have a nice Bouquet?
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Grape hyacinths just beginning.
Do Hyacinths have a nice Bouquet?
Actually, yes, they smell quite nice. But you need lots and lots of grape hyacinths to form a bouquet – they are quite small flowers.
:)
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Grape hyacinths just beginning.
Do Hyacinths have a nice Bouquet?
Actually, yes, they smell quite nice. But you need lots and lots of grape hyacinths to form a bouquet – they are quite small flowers.
:)
I saw what he did there.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:Do Hyacinths have a nice Bouquet?
Actually, yes, they smell quite nice. But you need lots and lots of grape hyacinths to form a bouquet – they are quite small flowers.
:)
I saw what he did there.
Of course, so did I. But you don’t have to let him know that…
Heidi’s jonquils are out.
I know what these ones are…nodding greenhood. Just starting. We have quite a large patch of them. The kangaroos don’t care, they have a path right through the middle of them.
………..
And massed daffodils are getting even more massed.
Ice follies on Bess’ grave.
Tete a tete also on Bess’ grave, at the other end.
And what I think is probably N. cordubensis in my veggie patch. I particularly like this one, it’s so dainty.
I love daffodils. Had heaps of them when I lived in Bowral.
Divine Angel said:
I love daffodils. Had heaps of them when I lived in Bowral.
buffy said:
And massed daffodils are getting even more massed.Ice follies on Bess’ grave.
Tete a tete also on Bess’ grave, at the other end.
And what I think is probably N. cordubensis in my veggie patch. I particularly like this one, it’s so dainty.
nice, very pretty
roughbarked said:
Fairies in the garden?
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
Fairies in the garden?
Throws hands in air. Pesky twining violets.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
Fairies in the garden?
Throws hands in air. Pesky twining violets.
roughbarked said:
Is that a fairy’s apron out of focus there? Must be a wet bit of ground if it is.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
Fairies in the garden?
Ah, I see PF had a similar thought. The orchid is a spider of some sort? I haven’t got my orchid brain turned on at the moment.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:Fairies in the garden?
Throws hands in air. Pesky twining violets.
Nice.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Is that a fairy’s apron out of focus there? Must be a wet bit of ground if it is.
You’d never think it was wet 99.9% of the time.
Slender violet, Hybanthus monopetalus.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
Fairies in the garden?
Ah, I see PF had a similar thought. The orchid is a spider of some sort? I haven’t got my orchid brain turned on at the moment.
Caladenia carnea? Pink fingers.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Throws hands in air. Pesky twining violets.
Nice.
Local country used to be slathered with this stuff. Aboriginal food. Most of it is ploughed land now.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:Fairies in the garden?
Ah, I see PF had a similar thought. The orchid is a spider of some sort? I haven’t got my orchid brain turned on at the moment.
Caladenia carnea? Pink fingers.
Mm, too early for our pink fingers yet. I’ve ID two types of pink fingers at our block. They come out at different times. C. carnea and C. congesta. I probably need to seriously sort out my photos. While I was working I was managing to keep plant lists and stuff, but the photos are not sorted.
Hmm, looking at my notes, I really should make a day next week to go and check on the gnat orchids too (Acianthus). And I’ve noted helmet orchids (Corybas) in August previously too. I think the dry July might make things a bit later this year though.
buffy said:
Hmm, looking at my notes, I really should make a day next week to go and check on the gnat orchids too (Acianthus). And I’ve noted helmet orchids (Corybas) in August previously too. I think the dry July might make things a bit later this year though.
Wow. This thread started 15/10/2017. Longest running thread ever.
mollwollfumble said:
buffy said:
Hmm, looking at my notes, I really should make a day next week to go and check on the gnat orchids too (Acianthus). And I’ve noted helmet orchids (Corybas) in August previously too. I think the dry July might make things a bit later this year though.
Wow. This thread started 15/10/2017. Longest running thread ever.
sigh
The goodnight thread was started on:
16/01/2008 23:43:35
From: The Pr0nLr0d
:)
sibeen said:
mollwollfumble said:
buffy said:
Hmm, looking at my notes, I really should make a day next week to go and check on the gnat orchids too (Acianthus). And I’ve noted helmet orchids (Corybas) in August previously too. I think the dry July might make things a bit later this year though.
Wow. This thread started 15/10/2017. Longest running thread ever.
sigh
The goodnight thread was started on:
16/01/2008 23:43:35
From: The Pr0nLr0d:)
OK, but Goodnight thread is accessible at top of screen.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
Nice.
Local country used to be slathered with this stuff. Aboriginal food. Most of it is ploughed land now.
We have a similar orchid here in the west, different species C. latifolia, commonly known as Pink Fairies.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Ah, I see PF had a similar thought. The orchid is a spider of some sort? I haven’t got my orchid brain turned on at the moment.
Caladenia carnea? Pink fingers.
Mm, too early for our pink fingers yet. I’ve ID two types of pink fingers at our block. They come out at different times. C. carnea and C. congesta. I probably need to seriously sort out my photos. While I was working I was managing to keep plant lists and stuff, but the photos are not sorted.
You are not the only one who has unsorted photos. A good job for a rainy day.
mollwollfumble said:
sibeen said:
mollwollfumble said:Wow. This thread started 15/10/2017. Longest running thread ever.
sigh
The goodnight thread was started on:
16/01/2008 23:43:35
From: The Pr0nLr0d:)
OK, but Goodnight thread is accessible at top of screen.
So is any thread bookmarked.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:Nice.
Local country used to be slathered with this stuff. Aboriginal food. Most of it is ploughed land now.
We have a similar orchid here in the west, different species C. latifolia, commonly known as Pink Fairies.
You do and isn’t there a blue fairy as well? Taken in Kings Park when I was last there in 1982.
Yes they are all Caladenia carnea. There is one C. alba. Didn’t see any C. caerula on this walk but it is present in the area.
Pterostylis mutica. There were also P. nana, lots of.
Spreading Gardenia.
All this was found in the location of a gravel quarry where most of these end up mixed with ccement to make concrete or as road base and etc.
and let’s fix those flowers laying down.
Another type of daffodil is almost open (Dick Wilden, he is a double daff)
And I’ve got a Romanesco broccoli head forming up. I reckon it counts as a flaar.
buffy said:
And I’ve got a Romanesco broccoli head forming up. I reckon it counts as a flaar.
Nice and fractal-esque
Ian said:
buffy said:And I’ve got a Romanesco broccoli head forming up. I reckon it counts as a flaar.
Nice and fractal-esque
I always think of them as my fractal veggies. They are beautiful things. And taste good too.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:Local country used to be slathered with this stuff. Aboriginal food. Most of it is ploughed land now.
We have a similar orchid here in the west, different species C. latifolia, commonly known as Pink Fairies.
You do and isn’t there a blue fairy as well? Taken in Kings Park when I was last there in 1982.
Good photo. Caladenia latifolia is highly variable, especially regarding coloration, locally pure whites also occur. They will hybridise too, commonly with C. flava and large compact colonies of these can also be found.
More daffodils – Dick Wilden.
Plum blossom just bursting.
And I think this is Viburnum burkwoodii. I grew a cutting from a bush in the Casterton garden before I sold the place. It’s a straggly bugger, but the perfume is lovely.
The wisteria announced the beginning of Spring here a couple of days ago…
buffy said:
More daffodils – Dick Wilden.
Plum blossom just bursting.
And I think this is Viburnum burkwoodii. I grew a cutting from a bush in the Casterton garden before I sold the place. It’s a straggly bugger, but the perfume is lovely.
Hello Dick and welcome to the forum.
fsm said:
The wisteria announced the beginning of Spring here a couple of days ago…
A fine display of spring wisteria always gladdens the heart.
Cymek said:
Keeps flipping the image when I upload from my phone
Cymek said:
Lovely blossoms.
Bubblecar said:
Cymek said:
Lovely blossoms.
There are some roadside plums out already here, but you appear to be a week or two ahead of us in the blossom Cymek.
fsm said:
The wisteria announced the beginning of Spring here a couple of days ago…
Beautiful pictures. I’ve never grown wisteria. Got a large bit of fence covered with Hardenbergia, which seems to be constantly in flower. I recall one of them doing a huge burst of flower years ago and then promptly dying off.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Cymek said:
Lovely blossoms.
There are some roadside plums out already here, but you appear to be a week or two ahead of us in the blossom Cymek.
It’s a pixie peach tree, it does look lovely
garvytenyarta just outside door here, boasting an impressive pollinator, had to tie it up to nearby tree because kept trying to strangle passers by
transition said:
garvytenyarta just outside door here, boasting an impressive pollinator, had to tie it up to nearby tree because kept trying to strangle passers by
A bold bloom indeed, looks prehistoric.
Cymek said:
Cymek said:
Keeps flipping the image when I upload from my phone
Wonders if you have the settings on “Landscape.”
PermeateFree said:
Cymek said:
Cymek said:
Keeps flipping the image when I upload from my phone
Wonders if you have the settings on “Landscape.”
I’m not sure, pretty sure I took it as a portrait photo.
I used my phone and when I upload onto here its rotates it
This is it at night, I rotated it and uploaded via a PC
Cymek said:
PermeateFree said:
Cymek said:Keeps flipping the image when I upload from my phone
Wonders if you have the settings on “Landscape.”
I’m not sure, pretty sure I took it as a portrait photo.
I used my phone and when I upload onto here its rotates it
No, check the settings on your phone.
Cymek said:
Cymek said:
Keeps flipping the image when I upload from my phone
You have to save it to your computer first.
Plum blossoms.
roughbarked said:
![]()
Plum blossoms.
Full of hope and passion for being, if somewhat simple-minded.
Give it a couple more years and this will be a nice drift of daffodils, I think.
Ice follies:
And lots of soldier boys (Lachanalia). They don’t stand up very straight though.
buffy said:
Give it a couple more years and this will be a nice drift of daffodils, I think.
Ice follies:
And lots of soldier boys (Lachanalia). They don’t stand up very straight though.
nice, don’t think seen latter before
transition said:
buffy said:
Give it a couple more years and this will be a nice drift of daffodils, I think.
Ice follies:
And lots of soldier boys (Lachanalia). They don’t stand up very straight though.
nice, don’t think seen latter before
My great aunts had them. I bought some bulbs, I’d lost the family ones. I reckon the family ones were a finer, more delicate version.
transition said:
Nice.
Do you have any information about it?
transition said:
Tiny orchid!
Might be Caladenia dilatata? Which is listed as endangered in SA.
https://bie.ala.org.au/species/ALA_Caladenia_dilatata_s_s
Some refs say it’s in Vic and Tas. But the ALA map has it in SA.
buffy said:
Might be Caladenia dilatata? Which is listed as endangered in SA.https://bie.ala.org.au/species/ALA_Caladenia_dilatata_s_s
Some refs say it’s in Vic and Tas. But the ALA map has it in SA.
Good one buffy. It has been reclassified in WA and Caladenia dilatata as such does not occur in WA.
Kate’s daffodils. And a tulip.
buffy said:
Kate’s daffodils. And a tulip.
Daffs of diverse detail.
buffy said:
Kate’s daffodils. And a tulip.
Very nice.
buffy said:
Kate’s daffodils. And a tulip.
Noice. Very noice.
The first of this years waratahs just starting to bloom today.
The first of this years waratahs just starting to bloom today.
Wow, two posts for the price of one!
fsm said:
Wow, two posts for the price of one!
But such beautiful flaars…they deserve to multiply.
:)
fsm said:
The first of this years waratahs just starting to bloom today.
really nice
There is a really striking red Corea out in the Penshurst Gardens/my front yard at the moment. Bruna made sure she was in the frame for scale.
roughbarked said:
nice
Diuris maculata amongst Micromyrtus ciliata.
roughbarked said:
![]()
Diuris maculata amongst Micromyrtus ciliata.
The weather looks good but I’d like a efresher of rain during the forecast dry weeks to keep these orchids making flowers longer.
https://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2020-08-27/bom-spring-outlook-suggests-dry-then-wet-for-the-east/12597386
A couple more daffodils have sprung. I think this one is Avalon, the flowers will fade to a much lighter colour over the next few days:
…..
And this is the first flower on a Silver chimes. They are multiheaded.
For PF…the Comesperma is just starting. I only saw one bit. But I didn’t walk far today. I was clearing bracken around the shed and along the front fence.
buffy said:
For PF…the Comesperma is just starting. I only saw one bit. But I didn’t walk far today. I was clearing bracken around the shed and along the front fence.
:)
The major identification feature for these plants is the shape of the seed capsule. I collected most of the WA species and corrected a couple of misconceptions, so have a soft spot for these plants.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
For PF…the Comesperma is just starting. I only saw one bit. But I didn’t walk far today. I was clearing bracken around the shed and along the front fence.
:)
The major identification feature for these plants is the shape of the seed capsule. I collected most of the WA species and corrected a couple of misconceptions, so have a soft spot for these plants.
We only really have one Comesperma here, don’t we? It’s pretty unmistakeable. And absolutely gorgeous. When I was working I would sometimes pick a piece with its bracken frond friend and put it in a vase on the counter at the practice. The oldies loved to see something they’d known since they were little and it always provided conversation.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
For PF…the Comesperma is just starting. I only saw one bit. But I didn’t walk far today. I was clearing bracken around the shed and along the front fence.
:)
The major identification feature for these plants is the shape of the seed capsule. I collected most of the WA species and corrected a couple of misconceptions, so have a soft spot for these plants.
We only really have one Comesperma here, don’t we? It’s pretty unmistakeable. And absolutely gorgeous. When I was working I would sometimes pick a piece with its bracken frond friend and put it in a vase on the counter at the practice. The oldies loved to see something they’d known since they were little and it always provided conversation.
There are apparently 7 spp. in Victoria. You can key them out here:
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/key/2496
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said::)
The major identification feature for these plants is the shape of the seed capsule. I collected most of the WA species and corrected a couple of misconceptions, so have a soft spot for these plants.
We only really have one Comesperma here, don’t we? It’s pretty unmistakeable. And absolutely gorgeous. When I was working I would sometimes pick a piece with its bracken frond friend and put it in a vase on the counter at the practice. The oldies loved to see something they’d known since they were little and it always provided conversation.
There are apparently 7 spp. in Victoria. You can key them out here:
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/key/2496
Oh, really? I’d always just assumed there was only one because there is only C. volubile as a creeper in my copy of Corrick and Fuhrer.
Ta, I’ll have a look.
Looks like the sunshine has brought out the hoverflies.
buffy said:
Looks like the sunshine has brought out the hoverflies.
In the background there…….that grass looks like it might be up by about 2 or 3 mil, yeah.
buffy said:
Looks like the sunshine has brought out the hoverflies.
Tamb said:
buffy said:
Looks like the sunshine has brought out the hoverflies.
Not quite Spring here yet. Only new blooms are on the Bauhinia![]()
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Looks like the sunshine has brought out the hoverflies.
In the background there…….that grass looks like it might be up by about 2 or 3 mil, yeah.
Yes, it’s about due for mowing…
Tamb said:
Tamb said:
buffy said:
Looks like the sunshine has brought out the hoverflies.
Not quite Spring here yet. Only new blooms are on the Bauhinia![]()
I suspect the circle is a small raindrop on the lens.
It’s an orb! Ghosts in your garden!
few from walk, not all flowers, pleasant out there
transition said:
few from walk, not all flowers, pleasant out there
![]()
Wish I had your camera.
transition said:
That has got insane prickles.
buffy said:
transition said:
That has got insane prickles.
crown or thorns, Euphorbia Milii maybe
not sure
rb probably know
I’ve been sorting out my plant/flower/orchid photos from the bush block. I knew I had this one somewhere. This was just a magic carpet to find. I think it’s from the mid 2000s. Many photos were moved from one computer to this one and acquired the date of 2012. There is a big patch not unlike this one right near the shed at the block, which is one reason I am clearing the bracken out a bit. I wouldn’t mind a nice carpet of violets right there.
buffy said:
I’ve been sorting out my plant/flower/orchid photos from the bush block. I knew I had this one somewhere. This was just a magic carpet to find. I think it’s from the mid 2000s. Many photos were moved from one computer to this one and acquired the date of 2012. There is a big patch not unlike this one right near the shed at the block, which is one reason I am clearing the bracken out a bit. I wouldn’t mind a nice carpet of violets right there.
nice
Doing photos for today’s Letter to Mum. So you lot can see some of them too.
Daffodils continue to cycle through: Avalon, Geranium, and one I haven’t worked out the name of. Geranium is very “perfumed”. It’s not allowed inside as a cut flower.
…..
…..
The plum blossom has been out for a week or so, and there are fruit setting.
And the Corella pear is beginning to blossom.
I can’t remember who it was, but we were discussing Hardenbergia here the other day. This is my HUGE expanse of purple.
Eriostemon also coming out:
And the native frangipani is getting itself ready.
buffy said:
The plum blossom has been out for a week or so, and there are fruit setting.
And the Corella pear is beginning to blossom.
So what are the best smelling?
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
The plum blossom has been out for a week or so, and there are fruit setting.
And the Corella pear is beginning to blossom.
So what are the best smelling?
Plum blossom is stinkiest.
Best smelling of the plants I’ve mentioned this morning is the native frangipani (Hymenosporum flavum). It perfumes for several houseblocks for about 3 months each year. It is definitely perfumed, not smelly.
Another letter to be written. Another wander around the garden for some photos.
White ranunculus:
Some of the “Avalon” daffodils (again)
And the “Avalon” daffs under the citrus trees. I chose this daffodil because of it’s very pale citrusy colour. I like the contrast with the low hanging oranges. I’ll pick higher oranges to use until the daffs finish.
The freesias have started:
…………….
And the white lillies have a particular meaning for us, even though they are a weed around here. I admit they are stunning. I might bring few inside tomorrow, but if I recall correctly they have rather a strong perfume, so they might be relegated to a back room.
buffy said:
And the white lillies have a particular meaning for us, even though they are a weed around here. I admit they are stunning. I might bring few inside tomorrow, but if I recall correctly they have rather a strong perfume, so they might be relegated to a back room.
Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: yet I say unto you, that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
buffy said:
The freesias have started:
…………….
always reminds me of grandma’a and grandpa’s, if I smell freesias anywhere I get a vision of their back yard
transition said:
buffy said:
The freesias have started:
…………….
always reminds me of grandma’a and grandpa’s, if I smell freesias anywhere I get a vision of their back yard
Freesia
There are many freesia cultivars, but the Freesia alba x leichtlinii hybrid is the one that has established itself densely in natural habitats, where it spreads by seed, offsets, and cormels on the stems. Flowers vary from white through cream to light yellow, sometimes with purple tinges.
Freesia is loved for its perfume, so its corms are a favourite subject of exchange between well-meaning gardeners who have no idea of its capacity to escape. Freesia is a serious weed of urban bushland, coastal heath, and woodland and granite areas from Gingin to Israelite Bay.
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/weeds/bulbs-become-bushland-weeds?page=0%2C1
PermeateFree said:
transition said:
buffy said:
The freesias have started:
…………….
always reminds me of grandma’a and grandpa’s, if I smell freesias anywhere I get a vision of their back yard
Freesia
There are many freesia cultivars, but the Freesia alba x leichtlinii hybrid is the one that has established itself densely in natural habitats, where it spreads by seed, offsets, and cormels on the stems. Flowers vary from white through cream to light yellow, sometimes with purple tinges.Freesia is loved for its perfume, so its corms are a favourite subject of exchange between well-meaning gardeners who have no idea of its capacity to escape. Freesia is a serious weed of urban bushland, coastal heath, and woodland and granite areas from Gingin to Israelite Bay.
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/weeds/bulbs-become-bushland-weeds?page=0%2C1
Was way out in the middle of nowhere today and saw a swag of Freesias in the National Park. This is dry as a dead dingoes donger country.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
transition said:always reminds me of grandma’a and grandpa’s, if I smell freesias anywhere I get a vision of their back yard
Freesia
There are many freesia cultivars, but the Freesia alba x leichtlinii hybrid is the one that has established itself densely in natural habitats, where it spreads by seed, offsets, and cormels on the stems. Flowers vary from white through cream to light yellow, sometimes with purple tinges.Freesia is loved for its perfume, so its corms are a favourite subject of exchange between well-meaning gardeners who have no idea of its capacity to escape. Freesia is a serious weed of urban bushland, coastal heath, and woodland and granite areas from Gingin to Israelite Bay.
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/weeds/bulbs-become-bushland-weeds?page=0%2C1
Was way out in the middle of nowhere today and saw a swag of Freesias in the National Park. This is dry as a dead dingoes donger country.
Being a bulb, they can wait until it rains, something else that makes them weedy.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:Freesia
There are many freesia cultivars, but the Freesia alba x leichtlinii hybrid is the one that has established itself densely in natural habitats, where it spreads by seed, offsets, and cormels on the stems. Flowers vary from white through cream to light yellow, sometimes with purple tinges.Freesia is loved for its perfume, so its corms are a favourite subject of exchange between well-meaning gardeners who have no idea of its capacity to escape. Freesia is a serious weed of urban bushland, coastal heath, and woodland and granite areas from Gingin to Israelite Bay.
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/weeds/bulbs-become-bushland-weeds?page=0%2C1
Was way out in the middle of nowhere today and saw a swag of Freesias in the National Park. This is dry as a dead dingoes donger country.
Being a bulb, they can wait until it rains, something else that makes them weedy.
Yep. They’ll take off as a weed down a gravel driveway.
buffy said:
And the white lillies have a particular meaning for us, even though they are a weed around here. I admit they are stunning. I might bring few inside tomorrow, but if I recall correctly they have rather a strong perfume, so they might be relegated to a back room.
They grow wild around here… we call them death lillies.
Arts said:
buffy said:
And the white lillies have a particular meaning for us, even though they are a weed around here. I admit they are stunning. I might bring few inside tomorrow, but if I recall correctly they have rather a strong perfume, so they might be relegated to a back room.
They grow wild around here… we call them death lillies.
I call them funeral lilies.
A rare white form of Hybanthe.
Where I was today on an old friend’s farm. Her husband suicided after their first son hit a tractor while driving to work one morning. She now lives out there by herself.
The place will be sold soon and some immigrant farmer will push it all down and plant bloody grapes or something over the hill.
I wish I had the million bucks it would cost to buy the place with. It is absolutely filthy with orchids. Not as many pinks as blue caladenias.
roughbarked said:
Where I was today on an old friend’s farm. Her husband suicided after their first son hit a tractor while driving to work one morning. She now lives out there by herself.
The place will be sold soon and some immigrant farmer will push it all down and plant bloody grapes or something over the hill.
![]()
I wish I had the million bucks it would cost to buy the place with. It is absolutely filthy with orchids. Not as many pinks as blue caladenias.
What are the yellow ones in the middle, buttercup?
Peak Warming Man said:
roughbarked said:
Where I was today on an old friend’s farm. Her husband suicided after their first son hit a tractor while driving to work one morning. She now lives out there by herself.
The place will be sold soon and some immigrant farmer will push it all down and plant bloody grapes or something over the hill.
![]()
I wish I had the million bucks it would cost to buy the place with. It is absolutely filthy with orchids. Not as many pinks as blue caladenias.
What are the yellow ones in the middle, buttercup?
Diuris maculata, Leopard orchids
roughbarked said:
Peak Warming Man said:
roughbarked said:
Where I was today on an old friend’s farm. Her husband suicided after their first son hit a tractor while driving to work one morning. She now lives out there by herself.
The place will be sold soon and some immigrant farmer will push it all down and plant bloody grapes or something over the hill.
![]()
I wish I had the million bucks it would cost to buy the place with. It is absolutely filthy with orchids. Not as many pinks as blue caladenias.
What are the yellow ones in the middle, buttercup?
Diuris maculata, Leopard orchids
oooohhh
The Diuris maculata is known as the leopard orchid because on the backs they are yellow and brown.
roughbarked said:
![]()
The Diuris maculata is known as the leopard orchid because on the backs they are yellow and brown.
They split D. maculata off, which has inherited a different common name. They both seem to occur in your area, so if you want to check, the following links should clarify the situation.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~pardina
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~maculata
As is the case with weeds, they sneak into what are otherwise weed free areas.
There is a Rusty Sppider Grevillea floribunda amongst this wattle which appears to possibly be Acacia decora.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
The Diuris maculata is known as the leopard orchid because on the backs they are yellow and brown.
They split D. maculata off, which has inherited a different common name. They both seem to occur in your area, so if you want to check, the following links should clarify the situation.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~pardina
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~maculata
thanks tor that.
PermeateFree said:
transition said:
buffy said:
The freesias have started:
…………….
always reminds me of grandma’a and grandpa’s, if I smell freesias anywhere I get a vision of their back yard
Freesia
There are many freesia cultivars, but the Freesia alba x leichtlinii hybrid is the one that has established itself densely in natural habitats, where it spreads by seed, offsets, and cormels on the stems. Flowers vary from white through cream to light yellow, sometimes with purple tinges.Freesia is loved for its perfume, so its corms are a favourite subject of exchange between well-meaning gardeners who have no idea of its capacity to escape. Freesia is a serious weed of urban bushland, coastal heath, and woodland and granite areas from Gingin to Israelite Bay.
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/weeds/bulbs-become-bushland-weeds?page=0%2C1
Freesias here are in pots or in garden beds that can be mowed all around. Like the berry canes.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:Freesia
There are many freesia cultivars, but the Freesia alba x leichtlinii hybrid is the one that has established itself densely in natural habitats, where it spreads by seed, offsets, and cormels on the stems. Flowers vary from white through cream to light yellow, sometimes with purple tinges.Freesia is loved for its perfume, so its corms are a favourite subject of exchange between well-meaning gardeners who have no idea of its capacity to escape. Freesia is a serious weed of urban bushland, coastal heath, and woodland and granite areas from Gingin to Israelite Bay.
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/weeds/bulbs-become-bushland-weeds?page=0%2C1
Was way out in the middle of nowhere today and saw a swag of Freesias in the National Park. This is dry as a dead dingoes donger country.
Being a bulb, they can wait until it rains, something else that makes them weedy.
There are all sorts of South African escapee bulbs in roadside drifts around this area.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
transition said:always reminds me of grandma’a and grandpa’s, if I smell freesias anywhere I get a vision of their back yard
Freesia
There are many freesia cultivars, but the Freesia alba x leichtlinii hybrid is the one that has established itself densely in natural habitats, where it spreads by seed, offsets, and cormels on the stems. Flowers vary from white through cream to light yellow, sometimes with purple tinges.Freesia is loved for its perfume, so its corms are a favourite subject of exchange between well-meaning gardeners who have no idea of its capacity to escape. Freesia is a serious weed of urban bushland, coastal heath, and woodland and granite areas from Gingin to Israelite Bay.
https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/weeds/bulbs-become-bushland-weeds?page=0%2C1
Freesias here are in pots or in garden beds that can be mowed all around. Like the berry canes.
A smart move but they still jump out of pots and appear down the road.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:Was way out in the middle of nowhere today and saw a swag of Freesias in the National Park. This is dry as a dead dingoes donger country.
Being a bulb, they can wait until it rains, something else that makes them weedy.
There are all sorts of South African escapee bulbs in roadside drifts around this area.
I’ve seen them. Victoria and SA and WA are full of them.
roughbarked said:
Arts said:
buffy said:
And the white lillies have a particular meaning for us, even though they are a weed around here. I admit they are stunning. I might bring few inside tomorrow, but if I recall correctly they have rather a strong perfume, so they might be relegated to a back room.
They grow wild around here… we call them death lillies.
I call them funeral lilies.
We call them Matthew lillies, from some British drama we watched a million years ago. Don’t even know what it was now. But they are also the lillies we threw into our friend’s grave all those years ago (9, to be exact, in about a month’s time). They were gathered from the paddocks and there was a big pile of them for everyone to throw in on top of the coffin.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Arts said:They grow wild around here… we call them death lillies.
I call them funeral lilies.
We call them Matthew lillies, from some British drama we watched a million years ago. Don’t even know what it was now. But they are also the lillies we threw into our friend’s grave all those years ago (9, to be exact, in about a month’s time). They were gathered from the paddocks and there was a big pile of them for everyone to throw in on top of the coffin.
Arum lily is the correct name.
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
monkey skipper said:
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
Why pick them? That’s why you miss them now.
monkey skipper said:
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
Not sure if that is legal, but we have plenty here now. Council did a hazard reduction burn in some of the bushland nearby with these plants (and some others) regenerating very nicely. Native flower-picking by a few has been an issue in recent weeks, with a couple of the rarer plants being stripped bare :(
monkey skipper said:
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
Not sure if that is legal, but we have plenty here now. Council did a hazard reduction burn in some of the bushland nearby with these plants (and some others) regenerating very nicely. Native flower-picking by a few has been an issue in recent weeks, with a couple of the rarer plants being stripped bare :(
Speedy said:
monkey skipper said:
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
Not sure if that is legal, but we have plenty here now. Council did a hazard reduction burn in some of the bushland nearby with these plants (and some others) regenerating very nicely. Native flower-picking by a few has been an issue in recent weeks, with a couple of the rarer plants being stripped bare :(
They were growing on our beach house block.
Speedy said:
monkey skipper said:
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
Not sure if that is legal, but we have plenty here now. Council did a hazard reduction burn in some of the bushland nearby with these plants (and some others) regenerating very nicely. Native flower-picking by a few has been an issue in recent weeks, with a couple of the rarer plants being stripped bare :(
Some humans.. :(
Saw a couple of girls with a huge bunch of blue daisies. I was in someone else’s car and Mrs rb said don’t yell at them. I said, I’m laughing because those flowers will all turn to burrs. They won’t be so pretty then.
Speedy said:
monkey skipper said:
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
Not sure if that is legal, but we have plenty here now. Council did a hazard reduction burn in some of the bushland nearby with these plants (and some others) regenerating very nicely. Native flower-picking by a few has been an issue in recent weeks, with a couple of the rarer plants being stripped bare :(
The WA species only appear after a fire has passed through and only lasts for that growing season, disappearing until the next fire, but when they do they occur in prolific numbers.
monkey skipper said:
Speedy said:
monkey skipper said:
I miss picking the flannel flowers that grow wild across the South Coast of NSW.
Not sure if that is legal, but we have plenty here now. Council did a hazard reduction burn in some of the bushland nearby with these plants (and some others) regenerating very nicely. Native flower-picking by a few has been an issue in recent weeks, with a couple of the rarer plants being stripped bare :(
They were growing on our beach house block.
Nice :)
We had some growing here when we bought the house, but Mr Speedy thought they were weeds and pulled them all out.
Speedy said:
monkey skipper said:
Speedy said:Not sure if that is legal, but we have plenty here now. Council did a hazard reduction burn in some of the bushland nearby with these plants (and some others) regenerating very nicely. Native flower-picking by a few has been an issue in recent weeks, with a couple of the rarer plants being stripped bare :(
They were growing on our beach house block.
Nice :)
We had some growing here when we bought the house, but Mr Speedy thought they were weeds and pulled them all out.
How awkward for him , when you pointed this out to him. By beachouse … I mean a shack on a block but as kids it was a great place to visit and not too far away from the beach …crossed 2 roads.
monkey skipper said:
Speedy said:
monkey skipper said:They were growing on our beach house block.
Nice :)
We had some growing here when we bought the house, but Mr Speedy thought they were weeds and pulled them all out.
How awkward for him , when you pointed this out to him. By beachouse … I mean a shack on a block but as kids it was a great place to visit and not too far away from the beach …crossed 2 roads.
I didn’t realise what they were either until a few years later which is why we’re still together :)
Shacks near the beach are the best. Recently I was looking at street-view images of Patonga, searching for a house where I stayed a few times with a friend and her family when we were little. It was blonde brick, so not nearly as charming as most of the village.
Speedy said:
monkey skipper said:
Speedy said:Nice :)
We had some growing here when we bought the house, but Mr Speedy thought they were weeds and pulled them all out.
How awkward for him , when you pointed this out to him. By beachouse … I mean a shack on a block but as kids it was a great place to visit and not too far away from the beach …crossed 2 roads.
I didn’t realise what they were either until a few years later which is why we’re still together :)
Shacks near the beach are the best. Recently I was looking at street-view images of Patonga, searching for a house where I stayed a few times with a friend and her family when we were little. It was blonde brick, so not nearly as charming as most of the village.
I have been to Patonga a couple of times I can vaguely remember the trips as I was quite young. It was a really popular weekend holiday during my mother’s childhood.
fsm said:
E. ficifolia.
roughbarked said:
fsm said:
E. ficifolia.
which is now known as Corymbia ficifolia.
fsm said:
Nice one!
:)
White Anemones and “Avalon”. A bit soft focussed. I left the flash turned off to get the better colour.
transition said:
Maireana schistocarpa?
roughbarked said:
transition said:
Maireana schistocarpa?
or M. trichoptera?
transition said:
Here is my guess…
http://flora.sa.gov.au/cgi-bin/speciesfacts_display.cgi?genus=Maireana&species=erioclada
But I don’t know these plants. I probably should get to know them, some are in Victoria.
buffy said:
transition said:
Here is my guess…
http://flora.sa.gov.au/cgi-bin/speciesfacts_display.cgi?genus=Maireana&species=erioclada
But I don’t know these plants. I probably should get to know them, some are in Victoria.
There are quite a number. I have quite a few in my area. However, things may different in transition’s vale.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
transition said:
Here is my guess…
http://flora.sa.gov.au/cgi-bin/speciesfacts_display.cgi?genus=Maireana&species=erioclada
But I don’t know these plants. I probably should get to know them, some are in Victoria.
There are quite a number. I have quite a few in my area. However, things may different in transition’s vale.
M. erioclada is mostly south westerly from here so, may well be it. Though the others I mentioned are more widespread if patchy in distribution.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Here is my guess…
http://flora.sa.gov.au/cgi-bin/speciesfacts_display.cgi?genus=Maireana&species=erioclada
But I don’t know these plants. I probably should get to know them, some are in Victoria.
There are quite a number. I have quite a few in my area. However, things may different in transition’s vale.
M. erioclada is mostly south westerly from here so, may well be it. Though the others I mentioned are more widespread if patchy in distribution.
Well that is why I went for the SA stuff. Transition is in SA.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:There are quite a number. I have quite a few in my area. However, things may different in transition’s vale.
M. erioclada is mostly south westerly from here so, may well be it. Though the others I mentioned are more widespread if patchy in distribution.
Well that is why I went for the SA stuff. Transition is in SA.
Yes.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:M. erioclada is mostly south westerly from here so, may well be it. Though the others I mentioned are more widespread if patchy in distribution.
Well that is why I went for the SA stuff. Transition is in SA.
Yes.
This is a photo of M. triptera I’ve taken.
transition said:
Maireana integra
http://flora.sa.gov.au/cgi-bin/speciesfacts_display.cgi?genus=Maireana&species=integra
transition said:
Maireana pentatropis Erect Mallee Bluebush
Check the fruit to see if it has a single slit from the outer circumference.
PermeateFree said:
transition said:
Maireana pentatropis Erect Mallee Bluebush
Check the fruit to see if it has a single slit from the outer circumference.
had a wander along back of the farm, edge of the reserve, plenty out there, pretty things, this time of year anyway
more looking at birds I was, hoping they might come up to me a sit for a picture, but none did, if i’d had my compass I maybe would have ventured further into the scrub, a grown man could get lost out there, how embarrassing would that be
transition said:
PermeateFree said:
transition said:
Maireana pentatropis Erect Mallee Bluebush
Check the fruit to see if it has a single slit from the outer circumference.
had a wander along back of the farm, edge of the reserve, plenty out there, pretty things, this time of year anyway
more looking at birds I was, hoping they might come up to me a sit for a picture, but none did, if i’d had my compass I maybe would have ventured further into the scrub, a grown man could get lost out there, how embarrassing would that be
Maireana erioclada – Rosy Bluebush is very similar to M. pentatropis, but has less hairy leaves.
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2011/03/maireana-erioclada-rosy-bluebush.html
Got lots of freesias out. I have rather old fashioned ones.
And the South African escapes are out too. I think I may have acquired these from roadsides over the years. They are Sparaxis as far as I can work out.
………
And the bluebells are out. It’s taken a lot of years to get this mass this big. That is miniature irises front right and some Christmas lilies poking up against the tree trunk.
Got pink bluebells too. And I’m sure I had white ones. Don’t know where they are now. I’ll have to think about it. There were some in Casterton. Perhaps the ones here have died out. The hoverflies seem to be enjoying my bulb gardens.
buffy said:
And the South African escapes are out too. I think I may have acquired these from roadsides over the years. They are Sparaxis as far as I can work out.
………
My mother used to grow lots of them with the freesias.
I looked at my daffs yesterday. The wind has hit them hard. They are ratty.
buffy said:
And the South African escapes are out too. I think I may have acquired these from roadsides over the years. They are Sparaxis as far as I can work out.
………
Sparaxis yes.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
And the South African escapes are out too. I think I may have acquired these from roadsides over the years. They are Sparaxis as far as I can work out.
………
My mother used to grow lots of them with the freesias.
I looked at my daffs yesterday. The wind has hit them hard. They are ratty.
That pink one seems to have a different colour depending on the soil. I’m certain it was a rather hot pink where I dug it up from. Here it is more purply.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
And the South African escapes are out too. I think I may have acquired these from roadsides over the years. They are Sparaxis as far as I can work out.
………
Sparaxis yes.
Ta.
sarahs mum said:
sarahs mum said:
Ragged windblown dog…ragged windblown daffs!
Roll over…
Good boy!!
fsm said:
Roll over…
Good boy!!
:)
fsm said:
Roll over…
Good boy!!
He does like to roll over and he does lit to chase his tails. Clockwise and anti clockwise.
3rd of October for the mobile groomers.
sarahs mum said:
fsm said:
Roll over…
Good boy!!
He does like to roll over and he does lit to chase his tails. Clockwise and anti clockwise.
3rd of October for the mobile groomers.
Afternoon’s effort turned these purdie flaars into a stump
Ian said:
![]()
Afternoon’s effort turned these purdie flaars into a stump
I was going to ask if you picked a big bunch…then I remembered how the ants love Grevillea flowers.
Ian said:
![]()
Afternoon’s effort turned these purdie flaars into a stump
Well done.
buffy said:
Ian said:
![]()
Afternoon’s effort turned these purdie flaars into a stump
I was going to ask if you picked a big bunch…then I remembered how the ants love Grevillea flowers.
I did pick some and bung em in a bucket.. put it on the dining room table, and got told very firmly to take it outside.
They’re not great as cut flowers.
Ian said:
![]()
Afternoon’s effort turned these purdie flaars into a stump
It did need a prune.
Ian said:
buffy said:
Ian said:
![]()
Afternoon’s effort turned these purdie flaars into a stump
I was going to ask if you picked a big bunch…then I remembered how the ants love Grevillea flowers.
I did pick some and bung em in a bucket.. put it on the dining room table, and got told very firmly to take it outside.
They’re not great as cut flowers.
No but they used to be good bird and bee food.
So it is Letter to Mum day again. Got Viburnum out. I grew this one from a cutting from a bush in Casterton. It’s still a baby. It’s shorter than me and has got 3 flowers on it. But it will be beautiful in a couple of years. This flower has a pleasant perfume.
There are buds on the redcurrants and the thornless loganberry canes
Oops.
………..
And the apple blossom is starting…Granny Smith and Red Delicious. The Jonathan branches haven’t budded yet.
…..
Sometimes the weeds are pretty. I’ve been thinking this was a blue version of scarlet pimpernel for years. I bothered to look it up…it’s got 4 petals and pimpernel has got 5. And apparently it’s speedwell (Veronica persica)
Quince blossom is out
buffy said:
Sometimes the weeds are pretty. I’ve been thinking this was a blue version of scarlet pimpernel for years. I bothered to look it up…it’s got 4 petals and pimpernel has got 5. And apparently it’s speedwell (Veronica persica)
Quince blossom is out
are pretty, top
quince, reminds me of jam and grandma’s
Iris time has struck. Auntie Annie’s first purple ones, and my first miniatures. The miniatures are a bit fickle, but it looks like it might be a flowering year this year.
……….
……….
I also cleaned and refilled the dishes of water in the backyard for the birds this morning. Some of the bees were a bit impatient for me to get that fresh water in there, woman!. They are working in the bluebells this morning. They crawl a long way into those flowers.
…………………..
And they aren’t the only insects happy to be playing in the blue.
We visited Cocoparra NP last week and I think we were there at just the right time of year. Some of these photos are not the right way around, but you get the idea. I’ve taken a liking to lichen lately, and I have plenty of it at home to admire, but it is beautifully abundant here in this national park.
Speedy said:
We visited Cocoparra NP last week and I think we were there at just the right time of year. Some of these photos are not the right way around, but you get the idea. I’ve taken a liking to lichen lately, and I have plenty of it at home to admire, but it is beautifully abundant here in this national park.
Ooh, I wonder what I’ll find down in our block today. Our flowers are October/November/December, so things should be starting.
buffy said:
Speedy said:
We visited Cocoparra NP last week and I think we were there at just the right time of year. Some of these photos are not the right way around, but you get the idea. I’ve taken a liking to lichen lately, and I have plenty of it at home to admire, but it is beautifully abundant here in this national park.
Ooh, I wonder what I’ll find down in our block today. Our flowers are October/November/December, so things should be starting.
Speedy, you were only 40km away from here. Could have dropped in for a cuppa.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Speedy said:
We visited Cocoparra NP last week and I think we were there at just the right time of year. Some of these photos are not the right way around, but you get the idea. I’ve taken a liking to lichen lately, and I have plenty of it at home to admire, but it is beautifully abundant here in this national park.
Ooh, I wonder what I’ll find down in our block today. Our flowers are October/November/December, so things should be starting.
Speedy, you were only 40km away from here. Could have dropped in for a cuppa.
Thanks rb. We’ll be back in the area again in a few of years probably without the complaining kids, so may just take you up on that offer then :)
And a selection of today’s flowers. I took a lot of dud photos. I will have to go back and concentrate harder. There are waxlip orchids and Diuris coming out.
For some reason I didn’t get one clear Diuris photo, which is annoying. The point and shoot camera in macro wanted to photograph grass leaves or bracken fronds.
………………………….
The violets in the shade (the first picture) are a different colour from the ones in the sun(second picture)
………………………………………
There are Microseris around, and twining fringe lilies.
…………………….
Chocolate lilies and milkmaids are starting, and there are lots of blue stars out. The colour of the blue stars is generally a bit disappointing in photos but this photo isn’t too bad.
……………
……………
In the yellow department we’ve also got Hibbertia and some Goodenias that seem to be around the front door of an ant nest. I didn’t see ants, but they must be there.
buffy said:
And a selection of today’s flowers. I took a lot of dud photos. I will have to go back and concentrate harder. There are waxlip orchids and Diuris coming out.
For some reason I didn’t get one clear Diuris photo, which is annoying. The point and shoot camera in macro wanted to photograph grass leaves or bracken fronds.
………………………….
Focus on something large like your hand, then press half way on the button (not fully), hold it there then position the camera the same distance from the flower, when hopefully it will also be in focus and the button can be pressed all the way to take the photo.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And a selection of today’s flowers. I took a lot of dud photos. I will have to go back and concentrate harder. There are waxlip orchids and Diuris coming out.
For some reason I didn’t get one clear Diuris photo, which is annoying. The point and shoot camera in macro wanted to photograph grass leaves or bracken fronds.
………………………….
Focus on something large like your hand, then press half way on the button (not fully), hold it there then position the camera the same distance from the flower, when hopefully it will also be in focus and the button can be pressed all the way to take the photo.
I thought I was lining things up, I used the half press, waited for it to focus, made sure what I wanted was inside the green square…and still I focussed on grass leaves. I’ve rechecked the instruction book, and I may have been doing the zoom bit wrongly. I previously gave up using the macro – I might just do that again and just use the normal zoom function.
Also got Pimelea, silky teatree and one of my favourites, Stackhousia coming out. All the flowers seem to be small this year. I thought the creamy candles were larger last time I photographed them.
………….
……….
Running postman starting, and just for you PF…yet more love creeper!
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And a selection of today’s flowers. I took a lot of dud photos. I will have to go back and concentrate harder. There are waxlip orchids and Diuris coming out.
For some reason I didn’t get one clear Diuris photo, which is annoying. The point and shoot camera in macro wanted to photograph grass leaves or bracken fronds.
………………………….
Focus on something large like your hand, then press half way on the button (not fully), hold it there then position the camera the same distance from the flower, when hopefully it will also be in focus and the button can be pressed all the way to take the photo.
I thought I was lining things up, I used the half press, waited for it to focus, made sure what I wanted was inside the green square…and still I focussed on grass leaves. I’ve rechecked the instruction book, and I may have been doing the zoom bit wrongly. I previously gave up using the macro – I might just do that again and just use the normal zoom function.
Unless the object that you want to photograph in macro is solid enough, the auto focus will have problems and rarely will you get a good photo. The other way is place your hand just behind and touching the flower, focus, then move your hand to take the photo.
I was also pleased to find a new patch of maidenhair fern that I didn’t know was there.
And not pleased to find a couple of Disa bracteata plants. I hadn’t seen any last year. I’m getting quite good at noticing them. I can’t say we’ve had a lot of them, but once I IDd them I keep a lookout. Which reminds me, I should check the area where I first found them some years ago. Today’s ones are now plastic bagged and in the rubbish.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:Focus on something large like your hand, then press half way on the button (not fully), hold it there then position the camera the same distance from the flower, when hopefully it will also be in focus and the button can be pressed all the way to take the photo.
I thought I was lining things up, I used the half press, waited for it to focus, made sure what I wanted was inside the green square…and still I focussed on grass leaves. I’ve rechecked the instruction book, and I may have been doing the zoom bit wrongly. I previously gave up using the macro – I might just do that again and just use the normal zoom function.
Unless the object that you want to photograph in macro is solid enough, the auto focus will have problems and rarely will you get a good photo. The other way is place your hand just behind and touching the flower, focus, then move your hand to take the photo.
Ah, that sounds reasonable.
buffy said:
I was also pleased to find a new patch of maidenhair fern that I didn’t know was there.
And not pleased to find a couple of Disa bracteata plants. I hadn’t seen any last year. I’m getting quite good at noticing them. I can’t say we’ve had a lot of them, but once I IDd them I keep a lookout. Which reminds me, I should check the area where I first found them some years ago. Today’s ones are now plastic bagged and in the rubbish.
Have you checked for spores on the rear of that fern, because I have doubts that it is.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
I was also pleased to find a new patch of maidenhair fern that I didn’t know was there.
And not pleased to find a couple of Disa bracteata plants. I hadn’t seen any last year. I’m getting quite good at noticing them. I can’t say we’ve had a lot of them, but once I IDd them I keep a lookout. Which reminds me, I should check the area where I first found them some years ago. Today’s ones are now plastic bagged and in the rubbish.
Have you checked for spores on the rear of that fern, because I have doubts that it is.
Might be necklace fern instead, you think? I reckon that’s possible.
Thanks for that fix on the fern PF. I called it maidenhair way back years ago, and never changed it in my head or in my notes. Fixed now.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
I was also pleased to find a new patch of maidenhair fern that I didn’t know was there.
And not pleased to find a couple of Disa bracteata plants. I hadn’t seen any last year. I’m getting quite good at noticing them. I can’t say we’ve had a lot of them, but once I IDd them I keep a lookout. Which reminds me, I should check the area where I first found them some years ago. Today’s ones are now plastic bagged and in the rubbish.
Have you checked for spores on the rear of that fern, because I have doubts that it is.
Might be necklace fern instead, you think? I reckon that’s possible.
Doesn’t look like a fern to me, but you would need to check for spores.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:Have you checked for spores on the rear of that fern, because I have doubts that it is.
Might be necklace fern instead, you think? I reckon that’s possible.
Doesn’t look like a fern to me, but you would need to check for spores.
Looks like a legume.
buffy said:
I thought I was lining things up, I used the half press, waited for it to focus, made sure what I wanted was inside the green square…and still I focussed on grass leaves. I’ve rechecked the instruction book, and I may have been doing the zoom bit wrongly. I previously gave up using the macro – I might just do that again and just use the normal zoom function.
You need to set your autofocus to a single point, not the green square. Then whatever is at the center of the frame will get focussed. Or use manual focus.
fsm said:
buffy said:I thought I was lining things up, I used the half press, waited for it to focus, made sure what I wanted was inside the green square…and still I focussed on grass leaves. I’ve rechecked the instruction book, and I may have been doing the zoom bit wrongly. I previously gave up using the macro – I might just do that again and just use the normal zoom function.
You need to set your autofocus to a single point, not the green square. Then whatever is at the center of the frame will get focussed. Or use manual focus.
I haven’t got manual focus. It’s a little Nikon Coolpix. It’s point, hold and shoot. I usually remember to make sure the flower is the closest thing to the camera, sometimes I don’t notice a piece of grass…
buffy said:
fsm said:
buffy said:I thought I was lining things up, I used the half press, waited for it to focus, made sure what I wanted was inside the green square…and still I focussed on grass leaves. I’ve rechecked the instruction book, and I may have been doing the zoom bit wrongly. I previously gave up using the macro – I might just do that again and just use the normal zoom function.
You need to set your autofocus to a single point, not the green square. Then whatever is at the center of the frame will get focussed. Or use manual focus.
I haven’t got manual focus. It’s a little Nikon Coolpix. It’s point, hold and shoot. I usually remember to make sure the flower is the closest thing to the camera, sometimes I don’t notice a piece of grass…
You should have manual focus mode. Look for a MF switch then focus by rotating a wheel or dial on the back of the camera. Or RTFM.
fsm said:
buffy said:I thought I was lining things up, I used the half press, waited for it to focus, made sure what I wanted was inside the green square…and still I focussed on grass leaves. I’ve rechecked the instruction book, and I may have been doing the zoom bit wrongly. I previously gave up using the macro – I might just do that again and just use the normal zoom function.
You need to set your autofocus to a single point, not the green square. Then whatever is at the center of the frame will get focussed. Or use manual focus.
I have my camera permanently set to a dot focus, which although it helps, is far from being satisfactory and often is no better than the larger focus area, With flora photography in the bush there is so much going on from the flower having far more depth, or the background very distracting, varying light and angles, etc., etc. that confuse the focus, seldom giving a good photo. As you suggest manual is the most reliable, but is also more time consuming, plus you usually need to get on the ground to photograph a small plant.
Using a good lens to throw the background out of focus helps to make the subject more apparent.
fsm said:
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Using a good lens to throw the background out of focus helps to make the subject more apparent.
I think we are talking about different cameras here with different quality lenses.
PermeateFree said:
I have my camera permanently set to a dot focus, which although it helps, is far from being satisfactory and often is no better than the larger focus area, With flora photography in the bush there is so much going on from the flower having far more depth, or the background very distracting, varying light and angles, etc., etc. that confuse the focus, seldom giving a good photo. As you suggest manual is the most reliable, but is also more time consuming, plus you usually need to get on the ground to photograph a small plant.
Out in the bush I like to use a flash to drop the background to dark or even black and to take the unwanted shadows away. This was taken in the middle of a sunny day under the tree canopy with a very busy bush background.
fsm said:
PermeateFree said:I have my camera permanently set to a dot focus, which although it helps, is far from being satisfactory and often is no better than the larger focus area, With flora photography in the bush there is so much going on from the flower having far more depth, or the background very distracting, varying light and angles, etc., etc. that confuse the focus, seldom giving a good photo. As you suggest manual is the most reliable, but is also more time consuming, plus you usually need to get on the ground to photograph a small plant.
Out in the bush I like to use a flash to drop the background to dark or even black and to take the unwanted shadows away. This was taken in the middle of a sunny day under the tree canopy with a very busy bush background.
I think we take rather different types of flora photos, mine are taken to highlight botanical features.
fsm said:
PermeateFree said:I have my camera permanently set to a dot focus, which although it helps, is far from being satisfactory and often is no better than the larger focus area, With flora photography in the bush there is so much going on from the flower having far more depth, or the background very distracting, varying light and angles, etc., etc. that confuse the focus, seldom giving a good photo. As you suggest manual is the most reliable, but is also more time consuming, plus you usually need to get on the ground to photograph a small plant.
Out in the bush I like to use a flash to drop the background to dark or even black and to take the unwanted shadows away. This was taken in the middle of a sunny day under the tree canopy with a very busy bush background.
that’s beautiful, nice picture too
fsm said:
![]()
Using a good lens to throw the background out of focus helps to make the subject more apparent.
took picture something like that the other day….looking…..cropping….sizing
then tried blowing on it and taking picture same time, or quickly so get seeds airborne, all got a bit complicated, didn’t turn out so well
fsm said:
buffy said:
fsm said:You need to set your autofocus to a single point, not the green square. Then whatever is at the center of the frame will get focussed. Or use manual focus.
I haven’t got manual focus. It’s a little Nikon Coolpix. It’s point, hold and shoot. I usually remember to make sure the flower is the closest thing to the camera, sometimes I don’t notice a piece of grass…
You should have manual focus mode. Look for a MF switch then focus by rotating a wheel or dial on the back of the camera. Or RTFM.
It’s a very basic Nikon Coolpix S3600. I’ve read the manual when I bought it, many years ago now. It is a purely autofocus camera. It is sometimes brilliant, but you do have to be very careful aligning for flowers. I spent so many hours of my childhood waiting for Dad to get angle, light, settings right taking photos that I’m only interested in point and shoot.
https://www.cameralabs.com/nikon_coolpix_s3600/
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Ooh, I wonder what I’ll find down in our block today. Our flowers are October/November/December, so things should be starting.
Speedy, you were only 40km away from here. Could have dropped in for a cuppa.
Thanks rb. We’ll be back in the area again in a few of years probably without the complaining kids, so may just take you up on that offer then :)
You’d be welcome.
buffy said:
It’s a very basic Nikon Coolpix S3600. I’ve read the manual when I bought it, many years ago now. It is a purely autofocus camera. It is sometimes brilliant, but you do have to be very careful aligning for flowers. I spent so many hours of my childhood waiting for Dad to get angle, light, settings right taking photos that I’m only interested in point and shoot.
https://www.cameralabs.com/nikon_coolpix_s3600/
It is getting close to Xmas. You should write a note to Santa requesting a better camera.
fsm said:
buffy said:It’s a very basic Nikon Coolpix S3600. I’ve read the manual when I bought it, many years ago now. It is a purely autofocus camera. It is sometimes brilliant, but you do have to be very careful aligning for flowers. I spent so many hours of my childhood waiting for Dad to get angle, light, settings right taking photos that I’m only interested in point and shoot.
https://www.cameralabs.com/nikon_coolpix_s3600/
It is getting close to Xmas. You should write a note to Santa requesting a better camera.
Apparently Josh is buying me one.
fsm said:
buffy said:It’s a very basic Nikon Coolpix S3600. I’ve read the manual when I bought it, many years ago now. It is a purely autofocus camera. It is sometimes brilliant, but you do have to be very careful aligning for flowers. I spent so many hours of my childhood waiting for Dad to get angle, light, settings right taking photos that I’m only interested in point and shoot.
https://www.cameralabs.com/nikon_coolpix_s3600/
It is getting close to Xmas. You should write a note to Santa requesting a better camera.
We don’t bother with Christmas presents. And I prefer not to faff about taking pictures. I don’t need perfect, I just need good enough for purpose. I really appreciate digital though, I can take oodles of pictures and then sift. I used proper film for years and had to take time framing up the picture etc before taking it. I love being able to zoom in, cut out the bit I want, and then just keeping that.
PermeateFree said:
fsm said:
PermeateFree said:I have my camera permanently set to a dot focus, which although it helps, is far from being satisfactory and often is no better than the larger focus area, With flora photography in the bush there is so much going on from the flower having far more depth, or the background very distracting, varying light and angles, etc., etc. that confuse the focus, seldom giving a good photo. As you suggest manual is the most reliable, but is also more time consuming, plus you usually need to get on the ground to photograph a small plant.
Out in the bush I like to use a flash to drop the background to dark or even black and to take the unwanted shadows away. This was taken in the middle of a sunny day under the tree canopy with a very busy bush background.
I think we take rather different types of flora photos, mine are taken to highlight botanical features.
To give you an idea of what is important to me and what makes up a good photo.
With your photo above, it gives very little information about the identity of the plant, but botanically what is important with plants in this family are the seeds, their attachments and ornamentation, so I would focus on these features rather than the overall inflorescence. However other features are also important requiring more photos, such as the involucral bracts just below the flower head, whether they are recurved or upright, shape and size. Another photo would need to be of the foliage (and with some plants both sides), plus the flowering stem whether it was vertical or growing in an arc from the ground. Preferably you would need a photo of the flower head when in bloom and lastly one of the complete plant and it growth habit. A habitat photo is also highly beneficial for habitat specific species. So you can see photographs have many purposes depending on the needs of the photographer.
PermeateFree said:
PermeateFree said:
fsm said:Out in the bush I like to use a flash to drop the background to dark or even black and to take the unwanted shadows away. This was taken in the middle of a sunny day under the tree canopy with a very busy bush background.
I think we take rather different types of flora photos, mine are taken to highlight botanical features.
To give you an idea of what is important to me and what makes up a good photo.
With your photo above, it gives very little information about the identity of the plant, but botanically what is important with plants in this family are the seeds, their attachments and ornamentation, so I would focus on these features rather than the overall inflorescence. However other features are also important requiring more photos, such as the involucral bracts just below the flower head, whether they are recurved or upright, shape and size. Another photo would need to be of the foliage (and with some plants both sides), plus the flowering stem whether it was vertical or growing in an arc from the ground. Preferably you would need a photo of the flower head when in bloom and lastly one of the complete plant and it growth habit. A habitat photo is also highly beneficial for habitat specific species. So you can see photographs have many purposes depending on the needs of the photographer.
An example:
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2012/12/asteridea-chaetopoda-gypsum-daisy.html
>nflorescence
had to look that up, permeate
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflorescence
An inflorescence is a group or cluster of flowers arranged on a stem that is composed of a main branch or a complicated arrangement of branches. Morphologically, it is the modified part of the shoot of seed plants where flowers are formed. The modifications can involve the length and the nature of the internodes and the phyllotaxis, as well as variations in the proportions, compressions, swellings, adnations, connations and reduction of main and secondary axes. One can also define an inflorescence as the reproductive portion of a plant that bears a cluster of flowers in a specific pattern.
The stem holding the whole inflorescence is called a peduncle and the major axis (incorrectly referred to as the main stem) holding the flowers or more branches within the inflorescence is called the rachis. The stalk of each single flower is called a pedicel. A flower that is not part of an inflorescence is called a solitary flower and its stalk is also referred to as a peduncle. Any flower in an inflorescence may be referred to as a floret, especially when the individual flowers are particularly small and borne in a tight cluster, such as in a pseudanthium. The fruiting stage of an inflorescence is known as an infructescence. Inflorescences may be simple (single) or complex (panicle). The rachis may be one of several types, including single, composite, umbel, spike or raceme.
I’m doing my bit by growing local flora.
And the native frangipani has start to pop.
buffy said:
And the native frangipani has start to pop.
I like the native frangipanni. Should be planted more often.
Here’s some of my chives and thyme.
Prostrate wattle flowering.
buffy said:
And the native frangipani has start to pop.
we may some cuttings of that, variegated maybe, whatever’s lost its leaves at the moment, and I shortened the other one with the whipper snipper apparently
transition said:
buffy said:
And the native frangipani has start to pop.
we may some cuttings of that, variegated maybe, whatever’s lost its leaves at the moment, and I shortened the other one with the whipper snipper apparently
Mine are twenty years old and tall trees. We will now have the magnificent perfume until about Christmas time. I love those trees.
roughbarked’s chives are a week or two ahead of mine:
And the ones in the garden seriously need weeding. You can’t even see them. They are between the golden marjoram and the wombat. The golden marjoram is looking fine, although I think a prune of about half of it might be in order very shortly.
The thyme I use is in a pot under the quince tree, surrounded by Dichodra.
And the wild and messy thyme bed (Balm of Gilead, lemon thyme, cooking thyme, feverfew) requires my attention too.
Pot of normal marjoram is looking good, but another thing that needs a one third to a half pruning to keep the fresh leaves coming.
I’ve put together a pot of chives and parsley for a friend. I’ll hand it over soon, I just want it to look a bit more lush before I do. They don’t know I’ve done it for them.
buffy said:
Pot of normal marjoram is looking good, but another thing that needs a one third to a half pruning to keep the fresh leaves coming.
I’ve put together a pot of chives and parsley for a friend. I’ll hand it over soon, I just want it to look a bit more lush before I do. They don’t know I’ve done it for them.
I should start growing pot herbs again.
The beautiful perfumed rose…and the Babiana! And the first of the bicolour bearded irises to flower for the year.
………….
…………
buffy said:
The beautiful perfumed rose…and the Babiana! And the first of the bicolour bearded irises to flower for the year.
………….
…………
It looks like it will be a good year for Irises here.
And for transition: the Bilbergia nutans is just opening up here now. I think yours started about two weeks ago? The snails rather like the flowers for fodder.
The native frangipani (Hymenopterum flavum) is now actually opening some buds.
And the species gladdies are coming out. I thought I had some darker ones of these too, but it seems they are all the white ones.
I’m quite fond of this dark burgundy columbine. It seeds quite a bit. But they are easy enough to pull out if necessary. And the crimson broad bean is fully in flower now.
……………………………..
And one that I am in anticipation of. This pot has poppies in it. They should be bright red ones. I’m hoping that they are and that I can then just keep shaking the seeds into the pot for reseeding. It’s also got Solomon’s seal, which is coming up through the poppies. (The butterflies are not real…)
transition said:
nice
I have been pruning in the Artemisia. It’s just the old fashioned A. absinthium, I think I grabbed a piece from someone’s paddock fence years ago and struck a cutting. It’s quite pretty foliage. And I cut the first white lilac flowers of the season.
Firstly, thank you PF…the tip about using my hand to focus the macro is an excellent one. I’ve still got a lot of dodgy photos, but I also got some good ones.
The pink fingers (Caladenia carnea) are out. Hiding in the bracken, but out.
…..
…..
But we also found one that is like a bicolour version. I’ve not seen one that looks like this before.
buffy said:
Firstly, thank you PF…the tip about using my hand to focus the macro is an excellent one. I’ve still got a lot of dodgy photos, but I also got some good ones.The pink fingers (Caladenia carnea) are out. Hiding in the bracken, but out.
…..
…..
But we also found one that is like a bicolour version. I’ve not seen one that looks like this before.
Yes a big improvement, the top right has most of the details to formally ID it. Well done.
Chocolate lily, milkmaid and pink boronia
……………
Appleberry
One of the peaflower things (Pultenaea?)
Waxlips orchids in moderate abundance and various shades of purple and mauve
An everlasting of some sort and a grass/sedge/rush that I haven’t IDd yet.
…………………….
buffy said:
Appleberry
One of the peaflower things (Pultenaea?)
Waxlips orchids in moderate abundance and various shades of purple and mauve
Good collection of purdies.
the very first agave planted here on the block, ~11 years ago, taken from the back of daughter’s then boyfriend’s back yard, it was just a little agave, has recently developed a protuberance, a projection, that has red colors in it
transition said:
the very first agave planted here on the block, ~11 years ago, taken from the back of daughter’s then boyfriend’s back yard, it was just a little agave, has recently developed a protuberance, a projection, that has red colors in it
Are they the ones that flower and then die? Auntie Annie had something like that. The flower was very spectacular. But the plant died afterwards. It took a lot of years to flower.
I’ve been waiting for the “red” Californian poppies to open a flower to see what colour they are. One opened today and I thought it was more deep orange than red. But just now I went out to photograph it, and it’s closed up for the night. Now it looks red. I’ll have another look tomorrow.
And there are more and more of the red Alstromeria out now too. I’ve thinned and thinned these things. But I do like just a few to remain as they are brilliant cut flowers.
I went out to check the “red” California poppy. It is out, because it is light and intermittently sunny today. It is more orangey, with an underlying redness, I suppose.
Also got an honesty plant that can’t make up it’s mind. There are open pollination honesty plants around my garden which came from Auntie Annie’s garden. There are usually mauve flowers on some plants and white flowers on some plants. This one has managed to put both colours on each flower.
And the species gladiolus are really into their prime now. The dragons are guarding them.
Bunch of roses coming up. The flowers are starting now.
Peace:
……….
Goldbunny:
……….
And a red one that I don’t know the name of. It’s very prolific, but the rain a couple of days ago has messed up the flowers a little.
And the “local” poppies are starting to flower. The pods happen quite quickly as the flowers are quite shortlived. Some are doubles and quite large flowers, some are singles.
buffy said:
And the “local” poppies are starting to flower. The pods happen quite quickly as the flowers are quite shortlived. Some are doubles and quite large flowers, some are singles.
I like the fancy lemon blancmange in the middle of those ones.
buffy said:
And the “local” poppies are starting to flower. The pods happen quite quickly as the flowers are quite shortlived. Some are doubles and quite large flowers, some are singles.
LOL @ “local”.
(We had the single opium poppies growing in the gardens and lawn at one of the Police Stations I worked at. The gardener used to mow the lawns at least twice a week, to keep them down.)
Michael V said:
buffy said:
And the “local” poppies are starting to flower. The pods happen quite quickly as the flowers are quite shortlived. Some are doubles and quite large flowers, some are singles.
LOL @ “local”.
(We had the single opium poppies growing in the gardens and lawn at one of the Police Stations I worked at. The gardener used to mow the lawns at least twice a week, to keep them down.)
I think I’ve mentioned before, they are all over town here. There is a particularly pretty one up the other side of town. I may have to accidentally get some seed onto my boots or something.
I picked a bunch of roses today. Includes Peace, Antigone, Mister Lincoln and some others that I don’t know the names of.
And one of my baby jellybean plants has decided flowering is the go.
buffy said:
And one of my baby jellybean plants has decided flowering is the go.
I have never seen one of those flower before.
There are a few irises out now. I like the white one with the purple edges best. But I also like the regal coloured one. Not so keen on the yellow one.
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………..
…………..
Also, it smells rather nice around the orange tree at the moment.
As well as the native Frangipani being out in the same area of garden. It’s going to town with the flowers this year. (There are actually three trees there)
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
buffy said:
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
Nice snaps. That love-in-a-mist foliage looks a bit like fennel or dill.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
Nice snaps. That love-in-a-mist foliage looks a bit like fennel or dill.
I was just about to mention that :)
Speedy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
Nice snaps. That love-in-a-mist foliage looks a bit like fennel or dill.
I was just about to mention that :)
“Traditional” Love in a mist has a blue flower. I bought the seed for the white one because that garden bed is white and purple.
buffy said:
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
Love in a mist is well named, can’t recall seeing it before, very effective.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
Love in a mist is well named, can’t recall seeing it before, very effective.
It is a bit naughty…seeds rather more than is safe. My next door neighbour says it is also known as F… in a Fog…
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
Love in a mist is well named, can’t recall seeing it before, very effective.
It is a bit naughty…seeds rather more than is safe. My next door neighbour says it is also known as F… in a Fog…
:)
buffy said:
I’ve been doing some photos for my Letter to Mum. You know it’s an old, old rose when the prickles are like this:
…………..
The love in a mist has self seeded and is now making flowers.
…………….
And the first Jacobean/Aztec Lily of the season is out:
nice, lady and I just looked at your aztec lily, etc
I’ve been braving the mosquitos to deadhead roses and other general tidying up. Have some red flowers.
buffy said:
I’ve been braving the mosquitos to deadhead roses and other general tidying up. Have some red flowers.
alstromerias.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I’ve been braving the mosquitos to deadhead roses and other general tidying up. Have some red flowers.
alstromerias.
Yes. It’s a name that always slips my mind. I’ve got Peruvian Lilies in my mind, which is another name for them, but I don’t seem to be able to get Alstromeria to stick. They are a bit of a weed. But pretty.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I’ve been braving the mosquitos to deadhead roses and other general tidying up. Have some red flowers.
alstromerias.
Yes. It’s a name that always slips my mind. I’ve got Peruvian Lilies in my mind, which is another name for them, but I don’t seem to be able to get Alstromeria to stick. They are a bit of a weed. But pretty.
Peruvian lillies is the common name..isn’t it?
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:alstromerias.
Yes. It’s a name that always slips my mind. I’ve got Peruvian Lilies in my mind, which is another name for them, but I don’t seem to be able to get Alstromeria to stick. They are a bit of a weed. But pretty.
Peruvian lillies is the common name..isn’t it?
Yes. I think they have some other names too. That red one might actually be A. haemantha (herb lily) rather than the ones grown for cut flowers. I got it from the garden in Casterton when we bought the place. The lady we bought the house from had quite a range of more unusual flowers in the garden, and the people before her were really into gardening too. I’ve also got A. psittacina, which is known as the NZ Christmas bell, because it’s popular there. But it too is a Brazilian. It’s a real spreader, mine are in a bed I mow around all sides of. Useful flower at Christmas because it is red and green.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:Yes. It’s a name that always slips my mind. I’ve got Peruvian Lilies in my mind, which is another name for them, but I don’t seem to be able to get Alstromeria to stick. They are a bit of a weed. But pretty.
Peruvian lillies is the common name..isn’t it?
Yes. I think they have some other names too. That red one might actually be A. haemantha (herb lily) rather than the ones grown for cut flowers. I got it from the garden in Casterton when we bought the place. The lady we bought the house from had quite a range of more unusual flowers in the garden, and the people before her were really into gardening too. I’ve also got A. psittacina, which is known as the NZ Christmas bell, because it’s popular there. But it too is a Brazilian. It’s a real spreader, mine are in a bed I mow around all sides of. Useful flower at Christmas because it is red and green.
Wallabies et mine.
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
Buffy’s got a wind up radio.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
Buffy’s got a wind up radio.
It’s also got a solar panel. That’s why it’s sitting by the window.
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
Isn’t the doilie meant to be under the vase?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
Isn’t the doilie meant to be under the vase?
Not a doily. It’s my very first effort at basketry with rushes out of the garden. I must go back to that and get better at it.
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
We must have very similar tastes in communication technology, Ms Buffy. You have my phone.
Oh… and yes. Purdie flaars. :)
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
Isn’t the doilie meant to be under the vase?
Not a doily. It’s my very first effort at basketry with rushes out of the garden. I must go back to that and get better at it.
:) Crafty.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Isn’t the doilie meant to be under the vase?
Not a doily. It’s my very first effort at basketry with rushes out of the garden. I must go back to that and get better at it.
:) Crafty.
A basket case.
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
:)
Nice.
:)
Woodie said:
buffy said:
The roses are most definitely out now.
……….
We must have very similar tastes in communication technology, Ms Buffy. You have my phone.
Oh… and yes. Purdie flaars. :)
My patient/friend who was a Telecom (yes, that far back) technician recommended Panasonic. He was good at sorting out our needs in the practice.
My Sarracenia flava are growing quite tall (70-80cm), but they’ve got wide tops and narrow bases, so a little wind blows them over. It’s quite disappointing.
btm said:
My Sarracenia flava are growing quite tall (70-80cm), but they’ve got wide tops and narrow bases, so a little wind blows them over. It’s quite disappointing.
They aren’t really conducive to fine staking, are they.
buffy said:
btm said:
My Sarracenia flava are growing quite tall (70-80cm), but they’ve got wide tops and narrow bases, so a little wind blows them over. It’s quite disappointing.
They aren’t really conducive to fine staking, are they.
Not really. I’ve thought about tying them up with cheesecloth or something similar, but the wind would probably just cause the cloth to cut into the plant. I need a hothouse.
btm said:
My Sarracenia flava are growing quite tall (70-80cm), but they’ve got wide tops and narrow bases, so a little wind blows them over. It’s quite disappointing.
Companion planting. Is this a new concept?
while out there, watering, the jacarandas at the moment, and whatever around them, too numerous to list
transition said:
while out there, watering, the jacarandas at the moment, and whatever around them, too numerous to list
Purdie cactusususes.
Woodie said:
transition said:
while out there, watering, the jacarandas at the moment, and whatever around them, too numerous to list
Purdie cactusususes.
Ooh, I think I’ve got that bottom one. I’d better watch out for flowers. Although trans place is hotter than us.
buffy said:
Woodie said:
transition said:
while out there, watering, the jacarandas at the moment, and whatever around them, too numerous to list
Purdie cactusususes.
Ooh, I think I’ve got that bottom one. I’d better watch out for flowers. Although trans place is hotter than us.
quick walk down past silos
transition said:
quick walk down past silos
Nice.
Auntie Annie’s “local” poppies are being very, very enthusiastic.
I went for a walk to check on the ones over the other side of town and I will definitely be watching them and picking some pods for seed when the time is right. There is a stunning red, with plain petals and with fringed petals, and a beautiful purple, again with plain and fringed petals. (Excuse slight out of focusness, it’s windy out there this morning)
…..
buffy said:
Auntie Annie’s “local” poppies are being very, very enthusiastic.
I went for a walk to check on the ones over the other side of town and I will definitely be watching them and picking some pods for seed when the time is right. There is a stunning red, with plain petals and with fringed petals, and a beautiful purple, again with plain and fringed petals. (Excuse slight out of focusness, it’s windy out there this morning)
…..
beautiful, lady and I just looked at
And some more roses. I think I can name some of these, and their history with me.
White with pink edges: I think this is Princess de Monaco. Cutting from the garden at Casterton
Mauve: Blue Moon. Cutting from one of my staff (Wendy)
Hot pink: I think this is Zephirin Drouin. Climbing rose. Cutting from the garden at Casterton
White: Madame Alfred Carriere. Climbing rose. I bought this one, so I am sure of the name. I used to discuss this rose with Awesome. He had it too.
buffy said:
And some more roses. I think I can name some of these, and their history with me.White with pink edges: I think this is Princess de Monaco. Cutting from the garden at Casterton
Mauve: Blue Moon. Cutting from one of my staff (Wendy)
Hot pink: I think this is Zephirin Drouin. Climbing rose. Cutting from the garden at Casterton
White: Madame Alfred Carriere. Climbing rose. I bought this one, so I am sure of the name. I used to discuss this rose with Awesome. He had it too.
![]()
very nice, my roses are nearly done I reckon, though not checked for a while, I might wander out there shortly for a look
couple from mummy’s garden today
transition said:
couple from mummy’s garden today
Can’t use that much water here.
transition said:
couple from mummy’s garden today
Ooh, Christmas lilies out already. Mine are leafing up but no buds just yet.
roughbarked said:
transition said:
couple from mummy’s garden today
Can’t use that much water here.
They grow like weeds. I don’t water mine.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
transition said:
couple from mummy’s garden today
Can’t use that much water here.
They grow like weeds. I don’t water mine.
I tried that. They all died.
buffy said:
transition said:
couple from mummy’s garden today
Ooh, Christmas lilies out already. Mine are leafing up but no buds just yet.
only just popped out very recently
And here is Madame Hardy. She is one of the really oldfashioned roses that only blooms once in the season. So you have to enjoy looking at her while she blooms. Because she only does it for a couple of weeks a year.
buffy said:
And here is Madame Hardy. She is one of the really oldfashioned roses that only blooms once in the season. So you have to enjoy looking at her while she blooms. Because she only does it for a couple of weeks a year.
Guess it has a good perfume?
buffy said:
And here is Madame Hardy. She is one of the really oldfashioned roses that only blooms once in the season. So you have to enjoy looking at her while she blooms. Because she only does it for a couple of weeks a year.
nice, lady wondered if was a creeping rose
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And here is Madame Hardy. She is one of the really oldfashioned roses that only blooms once in the season. So you have to enjoy looking at her while she blooms. Because she only does it for a couple of weeks a year.
Guess it has a good perfume?
Reasonably good, but there aren’t many white roses with perfume really.
transition said:
buffy said:
And here is Madame Hardy. She is one of the really oldfashioned roses that only blooms once in the season. So you have to enjoy looking at her while she blooms. Because she only does it for a couple of weeks a year.
nice, lady wondered if was a creeping rose
It’s a bush. A pretty untidy bush. Almost a thicket really.
:)
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And here is Madame Hardy. She is one of the really oldfashioned roses that only blooms once in the season. So you have to enjoy looking at her while she blooms. Because she only does it for a couple of weeks a year.
Guess it has a good perfume?
Reasonably good, but there aren’t many white roses with perfume really.
You have a few spiders on it!
:)
Michael V said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:Guess it has a good perfume?
Reasonably good, but there aren’t many white roses with perfume really.
You have a few spiders on it!
:)
Spiders = good.
My yarrow.
A tomato plant.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And here is Madame Hardy. She is one of the really oldfashioned roses that only blooms once in the season. So you have to enjoy looking at her while she blooms. Because she only does it for a couple of weeks a year.
Guess it has a good perfume?
Reasonably good, but there aren’t many white roses with perfume really.
Thanks, just found this:
In general, roses with the best scents are darker colors, have more petals, and have thick or velvety petals. Red and pink roses often smell like what we term “rose”. White and yellows often smell of violets, nasturtium, and lemon. Orange roses often smell of fruits, violets, nasturtium, and clove.
University of Vermont Extension
Department of Plant and Soil Science
And here are some more flowers I photographed today. I’ve brought home a container of soil with various plants I dug up in it. I’ll water them tonight and then get them out into the garden/pots tomorrow. If they are going under the mower at the next tidy up over around the shed, I’ll try bringing them home to plant here.
Chocolate lily
Blue pincushion
Dianella
Dainty, dainty Wahlenbergia…lots of these little things around today.
And the flags are out. The big ones and the little ones.
This rose is Remember Me. It’s an odd sort of colour. It’s got a mild scent. I grew cuttings from a bush in the Casterton garden.
Hmm, I just looked up the history of that rose. We bought the house in Casterton in 1995. Apparently the rose was introduced to Australia in 1990. So the bush in that garden must have been quite a young bush then.
https://sarose.org.au/rose-month/remember-me/
I also grow lots of baby plants.
The red poppies are out, and so are the Aztec Lilies now:
……..
For Spocky – the jellybean plant continued to open up its flower.
buffy said:
For Spocky – the jellybean plant continued to open up its flower.
Gosh!
We have some of them – they’re indestructible and self-propagating. We’ve never had flowers, though.
The Christmas flowers are starting. I always think of Feverfew as a Christmas flower. I can have large bunches of it this year, it has self seeded around the place.
buffy said:
The Christmas flowers are starting. I always think of Feverfew as a Christmas flower. I can have large bunches of it this year, it has self seeded around the place.
That’s a pleasing display.
And I did the front fence. I don’t really know why I had purple decorations. I suppose I was just doing something other than my normal red/gold/green that I do here at home.
Bruna thinks it is all a load of codswallop.
And here is the very first flower on my grown from seed passionfruit vine. It better be good after waiting for it…
buffy said:
And here is the very first flower on my grown from seed passionfruit vine. It better be good after waiting for it…
I can see more on the horizon. :)
Though we have had some seriously hot dry days, there are still some fringe lilies flowering.
The Buddleias are out. No butterflies today because we’ve got a very gentle light precipitation going on. But yesterday in the sunshine there were clouds of them around the flowers. Mostly they head for the sky, like the middle one, but some fall down with the weight of the head.
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………
buffy said:
The Buddleias are out. No butterflies today because we’ve got a very gentle light precipitation going on. But yesterday in the sunshine there were clouds of them around the flowers. Mostly they head for the sky, like the middle one, but some fall down with the weight of the head.
………
………
Is that the straw bale they sold you with the fake sheep?
buffy said:
The Buddleias are out. No butterflies today because we’ve got a very gentle light precipitation going on. But yesterday in the sunshine there were clouds of them around the flowers. Mostly they head for the sky, like the middle one, but some fall down with the weight of the head.
………
………
nice
reading..
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddleja
“Buddleja (orth. var. Buddleia) (/ˈbʌdliə/; also historically given as Buddlea) is a genus comprising over 140 species of flowering plants endemic to Asia, Africa, and the Americas. The generic name bestowed by Linnaeus posthumously honoured the Reverend Adam Buddle (1662–1715), an English botanist and rector, at the suggestion of Dr. William Houstoun. Houstoun sent the first plants to become known to science as buddleja (B. americana) to England from the Caribbean about 15 years after Buddle’s death..”
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
The Buddleias are out. No butterflies today because we’ve got a very gentle light precipitation going on. But yesterday in the sunshine there were clouds of them around the flowers. Mostly they head for the sky, like the middle one, but some fall down with the weight of the head.
………
………
Is that the straw bale they sold you with the fake sheep?
That is what remains of the peastraw bales I bought for the archery butt about 3 or 4 years ago. My little haystack is falling to bits now and I’m gradually putting the rotting straw onto the garden. Then I’ll buy some more bales and put up the butt again. So I can practice shooting. I won’t need as many bales as last time because I’m a better shot now and don’t need such a big catching area.
I think the Christmas Lilies are going to be late. Right now they look like this. They haven’t got many hours left to actually open up those flowers…
WA Christmas Bush of which we have thousands. Top photo shows my water tank next to the house, very attractive until you want to grow other things nearby, then it will rapidly attach itself to parasitise the plant causing poor growth and even death. The bottom photo was taken just a few metres away.
PermeateFree said:
WA Christmas Bush of which we have thousands. Top photo shows my water tank next to the house, very attractive until you want to grow other things nearby, then it will rapidly attach itself to parasitise the plant causing poor growth and even death. The bottom photo was taken just a few metres away.
Good for bees though, I assume.
Bubblecar said:
PermeateFree said:
WA Christmas Bush of which we have thousands. Top photo shows my water tank next to the house, very attractive until you want to grow other things nearby, then it will rapidly attach itself to parasitise the plant causing poor growth and even death. The bottom photo was taken just a few metres away.
Good for bees though, I assume.
Yes they like it, although not very popular with the birds.
The Christmas lilies missed their deadline by a couple of days.
………………..
buffy said:
The Christmas lilies missed their deadline by a couple of days.
………………..
And some more flowers because I’ll be writing another Letter to Mum to go on Monday.
Christmas lilies (a week late, but hey!) And feverfew – got lots of that about the place
………..
Showers here all day. No storms forecast.
And the local library has ordered three copies of my book.
Buddha and the pink rose………………………………………………. And Santolina and thyme.
………
Santolina and Heliotrope………………………………………………………..and Yarrow and Golden Marjoram.
………….
All the old plants my Great Aunts grew. My brother will complain again about having to read letters about my garden. But I do try to put in things Mum might remember from her childhood. Can’t discuss the news of the world, she is not in the world now.
We need something light. And I’m writing another Letter to Mum. The raspberries don’t really count as flaars…more afterflaars.
But these ones are flaars. Very enthusiastic flaars.
buffy said:
We need something light. And I’m writing another Letter to Mum. The raspberries don’t really count as flaars…more afterflaars.
But these ones are flaars. Very enthusiastic flaars.
They are doubling up on their enthusiasm. :)
The Buddleias are a butterfly utopia:
And the creeping thyme is favourite with the bees.
I didn’t get my Letter to Mum written today, but I’ve just wandered around to get some photos. I’ll write it tomorrow and get it on its way to Melbourne.
These things seem to understand they are on my list of things to remove from the garden. So they are flowering like crazy.
The roses are suffering from the heat and wind a bit, but there are still some impressive ones out there.
buffy said:
I didn’t get my Letter to Mum written today, but I’ve just wandered around to get some photos. I’ll write it tomorrow and get it on its way to Melbourne.These things seem to understand they are on my list of things to remove from the garden. So they are flowering like crazy.
The roses are suffering from the heat and wind a bit, but there are still some impressive ones out there.
very nice
This grevillea looks good in dull light.
……..
And some poppies that aren’t the illegal ones.
I probably should have a look at the whole bushes and pick the cape gooseberries. I don’t actually like them, but Mr buffy eats them. For some reason my brain says they taste like kerosene – although how my brain would know that I have no idea. Must be the smell over-riding things.
Last ones…Aggie’s Pants:
And I’m intending to harvest some of this, possibly tomorrow, and have another go at some weaving with it.
buffy said:
This grevillea looks good in dull light.
……..
And some poppies that aren’t the illegal ones.
I probably should have a look at the whole bushes and pick the cape gooseberries. I don’t actually like them, but Mr buffy eats them. For some reason my brain says they taste like kerosene – although how my brain would know that I have no idea. Must be the smell over-riding things.
I do like that white toothbrushy grevillea.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
This grevillea looks good in dull light.
……..
And some poppies that aren’t the illegal ones.
I probably should have a look at the whole bushes and pick the cape gooseberries. I don’t actually like them, but Mr buffy eats them. For some reason my brain says they taste like kerosene – although how my brain would know that I have no idea. Must be the smell over-riding things.
I do like that white toothbrushy grevillea.
I’m pretty sure it is Moonlight
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grevillea_%27Moonlight%27
I bought it many years ago. It’s a straggly thing but it just keeps on surviving.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
This grevillea looks good in dull light.
……..
And some poppies that aren’t the illegal ones.
I probably should have a look at the whole bushes and pick the cape gooseberries. I don’t actually like them, but Mr buffy eats them. For some reason my brain says they taste like kerosene – although how my brain would know that I have no idea. Must be the smell over-riding things.
I do like that white toothbrushy grevillea.
I’m pretty sure it is Moonlight
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grevillea_%27Moonlight%27
I bought it many years ago. It’s a straggly thing but it just keeps on surviving.
Mine is not and upright shrub, it’s a sprawling ragamuffin. It is planted right next to an oldish redgum (probably 60 odd years old at a guess) so it’s probably struggling for nutrients.
buffy said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:I do like that white toothbrushy grevillea.
I’m pretty sure it is Moonlight
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grevillea_%27Moonlight%27
I bought it many years ago. It’s a straggly thing but it just keeps on surviving.
Mine is not and upright shrub, it’s a sprawling ragamuffin. It is planted right next to an oldish redgum (probably 60 odd years old at a guess) so it’s probably struggling for nutrients.
I had a whiteish lemonny one at one stage. It was wobblied. But it was also a sprawling ragamuffin.
a mantis for variation, now some might point out it’s not a flower, but you might find a mantis on a flower, so here it is, a beautiful creature, it spent quite a while trying to catch flies through the fly screen, and the lady here felt sorry for it, anyway it moved on eventually
My Scabiosa is almost out:
And not a flaar, but the native violets I brought back from the bush block are very happy in their little terracotta pot. Surrounded by Dichondra. Leaves are so very similar.
Scabiosa is now out properly. Well, one flower is, anyway. Quite a few more to come in the next week by the look of the plants.
And a pretty rose:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
I’d have called those Aloes. ;)
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
Can imagine a few dinosaurs wandering through that.
buffy said:
Scabiosa is now out properly. Well, one flower is, anyway. Quite a few more to come in the next week by the look of the plants.
And a pretty rose:
Almost black, that top one.
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Ian said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
roughbarked said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
…/cut/… by me transitionI’d have called those Aloes. ;)
chuckle
most big ones presume are agave americana, quite a mix though in all that, don’t know names half of them
other prickly things, some of which are properly cacti maybe
Tamb said:
Ian said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
Yep.
Though they are restrained to the one locality by aridity.
Don’t plant them in dry stream beds.
transition said:
roughbarked said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
…/cut/… by me transitionI’d have called those Aloes. ;)
chuckle
most big ones presume are agave americana, quite a mix though in all that, don’t know names half of them
other prickly things, some of which are properly cacti maybe
Tamb said:
Ian said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
Looks like “Century Plant” Agave americana variegata in the foreground, and Agave americana with the flower spike in the background.
Not really a cactus. But a succulent, nonetheless.
Considered an environmental weed in many places in Australia, but really it’s not bad, unless left to its own devices for many, many years.
Ian said:
Tamb said:
Ian said:There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
They die after reproducing but reproduce numerous adventitious shoots from the base, which continue its growth.
Michael V said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
Looks like “Century Plant” Agave americana variegata in the foreground, and Agave americana with the flower spike in the background.
Not really a cactus. But a succulent, nonetheless.
Considered an environmental weed in many places in Australia, but really it’s not bad, unless left to its own devices for many, many years.
Can eat various parts of it, drink the waster it contains and make an alcohol from it called Pulque
Ian said:
Tamb said:
Ian said:There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
They are called “Century Plants” because they takes many years to grow to maturity and then flower. Then they die.
Michael V said:
Ian said:
Tamb said:Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
They are called “Century Plants” because they takes many years to grow to maturity and then flower. Then they die.
In a nutshell.. er offshoot. ;)
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
Looks like “Century Plant” Agave americana variegata in the foreground, and Agave americana with the flower spike in the background.
Not really a cactus. But a succulent, nonetheless.
Considered an environmental weed in many places in Australia, but really it’s not bad, unless left to its own devices for many, many years.
Can eat various parts of it, drink the waster it contains and make an alcohol from it called Pulque
Don’t waste the water.
Ian said:
Tamb said:
Ian said:There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
Tamb said:
Ian said:
Tamb said:Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
It’s the seeds on the pole. They drop then most of them take root.
Where you live, yes.
roughbarked said:
Tamb said:
Ian said:I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
It’s the seeds on the pole. They drop then most of them take root.Where you live, yes.
roughbarked said:
Tamb said:
Ian said:I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
It’s the seeds on the pole. They drop then most of them take root.Where you live, yes.
https://weeds.brisbane.qld.gov.au/weeds/century-plant
https://keyserver.lucidcentral.org/weeds/data/media/Html/agave_americana.htm
“Although seed has high germination rates, most seedlings have been found to die shortly after germination. In other species of Agave water stress in the seedling stage may be the most important factor affecting establishment. Interspecies crosses with Agave tequilana can produce viable seeds.” from https://florabase.dpaw.wa.gov.au/browse/profile/1505
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Tamb said:It’s the seeds on the pole. They drop then most of them take root.
Where you live, yes.
https://weeds.brisbane.qld.gov.au/weeds/century-plant
https://keyserver.lucidcentral.org/weeds/data/media/Html/agave_americana.htm
“Although seed has high germination rates, most seedlings have been found to die shortly after germination. In other species of Agave water stress in the seedling stage may be the most important factor affecting establishment. Interspecies crosses with Agave tequilana can produce viable seeds.” from https://florabase.dpaw.wa.gov.au/browse/profile/1505
At any rate, it would take at least a century or so to take over the veggie garden in arid lands on clay or clay loams. Although you probably couldn’t use the veggie garden for most of that century.
Plenty of this stuff here. May not be very purdie but it’s certainly hardy, requires zero attention.
Bubblecar said:
Plenty of this stuff here. May not be very purdie but it’s certainly hardy, requires zero attention.
Does it attract butterflies?
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
Plenty of this stuff here. May not be very purdie but it’s certainly hardy, requires zero attention.
Does it attract butterflies?
Haven’t noticed. The bees like it.
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
A story. Once upon a time we lived in Hawkesdale and we had verandah on two sides of the big house. We also had a Boxer called Duke. Who loved to run around the verandah, skidding out on the corner. We also had a terracotta pot of prickly plants of various types. One evening, there was a lot of thudding, skidding and then everything went quiet…we had to pick spines out of a Boxer backside…
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Scabiosa is now out properly. Well, one flower is, anyway. Quite a few more to come in the next week by the look of the plants.
And a pretty rose:
Almost black, that top one.
Yes. The bud stage is very, very dark. I didn’t know what I’d get when I planted the seed.
Tamb said:
Ian said:
transition said:
some of cacti perimeter security, generally you can hear intruders stuck amongst them, or if get through staggering around the yard blinded
![]()
There is one of those things in the distance with the tall flowering spikes growing on the footpath a bit down the road.. all that remains of the amazing garden of an 80 y o mate who died a couple of years ago. The owner decided to put a dozer through the lot except for it.
Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
Are they the thing that takes years and years to flower and then the parent plant dies. And millions of babies come up from the seed?
Michael V said:
Ian said:
Tamb said:Those things are nasty & should be declared noxious plants. They produce hundreds of very viable seeds. Almost impossible to eradicate.
I haven’t noticed this one reproducing.
They are called “Century Plants” because they takes many years to grow to maturity and then flower. Then they die.
Ah, I should have continued catching up before commenting.
nothing special, some color though, out in the garden briefly this morn
transition said:
nothing special, some color though, out in the garden briefly this morn
I’ve never grown a Hoya.
buffy said:
transition said:
nothing special, some color though, out in the garden briefly this morn
I’ve never grown a Hoya.
I could send you cuttings with roots next spring or some other time if you want. They do take quite a while to grow.
I grew one from a native Hoya I collected when geologic mapping a creek south of Biloela, QLD. Unfortunately it was very badly damaged before flowering and didn’t survive.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
transition said:
nothing special, some color though, out in the garden briefly this morn
I’ve never grown a Hoya.
I could send you cuttings with roots next spring or some other time if you want. They do take quite a while to grow.
I grew one from a native Hoya I collected when geologic mapping a creek south of Biloela, QLD. Unfortunately it was very badly damaged before flowering and didn’t survive.
I’d give it a go. Mum had one in a pot near her front door when I was a child.
By the way, it would seem your ginger has decided to grow in its pot this year. The galangal is not though. It may have been dug out by a feral cat though. Despite the dogs, there are feral cats about, and they dig.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:I’ve never grown a Hoya.
I could send you cuttings with roots next spring or some other time if you want. They do take quite a while to grow.
I grew one from a native Hoya I collected when geologic mapping a creek south of Biloela, QLD. Unfortunately it was very badly damaged before flowering and didn’t survive.
I’d give it a go. Mum had one in a pot near her front door when I was a child.
By the way, it would seem your ginger has decided to grow in its pot this year. The galangal is not though. It may have been dug out by a feral cat though. Despite the dogs, there are feral cats about, and they dig.
I have a hoya. I have had it a long time. A coupe of decades. It grows. It has only flowered a few times. I think it would prefer to be somewhere else.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:I could send you cuttings with roots next spring or some other time if you want. They do take quite a while to grow.
I grew one from a native Hoya I collected when geologic mapping a creek south of Biloela, QLD. Unfortunately it was very badly damaged before flowering and didn’t survive.
I’d give it a go. Mum had one in a pot near her front door when I was a child.
By the way, it would seem your ginger has decided to grow in its pot this year. The galangal is not though. It may have been dug out by a feral cat though. Despite the dogs, there are feral cats about, and they dig.
I have a hoya. I have had it a long time. A coupe of decades. It grows. It has only flowered a few times. I think it would prefer to be somewhere else.
They are really a tropical plant. If I give it a go, I’ll have to think carefully about where to put it. Mum did get flowers on hers, but it’s warmer in Melbourne than it is here or where you are.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:I’d give it a go. Mum had one in a pot near her front door when I was a child.
By the way, it would seem your ginger has decided to grow in its pot this year. The galangal is not though. It may have been dug out by a feral cat though. Despite the dogs, there are feral cats about, and they dig.
I have a hoya. I have had it a long time. A coupe of decades. It grows. It has only flowered a few times. I think it would prefer to be somewhere else.
They are really a tropical plant. If I give it a go, I’ll have to think carefully about where to put it. Mum did get flowers on hers, but it’s warmer in Melbourne than it is here or where you are.
Mine is in the bathroom near a north facing window. I think it would like more north. I have seen some really good ones down here but they have even more window.
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
Nice. Is that Moonah? Melaleuca lanceolata?
roughbarked said:
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
Nice. Is that Moonah? Melaleuca lanceolata?
Think the wren might be in Melaleuca elliptica?
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
Nice. Is that Moonah? Melaleuca lanceolata?
Think the wren might be in Melaleuca elliptica?
dunno, i’m a plant dunce, flora ignorant, possibly it is, the wren however I can say that’s a variegated wren, a male, which was a bit shy, the males tend to be
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
What’s the bird with the splash of yellow?
transition said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Nice. Is that Moonah? Melaleuca lanceolata?
Think the wren might be in Melaleuca elliptica?
dunno, i’m a plant dunce, flora ignorant, possibly it is, the wren however I can say that’s a variegated wren, a male, which was a bit shy, the males tend to be
Same wren as I get here and yes the trees are correct. Mel. elliptica is native to your area as also probably is Moonah. Moonah is native here but generally wherever mallee country is in south eastern Aust.
Michael V said:
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
What’s the bird with the splash of yellow?
new holland honeyeater, very common here, possibly don’t get up far as you are
transition said:
Michael V said:
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
What’s the bird with the splash of yellow?
new holland honeyeater, very common here, possibly don’t get up far as you are
New Holland Honeyeaters are one of the most common and widespread honeyeaters to inhabit coastal and sub-coastal heathlands and shrublands in south-eastern and south-western Australia and Tasmania. As a consequence they are also one of the most well-studied of all our honeyeaters and their life history and general biology is very well documented in HANZAB – the entry takes up several pages.
New Holland Honeyeaters normally breed as simple pairs, in favourable seasons sometimes in small, loose colonies where nests may be less than 30 metres apart. Males indulge in short vertical song-flights to advertise their territories while the females incubate the eggs, but both parents feed the nestlings, with nectar in the first instance and subsequently with insects. New Holland Honeyeaters are essentially sedentary and breed in the same places year after year, but in the non-breeding season they may wander a few kilometres in search of food, often in the company of the closely related White-cheeked Honeyeater. At this time, rather than flocks, they form small groups of 20 or so. On the east coast, the flowering of the various banksias is an important resource of nectar for these birds.
From Graeme Chapman http://www.graemechapman.com.au/library/viewphotos.php?c=261
transition said:
Michael V said:
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
What’s the bird with the splash of yellow?
new holland honeyeater, very common here, possibly don’t get up far as you are
Thanks. I checked, and I haven’t seen them here. Seems we are north of their range.
:)
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
transition said:
brief walk, think I got them all, birds, bees, flowers and trees
Nice. Is that Moonah? Melaleuca lanceolata?
Think the wren might be in Melaleuca elliptica?
The Melaleuca looks like our M. squarrosa. M. squarrosa is quite perfumed. You can tell from a distance when the things are in flower.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Nice. Is that Moonah? Melaleuca lanceolata?
Think the wren might be in Melaleuca elliptica?
The Melaleuca looks like our M. squarrosa. M. squarrosa is quite perfumed. You can tell from a distance when the things are in flower.
Could be that, yeah.
The corpse flower, Amorphophallus titanium, has been captivating the world since its discovery in 1878 by Italian botanist Odoardo Beccari. This rare and unusual plant only blooms about once every decade (or longer) when conditions are optimal, leading to a shallow genetic pool threatening the corpse flower’s existence in both the wild and in botanic gardens, reports Doug Johnson for Undark.
With fewer than 1,000 individuals left in the wild and 500 specimens living in private and public botanic collections, genetic diversity is limited, and these flowers are all too closely related. Inbred plants produce unviable seeds, which could potentially eliminate any hope of preservation reports, Samantha Drake for the New York Times.
Done my Letter to Mum. Here are today’s flowers. The Scabiosa are continuing to get more lush as more flowers come out. I like the velvety look of the purple buds.
And the white Agapanthus shows up nicely against the trunk of the gum tree:
And a cabbage white annoying a Buddleia flower before annoying my broccoli plants in the backyard.
buffy said:
Done my Letter to Mum. Here are today’s flowers. The Scabiosa are continuing to get more lush as more flowers come out. I like the velvety look of the purple buds.
And the white Agapanthus shows up nicely against the trunk of the gum tree:
And a cabbage white annoying a Buddleia flower before annoying my broccoli plants in the backyard.
Nice.
Here, Spider Lilies:
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Done my Letter to Mum. Here are today’s flowers. The Scabiosa are continuing to get more lush as more flowers come out. I like the velvety look of the purple buds.
And the white Agapanthus shows up nicely against the trunk of the gum tree:
And a cabbage white annoying a Buddleia flower before annoying my broccoli plants in the backyard.
Nice.
Here, Spider Lilies:
Ooh, they are elegant.
A hot pink rose.
buffy said:
A hot pink rose.
Does it have a sweet perfume?
Woodie said:
buffy said:
A hot pink rose.
Does it have a sweet perfume?
Boringly, no. Not that one. But it’s such a strong colour I made an exception to my rule that only roses of perfume were allowed in my garden. I have made a couple of exceptions for pretty or interesting colours.
buffy said:
Woodie said:
buffy said:
A hot pink rose.
Does it have a sweet perfume?
Boringly, no. Not that one. But it’s such a strong colour I made an exception to my rule that only roses of perfume were allowed in my garden. I have made a couple of exceptions for pretty or interesting colours.
A real beauty in colour and form, certainly worth a spot in your garden.
pelargonium or whatever, we not had that type here previous, popped out a flower for us
transition said:
pelargonium or whatever, we not had that type here previous, popped out a flower for us
One of my receptionist/secretaries would have described that as “hospital pink”. We used to have a standing order with the local florist for flowers each week for the reception desk. If they came in pink, she’d say “we’ve got hospital flowers this week!”
buffy said:
transition said:
pelargonium or whatever, we not had that type here previous, popped out a flower for us
One of my receptionist/secretaries would have described that as “hospital pink”. We used to have a standing order with the local florist for flowers each week for the reception desk. If they came in pink, she’d say “we’ve got hospital flowers this week!”
Doubt the flowers are pelargoniums though?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
transition said:
pelargonium or whatever, we not had that type here previous, popped out a flower for us
One of my receptionist/secretaries would have described that as “hospital pink”. We used to have a standing order with the local florist for flowers each week for the reception desk. If they came in pink, she’d say “we’ve got hospital flowers this week!”
Doubt the flowers are pelargoniums though?
They look like pelargoniums to me. I bet they smell like them too (the leaves).
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:One of my receptionist/secretaries would have described that as “hospital pink”. We used to have a standing order with the local florist for flowers each week for the reception desk. If they came in pink, she’d say “we’ve got hospital flowers this week!”
Doubt the flowers are pelargoniums though?
They look like pelargoniums to me. I bet they smell like them too (the leaves).
OK.
First picture on a google search for pink and white pelargonium:
Regal hybrids at gardens online.
buffy said:
First picture on a google search for pink and white pelargonium:
Regal hybrids at gardens online.
I’m not seeing the same anthers and stigma?
Maybe I’m not looking hard enough?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
First picture on a google search for pink and white pelargonium:
Regal hybrids at gardens online.
I’m not seeing the same anthers and stigma?
Maybe I’m not looking hard enough?
Look at the leaves behind it. What would you say it is? Lots of pelargoniums and geraniums around here and everyone nicks bits of everyone elses to stick in the ground. Grow from most bits you stick in the ground. Curiously the internet seems to think geraniums are tender annuals. I think they are tough as nails buggers. And so are the pelargoniums.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
First picture on a google search for pink and white pelargonium:
Regal hybrids at gardens online.
I’m not seeing the same anthers and stigma?
Maybe I’m not looking hard enough?
Look at the leaves behind it. What would you say it is? Lots of pelargoniums and geraniums around here and everyone nicks bits of everyone elses to stick in the ground. Grow from most bits you stick in the ground. Curiously the internet seems to think geraniums are tender annuals. I think they are tough as nails buggers. And so are the pelargoniums.
yes yes. I see and agree about the leaves and everything else you said but to my first glance flowers reminded me more of a lily than a pelargonium.
transition said:
Billbergia season again.
:)
And here are some roses…Blue Moon (cutting from a staff member) and a white one I don’t know the name of (here in the garden when we came). Both are better in bud form.
…………..
……………..
And a Dahlia that just keeps on keeping on. I did not plant this. It was also here when we came over 20 years ago. It gets no attention at all. I am considering digging some of it up and relocating it into my “Pink Garden”.
It is also naked lady time now. (Belladonna lilies)
I noticed the other day that the leaves on the grape hyacinths are starting to come up. I would have said that was a tad early for them.
And another one. I got a couple of packets of strawflower seeds and now I’ve got some flowers coming along. (I’d better go and write the Letter to Mum now I’ve got the photos ready)
buffy said:
And a Dahlia that just keeps on keeping on. I did not plant this. It was also here when we came over 20 years ago. It gets no attention at all. I am considering digging some of it up and relocating it into my “Pink Garden”.
It is also naked lady time now. (Belladonna lilies)
I noticed the other day that the leaves on the grape hyacinths are starting to come up. I would have said that was a tad early for them.
top one is very pretty, like that
I’ve sorted my pressed wildflowers onto sheets. Now my press is ready and waiting for me to go out and collect some more for pressing.
buffy said:
I’ve sorted my pressed wildflowers onto sheets. Now my press is ready and waiting for me to go out and collect some more for pressing.
You are good at it and that’s for sure.
Description under each image:
Ornamental Ginger
Spider lily with Assassin Bug.
Malaguetinha Chilli.
Red Habanero Chill.
Looks good from a distance…
But up close you can see what 4 days of hot temperatures does to a rose bush.
buffy said:
Looks good from a distance…
But up close you can see what 4 days of hot temperatures does to a rose bush.
It isn’t only roses. This current climate is very unforgiving for all plants, even natives.
Michael V said:
What be that?
Peak Warming Man said:
Michael V said:
What be that?
Yucca
PermeateFree said:
Peak Warming Man said:
Michael V said:
What be that?
Yucca
yeah not sure what sort, perhaps not quite the one you posted, dunno
Peak Warming Man said:
Michael V said:
What be that?
Looks like Yucca.
transition said:
PermeateFree said:
Peak Warming Man said:What be that?
Yucca
yeah not sure what sort, perhaps not quite the one you posted, dunno
Types of Yucca Plants (With Pictures)
https://leafyplace.com/yucca-plant/
PermeateFree said:
transition said:
PermeateFree said:
Yucca
yeah not sure what sort, perhaps not quite the one you posted, dunno
Types of Yucca Plants (With Pictures)
https://leafyplace.com/yucca-plant/
was in that page little while ago
got couple different sorts here
I guess this is what we have here. They are tall and spiky. I cut them down a couple of years back. They’ve grown back to be multi-branched and 3+ metres tall. They were well over 4 metres tall. The cut trunks left on the ground sprouted many new plants. Can’t kill them I reckon.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
“The Spanish bayonet multi-stemmed yucca plant is one of the most ornamental of the yucca species. As its name suggests, the leaves are long and sword-like. It’s not just the leaf shape that looks like a sword—the stiff evergreen blades also have sharp serration along the margins and a sharp pointed tip. A cluster of white flowers appears on 2-ft. (0.6 m) long flowering stems.
Also called the Spanish dagger, the tall yucca shrub-like tree grows to between 5 and 10 ft. (1.5 – 3 m). Densely growing spiky leaves form crowns on multiple stems. The yucca tree compliments other tropical trees and is ideal for growing in arid landscapes in coastal regions. This yucca species Yucca aloifolia thrives in USDA zones 7 – 11.
This palm-like yucca plant also grows well indoors as a tropical plant.”
few others out there, last picture is over stump shed they don’t have real solid spike on ends at all
The Beast of Yucca Flats was one of the crappiest films ever made.
Bubblecar said:
The Beast of Yucca Flats was one of the crappiest films ever made.
So bad it’s good or too bad even for that?
dv said:
Bubblecar said:
The Beast of Yucca Flats was one of the crappiest films ever made.
So bad it’s good or too bad even for that?
It has a cult following for its badness but I found it very boring as well as very bad.
Some flowers and fruit.
Bromeliad flower and leaves.
Red Habanero chilli.
Malaquetinha chilli flower.
Malaquetinha chilli fruit.
Ornamental Ginger.
Michael V said:
Some flowers and fruit.
Bromeliad flower and leaves.
Red Habanero chilli.
Malaquetinha chilli flower.
Malaquetinha chilli fruit.
Ornamental Ginger.
I’m still struggling to get those chillis to grow. They will not defeat me!
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Some flowers and fruit.
Bromeliad flower and leaves.
Red Habanero chilli.
Malaquetinha chilli flower.
Malaquetinha chilli fruit.
Ornamental Ginger.
I’m still struggling to get those chillis to grow. They will not defeat me!
That’s strange. I got them originally from Baralaba, which, I’d imagine would be similar summer temperatures to you. You’ve likely got colder winters, but Baralaba still gets plenty of frosts.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Some flowers and fruit.
Bromeliad flower and leaves.
Red Habanero chilli.
Malaquetinha chilli flower.
Malaquetinha chilli fruit.
Ornamental Ginger.
I’m still struggling to get those chillis to grow. They will not defeat me!
That’s strange. I got them originally from Baralaba, which, I’d imagine would be similar summer temperatures to you. You’ve likely got colder winters, but Baralaba still gets plenty of frosts.
It is a bit odd, given I’ve got a three year old jalapeno bush. I’ve got some of your plants going still. Actually, I might put a couple up into the anti cabbage moth cage amongst some cabbage plants. They can go dormant over Winter in there where they are protected and perhaps do something useful next Summer. Our season is changing, leaves are changing colour in the Botanic gardens now.
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
Will you try the seeds?
buffy said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:I’m still struggling to get those chillis to grow. They will not defeat me!
That’s strange. I got them originally from Baralaba, which, I’d imagine would be similar summer temperatures to you. You’ve likely got colder winters, but Baralaba still gets plenty of frosts.
It is a bit odd, given I’ve got a three year old jalapeno bush. I’ve got some of your plants going still. Actually, I might put a couple up into the anti cabbage moth cage amongst some cabbage plants. They can go dormant over Winter in there where they are protected and perhaps do something useful next Summer. Our season is changing, leaves are changing colour in the Botanic gardens now.
What is wrong with my chilli plant?
Overwatering is the most common cause of all chilli growing problems and can cause flower drop. Underwatering can also cause flower drop. Keep soil moist but not wet. … Chilli plants have generally not been bred like some super Tomatoes and cannot tolerate such high strength feed.
https://www.worldofchillies.com/chilli_problems/chilli-plant-problems.html
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
That is one weird flower.
:)
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
lady and I just had a look at them, beautiful
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:That’s strange. I got them originally from Baralaba, which, I’d imagine would be similar summer temperatures to you. You’ve likely got colder winters, but Baralaba still gets plenty of frosts.
It is a bit odd, given I’ve got a three year old jalapeno bush. I’ve got some of your plants going still. Actually, I might put a couple up into the anti cabbage moth cage amongst some cabbage plants. They can go dormant over Winter in there where they are protected and perhaps do something useful next Summer. Our season is changing, leaves are changing colour in the Botanic gardens now.
What is wrong with my chilli plant?
Overwatering is the most common cause of all chilli growing problems and can cause flower drop. Underwatering can also cause flower drop. Keep soil moist but not wet. … Chilli plants have generally not been bred like some super Tomatoes and cannot tolerate such high strength feed.https://www.worldofchillies.com/chilli_problems/chilli-plant-problems.html
These ones germinate and get to 6 or 8 leaves and then just stop. They don’t die, they just stop. Not to worry. I don’t personally eat chili but Mr buffy does.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:It is a bit odd, given I’ve got a three year old jalapeno bush. I’ve got some of your plants going still. Actually, I might put a couple up into the anti cabbage moth cage amongst some cabbage plants. They can go dormant over Winter in there where they are protected and perhaps do something useful next Summer. Our season is changing, leaves are changing colour in the Botanic gardens now.
What is wrong with my chilli plant?
Overwatering is the most common cause of all chilli growing problems and can cause flower drop. Underwatering can also cause flower drop. Keep soil moist but not wet. … Chilli plants have generally not been bred like some super Tomatoes and cannot tolerate such high strength feed.https://www.worldofchillies.com/chilli_problems/chilli-plant-problems.html
These ones germinate and get to 6 or 8 leaves and then just stop. They don’t die, they just stop. Not to worry. I don’t personally eat chili but Mr buffy does.
Soil microbes maybe?
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
Will you try the seeds?
LOL – no.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
That is one weird flower.
:)
Yes, it’s extraordinary
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:What is wrong with my chilli plant?
Overwatering is the most common cause of all chilli growing problems and can cause flower drop. Underwatering can also cause flower drop. Keep soil moist but not wet. … Chilli plants have generally not been bred like some super Tomatoes and cannot tolerate such high strength feed.https://www.worldofchillies.com/chilli_problems/chilli-plant-problems.html
These ones germinate and get to 6 or 8 leaves and then just stop. They don’t die, they just stop. Not to worry. I don’t personally eat chili but Mr buffy does.
Soil microbes maybe?
MV sent me plenty of seed, so I can keep trying. I’ll just plant out lots of them and maybe one will make me a chilli one day.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:It is a bit odd, given I’ve got a three year old jalapeno bush. I’ve got some of your plants going still. Actually, I might put a couple up into the anti cabbage moth cage amongst some cabbage plants. They can go dormant over Winter in there where they are protected and perhaps do something useful next Summer. Our season is changing, leaves are changing colour in the Botanic gardens now.
What is wrong with my chilli plant?
Overwatering is the most common cause of all chilli growing problems and can cause flower drop. Underwatering can also cause flower drop. Keep soil moist but not wet. … Chilli plants have generally not been bred like some super Tomatoes and cannot tolerate such high strength feed.https://www.worldofchillies.com/chilli_problems/chilli-plant-problems.html
These ones germinate and get to 6 or 8 leaves and then just stop. They don’t die, they just stop. Not to worry. I don’t personally eat chili but Mr buffy does.
Could it be that the soil is too clayey?
Michael V said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:What is wrong with my chilli plant?
Overwatering is the most common cause of all chilli growing problems and can cause flower drop. Underwatering can also cause flower drop. Keep soil moist but not wet. … Chilli plants have generally not been bred like some super Tomatoes and cannot tolerate such high strength feed.https://www.worldofchillies.com/chilli_problems/chilli-plant-problems.html
These ones germinate and get to 6 or 8 leaves and then just stop. They don’t die, they just stop. Not to worry. I don’t personally eat chili but Mr buffy does.
Could it be that the soil is too clayey?
Not much clay here. It’s volcanic. Red scoria mixed with dirt.
If you ever want to annoy me just say something like “it’s not a flower, it’s a weed”.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:These ones germinate and get to 6 or 8 leaves and then just stop. They don’t die, they just stop. Not to worry. I don’t personally eat chili but Mr buffy does.
Could it be that the soil is too clayey?
Not much clay here. It’s volcanic. Red scoria mixed with dirt.
They recommend a sand based soil with plenty of humus.
dv said:
If you ever want to annoy me just say something like “it’s not a flower, it’s a weed”.
You’ve gone native!
buffy said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:These ones germinate and get to 6 or 8 leaves and then just stop. They don’t die, they just stop. Not to worry. I don’t personally eat chili but Mr buffy does.
Could it be that the soil is too clayey?
Not much clay here. It’s volcanic. Red scoria mixed with dirt.
Most basaltic soils are dominated by clay.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:Could it be that the soil is too clayey?
Not much clay here. It’s volcanic. Red scoria mixed with dirt.
Most basaltic soils are dominated by clay.
It doesn’t stick into a ball.
Witty Rejoinder said:
dv said:
If you ever want to annoy me just say something like “it’s not a flower, it’s a weed”.
You’ve gone native!
I mean I’ve always been like that.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:Not much clay here. It’s volcanic. Red scoria mixed with dirt.
Most basaltic soils are dominated by clay.
It doesn’t stick into a ball.
Huh!
Unusual. Perhaps there’s still a fair bit of un-devitrified glass. When did your volcano last erupt?
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:Most basaltic soils are dominated by clay.
It doesn’t stick into a ball.
Huh!
Unusual. Perhaps there’s still a fair bit of un-devitrified glass. When did your volcano last erupt?
>>Age of the eruption The lack of extensive soil suggests that the lava flows are relatively young compared tothe older volcanics around them, which have deep black or red clay soils. Isotope dating of the Mt Rouse lava flows suggests an age of about 300,000 years, whereas the surrounding older lavas are about 2 million years, as discussed in a separate note in this series (Grimes,2013). <<
From here:
https://www.hamilton-field-naturalists-club-victoria.org.au/images/pdf/Publications/Geology/MtRouseKG.pdf
The local Aboriginal people have stories of eruptions, but I think that is for the one at the coast, Tower Hill, about 10,000 years ago.
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
Nice pictures MV.
A nice bat flower article-
https://jerry-coleby-williams.net/2013/04/19/why-do-bat-plants-have-whiskers/
I did not know that they are in the same family as yams (Dioscoreaceae), thanks to those pesky botanists reclassifying them.
ruby said:
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
Nice pictures MV.
A nice bat flower article-
https://jerry-coleby-williams.net/2013/04/19/why-do-bat-plants-have-whiskers/ I did not know that they are in the same family as yams (Dioscoreaceae), thanks to those pesky botanists reclassifying them.
Ta.
ruby said:
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
Nice pictures MV.
A nice bat flower article-
https://jerry-coleby-williams.net/2013/04/19/why-do-bat-plants-have-whiskers/ I did not know that they are in the same family as yams (Dioscoreaceae), thanks to those pesky botanists reclassifying them.
MV, have you noticed anything using the filamentous bracteoles?
PermeateFree said:
ruby said:
Michael V said:
Bat flower pictures. This amazing flower has been opening for about a week, and is likely at its best today.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacca_chantrieri
Front of flower.
Rear of flower.
Top of flower.
Front of flower with shadow on leaf.
Nice pictures MV.
A nice bat flower article-
https://jerry-coleby-williams.net/2013/04/19/why-do-bat-plants-have-whiskers/I did not know that they are in the same family as yams (Dioscoreaceae), thanks to those pesky botanists reclassifying them.
MV, have you noticed anything using the filamentous bracteoles?
No, no I haven’t. The filaments slowly dry from the outer end, and this bit can go a little bit like a tendril-spiral.
Michael V said:
PermeateFree said:
ruby said:Nice pictures MV.
A nice bat flower article-
https://jerry-coleby-williams.net/2013/04/19/why-do-bat-plants-have-whiskers/I did not know that they are in the same family as yams (Dioscoreaceae), thanks to those pesky botanists reclassifying them.
MV, have you noticed anything using the filamentous bracteoles?
No, no I haven’t. The filaments slowly dry from the outer end, and this bit can go a little bit like a tendril-spiral.
Might be interesting to keep an eye on them.
PermeateFree said:
Michael V said:
PermeateFree said:MV, have you noticed anything using the filamentous bracteoles?
No, no I haven’t. The filaments slowly dry from the outer end, and this bit can go a little bit like a tendril-spiral.
Might be interesting to keep an eye on them.
Ii have been, and will continue to. If something is seen, I’ll report it.
roughbarked said:
Fanflowers?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
Fanflowers?
Yes.
My local variety. Comes in white and mauve.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
Fanflowers?
Yes.
My local variety. Comes in white and mauve.
The white belladonnas are almost finished and now the pink ones are coming out. I prefer the white.
The appleblossom geranium is reliable for flowering most of the time.
And the hot pink nerines are now flowering. I brought some other colour bulbs back from the Casterton garden, but they are not flowering this year. They are only making some leaves. I need to get them out of the pots and into the garden so I am not constantly disrupting their flowering cycles.
Hmm, seems to be a bit pink around here at the moment.
buffy said:
The white belladonnas are almost finished and now the pink ones are coming out. I prefer the white.
The appleblossom geranium is reliable for flowering most of the time.
And the hot pink nerines are now flowering. I brought some other colour bulbs back from the Casterton garden, but they are not flowering this year. They are only making some leaves. I need to get them out of the pots and into the garden so I am not constantly disrupting their flowering cycles.
Hmm, seems to be a bit pink around here at the moment.
roool purdie. :)
some color
and scenic view, some birdies shortly ago, while out farm
transition said:
some color
and scenic view, some birdies shortly ago, while out farm
You have a lot of birdlife.
buffy said:
transition said:
some color
and scenic view, some birdies shortly ago, while out farm
You have a lot of birdlife.
plenty bush for them, and i’m attracted to their calls
babbler, inland thornbill, and weebill there, left to right
transition said:
buffy said:
transition said:
some color
and scenic view, some birdies shortly ago, while out farm
You have a lot of birdlife.
plenty bush for them, and i’m attracted to their calls
babbler, inland thornbill, and weebill there, left to right
That’s the stuff. In my records there were only incidental birds here until I planted some bushland back.
You can actually see it from google earth. The bush I mean.
some color from mummy’s garden late yesterday
transition said:
some color from mummy’s garden late yesterday
You’ve got some stuff that isn’t pink!
I deadheaded the roses yesterday. I’m not sure if I’ll get an Autumn flush or not.
Have some flowers. Scabiosa, hot pink Nerine, bay leaves.
Some flaars. The blue butterfly bush is out.
And the Stachys macrantha:
buffy said:
Some flaars. The blue butterfly bush is out.
And the Stachys macrantha:
they’re beautiful^
one of the two butcher birds been around here a lot this last three days maybe, came in the inner yard today, very noisy. In the picture that one’s talking to the other maybe ~100+ metres away, looking over the colorbond fence there I was
The Autumn flowers are coming out. Autumn crocus:
A late rose, I think it might be Antigone:
Pink belladonna:
And the Iochroma that I simply cannot manage to kill. I stripped it right back to no branches or leaves about 4 months ago. And back it popped. It is known as Lazarus.
The “red” California poppies keep on keeping on.
And both bees and butterflies like the last remaining Buddleia flower…
(I didn’t notice the bee when I was taking the picture!)
And not flowers. I might not have got apples this year, but the native frangpani certainly thinks making babies is a Good Thing.
And the variegated apple mint that I grabbed some roots from Mum’s seems to have settled in now.
Whoops!
Zephryanthes.
roughbarked said:
Zephryanthes.
So, do rain lilies actually flower after the first rain as Wikipedia suggests? (I’ve never grown them)
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
buffy said:
And not flowers. I might not have got apples this year, but the native frangpani certainly thinks making babies is a Good Thing.
Nice!
Michael V said:
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
That looks like roughbarked’s Zephyranthes (rain lilies).
Michael V said:
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
that pot is a lovely blue.
(no idea about the plant species)
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
That looks like roughbarked’s Zephyranthes (rain lilies).
LOL.
That’s what I just thought.
I had thought rain lilies were large flowers.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Zephryanthes.
So, do rain lilies actually flower after the first rain as Wikipedia suggests? (I’ve never grown them)
Basically yes. Though I usually have to water them.
Michael V said:
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
Zephryanthes..
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
Zephryanthes..
Ta.
I laughed, because I’d been meaning to ask what they were, and buffy’s posts prompted me to go look for the photo. I was doing that when you put up your photo…
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
Zephryanthes..
Ta.
I laughed, because I’d been meaning to ask what they were, and buffy’s posts prompted me to go look for the photo. I was doing that when you put up your photo…
:)
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Inherited plant. Any ideas?
Zephryanthes..
Ta.
I laughed, because I’d been meaning to ask what they were, and buffy’s posts prompted me to go look for the photo. I was doing that when you put up your photo…
LOL
They are finished now but they can be pretty.
It’s Nerine season. A red one (from Mum), a hot pink one (from the Casterton garden) and a white one (which was in this garden when we bought it). There is a pale pink one from Casterton too, but it wasn’t so keen on flowering after I moved it. So next year for that one.
……….
buffy said:
It’s Nerine season. A red one (from Mum), a hot pink one (from the Casterton garden) and a white one (which was in this garden when we bought it). There is a pale pink one from Casterton too, but it wasn’t so keen on flowering after I moved it. So next year for that one.
……….
Nerine. Such a loverlee name for a girl. :)
Woodie said:
buffy said:
It’s Nerine season. A red one (from Mum), a hot pink one (from the Casterton garden) and a white one (which was in this garden when we bought it). There is a pale pink one from Casterton too, but it wasn’t so keen on flowering after I moved it. So next year for that one.
……….
Nerine. Such a loverlee name for a girl. :)
Better than Nerida?
I’d lost this thread. But I found it. Or rather, mr Google found it for me.
Cyclamen are out:
…………………….
White Helleborus also coming out:
And the Daphne is holding its breath fit to bust!
And the first flower on the white Daphne has burst out!
Also the Helleborus are starting:
buffy said:
And the first flower on the white Daphne has burst out!
Also the Helleborus are starting:
lady and I just looking at them, not seen them before
transition said:
buffy said:
And the first flower on the white Daphne has burst out!
Also the Helleborus are starting:
lady and I just looking at them, not seen them before
I suppose this means I should be on the look out for hellebores soon.
The snowflakes are coming out, and the first of the paperwhites (which apparently are neither jonquils nor daffodils):
…………..
Violets and Daphne.
I forgot to offer my Purdie flaars when I did my Letter to Mum earlier. Lots of Helleborus now:
And the Hardenbergia is going for all it is worth:
buffy said:
And the Hardenbergia is going for all it is worth:
Dat’s a nice one.
buffy said:
I forgot to offer my Purdie flaars when I did my Letter to Mum earlier. Lots of Helleborus now:
Purdie.
:)
buffy said:
And the Hardenbergia is going for all it is worth:
Wow!
That’s so much better than the Hardenbergia I grew in Armidale.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
And the Hardenbergia is going for all it is worth:
Wow!
That’s so much better than the Hardenbergia I grew in Armidale.
It’s getting quite old now, as you can see from the trunk. It might just up and cark it soon. I had a magnificent one at Hawkesdale that did that. Huge flowering, then dead. But this one has done beautiful flowering for years.
The first of the daffodils has popped. I think this is Narcissus pseudonarcissus. But I don’t really know. Don’t even know where I got the bulbs from now. They have opened even more since I took the photo some hours ago as they are sitting in the warm kitchen.
buffy said:
The first of the daffodils has popped. I think this is Narcissus pseudonarcissus. But I don’t really know. Don’t even know where I got the bulbs from now. They have opened even more since I took the photo some hours ago as they are sitting in the warm kitchen.
Nice and early.
buffy said:
The first of the daffodils has popped. I think this is Narcissus pseudonarcissus. But I don’t really know. Don’t even know where I got the bulbs from now. They have opened even more since I took the photo some hours ago as they are sitting in the warm kitchen.
Purdie daffy dills.
few from a walk earlier, not much, a briefer than expected walk as it went because it rained, I even ran home some distance, but you know how hard it is to dodge rain drops
transition said:
few from a walk earlier, not much, a briefer than expected walk as it went because it rained, I even ran home some distance, but you know how hard it is to dodge rain drops
I just love the Dodonaea. I’ve got one here that I grew from seed I picked up off the ground in the Flinders Ranges many, many years ago. But they aren’t very good when they are solitary. It does flower, but enthusastically.
buffy said:
transition said:
few from a walk earlier, not much, a briefer than expected walk as it went because it rained, I even ran home some distance, but you know how hard it is to dodge rain drops
I just love the Dodonaea. I’ve got one here that I grew from seed I picked up off the ground in the Flinders Ranges many, many years ago. But they aren’t very good when they are solitary. It does flower, but enthusastically.
I grow three species of Dodonea in my garden. D. attenuata D. viscosa and D. boronofolia
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
transition said:
few from a walk earlier, not much, a briefer than expected walk as it went because it rained, I even ran home some distance, but you know how hard it is to dodge rain drops
I just love the Dodonaea. I’ve got one here that I grew from seed I picked up off the ground in the Flinders Ranges many, many years ago. But they aren’t very good when they are solitary. It does flower, but enthusastically.
I grow
threefour species of Dodonea in my garden. D. attenuata D. viscosa D. boroniifolia and D. cuneata
I’ve been pruning the peach tree and the apricot tree and then I moved on to the gangly Cape Gooseberries. They’ve got flowers, fruit and some interesting skeletonized fruit from some time ago.
Spring is springing.
buffy said:
Spring is springing.
:)
seedlings from strawberries I have eaten.
A fallen apricot flower and an Eucalyptus erythronema seedling.
The pink heath is out, and the tiny little Boronia muelleri. And some helmet orchids which I nearly missed. They are about the size of a pea.
………..
When we came to Penshurst from Hawkesdale about 20 years ago, I brought some daffodil bulbs with me which we always referred to as the Dog Daffodils. Because they grew next to the dog run. They were there when we moved there, which is now 40 odd years ago, so they are an old one. I can’t now remember exactly, but they flowered for a bit and then disappeared. I’m very pleased to see they have decided to revive! Now to see if the pink daffodils that I got from my grandmother’s garden ever return. I don’t hold much hope for them. This year looks like a very good daffodil year and there are no leaves of the pink daffs showing. I did, however, beg some pink daff bulbs from a friend last year and they are looking excellent. When they flower we will be able to see if she dug up the right bulbs for me. (She’s got gazillions of daffodils which were in their 1 acre garden when they bought the place around 3 years ago)
This is the Dog Daffodil. I should have a go at identifying it, I suppose.
And one of the pots of Jetfire is now coming out too.
I went off to try to ID the Dog Daffodil. And I found this American pdf, which is a joy to read, just for fun.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwis7tiQkaryAhXb63MBHeguBGY4ChAWegQIDhAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gcvirginia.org%2Fwarehouse%2Ffm%2Fdocuments%2Fuserfiles%2FHistorics-Handbook.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0VqSO1CVdPieFI6AwPsSrz
I’ve decided the Dog Daffodil is probably Telemonius or von Sion.
buffy said:
I went off to try to ID the Dog Daffodil. And I found this American pdf, which is a joy to read, just for fun.https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwis7tiQkaryAhXb63MBHeguBGY4ChAWegQIDhAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gcvirginia.org%2Fwarehouse%2Ffm%2Fdocuments%2Fuserfiles%2FHistorics-Handbook.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0VqSO1CVdPieFI6AwPsSrz
I’ve decided the Dog Daffodil is probably Telemonius or von Sion.
Wordsworth’s host of golden daffodils, were almost certainly one of the most pervasive of these wild species, the Narcissus pseudonarcissus . Image: Engraved illustration of Narcissus sorts, described as pseudonarcissus.
Tamb said:
buffy said:
I went off to try to ID the Dog Daffodil. And I found this American pdf, which is a joy to read, just for fun.https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwis7tiQkaryAhXb63MBHeguBGY4ChAWegQIDhAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gcvirginia.org%2Fwarehouse%2Ffm%2Fdocuments%2Fuserfiles%2FHistorics-Handbook.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0VqSO1CVdPieFI6AwPsSrz
I’ve decided the Dog Daffodil is probably Telemonius or von Sion.
Wordsworth’s host of golden daffodils, were almost certainly one of the most pervasive of these wild species, the Narcissus pseudonarcissus . Image: Engraved illustration of Narcissus sorts, described as pseudonarcissus.
N. pseudonarcissus is a very early flowerer, and I think I have them in my garden. But daffs are not at all easy to ID when they are yellow on yellow. This is mine:
This is one of the images on the Wikipedia page for N. pseudonarcissus.
buffy said:
Tamb said:
buffy said:
I went off to try to ID the Dog Daffodil. And I found this American pdf, which is a joy to read, just for fun.https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwis7tiQkaryAhXb63MBHeguBGY4ChAWegQIDhAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gcvirginia.org%2Fwarehouse%2Ffm%2Fdocuments%2Fuserfiles%2FHistorics-Handbook.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0VqSO1CVdPieFI6AwPsSrz
I’ve decided the Dog Daffodil is probably Telemonius or von Sion.
Wordsworth’s host of golden daffodils, were almost certainly one of the most pervasive of these wild species, the Narcissus pseudonarcissus . Image: Engraved illustration of Narcissus sorts, described as pseudonarcissus.
N. pseudonarcissus is a very early flowerer, and I think I have them in my garden. But daffs are not at all easy to ID when they are yellow on yellow. This is mine:
This is one of the images on the Wikipedia page for N. pseudonarcissus.
A bit of trivia, it’s tradition to plant daffodils at the foot of signposts for national walking trails in the UK.
buffy said:
Tamb said:
buffy said:
I went off to try to ID the Dog Daffodil. And I found this American pdf, which is a joy to read, just for fun.https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwis7tiQkaryAhXb63MBHeguBGY4ChAWegQIDhAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gcvirginia.org%2Fwarehouse%2Ffm%2Fdocuments%2Fuserfiles%2FHistorics-Handbook.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0VqSO1CVdPieFI6AwPsSrz
I’ve decided the Dog Daffodil is probably Telemonius or von Sion.
Wordsworth’s host of golden daffodils, were almost certainly one of the most pervasive of these wild species, the Narcissus pseudonarcissus . Image: Engraved illustration of Narcissus sorts, described as pseudonarcissus.
N. pseudonarcissus is a very early flowerer, and I think I have them in my garden. But daffs are not at all easy to ID when they are yellow on yellow. This is mine:
This is one of the images on the Wikipedia page for N. pseudonarcissus.
Tamb said:
buffy said:
Tamb said:Wordsworth’s host of golden daffodils, were almost certainly one of the most pervasive of these wild species, the Narcissus pseudonarcissus . Image: Engraved illustration of Narcissus sorts, described as pseudonarcissus.
N. pseudonarcissus is a very early flowerer, and I think I have them in my garden. But daffs are not at all easy to ID when they are yellow on yellow. This is mine:
This is one of the images on the Wikipedia page for N. pseudonarcissus.
Daffs don’t do well here. To balance that my Foxtail palm has fruited & I’m giving the locals some to help spread the species.
![]()
Judging by the pictures of Foxtail Palms, they are one of the palm tree choices here.
Michael V said:
Tamb said:
buffy said:N. pseudonarcissus is a very early flowerer, and I think I have them in my garden. But daffs are not at all easy to ID when they are yellow on yellow. This is mine:
This is one of the images on the Wikipedia page for N. pseudonarcissus.
Daffs don’t do well here. To balance that my Foxtail palm has fruited & I’m giving the locals some to help spread the species.
![]()
Judging by the pictures of Foxtail Palms, they are one of the palm tree choices here.
More Narcissus. The Paperwhites are looking quite lush, amongst the iris leaves and the white and purple violets.
The sun was out for a bit today, so the scented sundews showed their faces.
And we had pink and white Epacris, and a little bit of Leucopogon (bearded heath) around.
…..
…..
Years ago, after a fire, I discovered that there was Isopogon in our Bit of Bush. Then it disappeared again. Today I found 3 small bushes of it. Not in flower, but I noticed the distinctive foliage.
(I hope the clover glycine shows itself again one day. I should wander down to where it was, yet again, to see if I can find it. I’ll give it another month to think about flowering though, not much is out yet)
buffy said:
The sun was out for a bit today, so the scented sundews showed their faces.
And we had pink and white Epacris, and a little bit of Leucopogon (bearded heath) around.
…..
…..
Years ago, after a fire, I discovered that there was Isopogon in our Bit of Bush. Then it disappeared again. Today I found 3 small bushes of it. Not in flower, but I noticed the distinctive foliage.
(I hope the clover glycine shows itself again one day. I should wander down to where it was, yet again, to see if I can find it. I’ll give it another month to think about flowering though, not much is out yet)
lady and I just looked at them, nice
buffy said:
The sun was out for a bit today, so the scented sundews showed their faces.
And we had pink and white Epacris, and a little bit of Leucopogon (bearded heath) around.
…..
…..
Years ago, after a fire, I discovered that there was Isopogon in our Bit of Bush. Then it disappeared again. Today I found 3 small bushes of it. Not in flower, but I noticed the distinctive foliage.
(I hope the clover glycine shows itself again one day. I should wander down to where it was, yet again, to see if I can find it. I’ll give it another month to think about flowering though, not much is out yet)
I like the long bell ones.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
The sun was out for a bit today, so the scented sundews showed their faces.
And we had pink and white Epacris, and a little bit of Leucopogon (bearded heath) around.
…..
…..
Years ago, after a fire, I discovered that there was Isopogon in our Bit of Bush. Then it disappeared again. Today I found 3 small bushes of it. Not in flower, but I noticed the distinctive foliage.
(I hope the clover glycine shows itself again one day. I should wander down to where it was, yet again, to see if I can find it. I’ll give it another month to think about flowering though, not much is out yet)
I like the long bell ones.
It’s the Victorian state flower. Epacris impressa.
Possibly Hippeastrum papilio, flowering here. Thanks for the “Green Hippy” bulbs, Woodie.
:)
Michael V said:
Possibly Hippeastrum papilio, flowering here. Thanks for the “Green Hippy” bulbs, Woodie.:)
very nice
Michael V said:
Possibly Hippeastrum papilio, flowering here. Thanks for the “Green Hippy” bulbs, Woodie.:)
That’s a nice one.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Possibly Hippeastrum papilio, flowering here. Thanks for the “Green Hippy” bulbs, Woodie.:)
That’s a nice one.
Yes it is. We’ve never been at Woodies when it is flowering, so it’s lovely to see now.
:)
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Possibly Hippeastrum papilio, flowering here. Thanks for the “Green Hippy” bulbs, Woodie.:)
That’s a nice one.
Yes it is. We’ve never been at Woodies when it is flowering, so it’s lovely to see now.
:)
Some of mine have come out in the last few days I noticed yesterday. Reckon I’d have 20 – 30 of ‘em now.
You got a bargain, Mr V. @ gardenexpress.
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:That’s a nice one.
Yes it is. We’ve never been at Woodies when it is flowering, so it’s lovely to see now.
:)
Some of mine have come out in the last few days I noticed yesterday. Reckon I’d have 20 – 30 of ‘em now.
You got a bargain, Mr V. @ gardenexpress.
I reckon!
Michael V said:
Woodie said:
Michael V said:Yes it is. We’ve never been at Woodies when it is flowering, so it’s lovely to see now.
:)
Some of mine have come out in the last few days I noticed yesterday. Reckon I’d have 20 – 30 of ‘em now.
You got a bargain, Mr V. @ gardenexpress.
I reckon!
Didn’t I give ya a few of ‘em??
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
Woodie said:Some of mine have come out in the last few days I noticed yesterday. Reckon I’d have 20 – 30 of ‘em now.
You got a bargain, Mr V. @ gardenexpress.
I reckon!
Didn’t I give ya a few of ‘em??
Yes. The photo is of flower from the bulbs you gave us.
Thanks again.
:)
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:That’s a nice one.
Yes it is. We’ve never been at Woodies when it is flowering, so it’s lovely to see now.
:)
Some of mine have come out in the last few days I noticed yesterday. Reckon I’d have 20 – 30 of ‘em now.
You got a bargain, Mr V. @ gardenexpress.
That’s the worst excuse for an arrow that I’ve ever seen.
Peak Warming Man said:
Woodie said:
Michael V said:Yes it is. We’ve never been at Woodies when it is flowering, so it’s lovely to see now.
:)
Some of mine have come out in the last few days I noticed yesterday. Reckon I’d have 20 – 30 of ‘em now.
You got a bargain, Mr V. @ gardenexpress.
That’s the worst excuse for an arrow that I’ve ever seen.
Why taa muchly Mr Man. I try my best. 😁
snuck a bird in, don’t tell anyone, an inland thornbill
Some nice smelly flowers for scenting the laundry shower.
buffy said:
Some nice smelly flowers for scenting the laundry shower.
Are these Australian natives?
Just joking.
Yesterday bought calistemen, woolly bush and camelias for the front garden.
The camelias are in memory of the plants in mrs m’s parents’ garden.
I’ve got purdie flaaars too. :)
Woodie said:
I’ve got purdie flaaars too. :)
Lubberly.
:)
Woodie said:
I’ve got purdie flaaars too. :)
I like those red fellows.
mollwollfumble said:
buffy said:
Some nice smelly flowers for scenting the laundry shower.
Are these Australian natives?
Just joking.
Yesterday bought calistemen, woolly bush and camelias for the front garden.
The camelias are in memory of the plants in mrs m’s parents’ garden.
I’m sure I’ve shown it here before, but Callistemon hedges rather beautifully. And the honeyeaters, wattlebirds and small birds love them. When they are young, cut off the flower heads, just behind the heads as the flowers finish. This sort of pruning will make them much bushier. I’ve got a good tolerance for boredom, obviously, because these ones shown below got that treatment for 10 years.
2008:
2011:
And by 2019 when I’d cleared the lower branches to take them up to small shrubs:
Woodie said:
I’ve got purdie flaaars too. :)
You have, indeed.
:)
More purdie flaaars. :)
Woodie said:
More purdie flaaars. :)
I think your place thinks Spring is sprung.
Daffodils – assorted.
Canola paddock in full bloom.
Whoops:
buffy said:
Daffodils – assorted.
Canola paddock in full bloom.
My daffy dills don’t flower. They come up, yes, but the ground doesn’t get cold enough for long enough for them to flower.
Jonquils do, but this year wasn’t their best. Ground a bit too warm, methinks.
buffy said:
Whoops:
Hells Mc Murdie bells!! Daffy dills?
Woodie said:
buffy said:
Whoops:
Hells Mc Murdie bells!! Daffy dills?
No, that was the canola (rapeseed) paddock that I forgot to put the link into the post before. There are acres/hectares around here. It’s a bit too cold today, but if the air is a bit warmer, you can smell those paddocks.
lots of canola around here too, we hate it, the stink
a rainbow and a bird, not a flower, a butcher bird came sat in the tree near me, as about to cut a tree branch off the fence yesterday afternoon out the farm
transition said:
lots of canola around here too, we hate it, the stinka rainbow and a bird, not a flower, a butcher bird came sat in the tree near me, as about to cut a tree branch off the fence yesterday afternoon out the farm
![]()
There area also the thousands of insects that splat on your windscreen at dawn and more particularly at dusk when the canola is flowering. You can smell the turnip paddocks too, although that’s more the smell of the leaves. There seems to be steadily increasing numbers of paddock put into broadbeans over the last 15 years or so. One of my farmer patients told me a year of broadbeans benefited the following crops for about 3 or 4 years afterwards. A little bit of soil magic.
transition said:
lots of canola around here too, we hate it, the stinka rainbow and a bird, not a flower, a butcher bird came sat in the tree near me, as about to cut a tree branch off the fence yesterday afternoon out the farm
![]()
Nice one trans, years ago that road would have been tramped by bullocks.
A cloud of dust on the long white road,
And the teams go creeping on
Inch by inch with the weary load;
And by the power of the greenhide goad
The distant goal is won.
Peak Warming Man said:
transition said:
lots of canola around here too, we hate it, the stinka rainbow and a bird, not a flower, a butcher bird came sat in the tree near me, as about to cut a tree branch off the fence yesterday afternoon out the farm
![]()
Nice one trans, years ago that road would have been tramped by bullocks.
A cloud of dust on the long white road,
And the teams go creeping on
Inch by inch with the weary load;
And by the power of the greenhide goad
The distant goal is won.
nice one that, those words
I tried to photograph the one and only nodding greenhood I found today, but the camera insisted on focussing on the tree behind. This was the best I got:
Flowering period is listed as July to October, but there certainly weren’t a lot of leaves around in the place I usually find them. Maybe they are going to be late this year. Other orchid leaves are starting to show. Hare orchids:
And Pyrrorchis:
Neither of those will flower, there hasn’t been a fire for years now. They just make leaves each year to sustain themselves.
Not sure if this is a Pyrrorchis or something else.
The lovely dainty pink Boronia is out:
….
Still some pink heath about:
……….
And the prickly Moses is starting:
Not flaars, but…seeds on kangaroo grass
And I guess this is actually flowers on the tassel rope rush:
Boronia doesn’t have much of a scent does it?
buffy said:
Not flaars, but…seeds on kangaroo grass
And I guess this is actually flowers on the tassel rope rush:
When I worked at mount Annan botanic gardens a couple of decades ago they had a man come round with some sort of machine that could collect the seeds from the kangaroo grass.
Also great pictures
Peak Warming Man said:
Boronia doesn’t have much of a scent does it?
Some boronias do have a nice scent. There is a brown one, but it’s not in our bush. I actually forgot to sniff that one today. Most of the smell is in the leaves with the pink one, you can tell if you’ve brushed past a bush.
Trevtaowillgetyounowhere said:
buffy said:
Not flaars, but…seeds on kangaroo grass
And I guess this is actually flowers on the tassel rope rush:
When I worked at mount Annan botanic gardens a couple of decades ago they had a man come round with some sort of machine that could collect the seeds from the kangaroo grass.
Also great pictures
Was he growing the kangaroo grass? We have swathes and swathes of it on the roadsides here, but I’ve been rather unsuccessful at getting it to germinate. I’m presently trying again. I have successfully transplanted some plants from the bush block, but eventually they did die. Now I’m retired I’ll try doing more of this stuff.
buffy said:
The lovely dainty pink Boronia is out:
….
Still some pink heath about:
……….
And the prickly Moses is starting:
Thems is lotsa purdie flaaars. :)
buffy said:
Trevtaowillgetyounowhere said:
buffy said:
Not flaars, but…seeds on kangaroo grass
And I guess this is actually flowers on the tassel rope rush:
When I worked at mount Annan botanic gardens a couple of decades ago they had a man come round with some sort of machine that could collect the seeds from the kangaroo grass.
Also great pictures
Was he growing the kangaroo grass? We have swathes and swathes of it on the roadsides here, but I’ve been rather unsuccessful at getting it to germinate. I’m presently trying again. I have successfully transplanted some plants from the bush block, but eventually they did die. Now I’m retired I’ll try doing more of this stuff.
I’m not 100% sure why he was collecting the seed, I always assumed it was some sort of bush regeneration thing that they did all the time.
It was exciting at the time I worked there as it was around the time they were doing alot of work on wollemi pines and the processes they were using were very interesting. I did my horticultural apprenticeship at the royal Botanic gardens in Sydney back in the 90s but the money was shit so I never really worked in the business after I finished. Made more lugging boxes around a warehouse for Woolies.
Trevtaowillgetyounowhere said:
buffy said:
Trevtaowillgetyounowhere said:When I worked at mount Annan botanic gardens a couple of decades ago they had a man come round with some sort of machine that could collect the seeds from the kangaroo grass.
Also great pictures
Was he growing the kangaroo grass? We have swathes and swathes of it on the roadsides here, but I’ve been rather unsuccessful at getting it to germinate. I’m presently trying again. I have successfully transplanted some plants from the bush block, but eventually they did die. Now I’m retired I’ll try doing more of this stuff.
I’m not 100% sure why he was collecting the seed, I always assumed it was some sort of bush regeneration thing that they did all the time.
It was exciting at the time I worked there as it was around the time they were doing alot of work on wollemi pines and the processes they were using were very interesting. I did my horticultural apprenticeship at the royal Botanic gardens in Sydney back in the 90s but the money was shit so I never really worked in the business after I finished. Made more lugging boxes around a warehouse for Woolies.
I started a Cert III (I think it was) in Horticulture as a distance student many years ago (because being an optometrist running my own practice solo was not enough work – tongue very much in cheek – I needed something completely different from optometry sometimes for my mind). I’d never done biology at school, although obviously I’d done some stuff at uni. I left plants out when choosing my first year biology subjects – did vertebrates, invertebrates and genetics. So I really started the Horticulture course to learn how plants are named etc. I enjoyed it, and because I’d made it clear I wasn’t interested in doing it as a career, I was more free to make comments in my assignments. I particularly went to town on the one on noxious weeds…had to find, press and discuss a number of weeds. I made a snide comment about how since the amalgamation of the rural councils there hadn’t been much work getting rid of noxious weeds and all I had to do to find the requisite number was walk 100m down our road. Anyway, I passed the units I did, but I didn’t go to any of the on campus things. Couldn’t fit that in as well. Then before I got to the end the course was discontinued. I don’t know what happened to the people who were doing it “for real” rather than just as a hobby.
buffy said:
Trevtaowillgetyounowhere said:
buffy said:
Not flaars, but…seeds on kangaroo grass
And I guess this is actually flowers on the tassel rope rush:
When I worked at mount Annan botanic gardens a couple of decades ago they had a man come round with some sort of machine that could collect the seeds from the kangaroo grass.
Also great pictures
Was he growing the kangaroo grass? We have swathes and swathes of it on the roadsides here, but I’ve been rather unsuccessful at getting it to germinate. I’m presently trying again. I have successfully transplanted some plants from the bush block, but eventually they did die. Now I’m retired I’ll try doing more of this stuff.
Along with red grass it is the predominant native grass at the Redoubt. The introduced top shelf grass there are Digit grass and Rhodes grass the cattle nom nom them first.
side of road between farms
The pink daffodils that Kate gave me have flowered. They are, indeed, pink. We were hoping she’d dug up the right bulbs. The wind is making them a bit fidgety, but I reasonable photos.
buffy said:
The pink daffodils that Kate gave me have flowered. They are, indeed, pink. We were hoping she’d dug up the right bulbs. The wind is making them a bit fidgety, but I reasonable photos.
Nice!
:)
My camera was really much more interested in bark and leaves today than the flowers I chose to photograph. Never the less, the love creeper is starting to flower:
Some Hibbertia is about:
And the Kennedia (running postman) is starting to look a bit spectacular.
Spring is in the air! We went out for a walk on Sunday afternoon to inspect some of the local wildflowers.
fsm said:
Spring is in the air! We went out for a walk on Sunday afternoon to inspect some of the local wildflowers.
Your pictures are better than mine…but that’s OK. I had trouble with the wind moving stuff today, apart from the fact I was actually mowing bracken down and stopping to photograph things along the way. I kind of need to concentrate on the flowers. I’ll do that next month, when there is a more to look at. Our best months are Oct/Nov for variety.
This Pterostylus was being particularly annoying, swinging around in the wind. I haven’t pinned it down. It’s not a nodding greenhood. And I don’t think it’s a tall greenhood. I suppose I need to get out the big orchid book.
……….
……….
fsm said:
Spring is in the air! We went out for a walk on Sunday afternoon to inspect some of the local wildflowers.
Nice!
:)
Michael V said:
fsm said:
Spring is in the air! We went out for a walk on Sunday afternoon to inspect some of the local wildflowers.
Nice!
:)
+1
fsm said:
Spring is in the air! We went out for a walk on Sunday afternoon to inspect some of the local wildflowers.
Splendid snaps.
Second one looks like some fanciful arrangement of bananas.
buffy said:
My camera was really much more interested in bark and leaves today than the flowers I chose to photograph. Never the less, the love creeper is starting to flower:
Some Hibbertia is about:
And the Kennedia (running postman) is starting to look a bit spectacular.
Why is it called running postman?
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
My camera was really much more interested in bark and leaves today than the flowers I chose to photograph. Never the less, the love creeper is starting to flower:
Some Hibbertia is about:
And the Kennedia (running postman) is starting to look a bit spectacular.
Why is it called running postman?
Guess – it’s a ground-vine pea (a runner) with a bright red flower.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
My camera was really much more interested in bark and leaves today than the flowers I chose to photograph. Never the less, the love creeper is starting to flower:
Some Hibbertia is about:
And the Kennedia (running postman) is starting to look a bit spectacular.
Why is it called running postman?
About …
Also known as the ‘Running Postman’ because the colour of the flowers match the colour of post boxes.
http://www.sercul.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/BushTuckerFactSheet_ScarletRunner.pdf
fsm said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
My camera was really much more interested in bark and leaves today than the flowers I chose to photograph. Never the less, the love creeper is starting to flower:
Some Hibbertia is about:
And the Kennedia (running postman) is starting to look a bit spectacular.
Why is it called running postman?
About …
Also known as the ‘Running Postman’ because the colour of the flowers match the colour of post boxes.http://www.sercul.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/BushTuckerFactSheet_ScarletRunner.pdf
>The flowers provide a source of sweet nectar that can be sucked straight from the flower
Wonder if buffy sucks hers.
Bubblecar said:
fsm said:
Bubblecar said:Why is it called running postman?
About …
Also known as the ‘Running Postman’ because the colour of the flowers match the colour of post boxes.http://www.sercul.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/BushTuckerFactSheet_ScarletRunner.pdf
>The flowers provide a source of sweet nectar that can be sucked straight from the flower
Wonder if buffy sucks hers.
I’ve never tried it. Perhaps I should.
back from yonder, not flowers but whatever can go in here
Bump
dv said:
Bump
Could you bump Buffy’s trowel up to the top as well.
Peak Warming Man said:
dv said:
Bump
Could you bump Buffy’s trowel up to the top as well.
That would be good. I’ve wandered around the likely places again and can’t find it. It’s not as if I’ve only got one trowel. It’s just that one with the blue handle is my favourite one.
dv said:
Bump
thankyou
while doing meter reads etc
Can I join you in here? The freesias are coming out. Love the perfume of freesias.
transition said:
dv said:
Bump
thankyou
while doing meter reads etc
Daisies, pigface, little bird, little bird, medium bird…
:)
buffy said:
transition said:
dv said:
Bump
thankyou
while doing meter reads etc
Daisies, pigface, little bird, little bird, medium bird…
:)
lady white-fronted chat, and butcher bird
buffy said:
Can I join you in here? The freesias are coming out. Love the perfume of freesias.
very very nice
transition said:
dv said:
Bump
thankyou
while doing meter reads etc
Your pig-face flowers are much paler than mine. (Mine also has a triangular-section leaf.)
Note that pig-face is a quite pleasant vegetable. It stir-fries surprisingly well and is also great in a salad.
Michael V said:
transition said:
dv said:
Bump
thankyou
while doing meter reads etc
Your pig-face flowers are much paler than mine. (Mine also has a triangular-section leaf.)
Note that pig-face is a quite pleasant vegetable. It stir-fries surprisingly well and is also great in a salad.
transition said:
buffy said:
Can I join you in here? The freesias are coming out. Love the perfume of freesias.
very very nice
Bubblecar said:
Michael V said:
transition said:thankyou
while doing meter reads etc
Your pig-face flowers are much paler than mine. (Mine also has a triangular-section leaf.)
Note that pig-face is a quite pleasant vegetable. It stir-fries surprisingly well and is also great in a salad.
Nice!
:)
(Round-section leaves on that species.)
transition said:
….. and purdie birdies too. 😃
transition said:
Oooh, canola. And you got a mama and papa swan too.
:)
transition said:
I like misty mountain views.
and these are strawberry seedlings.
The other hippies are now flowering:
Michael V said:
The other hippies are now flowering:
They look as if they’d probably squirt you if you got too close.
Michael V said:
The other hippies are now flowering:
I like that colour.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
The other hippies are now flowering:
I like that colour.
Rust & cream, a pleasing combination.
transition said:
cool
transition said:
You’ve got a lot of birds.
transition said:
Lots of fresh spring colour there.
buffy said:
transition said:
You’ve got a lot of birds.
Transition lives in Dinosaur Plains, Eyre Peninsula.
transition said:
Shakes fist at wattlebird and its 5am mating calls.
male and female rufous whistlers, down the park shortly ago
transition said:
male and female rufous whistlers, down the park shortly ago
More birds! I spent about 3/4 hour in bed this morning listening to the shrike thrush. There were two different calls.
Dendrobium delicatum
roughbarked said:
Dendrobium delicatum
Yes there was a frost this morn.
This really needs to be broken up to get it into better condition but it is such a large specimen, I am loathe to break it up.
Diuris maculata.
roughbarked said:
Diuris maculata.
very nice
roughbarked said:
Diuris maculata.
So the real question is, D. maculata was listed in the book known as Plants of Western NSW.
Wiki now tells me that D. maculata is restricted to the east coast and that the inland species is D. pardina?
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Diuris maculata.
So the real question is, D. maculata was listed in the book known as Plants of Western NSW. As restricted to an area bounded by West wyalong Griffith Hillston Mt. Hope and Tullamore.
Wiki now tells me that D. maculata is restricted to the east coast and that the inland species is D. pardina? That D. pardina In New South Wales it occurs south from Mudgee and in Victoria it is widespread and common in the southern half of the state.
I am aware that the taxonomy has been revised since 1981 when my book was written.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Diuris maculata.
So the real question is, D. maculata was listed in the book known as Plants of Western NSW. As restricted to an area bounded by West wyalong Griffith Hillston Mt. Hope and Tullamore.
Wiki now tells me that D. maculata is restricted to the east coast and that the inland species is D. pardina? That D. pardina In New South Wales it occurs south from Mudgee and in Victoria it is widespread and common in the southern half of the state.
I am aware that the taxonomy has been revised since 1981 when my book was written.
A lot of orchids have been re-assigned and re-named in the last few years. There has been quite a bit of genetic work done.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:So the real question is, D. maculata was listed in the book known as Plants of Western NSW. As restricted to an area bounded by West wyalong Griffith Hillston Mt. Hope and Tullamore.
Wiki now tells me that D. maculata is restricted to the east coast and that the inland species is D. pardina? That D. pardina In New South Wales it occurs south from Mudgee and in Victoria it is widespread and common in the southern half of the state.
I am aware that the taxonomy has been revised since 1981 when my book was written.
A lot of orchids have been re-assigned and re-named in the last few years. There has been quite a bit of genetic work done.
https://publications.csiro.au/publications/publication/PIcsiro:EP17216
It’s getting very complex, and I suspect more difficult for field identification.
buffy said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:I am aware that the taxonomy has been revised since 1981 when my book was written.
A lot of orchids have been re-assigned and re-named in the last few years. There has been quite a bit of genetic work done.
https://publications.csiro.au/publications/publication/PIcsiro:EP17216
It’s getting very complex, and I suspect more difficult for field identification.
I can’t actually see a date on this list of current species names.
https://www.anbg.gov.au/cpbr/cd-keys/orchidkey/html/currentspecies-c.htm
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris%7Emaculata
And the NSW botanic gardens site has records inland in NSW.
buffy said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:I am aware that the taxonomy has been revised since 1981 when my book was written.
A lot of orchids have been re-assigned and re-named in the last few years. There has been quite a bit of genetic work done.
https://publications.csiro.au/publications/publication/PIcsiro:EP17216
It’s getting very complex, and I suspect more difficult for field identification.
Agree.
buffy said:
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris%7EmaculataAnd the NSW botanic gardens site has records inland in NSW.
Ta. :)
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris%7EmaculataAnd the NSW botanic gardens site has records inland in NSW.
Ta. :)
So too is D. pardina, though not so prolific.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris%7EmaculataAnd the NSW botanic gardens site has records inland in NSW.
Ta. :)
So too is D. pardina, though not so prolific.
This is the iNaturalist map page for D. pardina.
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?place_id=6825&subview=map&taxon_id=516646
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Ta. :)
So too is D. pardina, though not so prolific.
This is the iNaturalist map page for D. pardina.
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?place_id=6825&subview=map&taxon_id=516646
And the list of observations. Some are very recent. You can click on the observation record and see the details.
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?place_id=6825&subview=table&taxon_id=516646
And the map and list for D. maculata
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?place_id=6825&subview=table&taxon_id=516646
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?place_id=6825&subview=table&taxon_id=537942
buffy said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:So too is D. pardina, though not so prolific.
This is the iNaturalist map page for D. pardina.
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?place_id=6825&subview=map&taxon_id=516646
And the list of observations. Some are very recent. You can click on the observation record and see the details.
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?place_id=6825&subview=table&taxon_id=516646
:) there is some digging in to do I see.
There was one D. maculata reported from Wagga Wagga.
Prolly because peoople aren’t travelling far this year.
chats, and richard’s pipit I think, got some dinner there
transition said:
chats, and richard’s pipit I think, got some dinner there
Nice :)
transition said:
chats, and richard’s pipit I think, got some dinner there
Those birdies look fit and alert. Free of screen addictions and couch potato habits.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
chats, and richard’s pipit I think, got some dinner there
Those birdies look fit and alert. Free of screen addictions and couch potato habits.
They live from beak to mouth, they don’t know if they will find food tomorrow, they don’t know if it will rain all day and if they can find suitable shelter, they have no security, there is no bird police to protect them from other birds who want to kill them and feed them to their young.
When they wake up to the morning sun they start screaming because they don’t know what the fuck is going to go down today.
Peak Warming Man said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
chats, and richard’s pipit I think, got some dinner there
Those birdies look fit and alert. Free of screen addictions and couch potato habits.
They live from beak to mouth, they don’t know if they will find food tomorrow, they don’t know if it will rain all day and if they can find suitable shelter, they have no security, there is no bird police to protect them from other birds who want to kill them and feed them to their young.
When they wake up to the morning sun they start screaming because they don’t know what the fuck is going to go down today.
Don’t we all?
Peak Warming Man said:
When they wake up to the morning sun they start screaming because they don’t know what the fuck is going to go down today.
They don’t scream. They sing, because they think they can live forever if they simply keep doing what they have been doing.
They are not cursed with the knowledge that their life is finite, however lucky they are.
Here are today’s flowers:
Comesperma:
More greenhoods:
…………
Yellow stars (Hypoxis):
And the first of the pink fingers (Caladenia carnea):
I have brought back a couple of pink fingers and a couple of greenhoods for pressing. They are rehydrating first so I can arrange them properly.
buffy said:
Here are today’s flowers:Comesperma:
More greenhoods:
…………
Yellow stars (Hypoxis):
And the first of the pink fingers (Caladenia carnea):
I have brought back a couple of pink fingers and a couple of greenhoods for pressing. They are rehydrating first so I can arrange them properly.
very nice
Goodenia
transition said:
buffy said:
Here are today’s flowers:Comesperma:
More greenhoods:
…………
Yellow stars (Hypoxis):
And the first of the pink fingers (Caladenia carnea):
I have brought back a couple of pink fingers and a couple of greenhoods for pressing. They are rehydrating first so I can arrange them properly.
very nice
I’m in the past. Going to bed early meant I missed all last night’s discussions. I tried to get a bird picture of a tree creeper yesterday in the bush. He was quite obliging, let me get quite close, but as soon as I lifted up the camera he hid around the other side of the tree trunk, doing that spiraling climb that they do.
Went for a wander throught he gardens yesterday and found an interesting ginger – the camera doesn’t do the colours justice.
Zingiber Malaysiana – “Midnight Ginger”
Jade vine is in bloom.
Dark Orange said:
Jade vine is in bloom.
Obviously a messy bugger… flowers all over the ground…
:)
And here are my flowers that are going into the press shortly.
…..
…..
Dark Orange said:
Jade vine is in bloom.
Pretty talons.
Dark Orange said:
Jade vine is in bloom.
That colour is amazing.
Trevtaowillgetyounowhere said:
Dark Orange said:
Jade vine is in bloom.
That colour is amazing.
They have a red variety “flame of the forest” that is more attention getting, but I prefer the beautiful pastel colours of these.
May take my real camera and a nice vintage lens tomorrow.
Bubblecar said:
Dark Orange said:
Jade vine is in bloom.
Pretty talons.
very beautiful
one of local butcher birds out there, i’ll make up by posting a picture of a flower later
transition said:
one of local butcher birds out there, i’ll make up by posting a picture of a flower later
![]()
You’ve got a chemtrail…
More Jade Vine
Dark Orange said:
More Jade Vine
fragrant?
monkey skipper said:
Dark Orange said:
More Jade Vinefragrant?
Nope. But looks nice.
More from the botanical gardens.
All shot on a couple of old portrait lenses. A little soft, but oh so creamy.
Dark Orange said:
More Jade Vine
They certainly shed a lot of claws.
Dark Orange said:
I used to have that orchid.
roughbarked said:
AAAAARGH! Ya coulda warned me Mr Barked, Scared the shit outa me, that did.
Woodie said:
roughbarked said:
AAAAARGH! Ya coulda warned me Mr Barked, Scared the shit outa me, that did.
:) are you lepidopterophobic?
Cherry blossom.
while out farm whippering around the meters, then way back home past the dam, see Gordon is back, Gordon the white-faced heron
transition said:
while out farm whippering around the meters, then way back home past the dam, see Gordon is back, Gordon the white-faced heron
Gordon bleu?
transition said:
while out farm whippering around the meters, then way back home past the dam, see Gordon is back, Gordon the white-faced heron
Sure it’s the same one?
transition said:
while out farm whippering around the meters, then way back home past the dam, see Gordon is back, Gordon the white-faced heron
Do all your dams have ‘no swimming’ signs?
Been photographing flowers for a Letter to Mum.
Freesias are out:
……….
And Bluebells and grape Hyacinth and Sparaxis and a raggedy late Daffodil:
.
.
.
buffy said:
Been photographing flowers for a Letter to Mum.Freesias are out:
……….
And Bluebells and grape Hyacinth and Sparaxis and a raggedy late Daffodil:
.
.
.
very nice, some color
buffy said:
Been photographing flowers for a Letter to Mum.Freesias are out:
……….
And Bluebells and grape Hyacinth and Sparaxis and a raggedy late Daffodil:
.
.
.
Mmm, I can smell those freesias from here.
The strawflowers I grew out on the nature strip are looking particularly joyful at the moment too.
……….
The colours are very strong.
buffy said:
The strawflowers I grew out on the nature strip are looking particularly joyful at the moment too.
……….
The colours are very strong.
very nice
buffy said:
The strawflowers I grew out on the nature strip are looking particularly joyful at the moment too.
……….
The colours are very strong.
Nice to see fresh ones. Usually see them dried.
I’m not much of a Camellia fan, but this tree refuses to die.
And the weed lilies are out now too.
And the Nasturtiums under the apple tree are like weeds too.
buffy said:
I’m not much of a Camellia fan, but this tree refuses to die.
And the weed lilies are out now too.
And the Nasturtiums under the apple tree are like weeds too.
Have you bitten the endo off the nasturtium flower and sucked out the nectar?
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
I’m not much of a Camellia fan, but this tree refuses to die.
And the weed lilies are out now too.
And the Nasturtiums under the apple tree are like weeds too.
Have you bitten the endo off the nasturtium flower and sucked out the nectar?
When I was a child, yes. Not that impressed. My maternal grandfather used to munch on the leaves, sometimes even in sandwiches.
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
I’m not much of a Camellia fan, but this tree refuses to die.
And the weed lilies are out now too.
And the Nasturtiums under the apple tree are like weeds too.
Have you bitten the endo off the nasturtium flower and sucked out the nectar?
When I was a child, yes. Not that impressed. My maternal grandfather used to munch on the leaves, sometimes even in sandwiches.
I was impressed about it when I were lad.
buffy said:
The strawflowers I grew out on the nature strip are looking particularly joyful at the moment too.
……….
The colours are very strong.
Purdy, lubberly.
Peak Warming Man said:
Have you bitten the end off the nasturtium flower and sucked out the nectar?
Many times. I eat a lot of flowers. The humble rocket flowers are sweet.
while out cleaning troughs etc, getting stumps…
transition said:
while out cleaning troughs etc, getting stumps…
What are those blooms?
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
while out cleaning troughs etc, getting stumps…
What are those blooms?
native rosemary, what I call it
ooh, ooh, I photographed the Prickly Moses properly today to put up on iNaturalist for the mapping of species.
Acacia verticillata.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
while out cleaning troughs etc, getting stumps…
What are those blooms?
Can we have a bigger picture of the purple flowers?
transition said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
while out cleaning troughs etc, getting stumps…
What are those blooms?
native rosemary, what I call it
Ah, plenty of that around here. In that photo I assumed the plant was tree-size, for some reason.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
Bubblecar said:What are those blooms?
native rosemary, what I call it
Ah, plenty of that around here. In that photo I assumed the plant was tree-size, for some reason.
Is it Westringia?
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:native rosemary, what I call it
Ah, plenty of that around here. In that photo I assumed the plant was tree-size, for some reason.
Is it Westringia?
Don’t know what ours is called, but there are bushes of it around the river. Leaves look much like rosemary but I don’t recall ever actually picking any.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
while out cleaning troughs etc, getting stumps…
What are those blooms?
Can we have a bigger picture of the purple flowers?
transition said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:What are those blooms?
Can we have a bigger picture of the purple flowers?
Thank you. Looks like Westringia to me…although it isn’t something I see around here. Except planted in gardens.
buffy said:
transition said:
buffy said:Can we have a bigger picture of the purple flowers?
Thank you. Looks like Westringia to me…although it isn’t something I see around here. Except planted in gardens.
regular garden variety, just outside the door here
transition said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:What are those blooms?
Can we have a bigger picture of the purple flowers?
Dampiera.
roughbarked said:
transition said:
buffy said:Can we have a bigger picture of the purple flowers?
Dampiera.
Nah. I reckon it is probably https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westringia_eremicola
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-17/flannel-flowers-burst-into-bloom-after-bushfires/100458610
Flannel flowers, a sea of white up to 1.7 m tall!
Michael V said:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-17/flannel-flowers-burst-into-bloom-after-bushfires/100458610Flannel flowers, a sea of white up to 1.7 m tall!
Gorgeous
transition said:
ooh, yellow roses!
First year my Port Jackson Fig tree has flowered. It is 33 years old this year. I took it out of a palm tree crown in 1988 when I worked at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney. It was about 5cm tall when I got it. It now lives in a 1000 Litre water tank.
buffy said:
transition said:
ooh, yellow roses!
Be better if there was 5 yellow roses.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
transition said:
ooh, yellow roses!
Be better if there was 5 yellow roses.
Bugger, 18
The first jacaranda flowers are out in Brissy.
This bloke reckons that blue flowering plants are rare because umm…. because they are blue, no other explanation.
Well he need to tell that to blue heliotrope.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-18/bumper-wildflower-season-in-outback-australia/100464032
roughbarked said:
Look like weeds to me.
I know a man with a 40 ton excavator that can sort weeds. I’ll get him to give you a call. He’ll be round this arvo with a quote. 😁
Woodie said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
Look like weeds to me.
I know a man with a 40 ton excavator that can sort weeds. I’ll get him to give you a call. He’ll be round this arvo with a quote. 😁
No need. Mining companies dig it up either for minerals or simply gravel.
Meet my mingons.
roughbarked said:
you got orchids, nice orchids, pretty orchids
transition said:
Very nice, what are they?
transition said:
That’s a luxuriant display.
Peak Warming Man said:
transition said:
Very nice, what are they?
hibiscus front big flower, native, not sure other
transition said:
roughbarked said:
you got orchids, nice orchids, pretty orchids
We do. :)
transition said:
Peak Warming Man said:
transition said:
Very nice, what are they?
hibiscus front big flower, native, not sure other
The native is an Eremophila.
while driving farm back boundary/reserve
One of my own Kangaroo paw bushes in my backyard… flowering amazingly. (though the others are not even in flower..)
Arts said:
One of my own Kangaroo paw bushes in my backyard… flowering amazingly. (though the others are not even in flower..)
I don’t seem to be able to grow them here. Probably because they don’t belong here. I tried years ago and gave up. I’m happy with local flowers now. They are pretty spectacular, aren’t they.
transition said:
while driving farm back boundary/reserve
transition said:
while driving farm back boundary/reserve
Bogan Flea?
Arts said:
One of my own Kangaroo paw bushes in my backyard… flowering amazingly. (though the others are not even in flower..)
Looks like one of the Bush Gem hybrids.
Arts said:
One of my own Kangaroo paw bushes in my backyard… flowering amazingly. (though the others are not even in flower..)
mum grows them, reckon’s same, similar anyway, quite pretty
transition said:
Ooh, you’ve got orchids too!
We are planning a day at the bush again later in this week. Maybe I can find some too. Although it’s probably still 3 or 4 weeks early for us yet.
buffy said:
transition said:
Ooh, you’ve got orchids too!
We are planning a day at the bush again later in this week. Maybe I can find some too. Although it’s probably still 3 or 4 weeks early for us yet.
If the seson rains enough it should be good.
transition said:
:)
transition said:
Colourful collection. I assume that birdie is eating gumnuts.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
Colourful collection. I assume that birdie is eating gumnuts.
I had to check what ringnecks eat…
Feeding
Australian Ringnecks feed mainly on the ground, but also in trees and shrubs, usually in the morning and late afternoon, resting in the heat of the day. They eat seeds, and some fruits, flowers, nectar and insects and their larvae. They often feed on spilt grain on roadsides.
From: https://www.birdlife.org.au/bird-profile/australian-ringneck
Some of the blooms and veg in the Ross sister’s garden atm.
Bubblecar said:
Some of the blooms and veg in the Ross sister’s garden atm.
Colourful.
envious of growing skills
one of from lady’s mum’s yesterday, dunno what it is
Bubblecar said:
Some of the blooms and veg in the Ross sister’s garden atm.
lady and I just looked at them, very nice flowers
transition said:
one of from lady’s mum’s yesterday, dunno what it is
Ferraria?
transition said:
one of from lady’s mum’s yesterday, dunno what it is
Amazing!
fsm said:
transition said:
one of from lady’s mum’s yesterday, dunno what it is
Ferraria?
By gosh, I think you’ve got it.
Here is a nice combination to be going on with. The Comosperma (love creeper) is out all through the bracken. It’s a particularly nice combination when it climbs up the Prickly Moses.
So I was wandering along, looking at pink fingers orchids and love creeper etc and I thought…hmm…those leaves look familiar.
Even with a bud:
And then I found a whole flock of bird orchids.
buffy said:
So I was wandering along, looking at pink fingers orchids and love creeper etc and I thought…hmm…those leaves look familiar.
Even with a bud:
And then I found a whole flock of bird orchids.
:)
And today the camera was behaving itself too. And I took the time to stop and kneel down. I think they are common bird orchids.
………….
Found another lot of nodding greenhoods too.
……….
I’m having trouble getting good photos of the Caladenia carnea (pink fingers), but I got an arty one.
And a tall sundew.
I was just talking to my boy about sundews so there’s a coincidence
buffy said:
And today the camera was behaving itself too. And I took the time to stop and kneel down. I think they are common bird orchids.
………….
Lovely!
:)
Bubblecar said:
Some of the blooms and veg in the Ross sister’s garden atm.
Poppies out already!
Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
It’s taken a few years to get that looking like the bluebells have gone wild. (And now I look at the picture I see the possums have been knocking the bricks around again)
buffy said:
Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
It’s taken a few years to get that looking like the bluebells have gone wild. (And now I look at the picture I see the possums have been knocking the bricks around again)
Buddha looks suspiciously like Mr Buffy
kryten said:
buffy said:
Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
It’s taken a few years to get that looking like the bluebells have gone wild. (And now I look at the picture I see the possums have been knocking the bricks around again)
Buddha looks suspiciously like Mr Buffy
I had bluebells. lots. they were from my grandfather’s garden. The wallabies have dug up all the bubls and they are gone.
sarahs mum said:
kryten said:
buffy said:
Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
It’s taken a few years to get that looking like the bluebells have gone wild. (And now I look at the picture I see the possums have been knocking the bricks around again)
Buddha looks suspiciously like Mr Buffy
I had bluebells. lots. they were from my grandfather’s garden. The wallabies have dug up all the bubls and they are gone.
Wish the wallabies would come and take mine, bloody weeds.
buffy said:
Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
It’s taken a few years to get that looking like the bluebells have gone wild. (And now I look at the picture I see the possums have been knocking the bricks around again)
>>>Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
Buddha is looking good.
Tau.Neutrino said:
buffy said:
Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
It’s taken a few years to get that looking like the bluebells have gone wild. (And now I look at the picture I see the possums have been knocking the bricks around again)
>>>Buddha has got his bluebell background going at the moment.
Buddha is looking good.
I think he is fairly content under the centuries old redgum tree.
while whippering down the front, on the mound we call it
here ya go below, save trying to imagine it, no effort required
Went for a walk in my local orchid spots.
Found:
roughbarked said:
Went for a walk in my local orchid spots.
Found:
So, Calochilus (dunno if that is red or purplish beard orchid), and some sort of Pterostylis, rustyhood?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Went for a walk in my local orchid spots.
Found:
So, Calochilus (dunno if that is red or purplish beard orchid), and some sort of Pterostylis, rustyhood?
It is Calochilus robertsonii and Pterostylis rufa.
Looks like this spider orchid is eating the nodding chocolate lily buds.
This is the very local Eremophila glabra.
and this is a rock.
It isn’t quite deep purple in rock.
but I won’t bang that drum too loudly.
Now the nodding chocolate lily is a gracefully delicate flower that one needs to get down on hands and knees to observe.
Finding a small group of plants that probably are all from the same original mutation which have white flowers is so rare that I have only ever seen it the once.
roughbarked said:
Now the nodding chocolate lily is a gracefully delicate flower that one needs to get down on hands and knees to observe.
![]()
Finding a small group of plants that probably are all from the same original mutation which have white flowers is so rare that I have only ever seen it the once.
It’s Letter to Mum time, so here are some purdie flaars I’m going to use:
Alstromeria and Bearded Iris
……..
Columbines and a miniature Iris
………………………
buffy said:
It’s Letter to Mum time, so here are some purdie flaars I’m going to use:Alstromeria and Bearded Iris
……..
Columbines and a miniature Iris
………………………
:)
buffy said:
It’s Letter to Mum time, so here are some purdie flaars I’m going to use:Alstromeria and Bearded Iris
……..
Columbines and a miniature Iris
………………………
Purdie. :)
Woodie said:
buffy said:
It’s Letter to Mum time, so here are some purdie flaars I’m going to use:Alstromeria and Bearded Iris
……..
Columbines and a miniature Iris
………………………
Purdie. :)
Tamb said:
Woodie said:
buffy said:
It’s Letter to Mum time, so here are some purdie flaars I’m going to use:Alstromeria and Bearded Iris
……..
Columbines and a miniature Iris
………………………
Purdie. :)
Mine have almost finished.
Nice Hippies!
:)
Michael V said:
Tamb said:
Woodie said:Purdie. :)
Mine have almost finished.
Nice Hippies!
:)
Mz Tamb used to call them hippy plants.
Michael V said:
Tamb said:
Woodie said:Purdie. :)
Mine have almost finished.
Nice Hippies!
:)
They are indeed.
banged few together quickly, have better look later
transition said:
banged few together quickly, have better look later
ooh, bluewren!
buffy said:
transition said:
banged few together quickly, have better look later
ooh, bluewren!
yes a superb blue wren I guess, and notice I snuck a flower into that image to make it all legit, thread appropriate
transition said:
buffy said:
transition said:
banged few together quickly, have better look later
ooh, bluewren!
yes a superb blue wren I guess, and notice I snuck a flower into that image to make it all legit, thread appropriate
The sandmen are cute as is the beach bear.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
buffy said:ooh, bluewren!
yes a superb blue wren I guess, and notice I snuck a flower into that image to make it all legit, thread appropriate
The sandmen are cute as is the beach bear.
The Sandman was fairly good comedian.
It took me a while to crop and properly name today’s batch of wildflower photos. I’ll have to do some uploading to iNaturalist later too. Here are some purdie flaars from the bush. I earned the fun of photographing these by hand clearing (with hedge shears) the bracken fern off about 30m of five wire fencing. Next visit I have to run the mower along the fence after I retack the second bottom wire to its place on the posts so I don’t mow over it.
Chocolate lily and appleberry
………….
A Caladenia I can’t pin down any further, and a waxlip orchid playing with the love creeper.
……….
A Goodenia and Hibbertia
……….
Creamy candles and twining fringe lily
…..
And the sweet little native violets that are all over the place out there and some early Nancies.
…..
buffy said:
A Goodenia and Hibbertia
……….
Creamy candles and twining fringe lily
…..
And the sweet little native violets that are all over the place out there and some early Nancies.
…..
They’re all decent flowers in their way.
buffy said:
A Goodenia and Hibbertia
……….
Creamy candles and twining fringe lily
…..
And the sweet little native violets that are all over the place out there and some early Nancies.
…..
all very beautiful.
buffy said:
It took me a while to crop and properly name today’s batch of wildflower photos. I’ll have to do some uploading to iNaturalist later too. Here are some purdie flaars from the bush. I earned the fun of photographing these by hand clearing (with hedge shears) the bracken fern off about 30m of five wire fencing. Next visit I have to run the mower along the fence after I retack the second bottom wire to its place on the posts so I don’t mow over it.Chocolate lily and appleberry
………….
A Caladenia I can’t pin down any further, and a waxlip orchid playing with the love creeper.
……….
Caldenia alba?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
It took me a while to crop and properly name today’s batch of wildflower photos. I’ll have to do some uploading to iNaturalist later too. Here are some purdie flaars from the bush. I earned the fun of photographing these by hand clearing (with hedge shears) the bracken fern off about 30m of five wire fencing. Next visit I have to run the mower along the fence after I retack the second bottom wire to its place on the posts so I don’t mow over it.Chocolate lily and appleberry
………….
A Caladenia I can’t pin down any further, and a waxlip orchid playing with the love creeper.
……….
Caldenia alba?
I really don’t know. The pink fingers (C. carnea) were not so obvious today and I wondered if it was a white version of that.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
It took me a while to crop and properly name today’s batch of wildflower photos. I’ll have to do some uploading to iNaturalist later too. Here are some purdie flaars from the bush. I earned the fun of photographing these by hand clearing (with hedge shears) the bracken fern off about 30m of five wire fencing. Next visit I have to run the mower along the fence after I retack the second bottom wire to its place on the posts so I don’t mow over it.Chocolate lily and appleberry
………….
A Caladenia I can’t pin down any further, and a waxlip orchid playing with the love creeper.
……….
Caldenia alba?
I really don’t know. The pink fingers (C. carnea) were not so obvious today and I wondered if it was a white version of that.
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/88d33c8c-20c0-4068-adad-7c5f6519cd4e
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Caladenia~alba
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Caladenia~catenata
and then there’s C. picta but it is supposed to be endemic to NSW.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Caldenia alba?
I really don’t know. The pink fingers (C. carnea) were not so obvious today and I wondered if it was a white version of that.
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/88d33c8c-20c0-4068-adad-7c5f6519cd4e
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Caladenia~alba
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Caladenia~catenata
and then there’s C. picta but it is supposed to be endemic to NSW.
Looking at Jeanes and Backhouse, there is a Caladenia prolata, which seems to have the yellow “tongue” and pinkish hood (I haven’t got all the flower part names in my head). It’s flowers Sept/Oct and is “known from a handful of sites in Western Victoria in heathy woodland.” That’s definitely us. Also occurs in SA.
And here is a picture of one:
From: https://natureglenelg.org.au/wrapping-up-a-colourful-year-as-native-orchids-emerge-at-kurrawonga/
We may have it.
:)
And here are today’s offerings. A big paddock of introduced Ixias. This is probably about 1/10 of the area covered in them. Most of the cemetery lot has them. They are very pretty, I’ll grant, but they don’t really belong.
And then you see some yellow. And some of it is capeweed. But some of it is golden moth orchids.
………
And as you look more closely, there is a bit of white in there too. Milkmaids and early Nancies.
……….
buffy said:
And here are today’s offerings. A big paddock of introduced Ixias. This is probably about 1/10 of the area covered in them. Most of the cemetery lot has them. They are very pretty, I’ll grant, but they don’t really belong.
And then you see some yellow. And some of it is capeweed. But some of it is golden moth orchids.
………
And as you look more closely, there is a bit of white in there too. Milkmaids and early Nancies.
……….
See I have the same problems. Pretty yes but invasive and destructive to the prosperity of the native orchids and other species.
Gazanias are becoming the big issue here.
With Australia now having more people who have immigrated than people born here, they see these weeds as native wildflowers.
My purdie flaaars this week.
Woodie said:
My purdie flaaars this week.
Nice. Really nice. We have three of the red flowers at the moment. I suspect they should be in a less sunlit spot.
Michael V said:
Woodie said:
My purdie flaaars this week.
Nice. Really nice. We have three of the red flowers at the moment. I suspect they should be in a less sunlit spot.
Zygotes will do that in the dark. The ones that get no sun at all do much better.
Some splendid blooms there Woodie.
Woodie said:
More purdie flaaars. :)
The same purdie flaaaar pots from 15th October 2017.
Woodie said:
My purdie flaaars this week.
Ooh, is it zygo season?!
Woodie said:
I understand the succulents. But those wouldn’t stand a chance here, with my non-memory for watering hanging baskets…
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
Pretty dense Halgania there.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
Spare battery.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
So what use does it make of this device?
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
So what use does it make of this device?
Display. Bling.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
So what use does it make of this device?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_wattlebird
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
So what use does it make of this device?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_wattlebird
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wattle_(anatomy)
One plant.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
Slaps head.
I knew it was a wattlebird as it has those dangly bits, and I knew a turkey has a wattle, but I always thought that ‘wattle’ referred to the plant :)
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
Slaps head.
I knew it was a wattlebird as it has those dangly bits, and I knew a turkey has a wattle, but I always thought that ‘wattle’ referred to the plant :)
There’s such a thing as wattle(anatomical)
roughbarked said:
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
Slaps head.
I knew it was a wattlebird as it has those dangly bits, and I knew a turkey has a wattle, but I always thought that ‘wattle’ referred to the plant :)
There’s such a thing as wattle(anatomical)
Yes I know, but I had never connected it to the wattlebird, only to turkeys and chickens etc.
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:
Speedy said:Slaps head.
I knew it was a wattlebird as it has those dangly bits, and I knew a turkey has a wattle, but I always thought that ‘wattle’ referred to the plant :)
There’s such a thing as wattle(anatomical)
Yes I know, but I had never connected it to the wattlebird, only to turkeys and chickens etc.
:)
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:That birdy looks in the mood to brook no nonsense. But what’s that capsule thingy hanging from its cheek?
It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
Slaps head.
I knew it was a wattlebird as it has those dangly bits, and I knew a turkey has a wattle, but I always thought that ‘wattle’ referred to the plant :)
Our wattlebirds don’t have wattles. Poor things.
Michael V said:
Speedy said:
roughbarked said:It is called a wattle.
The bird is called a wattlebird.
Slaps head.
I knew it was a wattlebird as it has those dangly bits, and I knew a turkey has a wattle, but I always thought that ‘wattle’ referred to the plant :)
Our wattlebirds don’t have wattles. Poor things.
Too Little?
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Speedy said:Slaps head.
I knew it was a wattlebird as it has those dangly bits, and I knew a turkey has a wattle, but I always thought that ‘wattle’ referred to the plant :)
Our wattlebirds don’t have wattles. Poor things.
Too Little?
Yes.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Our wattlebirds don’t have wattles. Poor things.
Too Little?
Yes.
Are you aware that the regent honeyeater (Anthochaera phrygia) is also classed as a wattlebird.
roughbarked said:
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
Pretty dense Halgania there.
I don’t know Halgania. They seem to live a bit Northerer than us.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
transition said:
brief walk shortly ago, a break from bookwork
Pretty dense Halgania there.
I don’t know Halgania. They seem to live a bit Northerer than us.
Likes mallee country, red sand country.
roughbarked said:
That one is the other Arthropodium from what I photographed yesterday. That one is the pale vanilla lily, I think? I photographed a chocolate lily or two.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:Too Little?
Yes.
Are you aware that the regent honeyeater (Anthochaera phrygia) is also classed as a wattlebird.
No.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Pretty dense Halgania there.
I don’t know Halgania. They seem to live a bit Northerer than us.
Likes mallee country, red sand country.
One wouuld know if one looks at the flower closely. It is in the family Boraginaceae.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Yes.
Are you aware that the regent honeyeater (Anthochaera phrygia) is also classed as a wattlebird.
No.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:Are you aware that the regent honeyeater (Anthochaera phrygia) is also classed as a wattlebird.
No.
Ta.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
That one is the other Arthropodium from what I photographed yesterday. That one is the pale vanilla lily, I think? I photographed a chocolate lily or two.
I’m struggling to remember it’s name.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
That one is the other Arthropodium from what I photographed yesterday. That one is the pale vanilla lily, I think? I photographed a chocolate lily or two.
I’m struggling to remember it’s name.
Arthropodium milleflorum
(I’ve got the flowers book and the orchid book open on the ironing board behind me because I was doing plant IDs before)
just wandered in not far outside the door here, bit noisy when moves, settled now
transition said:
just wandered in not far outside the door here, bit noisy when moves, settled now
:)
transition said:
just wandered in not far outside the door here, bit noisy when moves, settled now
Ooh. In my experience they put their nose into a hole or a shrub and seem to think if they can’t see you, you can’t see them. Haven’t had one here for a while. The last one was in 2019…it hid its face up near the back fence. I’ve never worked out how they get in and out of our backyard. They must come through from the front because I’ve not found a hole under the metal fence anywhere.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:That one is the other Arthropodium from what I photographed yesterday. That one is the pale vanilla lily, I think? I photographed a chocolate lily or two.
I’m struggling to remember it’s name.
Arthropodium milleflorum
(I’ve got the flowers book and the orchid book open on the ironing board behind me because I was doing plant IDs before)
ta.
roughbarked said:
Interesting arrangement of atomic particles you have there.
Tau.Neutrino said:
roughbarked said:
Interesting arrangement of atomic particles you have there.
:)
roughbarked said:
I like the blue ones. Always fond of blue blooms.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
I like the blue ones. Always fond of blue blooms.
Larkspur.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
I like the blue ones. Always fond of blue blooms.
Larkspur.
Aye, delphiniums blue.
http://www.glirarium.org/bilch/literatur/doctor.html
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:I like the blue ones. Always fond of blue blooms.
Larkspur.
Aye, delphiniums blue.
http://www.glirarium.org/bilch/literatur/doctor.html
Used to grow Delphiniums and Rannuculus. Larkspurs are easier. All have to do is weed them out where I want to plant something. If I manage the plants that are left to produce seeds I can have all blue, all pink, all white or indeed a patch of blue a patch of pink and a patch of white, which is what I have this year.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:Larkspur.
Aye, delphiniums blue.
http://www.glirarium.org/bilch/literatur/doctor.html
Used to grow Delphiniums and Rannuculus. Larkspurs are easier. All have to do is weed them out where I want to plant something. If I manage the plants that are left to produce seeds I can have all blue, all pink, all white or indeed a patch of blue a patch of pink and a patch of white, which is what I have this year.
Larkspur is a common name for delphiniums, but is also shared by other flowers.
I’ve never grown flowers except a few in pots. I ought to have a go some time.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:Aye, delphiniums blue.
http://www.glirarium.org/bilch/literatur/doctor.html
Used to grow Delphiniums and Rannuculus. Larkspurs are easier. All have to do is weed them out where I want to plant something. If I manage the plants that are left to produce seeds I can have all blue, all pink, all white or indeed a patch of blue a patch of pink and a patch of white, which is what I have this year.
Larkspur is a common name for delphiniums, but is also shared by other flowers.
I’ve never grown flowers except a few in pots. I ought to have a go some time.
I popped some sunflower seeds between the rows of corn seeds that I put in today. With any luck I’ll have a couple of rows of corn with sunflowers in between and cucumbers around the bottom cooling the roots. This may, or may not, work.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:Aye, delphiniums blue.
http://www.glirarium.org/bilch/literatur/doctor.html
Used to grow Delphiniums and Rannuculus. Larkspurs are easier. All have to do is weed them out where I want to plant something. If I manage the plants that are left to produce seeds I can have all blue, all pink, all white or indeed a patch of blue a patch of pink and a patch of white, which is what I have this year.
Larkspur is a common name for delphiniums, but is also shared by other flowers.
I’ve never grown flowers except a few in pots. I ought to have a go some time.
The common name larkspur is shared between perennial Delphinium species and annual species of the genus Consolida.
Molecular data show that Consolida, as well as another segregate genus, Aconitella, are both embedded in Delphinium.
I put in the strawflower seed outside the fence. Much to my surprise, no-one (so far) has felt a need to pick them. The Dianella with them is about to burst into flower too. The blue berries on that do disappear – birds!
………..
buffy said:
I put in the strawflower seed outside the fence. Much to my surprise, no-one (so far) has felt a need to pick them. The Dianella with them is about to burst into flower too. The blue berries on that do disappear – birds!
………..
Nice little clump of daisies.
I have Dianella too.
buffy said:
I put in the strawflower seed outside the fence. Much to my surprise, no-one (so far) has felt a need to pick them. The Dianella with them is about to burst into flower too. The blue berries on that do disappear – birds!
………..
Dianella must be hardy. It survived in my garden in Armidale with the massive frosts (to -15°C) there. I had pulled a bit of a bunch up from the bush and re-planted that. And it grows wild here, too. No frosts. High humidity. Sand as soil. Salt in the air.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
I put in the strawflower seed outside the fence. Much to my surprise, no-one (so far) has felt a need to pick them. The Dianella with them is about to burst into flower too. The blue berries on that do disappear – birds!
………..
Dianella must be hardy. It survived in my garden in Armidale with the massive frosts (to -15°C) there. I had pulled a bit of a bunch up from the bush and re-planted that. And it grows wild here, too. No frosts. High humidity. Sand as soil. Salt in the air.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:
I put in the strawflower seed outside the fence. Much to my surprise, no-one (so far) has felt a need to pick them. The Dianella with them is about to burst into flower too. The blue berries on that do disappear – birds!
………..
Dianella must be hardy. It survived in my garden in Armidale with the massive frosts (to -15°C) there. I had pulled a bit of a bunch up from the bush and re-planted that. And it grows wild here, too. No frosts. High humidity. Sand as soil. Salt in the air.
Now, that second Dianella photo is brilliant!
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Dianella must be hardy. It survived in my garden in Armidale with the massive frosts (to -15°C) there. I had pulled a bit of a bunch up from the bush and re-planted that. And it grows wild here, too. No frosts. High humidity. Sand as soil. Salt in the air.
Now, that second Dianella photo is brilliant!
The odd one of my photos, stands out.
I can’t remember where the clumps of Dianella out the front of the house came from. Possibly from Mum’s garden, or from a friend’s. They’ve been there for years. Our at the bush block we have a fine, pale one. I’ve got it labelled as D. revoluta.
….
buffy said:
I can’t remember where the clumps of Dianella out the front of the house came from. Possibly from Mum’s garden, or from a friend’s. They’ve been there for years. Our at the bush block we have a fine, pale one. I’ve got it labelled as D. revoluta.
….
Was out looking at some of my Dianella clumps last eve after you posted this, buffy. I have Dianella revoluta.
and
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
I can’t remember where the clumps of Dianella out the front of the house came from. Possibly from Mum’s garden, or from a friend’s. They’ve been there for years. Our at the bush block we have a fine, pale one. I’ve got it labelled as D. revoluta.
….
Was out looking at some of my Dianella clumps last eve after you posted this, buffy. I have Dianella revoluta.
and
I hadn’t realised that there are about 40 species of Dianella, so my comments yesterday should be completely ignored. It is very likely that the strongly frost-tolerant Dianella I had in Armidale is a different species to the salt-and-sand tolerant Dianella here.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dianella_(plant)
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:I hadn’t realised that there are about 40 species of Dianella, so my comments yesterday should be completely ignored. It is very likely that the strongly frost-tolerant Dianella I had in Armidale is a different species to the salt-and-sand tolerant Dianella here.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dianella_(plant)
Higly likely that it could be any Dianella.
Australian Bugle with Dianella laevis in back.
roughbarked said:
![]()
Australian Bugle with Dianella laevis in back.
I know that as Austral Bugle. From a car it’s difficult to differentiate from Patterson’s Curse.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
Australian Bugle with Dianella laevis in back.
I know that as Austral Bugle. From a car it’s difficult to differentiate from Patterson’s Curse.
I never see it in those populations.
Austral bugle
Patterson’s curse.
You need almost to see the leaves. Although the flower form is a bit different, with the Bugle flowers up the stem.
We’ve got Patterson’s curse around here.
buffy said:
Austral bugle
Patterson’s curse.
You need almost to see the leaves. Although the flower form is a bit different, with the Bugle flowers up the stem.
The top one isn’t Austral Bugle. It is wild sage. and introduced plant. Salvia verbenaca.
compare it again with the Austral Bugle. Ajuga australis
buffy said:
We’ve got Patterson’s curse around here.
All the fields used to be either purple or yellow with Pattersons curse or capeweed. Don’t see it so much these days.
Picture came from here:
https://diversitynativeseeds.com.au/about-us/
They probably know what they are about.
buffy said:
Picture came from here:https://diversitynativeseeds.com.au/about-us/
They probably know what they are about.
Well, they don’t.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Picture came from here:https://diversitynativeseeds.com.au/about-us/
They probably know what they are about.
Well, they don’t.
Theirs look entirely different to mine.
However, theirs are in full sun.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Picture came from here:https://diversitynativeseeds.com.au/about-us/
They probably know what they are about.
Well, they don’t.
Theirs look entirely different to mine.
However, theirs are in full sun.
http://anpsa.org.au/a-aus.html
And here is today’s vase of flowers. Weedy gladdies, rich columbines and a Helleborus that a patient gave me when I retired.
buffy said:
And here is today’s vase of flowers. Weedy gladdies, rich columbines and a Helleborus that a patient gave me when I retired.
Well done. So how long are they likely to last before being chucked out?
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And here is today’s vase of flowers. Weedy gladdies, rich columbines and a Helleborus that a patient gave me when I retired.
Well done. So how long are they likely to last before being chucked out?
The gladdies will last the longest, because the buds will open up the stems. The Helleborus will only last a few days.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And here is today’s vase of flowers. Weedy gladdies, rich columbines and a Helleborus that a patient gave me when I retired.
Well done. So how long are they likely to last before being chucked out?
The gladdies will last the longest, because the buds will open up the stems. The Helleborus will only last a few days.
I need more flowers about the place. The sisters’ houses are always full of blooms, mine rarely sees such refinements.
buffy said:
And here is today’s vase of flowers. Weedy gladdies, rich columbines and a Helleborus that a patient gave me when I retired.
They look nice.
More irises coming out now. Mauve on purple and cream on mauve(ish).
…………
buffy said:
More irises coming out now. Mauve on purple and cream on mauve(ish).
…………
very nice
transition said:
Good dog!
roughbarked said:
Ooh, creamy candles. I like creamy candles. And they haven’t changed their botanical name when I wasn’t looking. I know this because I just checked it on my list.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Ooh, creamy candles. I like creamy candles. And they haven’t changed their botanical name when I wasn’t looking. I know this because I just checked it on my list.
:}
I just looked outside and noticed the first of the Jacobean/Aztec lilies has opened. Even so, the snails have already had a nibble…
buffy said:
I just looked outside and noticed the first of the Jacobean/Aztec lilies has opened. Even so, the snails have already had a nibble…
Hmm, I also liked the name Sprekelia, but apparently they are now put in with Hippeastrum.
buffy said:
buffy said:
I just looked outside and noticed the first of the Jacobean/Aztec lilies has opened. Even so, the snails have already had a nibble…
Hmm, I also liked the name Sprekelia, but apparently they are now put in with Hippeastrum.
very pretty, we got lot of snails, I dragged them from otherside of town when transplanted heap of stuff
been thinking about making a snail roller
transition said:
What kind of tree is that?
transition said:
:) :)
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
What kind of tree is that?
commonly known as white cedar, but aren’t properly a cedar
I have about seventy of them, make nice shade and grow quick
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
What kind of tree is that?
Melia azeradach. White Cedar.
transition said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
What kind of tree is that?
commonly known as white cedar, but aren’t properly a cedar
I have about seventy of them, make nice shade and grow quick
Quality furniture timber, too. Light coloured, though.
transition said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
What kind of tree is that?
commonly known as white cedar, but aren’t properly a cedar
I have about seventy of them, make nice shade and grow quick
I remember those berries on the cedar trees in Colonel Light Gardens.
Michael V said:
transition said:
Bubblecar said:What kind of tree is that?
commonly known as white cedar, but aren’t properly a cedar
I have about seventy of them, make nice shade and grow quick
Quality furniture timber, too. Light coloured, though.
Was also described in flowery language in the book, Confessions of a Beachcomber.
“The white cedar is a welcome and not unworthy substitute in appearance and perfume for English lilac”.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
Bubblecar said:What kind of tree is that?
commonly known as white cedar, but aren’t properly a cedar
I have about seventy of them, make nice shade and grow quick
I remember those berries on the cedar trees in Colonel Light Gardens.
Toxic to humans and many animals.
I’m back. Have some flowers. I’ve just put a heap up on iNaturalist for help with IDs for my plant list.
Pink bells (Tetratheca) and Murnong/Yam daisy (Microseris)
……….
Isopogon (cone flower)
A little flock of bird orchids
I think this is a Pultenaea, but…pea flowers!
>Isopogon (cone flower)
just looking up different types, would that be Isopogon ceratophyllus maybe, buffy
nah maybe it isn’t
transition said:
>Isopogon (cone flower)
just looking up different types, would that be Isopogon ceratophyllus maybe, buffy
nah maybe it isn’t
Yes, that is the name I have put up as my suggestion. It’s pretty distinctive.
buffy said:
transition said:
>Isopogon (cone flower)
just looking up different types, would that be Isopogon ceratophyllus maybe, buffy
nah maybe it isn’t
Yes, that is the name I have put up as my suggestion. It’s pretty distinctive.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isopogon_ceratophyllus
Isopogon ceratophyllus, commonly known as the horny cone-bush or wild Irishman, is a plant of the family Proteaceae that is endemic to the coast in Victoria, South Australia and on the Furneaux Group of islands in Tasmania. It is a small woody shrub that grows to 100 cm high with prickly foliage. It is extremely sensitive to dieback from the pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi
rose bush over the fence prolific, very strong scent downwind
roughbarked said:
These are in the path of Rio Tinto and their plans to seek rarer earths.
As if anyone cares?
Well if there are nine or ten plants that are like, Fifty or sixty kilometres from the next patch?
It is not as if they are everywhere like they used to be when the first nations people farmed them.
roughbarked said:
One of the blue sun orchids.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
One of the blue sun orchids.
Yes. Thelmytra pauciflora.
trans’ roses reminded me to check our here. And a warm day (mid 20s today) has persuaded the early ones to start opening. A hot pink, and a very perfumed red.
……………..
And the Babianas are out :
and the rather regal looking bearded iris on Bess (our second Boxer bitch) grave.
buffy said:
trans’ roses reminded me to check our here. And a warm day (mid 20s today) has persuaded the early ones to start opening. A hot pink, and a very perfumed red.
……………..
And the Babianas are out :
and the rather regal looking bearded iris on Bess (our second Boxer bitch) grave.
beautiful, added some color to my day
I’m back. The blue squill have come out. Actually until I just looked at this photo closely, I didn’t realize how many flowers were in it. Blue squill/stars, yellow goodenia, white milkmaids and purple twining fringe lily.
Also found the first donkey orchid for this season. No, it wasn’t intentional to make the focus a bit soft. But that is what it did. I might need to charge up the camera again.
And a tiny little Caladenia. Might be C. pusilla or just a single bloomed C. carnea.
buffy said:
I’m back. The blue squill have come out. Actually until I just looked at this photo closely, I didn’t realize how many flowers were in it. Blue squill/stars, yellow goodenia, white milkmaids and purple twining fringe lily.
Also found the first donkey orchid for this season. No, it wasn’t intentional to make the focus a bit soft. But that is what it did. I might need to charge up the camera again.
And a tiny little Caladenia. Might be C. pusilla or just a single bloomed C. carnea.
buffy said:
I’m back. The blue squill have come out. Actually until I just looked at this photo closely, I didn’t realize how many flowers were in it. Blue squill/stars, yellow goodenia, white milkmaids and purple twining fringe lily.
Also found the first donkey orchid for this season. No, it wasn’t intentional to make the focus a bit soft. But that is what it did. I might need to charge up the camera again.
And a tiny little Caladenia. Might be C. pusilla or just a single bloomed C. carnea.
Are blue squill the same as blue bells?
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
I’m back. The blue squill have come out. Actually until I just looked at this photo closely, I didn’t realize how many flowers were in it. Blue squill/stars, yellow goodenia, white milkmaids and purple twining fringe lily.
Also found the first donkey orchid for this season. No, it wasn’t intentional to make the focus a bit soft. But that is what it did. I might need to charge up the camera again.
And a tiny little Caladenia. Might be C. pusilla or just a single bloomed C. carnea.
Are blue squill the same as blue bells?
No. They’ve got a fabulous botanical name: Chamaescilla corymbosa. They do have a tuber underground.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
I’m back. The blue squill have come out. Actually until I just looked at this photo closely, I didn’t realize how many flowers were in it. Blue squill/stars, yellow goodenia, white milkmaids and purple twining fringe lily.
Also found the first donkey orchid for this season. No, it wasn’t intentional to make the focus a bit soft. But that is what it did. I might need to charge up the camera again.
And a tiny little Caladenia. Might be C. pusilla or just a single bloomed C. carnea.
Are blue squill the same as blue bells?
The wind can always beat the camera settings.
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
I’m back. The blue squill have come out. Actually until I just looked at this photo closely, I didn’t realize how many flowers were in it. Blue squill/stars, yellow goodenia, white milkmaids and purple twining fringe lily.
Also found the first donkey orchid for this season. No, it wasn’t intentional to make the focus a bit soft. But that is what it did. I might need to charge up the camera again.
And a tiny little Caladenia. Might be C. pusilla or just a single bloomed C. carnea.
Are blue squill the same as blue bells?
No. They’ve got a fabulous botanical name: Chamaescilla corymbosa. They do have a tuber underground.
Ta.
The bluebells are out up at the Redoubt
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:Are blue squill the same as blue bells?
No. They’ve got a fabulous botanical name: Chamaescilla corymbosa. They do have a tuber underground.
Ta.
The bluebells are out up at the Redoubt
Ah, I understand. You are thinking of the Wahlenbergia type bluebells. The ones we have here are smaller and more dainty than the squill/stars. I think this is your one.
http://anpsa.org.au/w-str.html
Looks like this?
We do have a very small, fine Wahlenbergia in our area. I took this picture last year, but I intend to get a better one at some point.
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:No. They’ve got a fabulous botanical name: Chamaescilla corymbosa. They do have a tuber underground.
Ta.
The bluebells are out up at the Redoubt
Ah, I understand. You are thinking of the Wahlenbergia type bluebells. The ones we have here are smaller and more dainty than the squill/stars. I think this is your one.
http://anpsa.org.au/w-str.html
Looks like this?
We do have a very small, fine Wahlenbergia in our area. I took this picture last year, but I intend to get a better one at some point.
Yep that’s them.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:Ta.
The bluebells are out up at the Redoubt
Ah, I understand. You are thinking of the Wahlenbergia type bluebells. The ones we have here are smaller and more dainty than the squill/stars. I think this is your one.
http://anpsa.org.au/w-str.html
Looks like this?
We do have a very small, fine Wahlenbergia in our area. I took this picture last year, but I intend to get a better one at some point.
Yep that’s them.
You’ve got to wonder really…who thought to call them “bells”? They don’t look like bells. The English bluebells do actually look like bells.
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:Ah, I understand. You are thinking of the Wahlenbergia type bluebells. The ones we have here are smaller and more dainty than the squill/stars. I think this is your one.
http://anpsa.org.au/w-str.html
Looks like this?
We do have a very small, fine Wahlenbergia in our area. I took this picture last year, but I intend to get a better one at some point.
Yep that’s them.
You’ve got to wonder really…who thought to call them “bells”? They don’t look like bells. The English bluebells do actually look like bells.
Had a nice patch of English bluebells under the pines at the old cottage place.
Another couple of colours of the bearded irises are out:
…………
And when I picked some wildflowers for the artist the other day, a couple of the pinkfinger orchids managed to bring their little bulb and root with them. So they have now been put into my garden with some of their home soil and surrounded by bits of wood to protect them. We shall see if they survive.
buffy said:
Another couple of colours of the bearded irises are out:
…………
And when I picked some wildflowers for the artist the other day, a couple of the pinkfinger orchids managed to bring their little bulb and root with them. So they have now been put into my garden with some of their home soil and surrounded by bits of wood to protect them. We shall see if they survive.
very nice
BUMP
Bubblecar said:
BUMP
Tamb said:
Bubblecar said:
BUMP
Thank you.
These are some random self planted Hippeastrums from round the house:
That’s a pleasant colour. Any scent?
Bubblecar said:
Tamb said:
Bubblecar said:
BUMP
Thank you.
These are some random self planted Hippeastrums from round the house:
That’s a pleasant colour. Any scent?
Hippies don’t have a scent, Parpyone. Well, some hippies do. Particularly their armpits.
hm ours are much whiter and have mostly wilted
Bubblecar said:
Tamb said:
Bubblecar said:
BUMP
Thank you.
These are some random self planted Hippeastrums from round the house:
That’s a pleasant colour. Any scent?
No scent but the Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow makes up for it.
SCIENCE said:
hm ours are much whiter and have mostly wilted
Tamb said:
Bubblecar said:
BUMP
Thank you.
These are some random self planted Hippeastrums from round the house:![]()
So are they just multiplying, or are the birds carrying the little bulblets around the garden?
Tamb said:
SCIENCE said:
hm ours are much whiter and have mostly wilted
The camera doesn’t catch the colour properly. The colours range from red & white to orange to deep red.
but we’re not flower experts so someone will probably tell us those are something completely different
buffy said:
Tamb said:
Bubblecar said:
BUMP
Thank you.
These are some random self planted Hippeastrums from round the house:![]()
So are they just multiplying, or are the birds carrying the little bulblets around the garden?
SCIENCE said:
Tamb said:
SCIENCE said:
hm ours are much whiter and have mostly wilted
The camera doesn’t catch the colour properly. The colours range from red & white to orange to deep red.
but we’re not flower experts so someone will probably tell us those are something completely different
A different type of hippeastrum.
Tamb said:
buffy said:
Tamb said:Thank you.
These are some random self planted Hippeastrums from round the house:So are they just multiplying, or are the birds carrying the little bulblets around the garden?
I think multiplying. Each year I seem to get more of them.
Are they exotic?
Peak Warming Man said:
Tamb said:
buffy said:So are they just multiplying, or are the birds carrying the little bulblets around the garden?
I think multiplying. Each year I seem to get more of them.Are they exotic?
That might depend on your own place of origin…
Peak Warming Man said:
Tamb said:
buffy said:So are they just multiplying, or are the birds carrying the little bulblets around the garden?
I think multiplying. Each year I seem to get more of them.Are they exotic?
Yes.
Peak Warming Man said:
Tamb said:
buffy said:So are they just multiplying, or are the birds carrying the little bulblets around the garden?
I think multiplying. Each year I seem to get more of them.Are they exotic?
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
Michael V said:
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
Just need a pizza plant now. So you can put ya pineapple on ya pizza.😁
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
Just need a pizza plant now. So you can put ya pineapple on ya pizza.😁
LOL
Can I get a corm from your garden, please?
Michael V said:
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
Just need a pizza plant now. So you can put ya pineapple on ya pizza.😁
LOL
Can I get a corm from your garden, please?
No probs, if you wanna get attacked by it. My pineapple has got razor sharp prickles on the leaves.
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
Woodie said:Just need a pizza plant now. So you can put ya pineapple on ya pizza.😁
LOL
Can I get a corm from your garden, please?
No probs, if you wanna get attacked by it. My pineapple has got razor sharp prickles on the leaves.
Ha!
I meant a pizza plant corm.
;)
Michael V said:
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
Bewdiful. :)
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
Bewdiful. :)
Ta. They are the first pineapple flowers I’ve ever had.
proud
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
Bewdiful. :)
Ta. They are the first pineapple flowers I’ve ever had.
proud
and rightly so. :)
My rescued grasstree is going off this year.
Two years ago it had just one spike that ended up about 4m high.
*Is there any way to stop these uploads from being rotated sideways? I tried pre-rotating and it just turned sideways the other way.
Kingy said:
My rescued grasstree is going off this year.
Two years ago it had just one spike that ended up about 4m high.
*Is there any way to stop these uploads from being rotated sideways? I tried pre-rotating and it just turned sideways the other way.
That last photo is great!
The way I rotate images for posting here is:
1. Identify the portrait image(s)
2. Rotate it on a PC so it is sideways, then save
3. Rotate it again so that it is the right way around again, then save
Kingy said:
My rescued grasstree is going off this year.
Two years ago it had just one spike that ended up about 4m high.
*Is there any way to stop these uploads from being rotated sideways? I tried pre-rotating and it just turned sideways the other way.
Very impressive.
I resize my snaps in Photoshop, name them and save them, and they’re always the right way up when posted here.
Doing the same in any image editor should work.
Speedy said:
Kingy said:
My rescued grasstree is going off this year.
Two years ago it had just one spike that ended up about 4m high.
*Is there any way to stop these uploads from being rotated sideways? I tried pre-rotating and it just turned sideways the other way.
That last photo is great!
The way I rotate images for posting here is:
1. Identify the portrait image(s)
2. Rotate it on a PC so it is sideways, then save
3. Rotate it again so that it is the right way around again, then save
Ok, it sounds crazy, but it works.
Kingy said:
My rescued grasstree is going off this year.
Two years ago it had just one spike that ended up about 4m high.
*Is there any way to stop these uploads from being rotated sideways? I tried pre-rotating and it just turned sideways the other way.
Use Irfanview to rotate, and save the rotated image before uploading.
Kingy said:
My rescued grasstree is going off this year.
Two years ago it had just one spike that ended up about 4m high.
*Is there any way to stop these uploads from being rotated sideways? I tried pre-rotating and it just turned sideways the other way.
amazing.. I love a good grass tree.
And today’s purdie flaars.
Appleberry
Caladenia carnea
A Goodenia
……….
A tiny little white Caladenia
…..
Michael V said:
Teensy weensy little baby pineapples. Two plants have started flowering (after several years in the ground, growing slowly):
They are a strange flower.
I may have to remove the larkspurs if I want a decent flowering of oregano for harvesting.
roughbarked said:
![]()
I may have to remove the larkspurs if I want a decent flowering of oregano for harvesting.
What do you harvest oregano flowers for?
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
I may have to remove the larkspurs if I want a decent flowering of oregano for harvesting.
What do you harvest oregano flowers for?
Potency/flavour. The best time to harvest oregano for drying is when they are in full flower, before the flower heads start browning off.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
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I may have to remove the larkspurs if I want a decent flowering of oregano for harvesting.
What do you harvest oregano flowers for?
Potency/flavour. The best time to harvest oregano for drying is when they are in full flower, before the flower heads start browning off.
Do you include the flowers in the drying mix? Or do you reject them?
I don’t remember our oregano ever flowering.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:What do you harvest oregano flowers for?
Potency/flavour. The best time to harvest oregano for drying is when they are in full flower, before the flower heads start browning off.
Do you include the flowers in the drying mix? Or do you reject them?
I don’t remember our oregano ever flowering.
Yes, the flowers are included.
The result is dried herbage so potent that a second pinch tossed in will overpower the dish.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:Potency/flavour. The best time to harvest oregano for drying is when they are in full flower, before the flower heads start browning off.
Do you include the flowers in the drying mix? Or do you reject them?
I don’t remember our oregano ever flowering.
Yes, the flowers are included.
The result is dried herbage so potent that a second pinch tossed in will overpower the dish.
Perfect. I like strong oregano when I use it. Using it fresh is not the same.
Ta.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Do you include the flowers in the drying mix? Or do you reject them?
I don’t remember our oregano ever flowering.
Yes, the flowers are included.
The result is dried herbage so potent that a second pinch tossed in will overpower the dish.
Perfect. I like strong oregano when I use it. Using it fresh is not the same.
Ta.
I use it fresh when I’m making a cup of ‘erbal tea. Because the dried stuff is too strong for that.
Well the orchid flowering season appears to be over until next year but the fringe lily season has started.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Do you include the flowers in the drying mix? Or do you reject them?
I don’t remember our oregano ever flowering.
Yes, the flowers are included.
The result is dried herbage so potent that a second pinch tossed in will overpower the dish.
Perfect. I like strong oregano when I use it. Using it fresh is not the same.
Ta.
I’ve never bothered to dry oregano. Or marjoram. Or thyme. They are green all year round, so I just pick as required. I do know they are more potent if you hold the water back from them.
roughbarked said:
Well the orchid flowering season appears to be over until next year but the fringe lily season has started.
Waddayamean?! The sun orchids are coming on and the potato orchids and the hyacinth orchids have barely started. This is the state of play in Victoria. I know from what photos are going up on iNaturalist. The orchid identifiers are still very busy. I can only do a few of the orchids. I can do hyacinth orchids. I can do common bird orchids. I can do potato orchids, but only as far as Gastrodia. The Caladenias I leave for the orchid experts, but if a photo is put up as “unknown” I’ll put a name on it so the orchid people can find it.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Well the orchid flowering season appears to be over until next year but the fringe lily season has started.
Waddayamean?! The sun orchids are coming on and the potato orchids and the hyacinth orchids have barely started. This is the state of play in Victoria. I know from what photos are going up on iNaturalist. The orchid identifiers are still very busy. I can only do a few of the orchids. I can do hyacinth orchids. I can do common bird orchids. I can do potato orchids, but only as far as Gastrodia. The Caladenias I leave for the orchid experts, but if a photo is put up as “unknown” I’ll put a name on it so the orchid people can find it.
The sun orchids here have finished here and we don’t have the others.
Have some Alstromerias. I can’t seem to kill the things. So I’ve picked all the flowers. It looks lush.
And for transition…my Bilbergias are now out in flower. In my family these are called tartan lilies. Real name Bilbergia nutans.
……….
buffy said:
Have some Alstromerias. I can’t seem to kill the things. So I’ve picked all the flowers. It looks lush.
And for transition…my Bilbergias are now out in flower. In my family these are called tartan lilies. Real name Bilbergia nutans.
……….
very nice, not sure what mine are doing, of latter, not looked for a while
one of darker pelargonium or whatever we been getting going
Not flaars…but what you get after the flaars.
Got redcurrants and a few blueberries set. And the bees have been immensely busy in the loganberries.
……….
I’ve just set up the netting for the redcurrants and blueberries. I need to procure some more netting for the loganberries in the next couple of weeks.
The Accidental Poppies are out again. The bees are loving it! (Although not enough to pose properly for photos. Most of these have a bee right down inside the flower, too greedy to sit still for me to capture them on the photo) I think the insect on the pink poppy is a hoverfly though.
So here is a selection of what I found on the side of the road at Range Road as I drove from Casterton to Digby this morning.
Chocolate lilies in profusion
The usual suspects – milkmaids, running postman, riceflowers and twining fringe lilies.
…..
And an assortment of weeds. Pretty, but naturalized imports.
…
Oh, and an orchid and a tiny little pea.
……..
All uploaded to iNaturalist now for help with ID. I’ve got names on most of them, but a couple I’ve not fully ID’d.
buffy said:
So here is a selection of what I found on the side of the road at Range Road as I drove from Casterton to Digby this morning.Chocolate lilies in profusion
The usual suspects – milkmaids, running postman, riceflowers and twining fringe lilies.
…..
And an assortment of weeds. Pretty, but naturalized imports.
…
Oh, and an orchid and a tiny little pea.
……..
All uploaded to iNaturalist now for help with ID. I’ve got names on most of them, but a couple I’ve not fully ID’d.
The orchids look like Microtis unifolia.
This in my garden.
The Brunonia here are not out yet. The buds are near to bursting, but not yet out.
And the perfume will come out with this lot now they are indoors and warming up. (I tend not to do symmetry with my flower “arranging”)
buffy said:
And the perfume will come out with this lot now they are indoors and warming up. (I tend not to do symmetry with my flower “arranging”)
Those are classic-looking blooms.
Roses are red,
But some are just white.
Kippers ain’t sweet
And neither is Vegemite.
buffy said:
And the perfume will come out with this lot now they are indoors and warming up. (I tend not to do symmetry with my flower “arranging”)
not sure I can tolerate the lack of symmetry
joking, very nice, lady buffy
my yellow roses have turned a pink color, scorched or at the end, didn’t give them another water, probably needed it
transition said:
buffy said:
And the perfume will come out with this lot now they are indoors and warming up. (I tend not to do symmetry with my flower “arranging”)
not sure I can tolerate the lack of symmetry
joking, very nice, lady buffy
my yellow roses have turned a pink color, scorched or at the end, didn’t give them another water, probably needed it
I have a yellow rose that is a different colour in Spring from the colour you get with a late Summer flush.
And a few flowers for today.
Blue pincushion and Dianella revoluta
……..
Patersonia (purple flags). We have two types. One holds its flowers above the leaves and the other one hides them amongst the leaves.
And an orchid I was looking for particularly, Caladenia congesta. Black tongued caladenia. I knew we had it, but this is the first I’ve seen this season.
………………
And here is today’s collection of purdie flaars.
Appleberries (Billardiera)
Blue pincushion (Brunonia australis)
Some Caladenia orchids
Cinnamon bells orchid (Gastrodia sesamoides). These ones have been hiding from me over the last 10 years or so. I’ve seen them before, but rarely.
And another tiny little Caladenia
buffy said:
And here is today’s collection of purdie flaars.Appleberries (Billardiera)
Blue pincushion (Brunonia australis)
Some Caladenia orchids
Cinnamon bells orchid (Gastrodia sesamoides). These ones have been hiding from me over the last 10 years or so. I’ve seen them before, but rarely.
And another tiny little Caladenia
Seems most native wildflowers are diminutive.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And here is today’s collection of purdie flaars.Appleberries (Billardiera)
Blue pincushion (Brunonia australis)
Some Caladenia orchids
Cinnamon bells orchid (Gastrodia sesamoides). These ones have been hiding from me over the last 10 years or so. I’ve seen them before, but rarely.
And another tiny little Caladenia
Seems most native wildflowers are diminutive.
A lot of them are. Our orchids here are smaller than the WA once for the most part.
roughbarked said:
very nice
I finded a flower
transition said:
roughbarked said:
very nice
All one handed hand held.
The otheer arm is useless at the moment.
transition said:
I finded a flower
and some antz.
transition said:
I finded a flower
Alstromeria. My mother calls those ones the Christmas flowers. Christmas colours and often out at Christmas time. Dreadful weed, mine are in a bed I can mow all around to keep them in check.
I think it’s cactus!
Been wandering. Here are some flaars.
A tiny weeny boronia the grows flat on the ground and isn’t called a boronia anymore but Cyanothamnus
A group of yam daisies (Microseris walteri) and a riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
…..
An Australian bluebell, Wahlenbergia, but I don’t know which one. Might be W multicaulis perhaps.
And a yellow rush lily, which I think is Tricoryne elatior.
……….
buffy said:
Been wandering. Here are some flaars.A tiny weeny boronia the grows flat on the ground and isn’t called a boronia anymore but Cyanothamnus
A group of yam daisies (Microseris walteri) and a riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
…..
An Australian bluebell, Wahlenbergia, but I don’t know which one. Might be W multicaulis perhaps.
And a yellow rush lily, which I think is Tricoryne elatior.
……….
Well done. Most people don’t even notice such tiny flowers.
buffy said:
Been wandering. Here are some flaars.A tiny weeny boronia the grows flat on the ground and isn’t called a boronia anymore but Cyanothamnus
A group of yam daisies (Microseris walteri) and a riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
…..
An Australian bluebell, Wahlenbergia, but I don’t know which one. Might be W multicaulis perhaps.
And a yellow rush lily, which I think is Tricoryne elatior.
……….
Had not fully appreciated the complexities of Rutaceae, but reading up about it and why Cyanothamnus was revisited was well worth the effort. As a general rule if plants will not key out they often belong to either Euphorbiaceae or Rutaceae thus illustrating their complexity.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Been wandering. Here are some flaars.A tiny weeny boronia the grows flat on the ground and isn’t called a boronia anymore but Cyanothamnus
A group of yam daisies (Microseris walteri) and a riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
…..
An Australian bluebell, Wahlenbergia, but I don’t know which one. Might be W multicaulis perhaps.
And a yellow rush lily, which I think is Tricoryne elatior.
……….
Had not fully appreciated the complexities of Rutaceae, but reading up about it and why Cyanothamnus was revisited was well worth the effort. As a general rule if plants will not key out they often belong to either Euphorbiaceae or Rutaceae thus illustrating their complexity.
I was with a friend who has recently produced a third edition of his book of plants of this area. He is now working on the more “forgotten” or “no-one ever bothered” things. We had a discussion about how complex Wahlenbergias are. And how you really do have to photograph all the bits. He also told me about an area in Warrnambool which was planted to pines for the schools back in the 1940s. Later of course, the pines were harvested. And twenty years later again, the orchids all decided it was time to show themselves again. We talked about how amazing the soil is and what a lot of stuff survives. It’s really quite mood improving.
:)
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Been wandering. Here are some flaars.A tiny weeny boronia the grows flat on the ground and isn’t called a boronia anymore but Cyanothamnus
A group of yam daisies (Microseris walteri) and a riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
…..
An Australian bluebell, Wahlenbergia, but I don’t know which one. Might be W multicaulis perhaps.
And a yellow rush lily, which I think is Tricoryne elatior.
……….
Well done. Most people don’t even notice such tiny flowers.
:)
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Been wandering. Here are some flaars.A tiny weeny boronia the grows flat on the ground and isn’t called a boronia anymore but Cyanothamnus
A group of yam daisies (Microseris walteri) and a riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
…..
An Australian bluebell, Wahlenbergia, but I don’t know which one. Might be W multicaulis perhaps.
And a yellow rush lily, which I think is Tricoryne elatior.
……….
Had not fully appreciated the complexities of Rutaceae, but reading up about it and why Cyanothamnus was revisited was well worth the effort. As a general rule if plants will not key out they often belong to either Euphorbiaceae or Rutaceae thus illustrating their complexity.
I was with a friend who has recently produced a third edition of his book of plants of this area. He is now working on the more “forgotten” or “no-one ever bothered” things. We had a discussion about how complex Wahlenbergias are. And how you really do have to photograph all the bits. He also told me about an area in Warrnambool which was planted to pines for the schools back in the 1940s. Later of course, the pines were harvested. And twenty years later again, the orchids all decided it was time to show themselves again. We talked about how amazing the soil is and what a lot of stuff survives. It’s really quite mood improving.
:)
Agree.
Michael V said:
Rool purdie flaaars. :)
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
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Rool purdie flaaars. :)
Ta.
:)
few of from nanna’s garden yesterday
I have several bushes of these purple flowers in bloom at the moment.
Don’t know what they are but bees love them, including the big fat bumblebees (which are difficult to snap, because they fly away just when you think you have them centred).
Bubblecar said:
I have several bushes of these purple flowers in bloom at the moment.Don’t know what they are but bees love them, including the big fat bumblebees (which are difficult to snap, because they fly away just when you think you have them centred).
hebes.
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
I have several bushes of these purple flowers in bloom at the moment.Don’t know what they are but bees love them, including the big fat bumblebees (which are difficult to snap, because they fly away just when you think you have them centred).
hebes.
Ta. The colour is more vivid than that but for some reason the Olympus snapper doesn’t much like purple.
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
I have several bushes of these purple flowers in bloom at the moment.Don’t know what they are but bees love them, including the big fat bumblebees (which are difficult to snap, because they fly away just when you think you have them centred).
hebes.
Yes. Been id-ing them for the scouts/cubs, who have recently discovered iNaturalist and seem to be taking the packs out for walks with their phones/cameras and then uploading. Some strange things get photographed and labelled “Unknown”.
:)
But it’s good they are out in the fresh air and looking at stuff.
have some flowers from mum’s garden today, possibly some repetition, if you cared enough to remember previous pictures, but there are worse things that could happen, you know consider you look out your window and see an asteroid headed for earth, seeing different pictures of the same flowers might seem not so bad, if you had a choice
Here are some flowers that I photographed today when I was doing the bracken massacre.
The blue pincushions (Brunonia australis) are in profusion, but the photos I took of the masses didn’t really work very well. So here are three specimen flowers.
And finally the fringe lilies have come out. Thysanotus tuberosus. There have been chocolate lilies, but no fringe lilies. Until now. Now lots of them have come out in the last week.
……..
This is a Hypericum (St John’s wort). I think.
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
I must admit I wouldn’t know a native grass from Uncle Tom Cobley, to look at.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
I must admit I wouldn’t know a native grass from Uncle Tom Cobley, to look at.
When I worked at Mount Annan botanical gardens eons ago they used to get a fella in with his harvesting machine thingo and collect the kangaroo grass. I hadn’t ever heard of it untill then
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
Aristida?
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
I must admit I wouldn’t know a native grass from Uncle Tom Cobley, to look at.
It’s not that difficult.
Kangaroo grass (left), Uncle Tom Cobley (right).
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
Austrostipa is a primarily Australian genus of plants in the grass family, commonly called speargrass. The genus includes species formerly included in the genus Stipa. All known species are native to Australia, most of them found nowhere else. … stipoides) are native to Australia and New Zealand.
Austrostipa mollis
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/50e7b111-e8ff-41b9-871e-862b93a12d6a
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
Aristida?
I don’t think so. The heads are big.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
Austrostipa is a primarily Australian genus of plants in the grass family, commonly called speargrass. The genus includes species formerly included in the genus Stipa. All known species are native to Australia, most of them found nowhere else. … stipoides) are native to Australia and New Zealand.
Austrostipa mollis
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/50e7b111-e8ff-41b9-871e-862b93a12d6a
Thank you. I’ll grab some seed next week and have a go at getting some going here. It’s very impressive for a couple of weeks when it’s seeding.
:)
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
The grasses are seeding now. Kangaroo grass (Themeda triandra) is easy to ID, and I’ve had the confirmation of wallaby grass ID for the fluffy one. Used to be Danthonia, but now called Rytidosperma.
…..
I’ve uploaded this one to iNaturalist and called it Austrostipa but I’m waiting to see if anyone agrees with that.
……….
Austrostipa is a primarily Australian genus of plants in the grass family, commonly called speargrass. The genus includes species formerly included in the genus Stipa. All known species are native to Australia, most of them found nowhere else. … stipoides) are native to Australia and New Zealand.
Austrostipa mollis
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/50e7b111-e8ff-41b9-871e-862b93a12d6aThank you. I’ll grab some seed next week and have a go at getting some going here. It’s very impressive for a couple of weeks when it’s seeding.
:)
These are the other photos I used for iNaturalist (the on of the stem isn’t as clear as I wanted):
….
….
Yes, I still have Flanders poppies.
Tipped this one up the right way.
and tossed in another fringe lily.
buffy said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:Austrostipa is a primarily Australian genus of plants in the grass family, commonly called speargrass. The genus includes species formerly included in the genus Stipa. All known species are native to Australia, most of them found nowhere else. … stipoides) are native to Australia and New Zealand.
Austrostipa mollis
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/50e7b111-e8ff-41b9-871e-862b93a12d6aThank you. I’ll grab some seed next week and have a go at getting some going here. It’s very impressive for a couple of weeks when it’s seeding.
:)
These are the other photos I used for iNaturalist (the on of the stem isn’t as clear as I wanted):
….
….
I wouldn’t want speargrass growing anywhere near my yard. My experience: the spears penetrate any woven clothes fabric and will even work their way through leather boots.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
buffy said:Thank you. I’ll grab some seed next week and have a go at getting some going here. It’s very impressive for a couple of weeks when it’s seeding.
:)
These are the other photos I used for iNaturalist (the on of the stem isn’t as clear as I wanted):
….
….
I wouldn’t want speargrass growing anywhere near my yard. My experience: the spears penetrate any woven clothes fabric and will even work their way through leather boots.
always fun getting them out of socks, few days ago I had an episode with just that, turned out easier to use a sharp wood saw
they tell me you don’t notice prickles at all with prosthetic limbs, so looking forward to that
Michael V said:
buffy said:
buffy said:Thank you. I’ll grab some seed next week and have a go at getting some going here. It’s very impressive for a couple of weeks when it’s seeding.
:)
These are the other photos I used for iNaturalist (the on of the stem isn’t as clear as I wanted):
….
….
I wouldn’t want speargrass growing anywhere near my yard. My experience: the spears penetrate any woven clothes fabric and will even work their way through leather boots.
They do.
transition said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:These are the other photos I used for iNaturalist (the on of the stem isn’t as clear as I wanted):
….
….
I wouldn’t want speargrass growing anywhere near my yard. My experience: the spears penetrate any woven clothes fabric and will even work their way through leather boots.
always fun getting them out of socks, few days ago I had an episode with just that, turned out easier to use a sharp wood saw
they tell me you don’t notice prickles at all with prosthetic limbs, so looking forward to that
Burn the socks.
Some garden flowers rather than bush flowers. Because I looked outside and liked the dusk light.
Mock orange. If you turn on your imagination you should be able to smell the wonderful perfume.
And it’s taken a while, but I got the drift of California poppies I planned. They started in a pot underneath there.
(That is next to the septic tank. Gotta have something there that you can just rip out if you need to get to the tank. So I’ve got Dichondra and poppies)
Got some purdie flaars for you:
Some Dianella revoluta I planted on the nature strip years ago which has rather liked being in a spot where the stormwater comes out as an ephemeral stream.
…..
A hot pink Buddleia:
And not a flaar, but a butterflaar…
buffy said:
Got some purdie flaars for you:Some Dianella revoluta I planted on the nature strip years ago which has rather liked being in a spot where the stormwater comes out as an ephemeral stream.
…..
A hot pink Buddleia:
And not a flaar, but a butterflaar…
like dianella, plenty that grows this part of world
transition said:
buffy said:
Got some purdie flaars for you:Some Dianella revoluta I planted on the nature strip years ago which has rather liked being in a spot where the stormwater comes out as an ephemeral stream.
…..
A hot pink Buddleia:
And not a flaar, but a butterflaar…
like dianella, plenty that grows this part of world
Same here.
And now a selection of flowers from my garden. I decided I’m not into globe artichokes, so I’m letting it flower. You can see the family resemblance to thistles. It will be interesting to see how it opens fully.
Christmas lilies running against the clock to open for Christmas…need to get their skates on.
I always think of feverfew as being a Christmas flower, and it’s definitely ready.
A pretty purple scabiosa and a pretty pink poppy.
Too hot for me outside. I went to the bakery for brunch – turkey/cheese/cranberry foccacia roll. And an iced mocha. Have some Remember Me roses and some Scabiosa.
Buddleias are out. Butterflies are ecstatic.
buffy said:
Buddleias are out. Butterflies are ecstatic.
Never heard of them.
buffy said:
Buddleias are out. Butterflies are ecstatic.
that looks beautiful buffy.
My succulents seem to have decided that flowering would be a good idea.
……….
I don’t know what the first one is. The second one is an Echeveria (I think) and I know the last one as “jelly beans”.
The Christmas lilies are exactly a week late opening…
buffy said:
The Christmas lilies are exactly a week late opening…
Ah, and the photo!
And this one is still thinking about it:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
Michael V said:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
Yep, that’s purdie.
:)
Michael V said:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
It’s likely an epiphyllum hybrid, but which one is anybody’s guess. Closest I’ve seen this morning is “Lady of Mars” but it’s probably not that one. (Second row, second from left.)
http://www.epiphyllums.org/oldsite/penticocollect/whitewithlavander.html
Michael V said:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
Way kewlies. Did I give ya those bits???
If I did, then the bits it came from, that I have, have never flowered. Cos I’ve never had a flower like that.
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
Way kewlies. Did I give ya those bits???
If I did, then the bits it came from, that I have, have never flowered. Cos I’ve never had a flower like that.
It’s a bit like one of those firework rocket bursts, frozen in time.
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
Way kewlies. Did I give ya those bits???
If I did, then the bits it came from, that I have, have never flowered. Cos I’ve never had a flower like that.
Yes, they came from you mid-last-year. Into new potting mix in a new big pot. We weren’t expecting flowers either. There are several more buds, too.
:)
Thanks.
:)
Bubblecar said:
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
Way kewlies. Did I give ya those bits???
If I did, then the bits it came from, that I have, have never flowered. Cos I’ve never had a flower like that.
It’s a bit like one of those firework rocket bursts, frozen in time.
Yes, well spotted!
:)
Michael V said:
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
For Woodie: the first flower has opened.
Way kewlies. Did I give ya those bits???
If I did, then the bits it came from, that I have, have never flowered. Cos I’ve never had a flower like that.
Yes, they came from you mid-last-year. Into new potting mix in a new big pot. We weren’t expecting flowers either. There are several more buds, too.
:)
Thanks.
:)
He’s gonna want it back now…
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Woodie said:Way kewlies. Did I give ya those bits???
If I did, then the bits it came from, that I have, have never flowered. Cos I’ve never had a flower like that.
Yes, they came from you mid-last-year. Into new potting mix in a new big pot. We weren’t expecting flowers either. There are several more buds, too.
:)
Thanks.
:)
He’s gonna want it back now…
I think he’s probably got enough in the pile behind the chook pen. We didn’t take it all by any means.
:)
I think we now know why Woodie has never seen flowers on this epiphyllum; they are night-flowering. These flowers were closed at nightfall yesterday evening. This is how they looked at 11:30 pm. They were spent before 8:30 am. The previous photo (of one open flower) was taken early morning and it was spent before 9am.
It is probably Epiphyllum hookeri. Our flowers had a faint, but lovely perfume.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphyllum_hookeri
Michael V said:
I think we now know why Woodie has never seen flowers on this epiphyllum; they are night-flowering. These flowers were closed at nightfall yesterday evening. This is how they looked at 11:30 pm. They were spent before 8:30 am. The previous photo (of one open flower) was taken early morning and it was spent before 9am.It is probably Epiphyllum hookeri. Our flowers had a faint, but lovely perfume.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphyllum_hookeri
Also:
https://worldofsucculents.com/epiphyllum-hookeri/
https://worldofsucculents.com/epiphyllum-hookeri-guatemalense/
Michael V said:
I think we now know why Woodie has never seen flowers on this epiphyllum; they are night-flowering. These flowers were closed at nightfall yesterday evening. This is how they looked at 11:30 pm. They were spent before 8:30 am. The previous photo (of one open flower) was taken early morning and it was spent before 9am.It is probably Epiphyllum hookeri. Our flowers had a faint, but lovely perfume.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphyllum_hookeri
I’ve heard them called moon flower.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
I think we now know why Woodie has never seen flowers on this epiphyllum; they are night-flowering. These flowers were closed at nightfall yesterday evening. This is how they looked at 11:30 pm. They were spent before 8:30 am. The previous photo (of one open flower) was taken early morning and it was spent before 9am.It is probably Epiphyllum hookeri. Our flowers had a faint, but lovely perfume.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphyllum_hookeri
I’ve heard them called moon flower.
I think that’s what a friend called them, too.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
I think we now know why Woodie has never seen flowers on this epiphyllum; they are night-flowering. These flowers were closed at nightfall yesterday evening. This is how they looked at 11:30 pm. They were spent before 8:30 am. The previous photo (of one open flower) was taken early morning and it was spent before 9am.It is probably Epiphyllum hookeri. Our flowers had a faint, but lovely perfume.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiphyllum_hookeri
I’ve heard them called moon flower.
I think that’s what a friend called them, too.
Night lilies. I do have some, but I thought they were red.
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:I’ve heard them called moon flower.
I think that’s what a friend called them, too.
Night lilies. I do have some, but I thought they were red.
If you have red ones, we’ll steal some of them, too.
We have a gorgeous red-purple epiphyllum hybrid, but it’s day flowering.
Ooh, thanks for reminding me. I took some photos of succulent flowers for my Letter to Mum. I may have already shown you lot some of them. Here they are anyway:
…
buffy said:
Ooh, thanks for reminding me. I took some photos of succulent flowers for my Letter to Mum. I may have already shown you lot some of them. Here they are anyway:
…
Looks like the big one is sneaking out of its cage.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Ooh, thanks for reminding me. I took some photos of succulent flowers for my Letter to Mum. I may have already shown you lot some of them. Here they are anyway:
…
Looks like the big one is sneaking out of its cage.
It’s not all that big, actually. And I cleared off a lot of spiderwebs after I took a picture, and then went back to take a “clean” picture. Funny how you get so used to things that you don’t notice them. That pot needs to be moved to somewhere that the rain can get it. I might put that on my mental list for tomorrow. I don’t feel like doing it now.
mummy’s tall philodendron or whatever out front of her house has an emerging impressively big flower, plants ten foot high or more
I haven’t caught up with you lot from this morning yet. But I have done my photos and submitted some to iNaturalist. You will all be pleased to know the ID on that koala has been seconded…
Anyway, most of the flowers are finished now, but I did find some.
…….
Grass trigger plant and ………………………………………………..blue bottle daisy
……
A tiny Goodenia and………………………………………………………..the last of the blue pincushions
And a tiny weeny little Boronia
Couple recent snaps from the older sister’s garden.
Hydrangeas here don’t look like that. Even the cossetted ones in our friends’ garden which have their own shadecloth covers. (Not in my garden, I don’t grow hydrangeas. I reckon they are ideal snake habitat. And the dessicate with the slightest heat and wind)
Some snaps from the sister’s garden at the do yesterday, including dahlias, lillies, Wollemi pine, other trees, ornaments etc.
Bubblecar said:
Some snaps from the sister’s garden at the do yesterday, including dahlias, lillies, Wollemi pine, other trees, ornaments etc.
Lovely place.
Michael V said:
Bubblecar said:
Some snaps from the sister’s garden at the do yesterday, including dahlias, lillies, Wollemi pine, other trees, ornaments etc.
Lovely place.
Perfect even.
Didn’t snap the pool ‘cos there were people in it, but here’s a view of the house from the pool enclosure.
Bubblecar said:
Didn’t snap the pool ‘cos there were people in it, but here’s a view of the house from the pool enclosure.
I’m sure that garden needs a hermit.
;)
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Didn’t snap the pool ‘cos there were people in it, but here’s a view of the house from the pool enclosure.
I’m sure that garden needs a hermit.
;)
in a folly.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Didn’t snap the pool ‘cos there were people in it, but here’s a view of the house from the pool enclosure.
I’m sure that garden needs a hermit.
;)
in a folly.
A very comfortable folly. With a kitchen…
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:I’m sure that garden needs a hermit.
;)
in a folly.
A very comfortable folly. With a kitchen…
Although a Summer house might work.
buffy said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:in a folly.
A very comfortable folly. With a kitchen…
Although a Summer house might work.
a folly with a conservatory?
Don’t fancy myself as a resident hermit, but I’ve been invited to spend a night or two in the spare bedroom when I’m wanting a little holiday.
Bubblecar said:
Don’t fancy myself as a resident hermit, but I’ve been invited to spend a night or two in the spare bedroom when I’m wanting a little holiday.
You could call yourself the Artist in Residence.
Bubblecar said:
Don’t fancy myself as a resident hermit, but I’ve been invited to spend a night or two in the spare bedroom when I’m wanting a little holiday.
That’s nice.
:)
My naked ladies. Belladonna.
roughbarked said:
![]()
My naked ladies. Belladonna.
very nice, brought some color to my day, my morning
and I hear birdies, calling me
transition said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
My naked ladies. Belladonna.
very nice, brought some color to my day, my morning
and I hear birdies, calling me
roughbarked said:
transition said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
My naked ladies. Belladonna.
very nice, brought some color to my day, my morning
and I hear birdies, calling me
nice raptor, reckon same as tried to eat my pet chook oneday, had a go
transition said:
roughbarked said:
transition said:very nice, brought some color to my day, my morning
and I hear birdies, calling me
nice raptor, reckon same as tried to eat my pet chook oneday, had a go
Juvenile sparrowhawk.
Here’s one for ID. The plant is Capparis mitchellii, in my garden.
roughbarked said:
![]()
Here’s one for ID. The plant is Capparis mitchellii, in my garden.
Caper white butterfly?
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
Here’s one for ID. The plant is Capparis mitchellii, in my garden.
Caper white butterfly?
Fair chance of that, I’d say. ;)
It is always amazing when one plant in the middle of no other plants for many tens or hundreds of km, that the insect can still find its host.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
Here’s one for ID. The plant is Capparis mitchellii, in my garden.
Caper white butterfly?
Fair chance of that, I’d say. ;)
It is always amazing when one plant in the middle of no other plants for many tens or hundreds of km, that the insect can still find its host.
I found the same with Sturt’s Pea,. No plants within 60km and the specific caterpillar turns up.
roughbarked said:
![]()
My naked ladies. Belladonna.
At this time of year? I’ve got naked bulbs sitting on/in the ground. Mine flower in March.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
Here’s one for ID. The plant is Capparis mitchellii, in my garden.
Caper white butterfly?
Fair chance of that, I’d say. ;)
It is always amazing when one plant in the middle of no other plants for many tens or hundreds of km, that the insect can still find its host.
One year here we had so many of them fluttering around, we couldn’t see properly across the road. It was amazing, quite amazing. And we likely don’t have any Capparis species within 100 km or more.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
My naked ladies. Belladonna.
At this time of year? I’ve got naked bulbs sitting on/in the ground. Mine flower in March.
Well, they are there. I suppose it is all about the rain I’ve had.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Caper white butterfly?
Fair chance of that, I’d say. ;)
It is always amazing when one plant in the middle of no other plants for many tens or hundreds of km, that the insect can still find its host.
One year here we had so many of them fluttering around, we couldn’t see properly across the road. It was amazing, quite amazing. And we likely don’t have any Capparis species within 100 km or more.
Where the wind blows. ;) Anyway a few of our butterfies migrate long distances.
Blooms from the Ross sister’s garden.
Bubblecar said:
Blooms from the Ross sister’s garden.
That’s a lot of flowers. And grasses.
Time for some pictures again. About to write a Letter to Mum. I took a week off last week. I’ve been doing these weekly letters for 5 years now.
It seems to be the pinky yellow time of year. Here is a Peace rose and a dahlia that was here when we bought the place and refuses to die no matter how I neglect it.
We’ve also got Madame Alfred Carrierre still making the odd flower.
And the mock orange should have finished but still keeps popping a few flowers.
buffy said:
Time for some pictures again. About to write a Letter to Mum. I took a week off last week. I’ve been doing these weekly letters for 5 years now.It seems to be the pinky yellow time of year. Here is a Peace rose and a dahlia that was here when we bought the place and refuses to die no matter how I neglect it.
We’ve also got Madame Alfred Carrierre still making the odd flower.
And the mock orange should have finished but still keeps popping a few flowers.
Whoops.
Sunflowers nearly there:
buffy said:
Time for some pictures again. About to write a Letter to Mum. I took a week off last week. I’ve been doing these weekly letters for 5 years now.It seems to be the pinky yellow time of year. Here is a Peace rose and a dahlia that was here when we bought the place and refuses to die no matter how I neglect it.
We’ve also got Madame Alfred Carrierre still making the odd flower.
And the mock orange should have finished but still keeps popping a few flowers.
Ta, I can smell those roses from here.
Some cheery sunflowers and a magnolia close-up, from my older sister’s garden.
She reports:
>Some of my Russian followers on Instagram (all people with lovely gardens) have posted pictures of the Ukrainian flag and messages of support for Ukraine.
Got sunflowers out again.
………………….
And some Cape Gooseberries. I don’t like them. They taste like kerosene to me. At least, while I’ve never drunk kerosene, the smell evokes that taste. It’s complicated.
………………
buffy said:
Got sunflowers out again.
………………….
And some Cape Gooseberries. I don’t like them. They taste like kerosene to me. At least, while I’ve never drunk kerosene, the smell evokes that taste. It’s complicated.
………………
TIL that there are red sunflowers
Arts said:
buffy said:
Got sunflowers out again.
………………….
And some Cape Gooseberries. I don’t like them. They taste like kerosene to me. At least, while I’ve never drunk kerosene, the smell evokes that taste. It’s complicated.
………………
TIL that there are red sunflowers
They come from Krypton…
Arts said:
buffy said:
Got sunflowers out again.
………………….
And some Cape Gooseberries. I don’t like them. They taste like kerosene to me. At least, while I’ve never drunk kerosene, the smell evokes that taste. It’s complicated.
………………
TIL that there are red sunflowers
Well, kind of dark tan really.
:)
And that moth reminded me to post pictures of our bat-flower for monkey skipper. If anybody sees her could you point her to this post, please?
I’ve also included a picture of some ornamental ginger that is also flowering.
Michael V said:
And that moth reminded me to post pictures of our bat-flower for monkey skipper. If anybody sees her could you point her to this post, please?I’ve also included a picture of some ornamental ginger that is also flowering.
What a weird flower. Great images.
Ian said:
Michael V said:
And that moth reminded me to post pictures of our bat-flower for monkey skipper. If anybody sees her could you point her to this post, please?I’ve also included a picture of some ornamental ginger that is also flowering.
What a weird flower. Great images.
Thanks.
:)
Bump for monkey skipper.
And that moth reminded me to post pictures of our bat-flower for monkey skipper. If anybody sees her could you point her to this post, please?
I’ve also included a picture of some ornamental ginger that is also flowering.
Michael V said:
Bump for monkey skipper.And that moth reminded me to post pictures of our bat-flower for monkey skipper. If anybody sees her could you point her to this post, please?
I’ve also included a picture of some ornamental ginger that is also flowering.
Way …. cool MV.
Got some more sunflowers for Arts. Here is a traditional yellow one. That plant is over 6 ft tall.
…………
And these mixed colour ones are not quite as tall. But interesting.
This one seems to be confused. It’s one plant but seems to have two colours in the flowers.
And browns and oranges.
And for a break from the hot colours…the blue butterfly bush is out at the moment.
buffy said:
Got some more sunflowers for Arts. Here is a traditional yellow one. That plant is over 6 ft tall.
…………
And these mixed colour ones are not quite as tall. But interesting.
This one seems to be confused. It’s one plant but seems to have two colours in the flowers.
Buffy does Ukrainian solidarity.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Got some more sunflowers for Arts. Here is a traditional yellow one. That plant is over 6 ft tall.
…………
And these mixed colour ones are not quite as tall. But interesting.
This one seems to be confused. It’s one plant but seems to have two colours in the flowers.
Buffy does Ukrainian solidarity.
:)
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Got some more sunflowers for Arts. Here is a traditional yellow one. That plant is over 6 ft tall.
…………
And these mixed colour ones are not quite as tall. But interesting.
This one seems to be confused. It’s one plant but seems to have two colours in the flowers.
Buffy does Ukrainian solidarity.
OK, I’m well out of the social media loop. I didn’t know about sunflowers and Ukraine. I had to look that up.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Got some more sunflowers for Arts. Here is a traditional yellow one. That plant is over 6 ft tall.
…………
And these mixed colour ones are not quite as tall. But interesting.
This one seems to be confused. It’s one plant but seems to have two colours in the flowers.
Buffy does Ukrainian solidarity.
OK, I’m well out of the social media loop. I didn’t know about sunflowers and Ukraine. I had to look that up.
Yellow and blue, as well.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Got some more sunflowers for Arts. Here is a traditional yellow one. That plant is over 6 ft tall.
…………
And these mixed colour ones are not quite as tall. But interesting.
This one seems to be confused. It’s one plant but seems to have two colours in the flowers.
Buffy does Ukrainian solidarity.
OK, I’m well out of the social media loop. I didn’t know about sunflowers and Ukraine. I had to look that up.
Synchronicity maybe.
My older sister’s hydrangeas.
Bubblecar said:
My older sister’s hydrangeas.
:)
my hydrangeas are looking good this year. But the garden is messy.
Sweet peas from the Ross sister’s garden, on display in the older sister’s house.
I was given several batches of these too when they were blooming. Very pleasing scent.
Bubblecar said:
Sweet peas from the Ross sister’s garden, on display in the older sister’s house.I was given several batches of these too when they were blooming. Very pleasing scent.
Love sweet peas.
Alstroemerias in the older sister’s place. Never heard of them but they’re also known Peruvian lilies.
Bubblecar said:
Alstroemerias in the older sister’s place. Never heard of them but they’re also known Peruvian lilies.
known as
She has vast numbers of potted plants. Watering takes ages.
Bubblecar said:
She has vast numbers of potted plants. Watering takes ages.
Does she have much time after watering and dusting?
Love the hostas. I had a lovely collection that native animals annihilated.
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
She has vast numbers of potted plants. Watering takes ages.
Does she have much time after watering and dusting?
Love the hostas. I had a lovely collection that native animals annihilated.
After watering and dusting she still has time to acquire yet more stuff which then needs to be arranged within the collections.
More snaps of her place here:
https://www.instagram.com/theeclectickitchen/?hl=en
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:Buffy does Ukrainian solidarity.
OK, I’m well out of the social media loop. I didn’t know about sunflowers and Ukraine. I had to look that up.
Synchronicity maybe.
Really…it’s just that the sunflowers have started to come out here.
Bubblecar said:
My older sister’s hydrangeas.
Are they in pots? They look like babies.
Bubblecar said:
Sweet peas from the Ross sister’s garden, on display in the older sister’s house.I was given several batches of these too when they were blooming. Very pleasing scent.
Ooh, thanks for reminding me. I think it’s time to plant those seeds.
Bubblecar said:
Alstroemerias in the older sister’s place. Never heard of them but they’re also known Peruvian lilies.
I’ve got red ones, and some red and blue ones.
…………
For some reason I don’t seem to have photographed the red ones. There are also golden ones. Which I haven’t got in the garden. All of them spread like weeds and I keep mine confined into a garden bed where they can’t get out.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
My older sister’s hydrangeas.
Are they in pots? They look like babies.
Yes. I think where they’re standing was originally an old pond.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Alstroemerias in the older sister’s place. Never heard of them but they’re also known Peruvian lilies.
I’ve got red ones, and some red and blue ones.
…………
For some reason I don’t seem to have photographed the red ones. There are also golden ones. Which I haven’t got in the garden. All of them spread like weeds and I keep mine confined into a garden bed where they can’t get out.
I beg your pardon, that was red and green ones.
I hadn’t realized just how dark this sunflower was when it first opened.
buffy said:
I hadn’t realized just how dark this sunflower was when it first opened.
Wow.
buffy said:
I hadn’t realized just how dark this sunflower was when it first opened.
Almost like an anti-sunflower.
Have the Can’t Kill It Dahlia (I have neglected as hard as I can, and over 20 years on, it’s still there) with some Heliotrope for contrast.
buffy said:
Have the Can’t Kill It Dahlia (I have neglected as hard as I can, and over 20 years on, it’s still there) with some Heliotrope for contrast.
Long time listener, first time poster.
A flower near the local dam.
And a couple of spidery houses in our trees.
Spiny Norman said:
Long time listener, first time poster.A flower near the local dam.
And a couple of spidery houses in our trees.
I wouldn’t want to push through those spider ropes. Last week when we were in the bush the spiders seemed to have all put their crosswise webs at my face height. Single strands. Very annoying.
:)
buffy said:
I wouldn’t want to push through those spider ropes. Last week when we were in the bush the spiders seemed to have all put their crosswise webs at my face height. Single strands. Very annoying.
:)
There’s several spider webs across the path i take from where i park the car to where i work.
I know where they are, and duck under them and dodge to the side of them.
My behaviour must look very strange to anyone who sees me from a distance.
captain_spalding said:
buffy said:I wouldn’t want to push through those spider ropes. Last week when we were in the bush the spiders seemed to have all put their crosswise webs at my face height. Single strands. Very annoying.
:)
There’s several spider webs across the path i take from where i park the car to where i work.
I know where they are, and duck under them and dodge to the side of them.
My behaviour must look very strange to anyone who sees me from a distance.
There is a young fellow in this town who dances to his own tune. He’s not dodging spider webs, just listening to the music in his head, I think. He’s personable enough and I was pleased to hear recently that he has a job in the shearing sheds. This will be very good for him. His life has been somewhat chaotic since he was born.
buffy said:
captain_spalding said:
buffy said:I wouldn’t want to push through those spider ropes. Last week when we were in the bush the spiders seemed to have all put their crosswise webs at my face height. Single strands. Very annoying.
:)
There’s several spider webs across the path i take from where i park the car to where i work.
I know where they are, and duck under them and dodge to the side of them.
My behaviour must look very strange to anyone who sees me from a distance.
There is a young fellow in this town who dances to his own tune. He’s not dodging spider webs, just listening to the music in his head, I think. He’s personable enough and I was pleased to hear recently that he has a job in the shearing sheds. This will be very good for him. His life has been somewhat chaotic since he was born.
It could be the making of him.
captain_spalding said:
buffy said:
captain_spalding said:There’s several spider webs across the path i take from where i park the car to where i work.
I know where they are, and duck under them and dodge to the side of them.
My behaviour must look very strange to anyone who sees me from a distance.
There is a young fellow in this town who dances to his own tune. He’s not dodging spider webs, just listening to the music in his head, I think. He’s personable enough and I was pleased to hear recently that he has a job in the shearing sheds. This will be very good for him. His life has been somewhat chaotic since he was born.
It could be the making of him.
I hope so. He deserves a break.
:)
buffy said:
Spiny Norman said:
Long time listener, first time poster.A flower near the local dam.
And a couple of spidery houses in our trees.
I wouldn’t want to push through those spider ropes. Last week when we were in the bush the spiders seemed to have all put their crosswise webs at my face height. Single strands. Very annoying.
:)
I noticed that first one when I was mowing the grass, on the small tractor we have. I moved the branch out of the way so it didn’t hit my head.
buffy said:
I hope so. He deserves a break.
:)
Can we hope for updates?
BACK from shopping & all packed away. Now about to relax with a pint of Guinness.
Ross sister brought me more pretty blooms from her garden + a big bag of fresh green beans.
Bubblecar said:
BACK from shopping & all packed away. Now about to relax with a pint of Guinness.Ross sister brought me more pretty blooms from her garden + a big bag of fresh green beans.
I like the lemon yellow.
Starters-: Bean soup.
Main-: Bean and lentil omelette.
Dessert-: Bean and chocolate ice cream.
Peak Warming Man said:
Starters-: Bean soup.
Main-: Bean and lentil omelette.
Dessert-: Bean and chocolate ice cream.
I took some flower photos for a Letter to Mum. Some of them didn’t work very well, but these ones are OK.
Blue butterfly bush and blue sage
……..
A hot pink Nerine
buffy said:
I took some flower photos for a Letter to Mum. Some of them didn’t work very well, but these ones are OK.Blue butterfly bush and blue sage
……..
A hot pink Nerine
How is she going?
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I took some flower photos for a Letter to Mum. Some of them didn’t work very well, but these ones are OK.Blue butterfly bush and blue sage
……..
A hot pink Nerine
How is she going?
My brother says OK. He’s not good at reporting, he can tell us she is fine and then we find she was supremely vague. I guess he hasn’t spent as many years dealing with the elderly as Mr buffy and I to pick up the nuances. He couldn’t see her this week past because he was in isolation because his son tested positive. No-one else in the house did though.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I took some flower photos for a Letter to Mum. Some of them didn’t work very well, but these ones are OK.Blue butterfly bush and blue sage
……..
A hot pink Nerine
How is she going?
My brother says OK. He’s not good at reporting, he can tell us she is fine and then we find she was supremely vague. I guess he hasn’t spent as many years dealing with the elderly as Mr buffy and I to pick up the nuances. He couldn’t see her this week past because he was in isolation because his son tested positive. No-one else in the house did though.
Well…we’ll hope all is well then.
The Autumn crocus are out.
buffy said:
The Autumn crocus are out.
Purdie.
Did I mention that the hot pink Nerines are out?
buffy said:
Did I mention that the hot pink Nerines are out?
:)
Aconite.
sarahs mum said:
Aconite.
Pleasing cluster of blooms.
I have flicked these around. I hope they come out right. My more uncommon hydrangeas.
Bubblecar said:
sarahs mum said:
Aconite.
Pleasing cluster of blooms.
I’m suspicious. Who are you planning to kill with the Queen of Poisons?
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
sarahs mum said:
Aconite.
Pleasing cluster of blooms.
I’m suspicious. Who are you planning to kill with the Queen of Poisons?
nothing eats it.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:Pleasing cluster of blooms.
I’m suspicious. Who are you planning to kill with the Queen of Poisons?
nothing eats it.
Not surprising really. It’s not a local plant and I imagine the leaves are bitter. Although I think it’s the root that kills best.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:Pleasing cluster of blooms.
I’m suspicious. Who are you planning to kill with the Queen of Poisons?
nothing eats it.
The cultivar is one used in the Dutch flower markets.
From “Culpeper’s Colour Herbal” entry for Aconite.
“A decoction of the root is a good lotion to wash the parts bitten by venomous creatures”
The book gives Culpeper’s notes on the herbs and then there is usually a modern note added. The book was published in 1983.
“Homeopathic physicians use a specially made tincture of the whole plant of Aconitum napellum. The dose given, however, is so minute that no danger arises”
:)
sarahs mum said:
I have flicked these around. I hope they come out right. My more uncommon hydrangeas.
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They’re still pleasing up the wrong way :)
Bubblecar said:
sarahs mum said:
I have flicked these around. I hope they come out right. My more uncommon hydrangeas.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
They’re still pleasing up the wrong way :)
Flipping them isn’t good enough. Mostly you’ll need to save the images after flipping.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
sarahs mum said:
I have flicked these around. I hope they come out right. My more uncommon hydrangeas.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
They’re still pleasing up the wrong way :)
Flipping them isn’t good enough. Mostly you’ll need to save the images after flipping.
I flip them in Photoshop, which then asks whether to save the changes when I close them, and of course I do.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:They’re still pleasing up the wrong way :)
Flipping them isn’t good enough. Mostly you’ll need to save the images after flipping.
I flip them in Photoshop, which then asks whether to save the changes when I close them, and of course I do.
Aah well. I tried.
Last flowers from the Ross sister’s garden, before the frost takes all.
Bubblecar said:
Last flowers from the Ross sister’s garden, before the frost takes all.
I picked the Impossible to Kill dahlias yesterday. My sunflowers are making seed for the chooks.
My backyard Banksia thinks the world is ending and is flowering like a crazy thing. It’s Banksia integrifolia. And I cut it back very hard a couple of years ago. Perhaps it fears for its life.
……….
Very little around in the way of flaars at the moment. So today I did a vase of gumleaves and rosehips. My flower arranging is of the plonking school…
buffy said:
Very little around in the way of flaars at the moment. So today I did a vase of gumleaves and rosehips. My flower arranging is of the plonking school…
we was looking up rosehips other day, was an ingredient in some tablets, some bottle gifted when we were down with covid and scurvy, can’t megadose with other stuff in it, anyway we got the good stuff, straight VC, the chewable horse tablet size, in the really really big bottle
got through that bottle, might have came off it a bit abruptly and got minor rebound scurvy, so back into’t some more
Michael V said:
What is that?
buffy said:
Michael V said:
What is that?
Culinary ginger.
It’s the first year our ginger has produced flowers. I think this is the fertilised fruit. The flowers are tiny and have now finished.
Michael V said:
buffy said:
Michael V said:
What is that?
Culinary ginger.
It’s the first year our ginger has produced flowers. I think this is the fertilised fruit. The flowers are tiny and have now finished.
Ah, the ginger I couldn’t grow. Now you mention it, I see the resemblance.
:)
Can I count mushrooms as if they are the flowers of the mycelium? Here are some I photographed today. All now submitted to iNaturalist.
Hippeastrum papilio: “green” hippies.
Michael V said:
Hippeastrum papilio: “green” hippies.
They are pretty stunning, aren’t they.
:)
Michael V said:
Hippeastrum papilio: “green” hippies.
That’s rool purdie. Mine aren’t showing any signs of such purdieness just yet.
buffy said:
Michael V said:
Hippeastrum papilio: “green” hippies.
They are pretty stunning, aren’t they.
:)
Yes they are. Thanks again to Woodie, who supplied them.
PF put up a photo the other day and wrote that they are endangered in the wild.
Interestingly, they are epiphytes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippeastrum_papilio
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-27/rare-queen-of-sheba-orchid-sighted-at-bremer-bay/101185000
Michael V said:
![]()
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-27/rare-queen-of-sheba-orchid-sighted-at-bremer-bay/101185000
They are speccy eh.
Michael V said:
![]()
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-27/rare-queen-of-sheba-orchid-sighted-at-bremer-bay/101185000
They would look even better under UV.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
![]()
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-27/rare-queen-of-sheba-orchid-sighted-at-bremer-bay/101185000
They are speccy eh.
Unfortunately, that photo has no scale, so I had no idea of the size of the flower. Professor Google tells me they are 3-5 cm flowers.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
![]()
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-27/rare-queen-of-sheba-orchid-sighted-at-bremer-bay/101185000
They are speccy eh.
Unfortunately, that photo has no scale, so I had no idea of the size of the flower. Professor Google tells me they are 3-5 cm flowers.
Here is the link for the iNaturalist observations of Thelymitra variegata. If you click on the individual observation, you can then click on the separate photos in each one, if they have taken multiples. The photos of the whole plant give some sense of scale. The observations cover 2017 to 2021.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=6827&taxon_id=1115579
buffy said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:They are speccy eh.
Unfortunately, that photo has no scale, so I had no idea of the size of the flower. Professor Google tells me they are 3-5 cm flowers.
Here is the link for the iNaturalist observations of Thelymitra variegata. If you click on the individual observation, you can then click on the separate photos in each one, if they have taken multiples. The photos of the whole plant give some sense of scale. The observations cover 2017 to 2021.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=6827&taxon_id=1115579
Ta.
Well, that took some hunting down in my various books and online. I’d never quite got around to finding the name of one of the roses in the Casterton garden. I took cuttings before I sold the place and I’ve got some going. Pink rose. Huh! So many pink roses. Well perfumed cut down the possibilities a bit. And checking what has been available in Australia. And the fact I know it’s quite an old bush. I reckon it’s Eiffel Tower, bred in 1963. I’ll go and put labels on my cuttings.
Still working on my photos. But finally I got a good photo of the “Pink Heath” (the white one) without it flaring badly.
And when the “pink heath” is actually pink. It also flares badly in photos.
buffy said:
Still working on my photos. But finally I got a good photo of the “Pink Heath” (the white one) without it flaring badly.
They’re pleasing blooms.
buffy said:
And when the “pink heath” is actually pink. It also flares badly in photos.
Could do a nice little arrangement of the pink & white combined, in a suitable vase.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And when the “pink heath” is actually pink. It also flares badly in photos.
Could do a nice little arrangement of the pink & white combined, in a suitable vase.
Shouldn’t pick them though.
Rare Queen of Sheba orchid, 10 years in the making, sighted on WA’s south coast
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-27/rare-queen-of-sheba-orchid-sighted-at-bremer-bay/101185000
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And when the “pink heath” is actually pink. It also flares badly in photos.
Could do a nice little arrangement of the pink & white combined, in a suitable vase.
I used to pick wildflowers from the bush block (there is a clause we put in the covenant to allow me to do that) and have a bunch on the front desk at the practice. I had a little card to put beside the vase that said “Picked from a private garden”. People always wanted to talk about them and the older folk remembered when they picked them on the farm as children.
There are some flowers coming out now. Violets of several hues:
……….
Some bulbs…Paperwhites and soldier boys (Lachenalia):
……….
And the Arisarum.
……….
Now to go and write the Letter to Mum that I took the photos for.
Michael V said:
Noice. Purdy noice.🙂
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
![]()
Noice. Purdy noice.🙂
The pink zygocactus is one of yours.
The red is a miniature bougainvillea.
Michael V said:
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
![]()
Noice. Purdy noice.🙂
The pink zygocactus is one of yours.
The red is a miniature bougainvillea.
Kewlies.
I didn’t know they had bogans in Villea.
Woodie said:
Michael V said:
Woodie said:Noice. Purdy noice.🙂
The pink zygocactus is one of yours.
The red is a miniature bougainvillea.
Kewlies.
I didn’t know they had bogans in Villea.
Ha!
And the first daffodils are out (excluding the paperwhites, which have been out for a couple of weeks). I think this one is Narcissus pseudonarcissus, one of the original “wild” daffodils before they started getting all frou-frou-y. They are late. In 2020 they started flowering around 10th July according to my photos. But this Winter has been colder, so perhaps that delays them.
buffy said:
And the first daffodils are out (excluding the paperwhites, which have been out for a couple of weeks). I think this one is Narcissus pseudonarcissus, one of the original “wild” daffodils before they started getting all frou-frou-y. They are late. In 2020 they started flowering around 10th July according to my photos. But this Winter has been colder, so perhaps that delays them.
I take it these are ones that came with the invasion?
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
And the first daffodils are out (excluding the paperwhites, which have been out for a couple of weeks). I think this one is Narcissus pseudonarcissus, one of the original “wild” daffodils before they started getting all frou-frou-y. They are late. In 2020 they started flowering around 10th July according to my photos. But this Winter has been colder, so perhaps that delays them.
I take it these are ones that came with the invasion?
I expect so. Been looking at drifts of local flowers out in the bush. My old field naturalist friend and I were discussing how big a feed you could get with orchid bulbs. We were being awed by a patch of probably a hundred flowers or more. But they are tiny. These flowers would be pushing to be as big as my thumbnail.
Daffodils are getting into mid season swing now.
Dick Wilden just starting to open
Ice Follies (on Bess the Boxer’s grave)
Ice Follies group
Tete a Tete
The grape hyacinths are also starting. I haven’t got as many of them, because I didn’t have many here, just lots at Casterton. I brought more here before I sold the garden, but they are still settling in.
There will be bluebells before to much longer. They are contained.
And the Oxalis pes-Caprae is not contained, to my unending annoyance. I do not want to grow this stuff, but it is very difficult to dissuade.
Only a few flowers out so far. Pink heath and flame heath.
Some wattles:
A Boronia and a Hibbertia
…..
And some beautifully scented Drosera.
buffy said:
Only a few flowers out so far. Pink heath and flame heath.
Some wattles:
A Boronia and a Hibbertia
…..
And some beautifully scented Drosera.
Little dolly mixture flowers, well done.
buffy said:
Only a few flowers out so far. Pink heath and flame heath.
Some wattles:
A Boronia and a Hibbertia
…..
And some beautifully scented Drosera.
Very nice. :)
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Only a few flowers out so far. Pink heath and flame heath.
Some wattles:
A Boronia and a Hibbertia
…..
And some beautifully scented Drosera.
Very nice. :)
Went for a walk through the gardens today with my old lens. The red of the rose is pretty washed out, but the bokeh is bloody nice.
Dark Orange said:
Went for a walk through the gardens today with my old lens. The red of the rose is pretty washed out, but the bokeh is bloody nice.
Ja.
You want purdie flaars?
Here’s some purdie flaars:
The Rev Dodgson said:
You want purdie flaars?Here’s some purdie flaars:
come a come a come a Camelia.
roughbarked said:
The Rev Dodgson said:
You want purdie flaars?Here’s some purdie flaars:
come a come a come a Camelia.
Looks like a magnolia to me.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
The Rev Dodgson said:
You want purdie flaars?Here’s some purdie flaars:
come a come a come a Camelia.
Looks like a magnolia to me.
I think you might be right :)
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
The Rev Dodgson said:
You want purdie flaars?Here’s some purdie flaars:
come a come a come a Camelia.
Looks like a magnolia to me.
Yes but I was singing the song anyway.
Main Street of Nannup. There were dozens of planters bulging full of tulips, and very many lots of other flowers in many gardens and the tiny little town was fkn chockers with cars and people.
Bunny_Fugger said:
Main Street of Nannup. There were dozens of planters bulging full of tulips, and very many lots of other flowers in many gardens and the tiny little town was fkn chockers with cars and people.
Nannup is a town in the South West region of Western Australia, approximately 280 kilometres (174 mi) south of Perth on the Blackwood River at the crossroads of Vasse Highway and Brockman Highway; the highways link Nannup to most of the lower South West’s regional centres. At the 2011 census, Nannup had a population of 587.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nannup,_Western_Australia
Bubblecar said:
Bunny_Fugger said:
Main Street of Nannup. There were dozens of planters bulging full of tulips, and very many lots of other flowers in many gardens and the tiny little town was fkn chockers with cars and people.
Nannup is a town in the South West region of Western Australia, approximately 280 kilometres (174 mi) south of Perth on the Blackwood River at the crossroads of Vasse Highway and Brockman Highway; the highways link Nannup to most of the lower South West’s regional centres. At the 2011 census, Nannup had a population of 587.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nannup,_Western_Australia
https://www.nannupgardens.org.au/
Kingy said:
Bubblecar said:
Bunny_Fugger said:
Main Street of Nannup. There were dozens of planters bulging full of tulips, and very many lots of other flowers in many gardens and the tiny little town was fkn chockers with cars and people.
Nannup is a town in the South West region of Western Australia, approximately 280 kilometres (174 mi) south of Perth on the Blackwood River at the crossroads of Vasse Highway and Brockman Highway; the highways link Nannup to most of the lower South West’s regional centres. At the 2011 census, Nannup had a population of 587.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nannup,_Western_Australia
https://www.nannupgardens.org.au/
:)
I’ve been for a short walk in the local wetlands nature reserve. Some of the wattles are coming out.
Blackwood
Acacia paradoxa
Prickly Moses
And one I had to look up – Tree violet
And a weed – broom.
And then as I was leaving, they turned on a gentle rainbow for me.
Some flowers from today:
Boronia
Pink Heath
Hibbertia
Nodding greenhood
And the possibly maroonhood that I went to get. And dissect.
…
buffy said:
Some flowers from today:Boronia
Pink Heath
Hibbertia
Nodding greenhood
And the possibly maroonhood that I went to get. And dissect.
…
Aw. It raised its arms in surrender but you sliced it up regardless.
There is perfume in the backyard from Viburnum and Freesias.
And not as pleasant “perfume” from daffodil types.
And not flowers…but I am now picking a few asparagus spears each day, hoarding them, and then eating them when there is enough.
It’s an ideal time of year for flowers all our fruit tree are starting to flower
buffy said:
There is perfume in the backyard from Viburnum and Freesias.
And not as pleasant “perfume” from daffodil types.
And not flowers…but I am now picking a few asparagus spears each day, hoarding them, and then eating them when there is enough.
Nice.
Fresh asparagus – yummo!
only got one rose at moment, it’s a big daggy, was pardalote opposite what I was looking at, a striated type, though blowing a strong wind, everything was moving a lot, and my neck was bent back uncomfortably
transition said:
only got one rose at moment, it’s a big daggy, was pardalote opposite what I was looking at, a striated type, though blowing a strong wind, everything was moving a lot, and my neck was bent back uncomfortably
It’s not really rose time yet. Mine are all putting on leaves though.
Red hippies, red geranium.
Red hippie, up close.
Insect on table.
Pig-face flower.
Crucifix orchid.
Michael V said:
Red hippies, red geranium.
Red hippie, up close.
Insect on table.
Pig-face flower.
Crucifix orchid.
Nice. I used to have a crucifix orchid but I gave up on non natives.
The insect looks to be an assassain bug.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Red hippies, red geranium.
Red hippie, up close.
Insect on table.
Pig-face flower.
Crucifix orchid.
Nice. I used to have a crucifix orchid but I gave up on non natives.
The insect looks to be an assassin bug.
Could be. We have some huge, bright orange assassin bugs here, from time to time.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
Red hippies, red geranium.
Red hippie, up close.
Insect on table.
Pig-face flower.
Crucifix orchid.
Nice. I used to have a crucifix orchid but I gave up on non natives.
The insect looks to be an assassin bug.
Could be. We have some huge, bright orange assassin bugs here, from time to time.
Michael V said:
Red hippies, red geranium.
Red hippie, up close.
Insect on table.
Pig-face flower.
Crucifix orchid.
Ah. I’ve got daffs of several sorts out. But not a lot else yet.
Things in my gardens.
roughbarked said:
Colourful displays.
Lovely day here, warm and mild and the air is heavy with blossom scent.
roughbarked said:
Some of mine for a table decoration:
Waratahs and some other wildflowers that are blooming around here at the moment…
Tamb said:
roughbarked said:
Some of mine for a table decoration:
:)
fsm said:
Waratahs and some other wildflowers that are blooming around here at the moment…
Lovely.
Bubblecar said:
fsm said:
Waratahs and some other wildflowers that are blooming around here at the moment…
Lovely.
Very lovely.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
fsm said:
Waratahs and some other wildflowers that are blooming around here at the moment…
Lovely.
Very lovely.
B-e-a-yoot-ee-full
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
fsm said:
Waratahs and some other wildflowers that are blooming around here at the moment…
Lovely.
Very lovely.
I do like waratahs and NSW waratahs are so much more showier than the Tassie ones.
We still aren’t Full Floral in the bush yet, but here are some of the ones that are out now.
Acacia exudans (a sort of varnish wattle peculiar to the Casterton region)
A blue squill (Chamaescilla corymbosa)
Sorry, hit submit instead of preview.
A blue squill
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
A pretty climbing sundew (I think Drosera macrantha subs planchonii)
Running postman (Kennedia prostrata)
One of the beard heaths – Leucopogon virgatus.
And a couple of greenhoods. One of which is still under discussion for ID, and one that is really obvious…a nodding greenhood.
……..
buffy said:
Sorry, hit submit instead of preview.A blue squill
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
A pretty climbing sundew (I think Drosera macrantha subs planchonii)
I like that blue squill.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Sorry, hit submit instead of preview.A blue squill
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
A pretty climbing sundew (I think Drosera macrantha subs planchonii)
I like that blue squill.
love them all.
Here’s more from my yard.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Sorry, hit submit instead of preview.A blue squill
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
A pretty climbing sundew (I think Drosera macrantha subs planchonii)
I like that blue squill.
love them all.
Here’s more from my yard.
Handsome reptile.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Sorry, hit submit instead of preview.A blue squill
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
A pretty climbing sundew (I think Drosera macrantha subs planchonii)
I like that blue squill.
It’s tiny. Here it is in my hand:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Sorry, hit submit instead of preview.A blue squill
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
A pretty climbing sundew (I think Drosera macrantha subs planchonii)
I like that blue squill.
It’s tiny. Here it is in my hand:
Ha :)
I didn’t really have much time for looking for flowers today. But I did see a tiny little twining fringe lily and a couple of sundews. One of the sundews refused to open its flower, although I waited and watched. So it got sacrificed in the name of science for a better picture. There were probably a hundred or more of them in a small patch.
……….
Also saw some pea flowers in a reasonable sized patch on the side of the road.
buffy said:
I didn’t really have much time for looking for flowers today. But I did see a tiny little twining fringe lily and a couple of sundews. One of the sundews refused to open its flower, although I waited and watched. So it got sacrificed in the name of science for a better picture. There were probably a hundred or more of them in a small patch.
……….
Also saw some pea flowers in a reasonable sized patch on the side of the road.
Most of these wildflowers are not exactly big and blousy blooms.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
I didn’t really have much time for looking for flowers today. But I did see a tiny little twining fringe lily and a couple of sundews. One of the sundews refused to open its flower, although I waited and watched. So it got sacrificed in the name of science for a better picture. There were probably a hundred or more of them in a small patch.
……….
Also saw some pea flowers in a reasonable sized patch on the side of the road.
Most of these wildflowers are not exactly big and blousy blooms.
No, rather delicate things. You have to keep you wits about you, looking for, as my naturalist friend puts it “a flash of colour”.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
I didn’t really have much time for looking for flowers today. But I did see a tiny little twining fringe lily and a couple of sundews. One of the sundews refused to open its flower, although I waited and watched. So it got sacrificed in the name of science for a better picture. There were probably a hundred or more of them in a small patch.
……….
Also saw some pea flowers in a reasonable sized patch on the side of the road.
Most of these wildflowers are not exactly big and blousy blooms.
No, rather delicate things. You have to keep you wits about you, looking for, as my naturalist friend puts it “a flash of colour”.
like much of Australian flowers, I like’t that way
Was out in the local environs today.
Took SWMBO for a walk in the bush.
Found that the onioin orchids are just starting to bloom.
So too were the spider orchids.
roughbarked said:
So too were the spider orchids.
Thems is purdie weeds. 😁
Woodie said:
roughbarked said:
So too were the spider orchids.
Thems is purdie weeds. 😁
They sure are. Think it is called the green comb spider orchid. Caladenia dilatata.
roughbarked said:
Woodie said:
roughbarked said:
So too were the spider orchids.
Thems is purdie weeds. 😁
They sure are. Think it is called the green comb spider orchid. Caladenia dilatata.
It mainly grows in Victoria and SA but there is an isolated pocket of them in NSW between Hillston and Griffith. Rare anywhere else in western NSW
But this is a rather strange item.
roughbarked said:
But this is a rather strange item.
A herbaceous annual root parasite without chlorophyll.
Orobanche, commonly known as broomrape, is a genus of over 200 species of small parasitic herbaceous plants, mostly native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere.
It was once thought to be a native of Australia but has since been reclassified as an introduced species.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
But this is a rather strange item.
A herbaceous annual root parasite without chlorophyll.
Orobanche, commonly known as broomrape, is a genus of over 200 species of small parasitic herbaceous plants, mostly native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere.
It was once thought to be a native of Australia but has since been reclassified as an introduced species.
That’s interesting about being introduced.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
But this is a rather strange item.
A herbaceous annual root parasite without chlorophyll.
Orobanche, commonly known as broomrape, is a genus of over 200 species of small parasitic herbaceous plants, mostly native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere.
It was once thought to be a native of Australia but has since been reclassified as an introduced species.
That’s interesting about being introduced.
Orobanche australiana apparently shouldn’t even be here according to the book, Plants of Western NSW. Says restricted to a line above White Cliffs.
But that book was written in the years preceeding its publication in 1981.
I’ve definitely seen it in Cocoparra and on Mcphersons range.
Would master PF know which Acacia this is?
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:A herbaceous annual root parasite without chlorophyll.
Orobanche, commonly known as broomrape, is a genus of over 200 species of small parasitic herbaceous plants, mostly native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere.
It was once thought to be a native of Australia but has since been reclassified as an introduced species.
That’s interesting about being introduced.
Orobanche australiana apparently shouldn’t even be here according to the book, Plants of Western NSW. Says restricted to a line above White Cliffs.
But that book was written in the years preceeding its publication in 1981.I’ve definitely seen it in Cocoparra and on Mcphersons range.
I too have seen it is some remote locations, although the first settlers used to graze sheep on the indigenous vegetation a hundred or so years ago, on which the seed was probably brought in on their fleece.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:That’s interesting about being introduced.
Orobanche australiana apparently shouldn’t even be here according to the book, Plants of Western NSW. Says restricted to a line above White Cliffs.
But that book was written in the years preceeding its publication in 1981.I’ve definitely seen it in Cocoparra and on Mcphersons range.
I too have seen it is some remote locations, although the first settlers used to graze sheep on the indigenous vegetation a hundred or so years ago, on which the seed was probably brought in on their fleece.
A lot of stuff came in on the sheep’s back according to the old fellas.
This wattle;
Very similar to Acacia doratoxylon but ..
I’m currently suspecting that it is; Acacia caroleae
roughbarked said:
This wattle;
Very similar to Acacia doratoxylon but ..
I’m currently suspecting that it is; Acacia caroleae
I’ve only got Roger’s Field Guide to Victorian Wattles. Can’t help with your NSW ones.
roughbarked said:
This wattle;
Very similar to Acacia doratoxylon but ..
I’m currently suspecting that it is; Acacia caroleae
Looks like baby sweetcorn.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
This wattle;
Very similar to Acacia doratoxylon but ..
I’m currently suspecting that it is; Acacia caroleae
I’ve only got Roger’s Field Guide to Victorian Wattles. Can’t help with your NSW ones.
Yes, I doubt there is a book specific enough for me to isolate it by locale.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
This wattle;
Very similar to Acacia doratoxylon but ..
I’m currently suspecting that it is; Acacia caroleae
Looks like baby sweetcorn.
I was tempted to taste the flowers. :)
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
This wattle;
Very similar to Acacia doratoxylon but ..
I’m currently suspecting that it is; Acacia caroleae
I’ve only got Roger’s Field Guide to Victorian Wattles. Can’t help with your NSW ones.
Yes, I doubt there is a book specific enough for me to isolate it by locale.
Although, Acacias of South Australia by D.J.E. Whibley and D. E. Symon has a lot of those that occur here also.
Yesterday I went to Boram Boram cemetery (just up the hill from our place) to check on the Golden Moth orchids. As I drove up the hill, it started to rain. I parked at the cemetery and waited. And waited. And drove home. This morning I did better and got photos. These are Diuris chryseopsis (probably). There are hundreds of them.
…..
There are also hundreds of Early Nancies (Wurmbea dioica) – tiny little things.
And some cute sundews, I think Drosera hookeri.
buffy said:
Yesterday I went to Boram Boram cemetery (just up the hill from our place) to check on the Golden Moth orchids. As I drove up the hill, it started to rain. I parked at the cemetery and waited. And waited. And drove home. This morning I did better and got photos. These are Diuris chryseopsis (probably). There are hundreds of them.
…..
There are also hundreds of Early Nancies (Wurmbea dioica) – tiny little things.
And some cute sundews, I think Drosera hookeri.
Nice. :)
As to the Orobanche australiana;
According to Plantnet RBGSYD
is the single species in NSW. However about 600 odd km from where I’ve seen it here.
The hot pink Sparaxis I collected from a roadside in Hawkesdale over 20 years ago has certainly made itself at home under the walnut tree. So easy to see why it’s an environmental weed. But pretty.
…..
buffy said:
The hot pink Sparaxis I collected from a roadside in Hawkesdale over 20 years ago has certainly made itself at home under the walnut tree. So easy to see why it’s an environmental weed. But pretty.
…..
:)
So today’s flaars included a field daisy
My first blue squill of the season
My first waxlip orchid of the season – it was not quite out…I gave it a gentle tap to open it up.
Bent Goodenia
Lots of running postman on the roadside.
The ivy leaved violets are starting
And the maroonhood orchids are still sending up flowers sporadically.
………
Took SWMBO out to looks for Thelmytra. They need a good sunny day to open. Temperature needs to get to about 24 for them to open flowers. Onion orchids doing their thing. Some spiders still about. Lots of Dampiera.
roughbarked said:
Took SWMBO out to looks for Thelmytra. They need a good sunny day to open. Temperature needs to get to about 24 for them to open flowers. Onion orchids doing their thing. Some spiders still about. Lots of Dampiera.
So…did you find any co-operative Thelymitra?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Took SWMBO out to looks for Thelmytra. They need a good sunny day to open. Temperature needs to get to about 24 for them to open flowers. Onion orchids doing their thing. Some spiders still about. Lots of Dampiera.
So…did you find any co-operative Thelymitra?
There are photos of unopened buds in what I uploaded, I’ll have to wait until next weekend at least before the sun comes out again.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Took SWMBO out to looks for Thelmytra. They need a good sunny day to open. Temperature needs to get to about 24 for them to open flowers. Onion orchids doing their thing. Some spiders still about. Lots of Dampiera.
So…did you find any co-operative Thelymitra?
There are photos of unopened buds in what I uploaded, I’ll have to wait until next weekend at least before the sun comes out again.
Yes, I saw that. So it wasn’t warm enough today?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:So…did you find any co-operative Thelymitra?
There are photos of unopened buds in what I uploaded, I’ll have to wait until next weekend at least before the sun comes out again.
Yes, I saw that. So it wasn’t warm enough today?
Nope. One day that reaches 22 isn’t enough. Need at least a couple of days at 24 or more.
The lemon scented sun orchids seem to be starting in Victoria. This is from Anglesea, taken today.
buffy said:
The lemon scented sun orchids seem to be starting in Victoria. This is from Anglesea, taken today.
Ours are blue. T. pauciflora.
Taken Wednesday, 20 October 2021 at 2:03 pm
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The lemon scented sun orchids seem to be starting in Victoria. This is from Anglesea, taken today.
Ours are blue. T. pauciflora.
Taken Wednesday, 20 October 2021 at 2:03 pm
There are quite a lot of Thelymitra in Victoria. Buds are around for several at the moment. But I’m off to watch NITV. I’ll be back later.
For roughbarked…a selection of sun orchids from around Victoria, photos uploaded to iNaturalist today. All these have had ID confirmed.
From Crib Point, near Hastings. T. aristata – Scented Sun Orchid
From the Bendigo area. Thelymitra x macmillanii. It’s a stunner!
Most of the ones going up at the moment are that yellow scented one I put up before.
buffy said:
For roughbarked…a selection of sun orchids from around Victoria, photos uploaded to iNaturalist today. All these have had ID confirmed.From Crib Point, near Hastings. T. aristata – Scented Sun Orchid
From the Bendigo area. Thelymitra x macmillanii. It’s a stunner!
Most of the ones going up at the moment are that yellow scented one I put up before.
Very beautiful. Thanks buffy.
Under my navel .. er tree that is.
Dendrobium delicatum.
When I was mowing this morning, I looked around the garden and thought to myself…why would anyone plant a magnolia tree when you can plant a quince tree, get quite a similar flower effect, and then you get the lovely golden fruit hanging there later.
Got Aquilegia out too now.
And not a flaar, but a fruiting body…that mushroom has been “sampled” overnight.
buffy said:
When I was mowing this morning, I looked around the garden and thought to myself…why would anyone plant a magnolia tree when you can plant a quince tree, get quite a similar flower effect, and then you get the lovely golden fruit hanging there later.
Got Aquilegia out too now.
And not a flaar, but a fruiting body…that mushroom has been “sampled” overnight.
Yes. My apples pears and nashi pears, as well as all the citrus trees, then there are the plums plumcots peachcots nectarines and apricots almonds etcetera. Make magnolia and camelia look useless.
Long ago my vow was that if it was meant to be ornamental, it should be a native.
The plant has picked up and is started flowering again with the extra rain.
I have at least three onion orchids flowering in my garden. Maybe a dozen plants growing but not all flowering age yet.
roughbarked said:
I have at least three onion orchids flowering in my garden. Maybe a dozen plants growing but not all flowering age yet.
Which one is it?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
I have at least three onion orchids flowering in my garden. Maybe a dozen plants growing but not all flowering age yet.
Which one is it?
The common one. Microtis unifolia.
My supermarket trips are getting ridiculous. I stopped three times on the way home to photograph wildflowers (and weeds). I may have to stop coming home along the interesting road and stick to the highway.
Milkmaids:
Buttons. I had to use the zoom…forgot my gumboots. Such an essential item to put into the car to go to the supermarket…
Pretty, invasive, weed.
And I reckon this is likely a weed too, but I haven’t got a name for it yet.
quick walkies around the yard, might be enough for another ten yet, working on’t
transition said:
quick walkies around the yard, might be enough for another ten yet, working on’t
and weather coming in from the west, gets rain tonight
transition said:
transition said:
quick walkies around the yard, might be enough for another ten yet, working on’t
and weather coming in from the west, gets rain tonight
I see one native in there. An Eremophila at that. Do you have the name for this plant?
Here are a few purdie flaars.
A Caladenia orchid and a sundew
…
A Waxlip Orchid
Running Postman
Large purple flags
Twining fringe lily
Ivy leaved violet.
buffy said:
Here are a few purdie flaars.A Caladenia orchid and a sundew
…
A Waxlip Orchid
Running Postman
Large purple flags
Twining fringe lily
Ivy leaved violet.
Last one looks rather pansy-like.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Here are a few purdie flaars.A Caladenia orchid and a sundew
…
A Waxlip Orchid
Running Postman
Large purple flags
Twining fringe lily
Ivy leaved violet.
Last one looks rather pansy-like.
They are related.
These above are our local spiders and this below is a local mural depicting spider orchids where the artistic license is basically the wrong colours.
The Spreklia are blooming. Maybe with a bit of sin the anthers may open.
Now I have sorted, cropped, named and uploaded my photos to iNaturalist (my camera ran out of battery today, I took quite a few photos) here are some of the prettier ones.
The Caladenia carnea (pink fingers) don’t often have more than two flowers per stem, but these two stems did well and wound around each other as well has having more flowers.
The apple berries (Billardiera mutabilis) are showing up all around the bush.
It’s milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata) season now.
The horny conebush (Isopogon ceratophyllus) is supposed to be endangered or something, but a lot of photos of it go up on iNaturalist. This is from our particular little clump.
And sometimes the auto flash does things just right. This is creamy candles (Stackhousia monogyna)
buffy said:
Now I have sorted, cropped, named and uploaded my photos to iNaturalist (my camera ran out of battery today, I took quite a few photos) here are some of the prettier ones.The Caladenia carnea (pink fingers) don’t often have more than two flowers per stem, but these two stems did well and wound around each other as well has having more flowers.
The apple berries (Billardiera mutabilis) are showing up all around the bush.
It’s milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata) season now.
The horny conebush (Isopogon ceratophyllus) is supposed to be endangered or something, but a lot of photos of it go up on iNaturalist. This is from our particular little clump.
And sometimes the auto flash does things just right. This is creamy candles (Stackhousia monogyna)
Very nice. The shot of the Stackhousia is speccy.
I’ve never seen a Caldenia carnea with more than the one flower.
Most of what I photographed this morning was weeds. But not all.
There were milkmaids at Boram Boram cemetery.
……….
And sundews.
……….
And burrs, but they are native burrs…
And some of today’s purdie flaars:
Milkmaids and pink ladyfinger orchids:
……..
And I found another of the really tiny pink orchids and a bird orchid
……..
Got thousands of little daisies, of a couple of sorts.
……..
And a very tiny violet and a pretty white orchid.
……..
I took a few wildflower photos.
A trigger plant and some prickly teatree
A drift of Goodenias and a potato orchid.
Milkmaids, a Caladenia orchid and a Dianella.
…….
buffy said:
I took a few wildflower photos.A trigger plant and some prickly teatree
A drift of Goodenias and a potato orchid.
Milkmaids, a Caladenia orchid and a Dianella.
…….
buffy said:
I took a few wildflower photos.A trigger plant and some prickly teatree
A drift of Goodenias and a potato orchid.
Milkmaids, a Caladenia orchid and a Dianella.
…….
Nice collection of wild blooms.
Tamb said:
buffy said:
I took a few wildflower photos.A trigger plant and some prickly teatree
A drift of Goodenias and a potato orchid.
Milkmaids, a Caladenia orchid and a Dianella.
…….
Some from a neighbour’s garden![]()
Nice!
Saw that the fringe lilies are starting to flower. Which is a little late but there hasn’t been the usual amount of sunshine and the grass is all long. We would usually have had dust storms and 40 degrees by now.
And now for my flower report for the day.
In the big flowers today, the Xanthorrhoea minor lutea are opening up now. Pretty spectacular. Not this one, but another one was towering over me, over 2m tall. This one was only about 1.5m.
……….
And in little flowers, I found a Caladenia congesta (black tongued caladenia orchid)
…..
The other things I photographed today were tiny little flowers, some needing ID. I think the first one is a Brachyloma. It’s certainly some sort of heathy thing.
This one used to be called Boronia, but is now called Cyanothamnus nanus
This is one of the Dianellas, perhaps D. callicarpa.
This is a Geranium and Lomandra nana.
…………
And this is a Xanthosia that a friend is trying to sort out. It’s probably the common one, X. dissecta, but he’d like it to be X. leiophylla.
I found a Utricularia this morning when I was flower hunting. I haven’t seen one of these (bladderworts) for many, many years. They are very small, but it’s also a sign of how dry we were until October. It’s probably U. barkeri because the flowers were single and I couldn’t find any leaves.
And the fringe lilies (Thysanotus tuberosus) are just starting to come out. I’ve been seeing chocolate lilies for a couple of months and the fringe lilies look ginormous by comparison!
buffy said:
I found a Utricularia this morning when I was flower hunting. I haven’t seen one of these (bladderworts) for many, many years. They are very small, but it’s also a sign of how dry we were until October. It’s probably U. barkeri because the flowers were single and I couldn’t find any leaves.
And the fringe lilies (Thysanotus tuberosus) are just starting to come out. I’ve been seeing chocolate lilies for a couple of months and the fringe lilies look ginormous by comparison!
Nice
Have some purdie flaars from my bushwalk today. I was surprised how many I found really, considering the Gods of Dessication have been wandering around.
Blue pincushions.
Coronidium scorpioides…gotta love the way nature arranges things sometimes.
Dianella callicarpa (one of our “endangered” species)
Lagenophora stipitata…blue bottle daisy.
The little Lobelia I found a couple of weeks ago…I found more today, still flowering.
…….
And fringe lilies…Thysanotus tuberosus. Not many records for our area in the databases…but there are hundreds, if not thousands of them out on the covenant at the moment.
buffy said:
Have some purdie flaars from my bushwalk today. I was surprised how many I found really, considering the Gods of Dessication have been wandering around.Blue pincushions.
Coronidium scorpioides…gotta love the way nature arranges things sometimes.
Dianella callicarpa (one of our “endangered” species)
Lagenophora stipitata…blue bottle daisy.
The little Lobelia I found a couple of weeks ago…I found more today, still flowering.
…….
And fringe lilies…Thysanotus tuberosus. Not many records for our area in the databases…but there are hundreds, if not thousands of them out on the covenant at the moment.
Nice. :)
In my garden today.
OK, it’s a roadside weed. Wild carrot/Queen Anne’s Lace. A garden escape. There are thousands of flowers on the roadsides between here and Casterton. It’s pretty though. And this is a particularly large flower head, I think.
buffy said:
OK, it’s a roadside weed. Wild carrot/Queen Anne’s Lace. A garden escape. There are thousands of flowers on the roadsides between here and Casterton. It’s pretty though. And this is a particularly large flower head, I think.
Belongs in someone’s garden where it would be an interesting and attractive addition.
buffy said:
OK, it’s a roadside weed. Wild carrot/Queen Anne’s Lace. A garden escape. There are thousands of flowers on the roadsides between here and Casterton. It’s pretty though. And this is a particularly large flower head, I think.
nice, brighten up the landscape
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
OK, it’s a roadside weed. Wild carrot/Queen Anne’s Lace. A garden escape. There are thousands of flowers on the roadsides between here and Casterton. It’s pretty though. And this is a particularly large flower head, I think.
Belongs in someone’s garden where it would be an interesting and attractive addition.
It jumped the fence many years ago now…
:)
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
OK, it’s a roadside weed. Wild carrot/Queen Anne’s Lace. A garden escape. There are thousands of flowers on the roadsides between here and Casterton. It’s pretty though. And this is a particularly large flower head, I think.
Belongs in someone’s garden where it would be an interesting and attractive addition.
I grow edible carrots for that. Leaving some for seed makes for an attractive garden for insects.
I also allow my parsley to set seed for the same reason.
Here are a few flaars from today.
Mitchell’s wattle. I’ve not seen it in flower for some years.
Still some blue pincushions around.
Bursaria spinosa – another one I’ve missed the flowering on for years.
A couple of Dianella.
Yellow rush lily…last week I could only see a few buds. This week there are drifts.
And my little endangered violet that is apparently all over the place when you actually look for it.
…..
cactus flower out there now
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
very nice
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Can you propagate them to help improve their population?
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Ah a thumbnail.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Ah a thumbnail.
It’s handy to have a hand in the photos for iNaturalist, gives an indication of size. I also cart around a small ruler to put in the photos. I prefer the hand though.
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Ah a thumbnail.
It’s handy to have a hand in the photos for iNaturalist, gives an indication of size. I also cart around a small ruler to put in the photos. I prefer the hand though.
hands are all different sizes though so this seems somewhat unscientific
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Can you propagate them to help improve their population?
There are actually quite a lot of photos showing up of them in our area at the moment. I remember one of the old Field Naturalist people telling me some 25 years ago that many things were labelled endangered etc more because nobody had really looked for them in the right places. Citizen science is very, very useful in this respect. There will never be enough professional scientists to look properly. So us amateurs can help with data collection.
On the propagation thing, the books say “very difficult to propagate”. I’ve just had confirmation on iNaturalist from an orchid expert that my IDs are correct and yes, they do cross pollinate. So it’s up to them to get on with it out there. Native orchid seed is like dust. Perhaps those two will make a hybrid.
Arts said:
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:Ah a thumbnail.
It’s handy to have a hand in the photos for iNaturalist, gives an indication of size. I also cart around a small ruler to put in the photos. I prefer the hand though.
hands are all different sizes though so this seems somewhat unscientific
It’s not a big enough difference to be a problem really. If things get really serious you get a permit etc and take samples and submit them with all the (electronic) paperwork.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Can you propagate them to help improve their population?
There are actually quite a lot of photos showing up of them in our area at the moment. I remember one of the old Field Naturalist people telling me some 25 years ago that many things were labelled endangered etc more because nobody had really looked for them in the right places. Citizen science is very, very useful in this respect. There will never be enough professional scientists to look properly. So us amateurs can help with data collection.
On the propagation thing, the books say “very difficult to propagate”. I’ve just had confirmation on iNaturalist from an orchid expert that my IDs are correct and yes, they do cross pollinate. So it’s up to them to get on with it out there. Native orchid seed is like dust. Perhaps those two will make a hybrid.
and you can hope that you can locate and identify this hybrid if it occurs during your lifetime.
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Beautiful…
ms spock said:
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Beautiful…
Maybe we need a bird thread
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Ah a thumbnail.
It’s handy to have a hand in the photos for iNaturalist, gives an indication of size. I also cart around a small ruler to put in the photos. I prefer the hand though.
Interesting…
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/64c81661-617f-4d88-89e6-37667c3a7c4c
dv said:
ms spock said:
buffy said:
Found a Dipodium pardalinum (endangered). Within about 3m of a more common D. roseum. I wonder if they are promiscuous. The pale one is the D. pardalinum. The D. roseum has the stripes on the labellum (the bottom flap)
……..
Beautiful…
Maybe we need a bird thread
https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/?main=https%3A//tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/1799587/
roughbarked said:
dv said:
ms spock said:Beautiful…
Maybe we need a bird thread
https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/?main=https%3A//tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/1799587/
bit general…
dv said:
roughbarked said:
dv said:Maybe we need a bird thread
https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/?main=https%3A//tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/1799587/
bit general…
Yes but in general it is all a part of our environment.
ms spock said:
buffy said:
Peak Warming Man said:Ah a thumbnail.
It’s handy to have a hand in the photos for iNaturalist, gives an indication of size. I also cart around a small ruler to put in the photos. I prefer the hand though.
Interesting…
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/64c81661-617f-4d88-89e6-37667c3a7c4c
And I’ve just spent half an hour doing identifications on iNaturalist. This endangered orchid has been photographed in about a dozen places in Victoria today. It’s a good year for them apparently.
buffy said:
ms spock said:
buffy said:It’s handy to have a hand in the photos for iNaturalist, gives an indication of size. I also cart around a small ruler to put in the photos. I prefer the hand though.
Interesting…
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/64c81661-617f-4d88-89e6-37667c3a7c4c
And I’ve just spent half an hour doing identifications on iNaturalist. This endangered orchid has been photographed in about a dozen places in Victoria today. It’s a good year for them apparently.
How amazing!
The Black Cockatoos are back. We have let a whole section go for Casuarinas. There’s a local park/wildlife strip and you can see the parents teaching the fledglings to fly. Magnificent, these moments.
ms spock said:
buffy said:
ms spock said:Interesting…
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/64c81661-617f-4d88-89e6-37667c3a7c4c
And I’ve just spent half an hour doing identifications on iNaturalist. This endangered orchid has been photographed in about a dozen places in Victoria today. It’s a good year for them apparently.
How amazing!
The Black Cockatoos are back. We have let a whole section go for Casuarinas. There’s a local park/wildlife strip and you can see the parents teaching the fledglings to fly. Magnificent, these moments.
We have yellow tail blacks around here. I love their call. They are vandals though. When we lived at Hawkesdale I had a hedge of Hakea salicifolia. Every year the yellow tails would “prune” them for me. And we had a couple of tall thin Casuarinas…the buggers would sit up there swinging about in any high wind that was offering. I really think they were playing.
buffy said:
ms spock said:
buffy said:And I’ve just spent half an hour doing identifications on iNaturalist. This endangered orchid has been photographed in about a dozen places in Victoria today. It’s a good year for them apparently.
How amazing!
The Black Cockatoos are back. We have let a whole section go for Casuarinas. There’s a local park/wildlife strip and you can see the parents teaching the fledglings to fly. Magnificent, these moments.
We have yellow tail blacks around here. I love their call. They are vandals though. When we lived at Hawkesdale I had a hedge of Hakea salicifolia. Every year the yellow tails would “prune” them for me. And we had a couple of tall thin Casuarinas…the buggers would sit up there swinging about in any high wind that was offering. I really think they were playing.
They are very playful birds! I love watching them.
They are definitely little buggers that get up to mischief.
Beautiful blooms from the Ross sister’s garden, just delivered :)
Bubblecar said:
Beautiful blooms from the Ross sister’s garden, just delivered :)
pleasant
Bubblecar said:
Beautiful blooms from the Ross sister’s garden, just delivered :)
It’s obviously a cottage type garden.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Beautiful blooms from the Ross sister’s garden, just delivered :)
It’s obviously a cottage type garden.
It’s a nice old stone cottage with quite a big back garden. She grows all kinds of flowers, vegetables and herbs.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Beautiful blooms from the Ross sister’s garden, just delivered :)
It’s obviously a cottage type garden.
It’s a nice old stone cottage with quite a big back garden. She grows all kinds of flowers, vegetables and herbs.
…and on their way back, the bro-in-law has just delivered me a 6-pack of German beer.
I’m a bit spoilt, I really am :)
Bubblecar said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:It’s obviously a cottage type garden.
It’s a nice old stone cottage with quite a big back garden. She grows all kinds of flowers, vegetables and herbs.
…and on their way back, the bro-in-law has just delivered me a 6-pack of German beer.
I’m a bit spoilt, I really am :)
I’ll say!
Bubblecar said:
Beautiful blooms from the Ross sister’s garden, just delivered :)
Wow!
Cad bláthanna áille! (What beautiful flowers!)
Reporting in. We walked for a couple of hours. Slowly. There is very little in the way of floral decoration in the bush at this time of year. Found 5 hyacinth orchid flower shoots. Three were the “endangered” one and two were the “common” one. I shouldn’t have gone wandering after eating lunch and I’d have kept the stats looking better at three and one.
:)
Dipodium pardalinum (endangered)
………..
Dipodium roseum (“common”) You ID this by looking for the stripes on the labellum (tongue bit)
There is also some very tiny Cyanothamnus nanus out. This used to be called Boronia, but got its name changed.
And we found quite a lot of Bursaria spinosa out. It’s a pretty thing. Very prickly though.
buffy said:
Reporting in. We walked for a couple of hours. Slowly. There is very little in the way of floral decoration in the bush at this time of year. Found 5 hyacinth orchid flower shoots. Three were the “endangered” one and two were the “common” one. I shouldn’t have gone wandering after eating lunch and I’d have kept the stats looking better at three and one.:)
Dipodium pardalinum (endangered)
………..
Dipodium roseum (“common”) You ID this by looking for the stripes on the labellum (tongue bit)
There is also some very tiny Cyanothamnus nanus out. This used to be called Boronia, but got its name changed.
And we found quite a lot of Bursaria spinosa out. It’s a pretty thing. Very prickly though.
I get the Bursaria here too. Very prickly but beautiful.
buffy said:
Reporting in. We walked for a couple of hours. Slowly. There is very little in the way of floral decoration in the bush at this time of year. Found 5 hyacinth orchid flower shoots. Three were the “endangered” one and two were the “common” one. I shouldn’t have gone wandering after eating lunch and I’d have kept the stats looking better at three and one.:)
Dipodium pardalinum (endangered)
………..
Dipodium roseum (“common”) You ID this by looking for the stripes on the labellum (tongue bit)
There is also some very tiny Cyanothamnus nanus out. This used to be called Boronia, but got its name changed.
And we found quite a lot of Bursaria spinosa out. It’s a pretty thing. Very prickly though.
It is so exciting and heartening to see the endangered species flowering away.
Some of my Belladonnas.
roughbarked said:
Some of my Belladonnas.
Here are some tiny flowers I found and photographed today.
Prickly Teatree (or possibly Manuka…they are very similar)
Hairy Mitrewort (Mitrasacme pilosa)
Prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia)
Small poranthera (Poranthera microphylla)
Unknown. Really tiny. I found a couple of patches of it.
Wahlenbergia gymnoclada
that top one looks like Geraldton Wax, except the leaves are a bit different..
buffy said:
Here are some tiny flowers I found and photographed today.Prickly Teatree (or possibly Manuka…they are very similar)
Hairy Mitrewort (Mitrasacme pilosa)
Prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia)
Small poranthera (Poranthera microphylla)
Unknown. Really tiny. I found a couple of patches of it.
Wahlenbergia gymnoclada
Unknown looks to be Platysace heterophylla
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/e21e5c87-de29-4561-83cb-a12a7c2800a5
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Here are some tiny flowers I found and photographed today.Prickly Teatree (or possibly Manuka…they are very similar)
Hairy Mitrewort (Mitrasacme pilosa)
Prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia)
Small poranthera (Poranthera microphylla)
Unknown. Really tiny. I found a couple of patches of it.
Wahlenbergia gymnoclada
Unknown looks to be Platysace heterophylla
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/e21e5c87-de29-4561-83cb-a12a7c2800a5
Ooh, thanks. I’ll put that on it and put it up on iNaturalist. See what happens. It is flowering out of season if that is so, but things are a bit out of whack. There was very little rain until October last year, and then it had a good go and was wet underfoot for sometime. We didn’t have floods though. The swamp goodenias have been rampant, loving that their ephemeral streams have been wet.
:)
And, um, Permeate…want to have a go at this one? I don’t recognize it. I’ve labelled my photos “rushy thing” until I can get closer to an ID.
…..
…..
(You know you are getting more into it when you pop a clipboard with a piece of white paper with a scale drawn onto it into your backpack for field photos…)
buffy said:
And, um, Permeate…want to have a go at this one? I don’t recognize it. I’ve labelled my photos “rushy thing” until I can get closer to an ID.
…..
…..
(You know you are getting more into it when you pop a clipboard with a piece of white paper with a scale drawn onto it into your backpack for field photos…)
Definitely a sedge, but too fiddly for me these days. You need to dissect flowers and obtain seed, plus would have to do it each time as I had difficulty remembering the details.
Oh, and I got in interesting Banksia marginata picture today. The tree is very scraggly and doesn’t look very well. But there should, I guess, be seed around underneath it. This tree was knocked over by the grader during our bushfire back in 2005, came back as a thicket and now seems to be dying off again. It still bravely produces some flowers.
buffy said:
And, um, Permeate…want to have a go at this one? I don’t recognize it. I’ve labelled my photos “rushy thing” until I can get closer to an ID.
…..
…..
(You know you are getting more into it when you pop a clipboard with a piece of white paper with a scale drawn onto it into your backpack for field photos…)
Yes, I can see you getting hooked on a line baited with vegetation.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And, um, Permeate…want to have a go at this one? I don’t recognize it. I’ve labelled my photos “rushy thing” until I can get closer to an ID.
…..
…..
(You know you are getting more into it when you pop a clipboard with a piece of white paper with a scale drawn onto it into your backpack for field photos…)
Definitely a sedge, but too fiddly for me these days. You need to dissect flowers and obtain seed, plus would have to do it each time as I had difficulty remembering the details.
Thanks, that’s a good place to start. Looking at Kevin Sparrow’s “Plants of the Great South West” (that’s our South West, not yours!!), the nearest on looks is Lepidosperma filiforme so I’ll put that on it tentatively. I’ll try to remember to pick some next time and bring it home for dissection. I can always add some more detail photos to an iNaturalist observation.
buffy, any possibility that it is Aristida behriana?
dv said:
buffy, any possibility that it is Aristida behriana?
Probably not, we are too far South for that. I always check distribution first. And in general I use the rule that whatever I see is most likely to be common. It’s very exciting when that is not the case.
buffy said:
Oh, and I got in interesting Banksia marginata picture today. The tree is very scraggly and doesn’t look very well. But there should, I guess, be seed around underneath it. This tree was knocked over by the grader during our bushfire back in 2005, came back as a thicket and now seems to be dying off again. It still bravely produces some flowers.
Banksia marginata being highly variable, seems to occur all over the place in Victoria and in most habitats, so should be easy to grow. A great plant for the honeyeaters.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Oh, and I got in interesting Banksia marginata picture today. The tree is very scraggly and doesn’t look very well. But there should, I guess, be seed around underneath it. This tree was knocked over by the grader during our bushfire back in 2005, came back as a thicket and now seems to be dying off again. It still bravely produces some flowers.
Banksia marginata being highly variable, seems to occur all over the place in Victoria and in most habitats, so should be easy to grow. A great plant for the honeyeaters.
buffy, have a look on the ground around the Banksia for any fallen cones. Seed will often sprout straight from the cone, to take root in the soil without the intervention of fire. With all the rain this season conditions should be good for this.
buffy said:
And, um, Permeate…want to have a go at this one? I don’t recognize it. I’ve labelled my photos “rushy thing” until I can get closer to an ID.
…..
…..
(You know you are getting more into it when you pop a clipboard with a piece of white paper with a scale drawn onto it into your backpack for field photos…)
:)
PermeateFree said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Oh, and I got in interesting Banksia marginata picture today. The tree is very scraggly and doesn’t look very well. But there should, I guess, be seed around underneath it. This tree was knocked over by the grader during our bushfire back in 2005, came back as a thicket and now seems to be dying off again. It still bravely produces some flowers.
Banksia marginata being highly variable, seems to occur all over the place in Victoria and in most habitats, so should be easy to grow. A great plant for the honeyeaters.
buffy, have a look on the ground around the Banksia for any fallen cones. Seed will often sprout straight from the cone, to take root in the soil without the intervention of fire. With all the rain this season conditions should be good for this.
Thanks again. We have hot weather coming up and we don’t venture into the bush then, but I’ll look next time we have a cool spell. I like this retirement thing…I can go when the weather is right. I don’t know much about our block in high Summer because we haven’t been there much due to the heat and risk. But this season has been very kind and let me get there more often.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Here are some tiny flowers I found and photographed today.Prickly Teatree (or possibly Manuka…they are very similar)
Hairy Mitrewort (Mitrasacme pilosa)
Prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia)
Small poranthera (Poranthera microphylla)
Unknown. Really tiny. I found a couple of patches of it.
Wahlenbergia gymnoclada
Unknown looks to be Platysace heterophylla
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/e21e5c87-de29-4561-83cb-a12a7c2800a5
PF…one of the trained botanists on iNat has agreed with this ID.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Here are some tiny flowers I found and photographed today.Prickly Teatree (or possibly Manuka…they are very similar)
Hairy Mitrewort (Mitrasacme pilosa)
Prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia)
Small poranthera (Poranthera microphylla)
Unknown. Really tiny. I found a couple of patches of it.
Wahlenbergia gymnoclada
Unknown looks to be Platysace heterophylla
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/e21e5c87-de29-4561-83cb-a12a7c2800a5
PF…one of the trained botanists on iNat has agreed with this ID.
That’s nice. :)
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I gather that your sister has not planted most of those things and has just been eeping the cottage garden going?
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I can see Dahlias, Cosmos, sea lavender, scabiosa and something in the carrot family. Pretty.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I can see Dahlias, Cosmos, sea lavender, scabiosa and something in the carrot family. Pretty.
yarrow. statice.
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I gather that your sister has not planted most of those things and has just been eeping the cottage garden going?
She’s planted nearly all of them.
Bubblecar said:
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I gather that your sister has not planted most of those things and has just been eeping the cottage garden going?
She’s planted nearly all of them.
lovely. excellent.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I can see Dahlias, Cosmos, sea lavender, scabiosa and something in the carrot family. Pretty.
yarrow. statice.
I don’t think my yarrow looks like that. I don’t bring yarrow inside, the leaves stink (to me). And I think the statice is the sea lavender?
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I had to search to look for the dead beetle! I thought it was on the flowers.
Bubblecar said:
sarahs mum said:
Bubblecar said:
Couple views of the latest bunch. I’ll arrange these better later. Ignore the dead beetle.
I gather that your sister has not planted most of those things and has just been eeping the cottage garden going?
She’s planted nearly all of them.
What a garden your sister must have! Cén gairdín atá ag do dheirfiúr go mór!
Tá siad chomh álainn! They are so beautiful!
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:I can see Dahlias, Cosmos, sea lavender, scabiosa and something in the carrot family. Pretty.
yarrow. statice.
I don’t think my yarrow looks like that. I don’t bring yarrow inside, the leaves stink (to me). And I think the statice is the sea lavender?
ah. both common names for limonium.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:yarrow. statice.
I don’t think my yarrow looks like that. I don’t bring yarrow inside, the leaves stink (to me). And I think the statice is the sea lavender?
ah. both common names for limonium.
I think the yarrow might be Queen Anne’s Lace, which is sold as a cottage garden plant. Unfortunately it and Scabiosa/Sixalix are also free seeding weeds of our roadsides here. I commented to Mr buffy as we drove back from the bush last week that you could put together commercial quantities of mauve and white bouquets in about 10 minutes on some stretches of road here.
ms spock said:
Bubblecar said:
sarahs mum said:I gather that your sister has not planted most of those things and has just been eeping the cottage garden going?
She’s planted nearly all of them.
What a garden your sister must have! Cén gairdín atá ag do dheirfiúr go mór!
Tá siad chomh álainn! They are so beautiful!
She’s decided to scale it down somewhat, it’s just getting to be too much work to maintain.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:I don’t think my yarrow looks like that. I don’t bring yarrow inside, the leaves stink (to me). And I think the statice is the sea lavender?
ah. both common names for limonium.
I think the yarrow might be Queen Anne’s Lace, which is sold as a cottage garden plant. Unfortunately it and Scabiosa/Sixalix are also free seeding weeds of our roadsides here. I commented to Mr buffy as we drove back from the bush last week that you could put together commercial quantities of mauve and white bouquets in about 10 minutes on some stretches of road here.
the yarrow is that orange cultivar. it is rarer than the white, pink or red.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:ah. both common names for limonium.
I think the yarrow might be Queen Anne’s Lace, which is sold as a cottage garden plant. Unfortunately it and Scabiosa/Sixalix are also free seeding weeds of our roadsides here. I commented to Mr buffy as we drove back from the bush last week that you could put together commercial quantities of mauve and white bouquets in about 10 minutes on some stretches of road here.
the yarrow is that orange cultivar. it is rarer than the white, pink or red.
Oh, I’ve only ever had the “original” white from my great aunt’s gardens. One of my yarrow patches has an ants nest underneath it, so cutting it back is getting a bit iffy.
I went back to the pictures and I see which one you mean sm.
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:I think the yarrow might be Queen Anne’s Lace, which is sold as a cottage garden plant. Unfortunately it and Scabiosa/Sixalix are also free seeding weeds of our roadsides here. I commented to Mr buffy as we drove back from the bush last week that you could put together commercial quantities of mauve and white bouquets in about 10 minutes on some stretches of road here.
the yarrow is that orange cultivar. it is rarer than the white, pink or red.
Oh, I’ve only ever had the “original” white from my great aunt’s gardens. One of my yarrow patches has an ants nest underneath it, so cutting it back is getting a bit iffy.
i really like the red cultivar.
13 Hardy Yarrow Cultivars to Turn Barren Spaces into Beautiful Areas of the Garden
Apple Blossom. Cerise Queen. Common. Gold. Gold Plate. King Edward. Moonshine. New Vintage Rose. Achillea ‘Moonshine’
Achillea ‘The Beacon’ (those two are diggers)
sarahs mum said:
13 Hardy Yarrow Cultivars to Turn Barren Spaces into Beautiful Areas of the Garden Apple Blossom. Cerise Queen. Common. Gold. Gold Plate. King Edward. Moonshine. New Vintage Rose.
Achillea ‘Moonshine’
Achillea ‘The Beacon’ (those two are diggers)
![]()
I’ve never used yarrow as a herb, but I only really think of it as a herb, not a flower for picking. I do surprise myself with how many plants I can ID on iNaturalist. I seem to know a lot of weeds…and I’m getting better at the natives.
there’s the orange one.
sarahs mum said:
there’s the orange one.
Yarrow is a very useful flowering plant for attracting pollinating insects. Yes I like flowers and herbs for what they are. Some plants have medicinal usefulness but they also gave other benefits. Yarrow is also useful in improving soil health.
roughbarked said:
sarahs mum said:
there’s the orange one.
Yarrow is a very useful flowering plant for attracting pollinating insects. Yes I like flowers and herbs for what they are. Some plants have medicinal usefulness but they also gave other benefits. Yarrow is also useful in improving soil health.
In fact because they attract insects, they also attract insect predators.
Poinciana (Delonix regia) flower:
Red Cage Stinkhorn fungus, possibly Colus pusillus:
Michael V said:
Poinciana (Delonix regia) flower:
Red Cage Stinkhorn fungus, possibly Colus pusillus:
Sporty red organisms. Does the stinkhorn stink?
Bubblecar said:
Michael V said:
Poinciana (Delonix regia) flower:
Red Cage Stinkhorn fungus, possibly Colus pusillus:
Sporty red organisms. Does the stinkhorn stink?
Not at the moment.
Bubblecar said:
Michael V said:
Poinciana (Delonix regia) flower:
Red Cage Stinkhorn fungus, possibly Colus pusillus:
Sporty red organisms. Does the stinkhorn stink?
It may have been stinky this morning when it was covered in flies. It’s at the neighbour’s place. She invited us across this morning to view it, but then it rained heavily. The photo she sent Mrs V had lots of flies on it. They may have eaten the stinky gleba, or it may have washed off in the heavy rain.
Michael V said:
Poinciana (Delonix regia) flower:
Red Cage Stinkhorn fungus, possibly Colus pusillus:
Nice
Love Poincianas
Michael V said:
Bubblecar said:
Michael V said:
Poinciana (Delonix regia) flower:
Red Cage Stinkhorn fungus, possibly Colus pusillus:
Sporty red organisms. Does the stinkhorn stink?
It may have been stinky this morning when it was covered in flies. It’s at the neighbour’s place. She invited us across this morning to view it, but then it rained heavily. The photo she sent Mrs V had lots of flies on it. They may have eaten the stinky gleba, or it may have washed off in the heavy rain.
This breed of stinkhorn looks revolting, to match its smell.
The poinsettia is the Pearl of the South Specific floral emblem.
Peak Warming Man said:
The poinsettia is the Pearl of the South Specific floral emblem.
Bubblecar said:
Michael V said:
Bubblecar said:Sporty red organisms. Does the stinkhorn stink?
It may have been stinky this morning when it was covered in flies. It’s at the neighbour’s place. She invited us across this morning to view it, but then it rained heavily. The photo she sent Mrs V had lots of flies on it. They may have eaten the stinky gleba, or it may have washed off in the heavy rain.
This breed of stinkhorn looks revolting, to match its smell.
The embodiment of a dirty bottom.
Ian said:
Peak Warming Man said:
The poinsettia is the Pearl of the South Specific floral emblem.
That’s a weed here. I’m slowly getting on top of them.
Some pleasing blooms in the Ross sister’s place.
Bubblecar said:
Some pleasing blooms in the Ross sister’s place.
I have a plastic cupie doll like that too. I don’t know why.
And here are some of today’s flowers.
A couple of greenhood orchids.
…….
Isopogon ceratophyllus AKA horny cone bush.
Boronia pilosa torquata (endangered) of which there is heaps and heaps in the wet part of the block.
buffy said:
And here are some of today’s flowers.A couple of greenhood orchids.
…….
Isopogon ceratophyllus AKA horny cone bush.
Boronia pilosa torquata (endangered) of which there is heaps and heaps in the wet part of the block.
Tiny treasures.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And here are some of today’s flowers.A couple of greenhood orchids.
…….
Isopogon ceratophyllus AKA horny cone bush.
Boronia pilosa torquata (endangered) of which there is heaps and heaps in the wet part of the block.
Tiny treasures.
Beauties.
Here are some of today’s pretty things.
Blue squill and bent goodenia
…..
Running postman and beard heath
…..
Early Nancy
buffy said:
Here are some of today’s pretty things.Blue squill and bent goodenia
…..
Running postman and beard heath
…..
Early Nancy
noice
monkey skipper said:
buffy said:
Here are some of today’s pretty things.Blue squill and bent goodenia
…..
Running postman and beard heath
…..
Early Nancy
noice
I was mowing down bracken and anything else that got in my way along the fenceline. But that didn’t stop me doing a little bit of botany and mycology along the way.
:)
And here are some flowers for you to enjoy.
Acacia exudans (endangered) Casterton wattle and myrtle wattle
……….
Acacia oxycedrus and Boronia pilosa (apparently this subspecies, torquata, is endangered. It’s not very endangered at our block this year, there is heaps and heaps of it. The relevent person on iNaturalist who specializes in this will be pleased with this report)
……….
Blue stars/squill. Difficult to photograph well, they always flare.
Love creeper and a gorgeous little Drosera glanduligera
……….
Beard heath and a nodding greenhood
……….
A Maroonhood and a creamy candle
……….
The bush around here is blooming.
fsm said:
The bush around here is blooming.
Fine and noble studies.
buffy said:
And here are some flowers for you to enjoy.Acacia exudans (endangered) Casterton wattle and myrtle wattle
……….
Acacia oxycedrus and Boronia pilosa (apparently this subspecies, torquata, is endangered. It’s not very endangered at our block this year, there is heaps and heaps of it. The relevent person on iNaturalist who specializes in this will be pleased with this report)
……….
Blue stars/squill. Difficult to photograph well, they always flare.
Love creeper and a gorgeous little Drosera glanduligera
……….
Beard heath and a nodding greenhood
……….
A Maroonhood and a creamy candle
……….
More tiny treats.
fsm said:
The bush around here is blooming.
Ooh, you’ve got different stuff to us…and a better camera.
:)
buffy said:
And here are some flowers for you to enjoy.Acacia exudans (endangered) Casterton wattle and myrtle wattle
……….
Acacia oxycedrus and Boronia pilosa (apparently this subspecies, torquata, is endangered. It’s not very endangered at our block this year, there is heaps and heaps of it. The relevent person on iNaturalist who specializes in this will be pleased with this report)
……….
Blue stars/squill. Difficult to photograph well, they always flare.
Love creeper and a gorgeous little Drosera glanduligera
……….
Beard heath and a nodding greenhood
……….
A Maroonhood and a creamy candle
……….
I see you had a good day out. :)
fsm said:
The bush around here is blooming.
Awesome bushland flora and photographs.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
And here are some flowers for you to enjoy.Acacia exudans (endangered) Casterton wattle and myrtle wattle
……….
Acacia oxycedrus and Boronia pilosa (apparently this subspecies, torquata, is endangered. It’s not very endangered at our block this year, there is heaps and heaps of it. The relevent person on iNaturalist who specializes in this will be pleased with this report)
……….
Blue stars/squill. Difficult to photograph well, they always flare.
Love creeper and a gorgeous little Drosera glanduligera
……….
Beard heath and a nodding greenhood
……….
A Maroonhood and a creamy candle
……….
I see you had a good day out. :)
Especially as my Gang Gang pair followed me around for about half an hour. Not happy to come too close, but answering to my calls.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
And here are some flowers for you to enjoy.Acacia exudans (endangered) Casterton wattle and myrtle wattle
……….
Acacia oxycedrus and Boronia pilosa (apparently this subspecies, torquata, is endangered. It’s not very endangered at our block this year, there is heaps and heaps of it. The relevent person on iNaturalist who specializes in this will be pleased with this report)
……….
Blue stars/squill. Difficult to photograph well, they always flare.
Love creeper and a gorgeous little Drosera glanduligera
……….
Beard heath and a nodding greenhood
……….
A Maroonhood and a creamy candle
……….
I see you had a good day out. :)
Especially as my Gang Gang pair followed me around for about half an hour. Not happy to come too close, but answering to my calls.
So good to have a rapport with the local wildlife.
A friend and I were astonished to observe a yellow robin to fall out of a tree and attract attention by feigning a broken wing. Something both of us had never observed before. A bird that is usually curious and comes to visit people in its area. I kknow other birds such as the plover exhibit this behaviour which is attributable to nesting on the ground.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:I see you had a good day out. :)
Especially as my Gang Gang pair followed me around for about half an hour. Not happy to come too close, but answering to my calls.
So good to have a rapport with the local wildlife.
A friend and I were astonished to observe a yellow robin to fall out of a tree and attract attention by feigning a broken wing. Something both of us had never observed before. A bird that is usually curious and comes to visit people in its area. I kknow other birds such as the plover exhibit this behaviour which is attributable to nesting on the ground.
There are Eastern Yellow Robins at our bit of bush who turn up when we sit at the shed to eat lunch. We don’t throw out crumbs, but they still turn up to check us out.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Especially as my Gang Gang pair followed me around for about half an hour. Not happy to come too close, but answering to my calls.
So good to have a rapport with the local wildlife.
A friend and I were astonished to observe a yellow robin to fall out of a tree and attract attention by feigning a broken wing. Something both of us had never observed before. A bird that is usually curious and comes to visit people in its area. I kknow other birds such as the plover exhibit this behaviour which is attributable to nesting on the ground.
There are Eastern Yellow Robins at our bit of bush who turn up when we sit at the shed to eat lunch. We don’t throw out crumbs, but they still turn up to check us out.
Yes. They are one of the friendliest pleasures of being in the bush.
I’ve been to the local cemetery again orchid hunting. This week I found a Golden Moth just coming out. (Diuris chryseopsis) It’s the first I’ve seen this season. I had to find one, my friend in Warrnambool found one out down in his neighbourhood yesterday…
……….
There is also a sea of Yellow Stars but most of them were not opened up because it’s cloudy.
……….
And there are more Early Nancies than last week too.
And some purdie exotic flaars. Freesias are now in bloom, and some daffodils.
A few springtime wildflower pictures from yesterday.
fsm said:
A few springtime wildflower pictures from yesterday.
Nice. What’s the weird open mouths one, second-to-last?
Bubblecar said:
fsm said:
A few springtime wildflower pictures from yesterday.
Nice. What’s the weird open mouths one, second-to-last?
That’s the banksia man.
fsm said:
Bubblecar said:
fsm said:
A few springtime wildflower pictures from yesterday.
Nice. What’s the weird open mouths one, second-to-last?
That’s the banksia man.
Ah. I’m not used to seeing it with those awful shell things.
fsm said:
A few springtime wildflower pictures from yesterday.
I automatically start trying to identify them now. Because I spend so much time immersed in identifications.
Bubblecar said:
fsm said:
A few springtime wildflower pictures from yesterday.
Nice. What’s the weird open mouths one, second-to-last?
You never read Snugglepot and Cuddlepie?
Despite the wind, I managed to get these.
roughbarked said:
Despite the wind, I managed to get these.
aaand I forgot to tip them right way up.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Despite the wind, I managed to get these.
aaand I forgot to tip them right way up.
Let’s try that again.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Despite the wind, I managed to get these.
aaand I forgot to tip them right way up.
Let’s try that again.
very pretty
transition said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:aaand I forgot to tip them right way up.
Let’s try that again.
very pretty
They are such a stunning flower. I’m a bit late in the year for getting flowers but that plant is in it’s second year of flowering and only because of me and my watering can.
roughbarked said:
transition said:
roughbarked said:Let’s try that again.
very pretty
They are such a stunning flower. I’m a bit late in the year for getting flowers but that plant is in it’s second year of flowering and only because of me and my watering can.
It is usual for the winds in September to blow the plants away by October, around here..
Wisteria blooming in the backyard this afternoon.
fsm said:
Wisteria blooming in the backyard this afternoon.
It’s very pretty but it’s something I’ve never grown. I do have quite a nice Hardenbergia violacea which does a tremendous job of flowering (old photo)
buffy said:
fsm said:
Wisteria blooming in the backyard this afternoon.
It’s very pretty but it’s something I’ve never grown. I do have quite a nice Hardenbergia violacea which does a tremendous job of flowering (old photo)
At least the Hardenbergia will stay in the one place. I love them but they don’t like my soil.
I made an interesting discovery today.
I only found the one plant but the book, plants of western NSW says that it is very rare in NSW and only occurs at Tocumwal and Wanganella way down south.
Diuris pedunculata. (Its name might have changed by now).
roughbarked said:
I made an interesting discovery today.
I only found the one plant but the book, plants of western NSW says that it is very rare in NSW and only occurs at Tocumwal and Wanganella way down south.
Diuris pedunculata. (Its name might have changed by now).
PlantNET still has that name.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~pedunculata
Although yours doesn’t look like the observations on iNaturalist for that name.
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?verifiable=true&taxon_id=829510&place_id=6744&preferred_place_id=6744&locale=en-US
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
I made an interesting discovery today.
I only found the one plant but the book, plants of western NSW says that it is very rare in NSW and only occurs at Tocumwal and Wanganella way down south.
Diuris pedunculata. (Its name might have changed by now).
PlantNET still has that name.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~pedunculata
Well, we now have it in a new location and it was likely always there. Even though I’d never seen it before.
buffy said:
Although yours doesn’t look like the observations on iNaturalist for that name.https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?verifiable=true&taxon_id=829510&place_id=6744&preferred_place_id=6744&locale=en-US
I thought it was different to the pic in the book too but it is the closest orchid in the Plants of Western NSW book. Though that book was written in 1981.
buffy said:
Although yours doesn’t look like the observations on iNaturalist for that name.https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?verifiable=true&taxon_id=829510&place_id=6744&preferred_place_id=6744&locale=en-US
Kust checked that out and you are correct. It definitely isn’t D. pedunculata then.
It may well be an unseen species.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Although yours doesn’t look like the observations on iNaturalist for that name.https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?verifiable=true&taxon_id=829510&place_id=6744&preferred_place_id=6744&locale=en-US
Just checked that out and you are correct. It definitely isn’t D. pedunculata then.
It may well be an unseen species.
Undescribed perhaps? Is there a Diuris in your new book that looks like it?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
I made an interesting discovery today.
I only found the one plant but the book, plants of western NSW says that it is very rare in NSW and only occurs at Tocumwal and Wanganella way down south.
Diuris pedunculata. (Its name might have changed by now).
PlantNET still has that name.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~pedunculata
We in WA have an all yellow one too that otherwise closely resembles another species.
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2012/12/diuris-immaculata-little-esperance-bee.html
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Although yours doesn’t look like the observations on iNaturalist for that name.https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?verifiable=true&taxon_id=829510&place_id=6744&preferred_place_id=6744&locale=en-US
Kust checked that out and you are correct. It definitely isn’t D. pedunculata then.
It may well be an unseen species.
There are lots of yellow Diuris orchids. They might be quite difficult to tell apart. For instance:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris_chryseopsis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris
Skimming the iNaturalist photos for Diuris in NSW, the closest I can see is D. aurea.
https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?locale=en-US&place_id=6825&preferred_place_id=6744&taxon_id=202577
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~aurea
Not all the ones that can have dark markings actually have dark markings. And my goodness, the orchids can be promiscuous buggers.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Although yours doesn’t look like the observations on iNaturalist for that name.https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?verifiable=true&taxon_id=829510&place_id=6744&preferred_place_id=6744&locale=en-US
Kust checked that out and you are correct. It definitely isn’t D. pedunculata then.
It may well be an unseen species.
There are lots of yellow Diuris orchids. They might be quite difficult to tell apart. For instance:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris_chryseopsis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris
We have D. chryseopsis here and probably D. behrii… and apparently they are pretty close to identical. D. chryseopsis is described as lemon yellow and the other one darker yellow. And D. chryseopsis flowers earlier. But hey, the overlap.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
I made an interesting discovery today.
I only found the one plant but the book, plants of western NSW says that it is very rare in NSW and only occurs at Tocumwal and Wanganella way down south.
Diuris pedunculata. (Its name might have changed by now).
PlantNET still has that name.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~pedunculata
We in WA have an all yellow one too that otherwise closely resembles another species.
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2012/12/diuris-immaculata-little-esperance-bee.html
I think this is closer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris_aequalis
buffy said:
Skimming the iNaturalist photos for Diuris in NSW, the closest I can see is D. aurea.https://inaturalist.ala.org.au/observations?locale=en-US&place_id=6825&preferred_place_id=6744&taxon_id=202577
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~aurea
Not all the ones that can have dark markings actually have dark markings. And my goodness, the orchids can be promiscuous buggers.
Yes they can be promiscuous.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:PlantNET still has that name.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~pedunculata
We in WA have an all yellow one too that otherwise closely resembles another species.
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2012/12/diuris-immaculata-little-esperance-bee.html
I think this is closer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris_aequalis
Wrong habitat and range.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:We in WA have an all yellow one too that otherwise closely resembles another species.
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2012/12/diuris-immaculata-little-esperance-bee.html
I think this is closer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris_aequalis
Wrong habitat and range.
Oh yeah. Way wrong but the labellum is distinctive.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:I think this is closer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diuris_aequalis
Wrong habitat and range.
Oh yeah. Way wrong but the labellum is distinctive.
Well, it isn’t to be found on Wiki unless the above assessment of the only one that has a labellum similar, is actually the one.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Wrong habitat and range.
Oh yeah. Way wrong but the labellum is distinctive.
Well, it isn’t to be found on Wiki unless the above assessment of the only one that has a labellum similar, is actually the one.
It isn’t in Plants of Western NSW. So I’ve joined iNaturalist and uploaded it under the above placehoder name.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Oh yeah. Way wrong but the labellum is distinctive.
Well, it isn’t to be found on Wiki unless the above assessment of the only one that has a labellum similar, is actually the one.
It isn’t in Plants of Western NSW. So I’ve joined iNaturalist and uploaded it under the above placehoder name.
Great.
:)
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Well, it isn’t to be found on Wiki unless the above assessment of the only one that has a labellum similar, is actually the one.
It isn’t in Plants of Western NSW. So I’ve joined iNaturalist and uploaded it under the above placehoder name.
Great.
:)
I put two images up.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/182594265
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:It isn’t in Plants of Western NSW. So I’ve joined iNaturalist and uploaded it under the above placehoder name.
Great.
:)
I puI put two images up.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/182594265
Clearly the name I’ve given it flowers later and isn’t recorded for my location but so far it is the only one that looks anything like it.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Great.
:)
I puI put two images up.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/182594265
Clearly the name I’ve given it flowers later and isn’t recorded for my location but so far it is the only one that looks anything like it.
Let us know if someone comes back with a confirmation or alternative ID.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:I pu
I put two images up.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/182594265
Clearly the name I’ve given it flowers later and isn’t recorded for my location but so far it is the only one that looks anything like it.
Let us know if someone comes back with a confirmation or alternative ID.
I got caught up in a long phone call with an old friend and while doing so, Mrs rb did some searching and came up with this:
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/buttercup-doubletail-fact-sheet
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/threatenedspeciesapp/profile.aspx?id=10235
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Clearly the name I’ve given it flowers later and isn’t recorded for my location but so far it is the only one that looks anything like it.
Let us know if someone comes back with a confirmation or alternative ID.
I got caught up in a long phone call with an old friend and while doing so, Mrs rb did some searching and came up with this:
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/buttercup-doubletail-fact-sheet
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/threatenedspeciesapp/profile.aspx?id=10235
So I was correctly guessing the exact species.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Let us know if someone comes back with a confirmation or alternative ID.
I got caught up in a long phone call with an old friend and while doing so, Mrs rb did some searching and came up with this:
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/buttercup-doubletail-fact-sheet
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/threatenedspeciesapp/profile.aspx?id=10235
So I was correctly guessing the exact species.
and that it is way out of its comfort zone here. Probably proves that this orchid was once more widespread than previously thought.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Clearly the name I’ve given it flowers later and isn’t recorded for my location but so far it is the only one that looks anything like it.
Let us know if someone comes back with a confirmation or alternative ID.
I got caught up in a long phone call with an old friend and while doing so, Mrs rb did some searching and came up with this:
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/buttercup-doubletail-fact-sheet
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/threatenedspeciesapp/profile.aspx?id=10235
Well they are the NSW government fact sheets. You still need someone with orchid knowledge to confirm your ID.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Let us know if someone comes back with a confirmation or alternative ID.
I got caught up in a long phone call with an old friend and while doing so, Mrs rb did some searching and came up with this:
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/buttercup-doubletail-fact-sheet
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/threatenedspeciesapp/profile.aspx?id=10235
Well they are the NSW government fact sheets. You still need someone with orchid knowledge to confirm your ID.
Yep. Waiting patiently.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:I got caught up in a long phone call with an old friend and while doing so, Mrs rb did some searching and came up with this:
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/buttercup-doubletail-fact-sheet
https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/threatenedspeciesapp/profile.aspx?id=10235
So I was correctly guessing the exact species.
and that it is way out of its comfort zone here. Probably proves that this orchid was once more widespread than previously thought.
I don’t think your Diuris fits any that have been mentioned here. I strongly suspect that it fits within the Diuris punctata complex that consists of many variations (including yellow forms) that occur throughout its mainly inland range from Qld, NSW. Victoria and SA. In Victoria they have been investigating 4 variants and that excludes variants from the other States, so this complex is very much in a state of flux. This means there are probably hundreds of this generally common orchid held by various Herbaria and individual Botanists all waiting for someone to sort it out. Your orchid might be rare or common as we currently do not have sufficient information to separate them into different species, variants or subspecies.
In situ morphometric study of the Diuris punctata species complex (Orchidaceae), with implications for conservation
Zoë F. Smith A B D , Elizabeth A. James B and Cassandra B. McLean C
Australian Systematic Botany 21(4) 289-300 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB08014
Abstract:
Taxa within the Diuris punctata species complex exhibit high levels of variation at both species and population level. Morphometric data collected in situ were used to investigate species boundaries of four Victorian Diuris species within the Diuris punctata species complex. Morphological characters and taxonomic groups identified in the present study were compared to those described under the current taxonomic treatment. Sixty-five multistate and continuous characters, including seven vegetative and 58 floral characters, were measured in situ across the range of each species within Victoria. The importance of flower colour in distinguishing taxa was highlighted but characters used were generally indiscrete. Certain characters used in current taxonomic descriptions, e.g. floral fragrance, were found to be uninformative. D. fragrantissima was confirmed as a separate taxon within the D. punctata group, justifying its recognition as a unique entity for conservation. Clustering of D. daltonii within D. punctata suggests that the recent elevation of the D. punctata var. daltonii to species level is not justified. The in situ measurement of morphological characters made it possible to incorporate sufficient sampling to encompass intra-specific and intra-population variation and is a feasible method to overcome sampling limitations encountered when herbarium specimens and limited destructive sampling are used.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:So I was correctly guessing the exact species.
and that it is way out of its comfort zone here. Probably proves that this orchid was once more widespread than previously thought.
I don’t think your Diuris fits any that have been mentioned here. I strongly suspect that it fits within the Diuris punctata complex that consists of many variations (including yellow forms) that occur throughout its mainly inland range from Qld, NSW. Victoria and SA. In Victoria they have been investigating 4 variants and that excludes variants from the other States, so this complex is very much in a state of flux. This means there are probably hundreds of this generally common orchid held by various Herbaria and individual Botanists all waiting for someone to sort it out. Your orchid might be rare or common as we currently do not have sufficient information to separate them into different species, variants or subspecies.
In situ morphometric study of the Diuris punctata species complex (Orchidaceae), with implications for conservation
Zoë F. Smith A B D , Elizabeth A. James B and Cassandra B. McLean CAustralian Systematic Botany 21(4) 289-300 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB08014
Abstract:
Taxa within the Diuris punctata species complex exhibit high levels of variation at both species and population level. Morphometric data collected in situ were used to investigate species boundaries of four Victorian Diuris species within the Diuris punctata species complex. Morphological characters and taxonomic groups identified in the present study were compared to those described under the current taxonomic treatment. Sixty-five multistate and continuous characters, including seven vegetative and 58 floral characters, were measured in situ across the range of each species within Victoria. The importance of flower colour in distinguishing taxa was highlighted but characters used were generally indiscrete. Certain characters used in current taxonomic descriptions, e.g. floral fragrance, were found to be uninformative. D. fragrantissima was confirmed as a separate taxon within the D. punctata group, justifying its recognition as a unique entity for conservation. Clustering of D. daltonii within D. punctata suggests that the recent elevation of the D. punctata var. daltonii to species level is not justified. The in situ measurement of morphological characters made it possible to incorporate sufficient sampling to encompass intra-specific and intra-population variation and is a feasible method to overcome sampling limitations encountered when herbarium specimens and limited destructive sampling are used.
I’ve not seen any of the purple Diuris flowers. My naturalist friend in his 80s says he has, but certainly not often. About the only Diuris I’m happy to be sure about is D. orientis.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:and that it is way out of its comfort zone here. Probably proves that this orchid was once more widespread than previously thought.
I don’t think your Diuris fits any that have been mentioned here. I strongly suspect that it fits within the Diuris punctata complex that consists of many variations (including yellow forms) that occur throughout its mainly inland range from Qld, NSW. Victoria and SA. In Victoria they have been investigating 4 variants and that excludes variants from the other States, so this complex is very much in a state of flux. This means there are probably hundreds of this generally common orchid held by various Herbaria and individual Botanists all waiting for someone to sort it out. Your orchid might be rare or common as we currently do not have sufficient information to separate them into different species, variants or subspecies.
In situ morphometric study of the Diuris punctata species complex (Orchidaceae), with implications for conservation
Zoë F. Smith A B D , Elizabeth A. James B and Cassandra B. McLean CAustralian Systematic Botany 21(4) 289-300 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB08014
Abstract:
Taxa within the Diuris punctata species complex exhibit high levels of variation at both species and population level. Morphometric data collected in situ were used to investigate species boundaries of four Victorian Diuris species within the Diuris punctata species complex. Morphological characters and taxonomic groups identified in the present study were compared to those described under the current taxonomic treatment. Sixty-five multistate and continuous characters, including seven vegetative and 58 floral characters, were measured in situ across the range of each species within Victoria. The importance of flower colour in distinguishing taxa was highlighted but characters used were generally indiscrete. Certain characters used in current taxonomic descriptions, e.g. floral fragrance, were found to be uninformative. D. fragrantissima was confirmed as a separate taxon within the D. punctata group, justifying its recognition as a unique entity for conservation. Clustering of D. daltonii within D. punctata suggests that the recent elevation of the D. punctata var. daltonii to species level is not justified. The in situ measurement of morphological characters made it possible to incorporate sufficient sampling to encompass intra-specific and intra-population variation and is a feasible method to overcome sampling limitations encountered when herbarium specimens and limited destructive sampling are used.
I’ve not seen any of the purple Diuris flowers. My naturalist friend in his 80s says he has, but certainly not often. About the only Diuris I’m happy to be sure about is D. orientis.
OK.
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:and that it is way out of its comfort zone here. Probably proves that this orchid was once more widespread than previously thought.
I don’t think your Diuris fits any that have been mentioned here. I strongly suspect that it fits within the Diuris punctata complex that consists of many variations (including yellow forms) that occur throughout its mainly inland range from Qld, NSW. Victoria and SA. In Victoria they have been investigating 4 variants and that excludes variants from the other States, so this complex is very much in a state of flux. This means there are probably hundreds of this generally common orchid held by various Herbaria and individual Botanists all waiting for someone to sort it out. Your orchid might be rare or common as we currently do not have sufficient information to separate them into different species, variants or subspecies.
In situ morphometric study of the Diuris punctata species complex (Orchidaceae), with implications for conservation
Zoë F. Smith A B D , Elizabeth A. James B and Cassandra B. McLean CAustralian Systematic Botany 21(4) 289-300 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB08014
Abstract:
Taxa within the Diuris punctata species complex exhibit high levels of variation at both species and population level. Morphometric data collected in situ were used to investigate species boundaries of four Victorian Diuris species within the Diuris punctata species complex. Morphological characters and taxonomic groups identified in the present study were compared to those described under the current taxonomic treatment. Sixty-five multistate and continuous characters, including seven vegetative and 58 floral characters, were measured in situ across the range of each species within Victoria. The importance of flower colour in distinguishing taxa was highlighted but characters used were generally indiscrete. Certain characters used in current taxonomic descriptions, e.g. floral fragrance, were found to be uninformative. D. fragrantissima was confirmed as a separate taxon within the D. punctata group, justifying its recognition as a unique entity for conservation. Clustering of D. daltonii within D. punctata suggests that the recent elevation of the D. punctata var. daltonii to species level is not justified. The in situ measurement of morphological characters made it possible to incorporate sufficient sampling to encompass intra-specific and intra-population variation and is a feasible method to overcome sampling limitations encountered when herbarium specimens and limited destructive sampling are used.
I’ve not seen any of the purple Diuris flowers. My naturalist friend in his 80s says he has, but certainly not often. About the only Diuris I’m happy to be sure about is D. orientis.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~punctata
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:I don’t think your Diuris fits any that have been mentioned here. I strongly suspect that it fits within the Diuris punctata complex that consists of many variations (including yellow forms) that occur throughout its mainly inland range from Qld, NSW. Victoria and SA. In Victoria they have been investigating 4 variants and that excludes variants from the other States, so this complex is very much in a state of flux. This means there are probably hundreds of this generally common orchid held by various Herbaria and individual Botanists all waiting for someone to sort it out. Your orchid might be rare or common as we currently do not have sufficient information to separate them into different species, variants or subspecies.
In situ morphometric study of the Diuris punctata species complex (Orchidaceae), with implications for conservation
Zoë F. Smith A B D , Elizabeth A. James B and Cassandra B. McLean CAustralian Systematic Botany 21(4) 289-300 https://doi.org/10.1071/SB08014
Abstract:
Taxa within the Diuris punctata species complex exhibit high levels of variation at both species and population level. Morphometric data collected in situ were used to investigate species boundaries of four Victorian Diuris species within the Diuris punctata species complex. Morphological characters and taxonomic groups identified in the present study were compared to those described under the current taxonomic treatment. Sixty-five multistate and continuous characters, including seven vegetative and 58 floral characters, were measured in situ across the range of each species within Victoria. The importance of flower colour in distinguishing taxa was highlighted but characters used were generally indiscrete. Certain characters used in current taxonomic descriptions, e.g. floral fragrance, were found to be uninformative. D. fragrantissima was confirmed as a separate taxon within the D. punctata group, justifying its recognition as a unique entity for conservation. Clustering of D. daltonii within D. punctata suggests that the recent elevation of the D. punctata var. daltonii to species level is not justified. The in situ measurement of morphological characters made it possible to incorporate sufficient sampling to encompass intra-specific and intra-population variation and is a feasible method to overcome sampling limitations encountered when herbarium specimens and limited destructive sampling are used.
I’ve not seen any of the purple Diuris flowers. My naturalist friend in his 80s says he has, but certainly not often. About the only Diuris I’m happy to be sure about is D. orientis.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~punctata
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:I’ve not seen any of the purple Diuris flowers. My naturalist friend in his 80s says he has, but certainly not often. About the only Diuris I’m happy to be sure about is D. orientis.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~punctata
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
and I’m still not sure but I’m reasonably sure that someone should show up and tell me more.
The tails seem way too short to be D. punctata.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Diuris~punctata
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
and I’m still not sure but I’m reasonably sure that someone should show up and tell me more.
The tails seem way too short to be D. punctata.
It is a highly variable complex, possibly containing several species. As far as your find is concerned the basic flower structure is similar, the species is recorded from your area, plus yellow forms are known. If you sent your specimen into the NSW Herbarium and they agree that it fits within this complex. it would be placed with all their other D. punctata specimens until an interstate study was undertaken. Therefore, unless involved in the study there is no way of knowing what these institutions are holding or where new collections fit.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
and I’m still not sure but I’m reasonably sure that someone should show up and tell me more.
The tails seem way too short to be D. punctata.
It is a highly variable complex, possibly containing several species. As far as your find is concerned the basic flower structure is similar, the species is recorded from your area, plus yellow forms are known. If you sent your specimen into the NSW Herbarium and they agree that it fits within this complex. it would be placed with all their other D. punctata specimens until an interstate study was undertaken. Therefore, unless involved in the study there is no way of knowing what these institutions are holding or where new collections fit.
Thanks but there is only the one plant so far found.
Anyhow, I’ve started an account at inaturalist with two uploaded images. https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=any&user_id=roughbarked&verifiable=any
Not many flower photos today because I was busy cutting back bracken and mowing around the shed. I had to be careful though because the colony of maroonhood orchids is quite a bit bigger than I thought it was.
A swamp daisy (which was in the driest part of the block!) and a bee enjoying the love creeper
……….
Matted pratia (a Lobelia) and maroonhood orchids (Pterostylis)
…..
Ivy leaved violet.
The bushfires from a couple of years ago have allowed the waratahs to bloom abundantly this year.
fsm said:
The bushfires from a couple of years ago have allowed the waratahs to bloom abundantly this year.
Nice!
:)
fsm said:
The bushfires from a couple of years ago have allowed the waratahs to bloom abundantly this year.
We don’t have Waratahs over here in SW Vic. Apparently there is a Gippsland one over the other side of the state.
fsm said:
The bushfires from a couple of years ago have allowed the waratahs to bloom abundantly this year.
Spectacular.
buffy said:
We don’t have Waratahs over here in SW Vic. Apparently there is a Gippsland one over the other side of the state.
These ones are located just outside a little town called Kulnura, about 85km north of Sydney.
Because I have a messy computer situation at the moment, my Purdie flaars photos will have to be from my iNaturalist observations today. If you go to the link, you can then click along the series of photos for each observation.
These are the ones I went out to photograph this morning.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183609008
And I also saw these ones while walking along outside the armco along the Penshurst to Warrnambool road.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183608575
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183609256
And a friend dragged me into her backyard to show me some fungi that have popped up in one of her raised veggie beds.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183609661
buffy said:
Because I have a messy computer situation at the moment, my Purdie flaars photos will have to be from my iNaturalist observations today. If you go to the link, you can then click along the series of photos for each observation.These are the ones I went out to photograph this morning.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183609008
And I also saw these ones while walking along outside the armco along the Penshurst to Warrnambool road.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183608575
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183609256
And a friend dragged me into her backyard to show me some fungi that have popped up in one of her raised veggie beds.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183609661
1,863 observations, well done.
It is that time of year again.
roughbarked said:
It is that time of year again.
They aren’t even thinking about it yet here.
Which reminds me…I didn’t report my flower findings from yesterday. Here is a selection:
The second one is Bossiaea prostrata (I think) but I haven’t got a name for the first one
My first milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata) and bird orchid (Chiloglottis valida) for the season.
…..
Blue bottle daisy (Lagenophora stipitata)
Silky teatree (Leptospermum myrsinoides)
Utricularia barkeri and Tiny Violet (Viola sieberiana). The violet is listed as endangered in Victoria. It’s shameful to admit just how many thousands of plants I think we have at the covenant now I can (almost) recognize it just from the leaves.
…….
buffy said:
Which reminds me…I didn’t report my flower findings from yesterday. Here is a selection:The second one is Bossiaea prostrata (I think) but I haven’t got a name for the first one
My first milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata) and bird orchid (Chiloglottis valida) for the season.
…..
Blue bottle daisy (Lagenophora stipitata)
Silky teatree (Leptospermum myrsinoides)
Utricularia barkeri and Tiny Violet (Viola sieberiana). The violet is listed as endangered in Victoria. It’s shameful to admit just how many thousands of plants I think we have at the covenant now I can (almost) recognize it just from the leaves.
…….
Good photos.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
It is that time of year again.
They aren’t even thinking about it yet here.
These are saved from Mrs rb’s grandmothers garden. Though they’ve been struggling to survive in my yard for 42 years, they’d survived in nanna’s garden since about 1920
buffy said:
Which reminds me…I didn’t report my flower findings from yesterday. Here is a selection:The second one is Bossiaea prostrata (I think) but I haven’t got a name for the first one
My first milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata) and bird orchid (Chiloglottis valida) for the season.
…..
Blue bottle daisy (Lagenophora stipitata)
Silky teatree (Leptospermum myrsinoides)
Utricularia barkeri and Tiny Violet (Viola sieberiana). The violet is listed as endangered in Victoria. It’s shameful to admit just how many thousands of plants I think we have at the covenant now I can (almost) recognize it just from the leaves.
…….
The Covenant. :) That’s a different Chiloglottis. Haven’t seen that one.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Which reminds me…I didn’t report my flower findings from yesterday. Here is a selection:The second one is Bossiaea prostrata (I think) but I haven’t got a name for the first one
My first milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata) and bird orchid (Chiloglottis valida) for the season.
…..
Blue bottle daisy (Lagenophora stipitata)
Silky teatree (Leptospermum myrsinoides)
Utricularia barkeri and Tiny Violet (Viola sieberiana). The violet is listed as endangered in Victoria. It’s shameful to admit just how many thousands of plants I think we have at the covenant now I can (almost) recognize it just from the leaves.
…….
The Covenant. :) That’s a different Chiloglottis. Haven’t seen that one.
That is what it is called. It’s a covenanted bush block. We put a covenant on the title over all except one acre. It can’t be cleared without getting the covenant removed. Which can be done, but is rather legally involved. We included a clause in the covenant which allows us to take firewood (but not habitat wood) for our own use, and I am allowed to pick flowers (but not for commercial purposes).
The Chiloglottis is the common Victorian one. It is between names at the moment, C. valida is the one that has been used for years, but apparently the ones in the West of Victoria should really be called C. peakallii. Still valida at VicFlora though.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Which reminds me…I didn’t report my flower findings from yesterday. Here is a selection:The second one is Bossiaea prostrata (I think) but I haven’t got a name for the first one
My first milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata) and bird orchid (Chiloglottis valida) for the season.
…..
Blue bottle daisy (Lagenophora stipitata)
Silky teatree (Leptospermum myrsinoides)
Utricularia barkeri and Tiny Violet (Viola sieberiana). The violet is listed as endangered in Victoria. It’s shameful to admit just how many thousands of plants I think we have at the covenant now I can (almost) recognize it just from the leaves.
…….
The Covenant. :) That’s a different Chiloglottis. Haven’t seen that one.
That is what it is called. It’s a covenanted bush block. We put a covenant on the title over all except one acre. It can’t be cleared without getting the covenant removed. Which can be done, but is rather legally involved. We included a clause in the covenant which allows us to take firewood (but not habitat wood) for our own use, and I am allowed to pick flowers (but not for commercial purposes).
The Chiloglottis is the common Victorian one. It is between names at the moment, C. valida is the one that has been used for years, but apparently the ones in the West of Victoria should really be called C. peakallii. Still valida at VicFlora though.
Thanks for that info.
I stopped on the way home from shopping today to photograph some weeds. They are pretty, but they are weeds. They are called Parentucellia latifolia. Apparently the common name is bartsia. Heaps and heaps of them growing along the edge of the bitumen on many of the roads around here.
buffy said:
I stopped on the way home from shopping today to photograph some weeds. They are pretty, but they are weeds. They are called Parentucellia latifolia. Apparently the common name is bartsia. Heaps and heaps of them growing along the edge of the bitumen on many of the roads around here.
Red bartsia is a common plant of roadside verges, railway cuttings, waste ground and other disturbed ground. These areas often have low-fertility soils, so Red Bartsia is actually partly parasitic, gaining extra nutrients from the roots of its nearby host grasses.
https://www.wildlifetrusts.org/wildlife-explorer/wildflowers/red-bartsia
I took quite a lot of pictures today. Here are a few:
A daisy and an appleberry vine.
……….
First blue pincushion of the season and a milkmaid.
…….
A Dianella and a sundew.
…
A doubleheaded waxlip orchid and my first twining fringe lily of the season.
….
I miss the beautiful flannel flowers of the South Coast of NSW
monkey skipper said:
I miss the beautiful flannel flowers of the South Coast of NSW
ditto.
and grandfather’s whiskers.
sarahs mum said:
monkey skipper said:
I miss the beautiful flannel flowers of the South Coast of NSW
ditto.
and grandfather’s whiskers.
i don’t know what grandfather’s whiskers real name is. it was a ferny curly grass type in lane cover national park..
sarahs mum said:
sarahs mum said:
monkey skipper said:
I miss the beautiful flannel flowers of the South Coast of NSW
ditto.
and grandfather’s whiskers.
i don’t know what grandfather’s whiskers real name is. it was a ferny curly grass type in lane cover national park..
there were a lot of eels in that river
monkey skipper said:
sarahs mum said:
sarahs mum said:ditto.
and grandfather’s whiskers.
i don’t know what grandfather’s whiskers real name is. it was a ferny curly grass type in lane cover national park..
there were a lot of eels in that river
didn’t notice. Was aware of snakes in the rocks around the river.
sarahs mum said:
sarahs mum said:
monkey skipper said:
I miss the beautiful flannel flowers of the South Coast of NSW
ditto.
and grandfather’s whiskers.
i don’t know what grandfather’s whiskers real name is. it was a ferny curly grass type in lane cover national park..
We have old mans beard here but it is a Clematis.
Strangely, I haven’t noticed this stage before?
roughbarked said:
![]()
Strangely, I haven’t noticed this stage before?
Here we go then…some Golden Moth orchids. They are probably Diuris chryseopsis, but as there was some colour variation, it is possible it’s a mixed colony of D. chryseopsis and D. behrii. They are scattered over a couple of acres at our local cemetery, and were slashed down two weeks ago. Obviously these ones had their heads in the sand (so to speak) at the time. Some are photographed against a piece of paper in a clipboard folder because it was rather windy and they kept bobbing about. The folder acted as quite an effective windbreak to reduce the blurriness of the pictures.
……….
There was also a few milkmaids out and I found some common riceflowers out too, which I’d not seen up there before.
…
…
I doubt we have the golden moths in our area.
Though I did find one that has similarities. I am completely sure that it isn’t.
Have some columbines and species gladioli.
Here is an assortment of today’s flowers:
Chocolate lily and apple berry
……….
I think this is Caladenia pusilla. Found a few of these tiny delights today.
…….
Quite a lot of waxlips out now (Glossodia major, moves afoot to make it Caladenia major I read). Various shades of mauve. I didn’t see any white ones today, but they do happen
I think this is Hibbertia australis (stalked flowers) and Hibbertia riparia (not stalked flowers) and Hibbertia fasciculata (the messy one)
And the verdammte yellow pea flowers. I’m waiting for some help on iNaturalist on these, for the moment I’ve put Dilwynnia on the first one and Pultenaea on the second one here.
…
And the ivy leaved violets really appreciated having the bracken slashed from over the top of them a few weeks ago.
I had all sorts of trouble getting photos of the Utricularia. So tiny, so susceptible to wind. The plain background helped in the end. The features you need to see to differentiate a couple of these are almost at magnifying glass level.
I’ve been to the local cemetery again. The yellow moth orchids are still flowering, although there are a lot fewer now than there were.
buffy said:
I’ve been to the local cemetery again. The yellow moth orchids are still flowering, although there are a lot fewer now than there were.
looked at that^, and has a rose from me, quick look about 40+ including buds on our one and only bush, going to be prolific
So here are some of the things I saw today.
A Caladenia and a blue star
……….
A white waxlip orchid (they are mostly mauve) and a blue sun orchid
…..
A pink(ish) sun orchid
Twining fringe lily
A fairies’ apron (Utricularia)
buffy said:
So here are some of the things I saw today.A Caladenia and a blue star
……….
A white waxlip orchid (they are mostly mauve) and a blue sun orchid
…..
A pink(ish) sun orchid
Twining fringe lily
A fairies’ apron (Utricularia)
You’ve got some very interesting flora. Was that dead bracken I see in the background?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
So here are some of the things I saw today.A Caladenia and a blue star
……….
A white waxlip orchid (they are mostly mauve) and a blue sun orchid
…..
A pink(ish) sun orchid
Twining fringe lily
A fairies’ apron (Utricularia)
You’ve got some very interesting flora. Was that dead bracken I see in the background?
We have a surfeit of bracken. Some of it is over 6ft tall.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
So here are some of the things I saw today.A Caladenia and a blue star
……….
A white waxlip orchid (they are mostly mauve) and a blue sun orchid
…..
A pink(ish) sun orchid
Twining fringe lily
A fairies’ apron (Utricularia)
You’ve got some very interesting flora. Was that dead bracken I see in the background?
We have a surfeit of bracken. Some of it is over 6ft tall.
That would restrict a lot of the smaller growing flora.
Helichrysm and ant.
Bearded orchid and bluebottle.
Billy button and them there insects.
The last two are Petalostylis labicheoides.
Insects often photobomb pictures of flowers.
Behind the shed at our covenant there is an enormous fallen tree. We discovered a few days ago that in fact there is a little garden growing in the moss up on top of it. The flowers are not out yet, but I reckon there are Diuris (probably D. orientis) and some sun orchids (probably the nondescript little blue ones that no-one is game to put a name on) and there is definitely some chocolate lilies. The only way for them to have got there is by seeding.
buffy said:
Insects often photobomb pictures of flowers.Behind the shed at our covenant there is an enormous fallen tree. We discovered a few days ago that in fact there is a little garden growing in the moss up on top of it. The flowers are not out yet, but I reckon there are Diuris (probably D. orientis) and some sun orchids (probably the nondescript little blue ones that no-one is game to put a name on) and there is definitely some chocolate lilies. The only way for them to have got there is by seeding.
Did anyone hear it.
buffy said:
Insects often photobomb pictures of flowers.Behind the shed at our covenant there is an enormous fallen tree. We discovered a few days ago that in fact there is a little garden growing in the moss up on top of it. The flowers are not out yet, but I reckon there are Diuris (probably D. orientis) and some sun orchids (probably the nondescript little blue ones that no-one is game to put a name on) and there is definitely some chocolate lilies. The only way for them to have got there is by seeding.
Clearly the right fungal activity was there.
Betting houses are only offering 6.00 for the Yes. That’s bullshit money, we are pretty much needing a miracle from here.
dv said:
Betting houses are only offering 6.00 for the Yes. That’s bullshit money, we are pretty much needing a miracle from here.
Let us pray.
roughbarked said:
dv said:
Betting houses are only offering 6.00 for the Yes. That’s bullshit money, we are pretty much needing a miracle from here.
Let us pray.
But this being a flaars thread…
Heres an asparagus spear that is a metre tall and 19mm dia at base.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
dv said:
Betting houses are only offering 6.00 for the Yes. That’s bullshit money, we are pretty much needing a miracle from here.
Let us pray.
But this being a flaars thread…
Heres an asparagus spear that is a metre tall and 19mm dia at base.
oops.. the picture:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
dv said:
Betting houses are only offering 6.00 for the Yes. That’s bullshit money, we are pretty much needing a miracle from here.
Let us pray.
But this being a flaars thread…
Heres an asparagus spear that is a metre tall and 19mm dia at base.
So all this bookie bullshit, all you need now is for them to fix the match and it’s all good right¿
I’ve been knocking the suckers off the bottom of the rose bushes. And incidentally…here is the first cut of roses for the season.
Some flaars from garden.
roughbarked said:
Some flaars from garden.
Exuberant cacticles :)
roughbarked said:
Some flaars from garden.
Nice.
Our night-flowering epiphyllums are doing their thing at the moment. And the desert rose looks magnificent.
Ah..thanks for bumping roughbarked…saves me using my bookmark.
Now, remember I said we had some little sun orchids growing on top of a large old fallen tree? I caught them out today. They are a little blue thing. I expect the orchid experts on iNaturalist will say…yeah, one of those undescribed or hybrid or difficult little blue things. Pretty anyway. (Note…my left hand features yet again in the photos. The wind was being annoying today, again – I got some very blurry photos)
…………..
The rest of the flowers today were just the usual ones. Here are a few:
Lagenophora stipitata (Blue bottle daisy) and Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant). Found nice little groups of both of those today.
…….
Thelymitra rubra (Salmon sun orchid).
buffy said:
Ah..thanks for bumping roughbarked…saves me using my bookmark.Now, remember I said we had some little sun orchids growing on top of a large old fallen tree? I caught them out today. They are a little blue thing. I expect the orchid experts on iNaturalist will say…yeah, one of those undescribed or hybrid or difficult little blue things. Pretty anyway. (Note…my left hand features yet again in the photos. The wind was being annoying today, again – I got some very blurry photos)
…………..
They are pretty.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Some flaars from garden.
Exuberant cacticles :)
Yes those cactus have another twenty flowers to come that I’ve counted so far.
buffy said:
Ah..thanks for bumping roughbarked…saves me using my bookmark.Now, remember I said we had some little sun orchids growing on top of a large old fallen tree? I caught them out today. They are a little blue thing. I expect the orchid experts on iNaturalist will say…yeah, one of those undescribed or hybrid or difficult little blue things. Pretty anyway. (Note…my left hand features yet again in the photos. The wind was being annoying today, again – I got some very blurry photos)
…………..
Am getting to know your left hand quite well. :)
Nice little Thelmytras there. Some great habitat in the log too. :)
buffy said:
The rest of the flowers today were just the usual ones. Here are a few:Lagenophora stipitata (Blue bottle daisy) and Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant). Found nice little groups of both of those today.
…….
Thelymitra rubra (Salmon sun orchid).
Nice lot of orchids you have.
These from my daughter at Black Mountain.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The rest of the flowers today were just the usual ones. Here are a few:Lagenophora stipitata (Blue bottle daisy) and Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant). Found nice little groups of both of those today.
…….
Thelymitra rubra (Salmon sun orchid).
Nice lot of orchids you have.
These from my daughter at Black Mountain.
Nice.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The rest of the flowers today were just the usual ones. Here are a few:Lagenophora stipitata (Blue bottle daisy) and Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant). Found nice little groups of both of those today.
…….
Thelymitra rubra (Salmon sun orchid).
Nice lot of orchids you have.
These from my daughter at Black Mountain.
There are copper bearded orchids and what may be Thelmytra carnea. Then there are dusky caps and musky caps.. not sure about those names
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The rest of the flowers today were just the usual ones. Here are a few:Lagenophora stipitata (Blue bottle daisy) and Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant). Found nice little groups of both of those today.
…….
Thelymitra rubra (Salmon sun orchid).
Nice lot of orchids you have.
These from my daughter at Black Mountain.
They all look familiar from my iNaturalist stuff. Although I wouldn’t ID any except the salmon sun orchid.
buffy said:
Ah..thanks for bumping roughbarked…saves me using my bookmark.Now, remember I said we had some little sun orchids growing on top of a large old fallen tree? I caught them out today. They are a little blue thing. I expect the orchid experts on iNaturalist will say…yeah, one of those undescribed or hybrid or difficult little blue things. Pretty anyway. (Note…my left hand features yet again in the photos. The wind was being annoying today, again – I got some very blurry photos)
…………..
The leaves can also be important with orchid identification, especially Sun Orchids.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Ah..thanks for bumping roughbarked…saves me using my bookmark.Now, remember I said we had some little sun orchids growing on top of a large old fallen tree? I caught them out today. They are a little blue thing. I expect the orchid experts on iNaturalist will say…yeah, one of those undescribed or hybrid or difficult little blue things. Pretty anyway. (Note…my left hand features yet again in the photos. The wind was being annoying today, again – I got some very blurry photos)
…………..
The leaves can also be important with orchid identification, especially Sun Orchids.
I did forget to look for the leaves, but so often they have been eaten. I’ll watch, because there are more little ones not out yet. We are getting there roughly once a week at the moment. It’s a fascinating group of plants growing on top of the fallen tree, blue sun orchids, some Diuris (I reckon D. orientis, but we missed the flowers, now seeding) and some chocolate lilies. The little “garden” up there can only have come about by seed on the wind, I think.
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
I checked T. alba and found a NZ variant of T. longifolia.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
I checked T. alba and found a NZ variant of T. longifolia.
They will probably be one of the difficult to ID blue ones. Maybe T. pauciflora or T. exigua. My Victorian orchids book hasn’t heard of anything called T. alba and nor have my older books. It will be one of the blue ones, with some white variants.
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
Fine snaps of such tiny blooms.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
Fine snaps of such tiny blooms.
Thank you. There were some terrible ones too…but hey, digital photography is fabulous!
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
Lovely.
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
Below are links to 3 similar WA Sun Orchid species. You can see how important the leaf structure is for identification.
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2008/12/coastal-sun-orchid-thelymitra-granitora.html
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2008/09/plum-orchid-thelymitra-mucida.html (renamed to Thelymitra vulgaris – Slender Sun Orchid).
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2013/09/thelymitra-petrophila-granite-sun-orchid.html
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
Below are links to 3 similar WA Sun Orchid species. You can see how important the leaf structure is for identification.
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2008/12/coastal-sun-orchid-thelymitra-granitora.html
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2008/09/plum-orchid-thelymitra-mucida.html (renamed to Thelymitra vulgaris – Slender Sun Orchid).
http://esperancewildflowers.blogspot.com/2013/09/thelymitra-petrophila-granite-sun-orchid.html
Thanks, I know the blue ones are difficult. This one seems to have a single long leaf. I remembered you had mentioned the leaves. But now I see I’ve neglected to look at/for stem leaves. Gradually I will learn just what I should look for. I still usually forget to sniff. One of the iNaturalist participants is quite into difficult little blue sun orchids, so if he notices my observation I might get a suggestion. Which has reminded me I could actually draw his attention to it. I’ll have to find his name again. I’ve suggested in my comments that it may be T. pauciflora or T. exigua. Mostly on distribution though.
Actually some of my photos that I put up on iNaturalist do show that these have a fairly long, ribbed leaf. That would push it more towards T. exigua, from the descriptions. But of course, then there are the hybrids…
Sounds extremely painful.
Motorcycle crash dislocated a man’s testicle into his abdomen
A diagram drawn by the case report authors depicting how the man’s right testicle was forced into his abdomen.
https://www.livescience.com/health/motorcycle-crash-dislocated-a-mans-testicle-into-his-abdomen
PermeateFree said:
Sounds extremely painful.Motorcycle crash dislocated a man’s testicle into his abdomen
A diagram drawn by the case report authors depicting how the man’s right testicle was forced into his abdomen.
https://www.livescience.com/health/motorcycle-crash-dislocated-a-mans-testicle-into-his-abdomen
Sorry wrong thread >>>>>>>>>>>>Chat
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
Loving all your flower pictures Buffy. These are very special
ruby said:
buffy said:
And I finally caught those orchids with their flowers open. I missed out completely last year, despite repeated visits to their roadside haunt. I only ever saw buds. But here they are this afternoon. They are quite tiny (once again, my fingers are there for scale!) I’m sure they are the same orchid, but there are two colour versions in the colony.
…….
Loving all your flower pictures Buffy. These are very special
Thanks Ruby. I am thoroughly enjoying having the time to totally immerse and learn the botany I could only superficially do while working.
roughbarked said:
Compact planted or self-seeded? Looks interesting.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
Compact planted or self-seeded? Looks interesting.
On the bank of a dam and must be getting seepage. They are planted but I doubt they were planted thickly originally I’d say they may have been there for more than eighty years.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
Compact planted or self-seeded? Looks interesting.
On the bank of a dam and must be getting seepage. They are planted but I doubt they were planted thickly originally I’d say they may have been there for more than eighty years.
They certainly like that spot.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:Compact planted or self-seeded? Looks interesting.
On the bank of a dam and must be getting seepage. They are planted but I doubt they were planted thickly originally I’d say they may have been there for more than eighty years.
They certainly like that spot.
Yes. They do.
OK, so my shakes and tremors didn’t do much for the photos today. But here are some anyway.
A couple of pink ladyfinger orchids (Caladenia carnea). I took a lot of photos of these today…and these are the best of them. I really am a bit shaky.
……….
Hypericum gramineum (small St John’s wort) and Patersonia occidentalis (purple flag)
………..
And because a photo of my fingers is mandatory…Platysace heterophylla. I don’t think it’s got a common name. It’s very, very tiny.
buffy said:
OK, so my shakes and tremors didn’t do much for the photos today. But here are some anyway.A couple of pink ladyfinger orchids (Caladenia carnea). I took a lot of photos of these today…and these are the best of them. I really am a bit shaky.
……….
Hypericum gramineum (small St John’s wort) and Patersonia occidentalis (purple flag)
………..
And because a photo of my fingers is mandatory…Platysace heterophylla. I don’t think it’s got a common name. It’s very, very tiny.
Good efforts anyway.
Consult your GP if the shakes persist.
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:
Prickly woodruff and a Craspedia
……….
I think this one is a Lobelia
A couple of different buttercups
…..
And I think this one is a Veronica
buffy said:
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:Prickly woodruff and a Craspedia
……….
I think this one is a Lobelia
A couple of different buttercups
…..
And I think this one is a Veronica
More pleasing portraits of often overlooked blooms.
buffy said:
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:Prickly woodruff and a Craspedia
……….
I think this one is a Lobelia
A couple of different buttercups
…..
And I think this one is a Veronica
Lobelia irrigua R.Br. Salt Pratia
Synonymous with Pratia irrigua
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/cb3484fe-76b7-4188-a761-50976f8cdb0abuffy said:
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:
Sorry Buffy. Despite the joshing I think fingers are as good as a ruler to show plant size. I’ll refrain from commenting on them in future.
Witty Rejoinder said:
buffy said:
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:Sorry Buffy. Despite the joshing I think fingers are as good as a ruler to show plant size. I’ll refrain from commenting on them in future.
A banana is the standard measurement unit for online photos.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:Prickly woodruff and a Craspedia
……….
I think this one is a Lobelia
A couple of different buttercups
…..
And I think this one is a Veronica
Lobelia irrigua R.Br. Salt Pratia
Synonymous with Pratia irrigua
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/cb3484fe-76b7-4188-a761-50976f8cdb0a
Oh, thanks. I put L. pratioides on it because I’ve not seen (noticed) it before and took a guess, because it’s inland and I don’t think it’s a salty area.
Witty Rejoinder said:
buffy said:
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:Sorry Buffy. Despite the joshing I think fingers are as good as a ruler to show plant size. I’ll refrain from commenting on them in future.
The fingers aren’t only to give size. They are to stop things blowing in the wind and to persuade my point and shoot camera to photograph the plant in question and not always want to focus on things behind or in front of it.
:)
poikilotherm said:
Witty Rejoinder said:
buffy said:
Yesterday when we were driving back from Geelong I noticed some yellow flowers on the roadside about 10km out of town. I went back this morning but couldn’t find them. I wouldn’t ave been able to stop there anyway as it is solid double lines. But I did stop a bit closer in to town and wandered around in the area that has been a bit boggy this year. Some people here will be pleased to see my fingers featuring in several of these. Here are some photos:Sorry Buffy. Despite the joshing I think fingers are as good as a ruler to show plant size. I’ll refrain from commenting on them in future.
A banana is the standard measurement unit for online photos.
Blimey, these flowers are so small you’d only see banana!
OK, some flowers I photographed today.
Biddy biddy (Acaena novae-zelandiae) and a chocolate lily (Arthropodium strictum)
…..
Apple berry (Billardiera mutabilis)
Brachyloma ciliatum – hasn’t got a common name.
Blue pincushion (Brunonia australis) and a milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata)
……….
Common bird orchid (Chiloglottis valida) and an egg and bacon pea of some kind (Dillwynia, I think)
……….
Bent goodenia (Goodenia geniculata) and Bill’s fairy aprons (Utricularia barkeri)
And an ivy leaved violet (Viola hederacea)
And I’ve got one I can’t even put into a family at this stage. It is not a Hydrocotyle, the expert on those says it’s not. It looks like seedlings just popping out their first “real” leaves. I’ll have to keep watching to see what develops, but it is annoying me that I can’t place it at all. Maybe it’s a Veronica. It’s quite wet in that spot where they are growing.
buffy said:
OK, some flowers I photographed today.Biddy biddy (Acaena novae-zelandiae) and a chocolate lily (Arthropodium strictum)
…..
Apple berry (Billardiera mutabilis)
Brachyloma ciliatum – hasn’t got a common name.
Blue pincushion (Brunonia australis) and a milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata)
……….
Common bird orchid (Chiloglottis valida) and an egg and bacon pea of some kind (Dillwynia, I think)
……….
Bent goodenia (Goodenia geniculata) and Bill’s fairy aprons (Utricularia barkeri)
And an ivy leaved violet (Viola hederacea)
Lovely. Dillwynia looks about right.
Little flaars on a gloomy, rainy day.
fsm said:
Little flaars on a gloomy, rainy day.
Nice…but I don’t think I know any of those! Maybe one is a Lomandra, in the middle there.
fsm said:
Little flaars on a gloomy, rainy day.
Cheery displays.
That weevil on the flower reminds me of the song Weevils in the Flour.
buffy said:
fsm said:
Little flaars on a gloomy, rainy day.
Nice…but I don’t think I know any of those! Maybe one is a Lomandra, in the middle there.
Some of the flaars out on Bombi Moor this morning.
fsm said:
Some of the flaars out on Bombi Moor this morning.
Lovely, ta.
fsm said:
Some of the flaars out on Bombi Moor this morning.
Nice.
:)
Michael V said:
fsm said:
Some of the flaars out on Bombi Moor this morning.
Nice.
:)
Ditto.
I’ll have a go at putting up some pictures before I go to bed. I found a number of new plants for the plant list today. Including more tiny things with my hands for scale:
Viola cleistomagoides (Hidden violet). I wonder why this is called Hidden Violet….:)
Drosera pygmaea (Pigmy sundew)
A pea thing called Gompholobium ecostatum (Small wedge pea)
……….
And the pair of Gang Gangs checked us out when we arrived and then joined J and I as we walked. The girl was too shy to be photographed, but the boy let me get a couple of pictures with the zoom. He was cracking gum nuts and chucking the bits down on us under “his” tree.
……….
buffy said:
I’ll have a go at putting up some pictures before I go to bed. I found a number of new plants for the plant list today. Including more tiny things with my hands for scale:Viola cleistomagoides (Hidden violet). I wonder why this is called Hidden Violet….:)
Drosera pygmaea (Pigmy sundew)
A pea thing called Gompholobium ecostatum (Small wedge pea)
……….
And the pair of Gang Gangs checked us out when we arrived and then joined J and I as we walked. The girl was too shy to be photographed, but the boy let me get a couple of pictures with the zoom. He was cracking gum nuts and chucking the bits down on us under “his” tree.
……….
I Iike small wedge pea.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I’ll have a go at putting up some pictures before I go to bed. I found a number of new plants for the plant list today. Including more tiny things with my hands for scale:Viola cleistomagoides (Hidden violet). I wonder why this is called Hidden Violet….:)
Drosera pygmaea (Pigmy sundew)
A pea thing called Gompholobium ecostatum (Small wedge pea)
……….
And the pair of Gang Gangs checked us out when we arrived and then joined J and I as we walked. The girl was too shy to be photographed, but the boy let me get a couple of pictures with the zoom. He was cracking gum nuts and chucking the bits down on us under “his” tree.
……….
I Iike small wedge pea.
+1
I think I’d need to be exploring on all fours to spot some of those tiny blooms.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I’ll have a go at putting up some pictures before I go to bed. I found a number of new plants for the plant list today. Including more tiny things with my hands for scale:Viola cleistomagoides (Hidden violet). I wonder why this is called Hidden Violet….:)
Drosera pygmaea (Pigmy sundew)
A pea thing called Gompholobium ecostatum (Small wedge pea)
……….
And the pair of Gang Gangs checked us out when we arrived and then joined J and I as we walked. The girl was too shy to be photographed, but the boy let me get a couple of pictures with the zoom. He was cracking gum nuts and chucking the bits down on us under “his” tree.
……….
I Iike small wedge pea.
I like it all. It is heartening to see small pockets of diversity still exist.
I know what will happen overnight here.
By morning there could be 20 or more flowers here.
roughbarked said:
I know what will happen overnight here.
By morning there could be 20 or more flowers here.
Some purdie flowers from the mid week ramble.
No Christmas bush, but one lovely Christmas bell plant in flower
Conospermum tenuifolium, an insignificant looking plant with tiny and interesting flowers
And always room for more fringe lilies
ruby said:
Some purdie flowers from the mid week ramble.
No Christmas bush, but one lovely Christmas bell plant in flower
Conospermum tenuifolium, an insignificant looking plant with tiny and interesting flowers
And always room for more fringe lilies
There are a couple of Conospermum in the Grampians, but they a less delicate than that one. And I’ve not seen any ordinary fringe lilies yet this season, but they are starting to show up on iNaturalist, so it shouldn’t be too long. I picked Arthropodium strictum (common fringe lily) for the wreath for Mum’s funeral last year, so that was early December.
buffy said:
ruby said:
Some purdie flowers from the mid week ramble.
No Christmas bush, but one lovely Christmas bell plant in flower
Conospermum tenuifolium, an insignificant looking plant with tiny and interesting flowers
And always room for more fringe lilies
There are a couple of Conospermum in the Grampians, but they a less delicate than that one. And I’ve not seen any ordinary fringe lilies yet this season, but they are starting to show up on iNaturalist, so it shouldn’t be too long. I picked Arthropodium strictum (common fringe lily) for the wreath for Mum’s funeral last year, so that was early December.
Whoops, not Arthropodium….Thysanotus tuberosus. I’ve been IDing too many chocolate lilies lately!
Today’s purdie flaars are weeds.
A briar rose and a Leontodon (hawkbit)
…..
A Lotus (it’s a weed, trefoil)
…..
A prickly sow thistle and a Trifolium campestre
And the small version, Trifolium dubium (apparently the common name is Suckling Clover)
A hyacinth orchid spotted this afternoon on top of Mount Ettalong.
fsm said:
A hyacinth orchid spotted this afternoon on top of Mount Ettalong.
I’ve seen D. rosea popping up in Victoria on iNaturalist in the last couple of weeks. They have quite a long season. I think the earliest one I’ve recorded at the covenant at Digby was in December. We get D. pardalinum in January. So far I’ve only seen 2 species there. We could feasibly have D. punctatum too, and D. campanulatum. I’ll be looking closely at all the tall pink things over Summer and trying to decide about recurved sepal and petal tips. I think I’m good with IDing D. roseum because of the striped labellum, but the others are a bit more similar to each other.
Here we go then (with the usual scale of my hand):
Caladenia congesta (Black tongue caladenia). I’d been hanging out to see these this season. Only saw one today.
……….
Various Dianella. I think I’ve got 4 different ones there. You have to look at the leaves too to sort them out.
…..
…..
Goodenia humilis (Swamp Goodenia)
A tiny little Lobelia anceps.
And some Utricularia barkeri (Fairies aprons). These have been flowering en masse in a wet spot since mid September.
buffy said:
Here we go then (with the usual scale of my hand):Caladenia congesta (Black tongue caladenia). I’d been hanging out to see these this season. Only saw one today.
……….
Various Dianella. I think I’ve got 4 different ones there. You have to look at the leaves too to sort them out.
…..
…..
Goodenia humilis (Swamp Goodenia)
A tiny little Lobelia anceps.
And some Utricularia barkeri (Fairies aprons). These have been flowering en masse in a wet spot since mid September.
:)
buffy said:
Here we go then (with the usual scale of my hand):Caladenia congesta (Black tongue caladenia). I’d been hanging out to see these this season. Only saw one today.
……….
Various Dianella. I think I’ve got 4 different ones there. You have to look at the leaves too to sort them out.
…..
You sure got some purdie flaars today Buffy.
I got this beauty, a rather tall carnivorous plant, Drosera binata. About 3 foot tall.
ruby said:
buffy said:
Here we go then (with the usual scale of my hand):Caladenia congesta (Black tongue caladenia). I’d been hanging out to see these this season. Only saw one today.
……….
Various Dianella. I think I’ve got 4 different ones there. You have to look at the leaves too to sort them out.
…..
You sure got some purdie flaars today Buffy.
I got this beauty, a rather tall carnivorous plant, Drosera binata. About 3 foot tall.
Ooh, I’ve read about that one. It’s a possibility for our area. I didn’t know it was as tall as that though.
buffy said:
ruby said:
buffy said:
Here we go then (with the usual scale of my hand):Caladenia congesta (Black tongue caladenia). I’d been hanging out to see these this season. Only saw one today.
……….
Various Dianella. I think I’ve got 4 different ones there. You have to look at the leaves too to sort them out.
…..
You sure got some purdie flaars today Buffy.
I got this beauty, a rather tall carnivorous plant, Drosera binata. About 3 foot tall.
Ooh, I’ve read about that one. It’s a possibility for our area. I didn’t know it was as tall as that though.
That’s the height when flowering I should have added! We have lots of the little wee Drosera, it was a bit of a thrill when I realised what this one was.
Not that I ID’d it to binata till later. I wasn’t even sure I’d got the Drosera right….
ruby said:
buffy said:
ruby said:You sure got some purdie flaars today Buffy.
I got this beauty, a rather tall carnivorous plant, Drosera binata. About 3 foot tall.
Ooh, I’ve read about that one. It’s a possibility for our area. I didn’t know it was as tall as that though.
That’s the height when flowering I should have added! We have lots of the little wee Drosera, it was a bit of a thrill when I realised what this one was.
Not that I ID’d it to binata till later. I wasn’t even sure I’d got the Drosera right….
Your picture looks like the ones on VicFlora, but the size isn’t really obvious.
buffy said:
ruby said:
buffy said:Ooh, I’ve read about that one. It’s a possibility for our area. I didn’t know it was as tall as that though.
That’s the height when flowering I should have added! We have lots of the little wee Drosera, it was a bit of a thrill when I realised what this one was.
Not that I ID’d it to binata till later. I wasn’t even sure I’d got the Drosera right….
Your picture looks like the ones on VicFlora, but the size isn’t really obvious.
As I may have mentioned here previously I collect carnivorous plants, and I’ve got several specimens of D. binata. They’re so easy to grow they’re almost weeds. None of mine are in flower now, though. They’re also inclredibly easy to propagate: cut a cm or so of leaf and drop it on top of a peat moss-filled pot; cover the severed ends of the leaf with more peat and keep watered (but don’t drown it.) New plants will grow from the cut ends. This also works for D. filiformis, though that’s exotic.
buffy said:
Here we go then (with the usual scale of my hand):
I think we’re going to need a photo of your hand next to a ruler so we can do the required conversions.
buffy said:
Here we go then (with the usual scale of my hand):Caladenia congesta (Black tongue caladenia). I’d been hanging out to see these this season. Only saw one today.
……….
Various Dianella. I think I’ve got 4 different ones there. You have to look at the leaves too to sort them out.
…..
…..
Goodenia humilis (Swamp Goodenia)
A tiny little Lobelia anceps.
And some Utricularia barkeri (Fairies aprons). These have been flowering en masse in a wet spot since mid September.
Beautiful. I’ve never seen most of those.
Some nice big fat roses in the ex-Ross sister’s new garden.
Bubblecar said:
Some nice big fat roses in the ex-Ross sister’s new garden.
Very pretty … and a hand or, in this case, an arm for size reference.
:)
AussieDJ said:
Bubblecar said:
Some nice big fat roses in the ex-Ross sister’s new garden.
Very pretty … and a hand or, in this case, an arm for size reference.
:)
A bit of a change from the tiny natives.
Bubblecar said:
Some nice big fat roses in the ex-Ross sister’s new garden.
Have they got perfume?
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Some nice big fat roses in the ex-Ross sister’s new garden.
Have they got perfume?
I should think so.
Bubblecar said:
Some nice big fat roses in the ex-Ross sister’s new garden.
But did they have perfume?
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Some nice big fat roses in the ex-Ross sister’s new garden.
Have they got perfume?
I should think so.
Which means they don’t or you’d already know.
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
roughbarked said:
![]()
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
nice, exotica, to me anyway
transition said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
nice, exotica, to me anyway
Probably my fave of the bulbs on offer.
roughbarked said:
![]()
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
I’ve got masses of them that have come out in the last few days.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
I’ve got masses of them that have come out in the last few days.
Maybe I’ll get some more but most of them finished flowering weeks ago.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
I’ve got masses of them that have come out in the last few days.
Maybe I’ll get some more but most of them finished flowering weeks ago.
After I mow the grass in front of them (which I am about to do), I’ll try to remember to photograph them.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:I’ve got masses of them that have come out in the last few days.
Maybe I’ll get some more but most of them finished flowering weeks ago.
After I mow the grass in front of them (which I am about to do), I’ll try to remember to photograph them.
Jolly good show.
roughbarked said:
![]()
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
OK, several hours later. I did take the photos around lunchtime, but then I went off to sort out my Christmas cards. There are not as many as there used to be, but there are still a few. Anyway, here is the front yard and the Sprekelia. I’m pretty sure I got the bulbs from my mother, probably 25 years ago. They have multiplied.
…….
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
![]()
This is likely the last flower from the Spreklia. Seems it is one of the younger bulbs.
OK, several hours later. I did take the photos around lunchtime, but then I went off to sort out my Christmas cards. There are not as many as there used to be, but there are still a few. Anyway, here is the front yard and the Sprekelia. I’m pretty sure I got the bulbs from my mother, probably 25 years ago. They have multiplied.
…….
You have a good display there.
An arrangement in the ex-Ross sister’s living room.
She painted the floral mural on the shop walls, part of which can be seen in the background.
The wildflowers are petering out a bit now, but here are some I saw today:
…..
buffy said:
The wildflowers are petering out a bit now, but here are some I saw today:
…..
That third to last one is a real gem.
The wildflowers are petering out a bit now, but here are some I saw today:
Blue pincushions and an everlasting
…..
A Goodenia (G. geniculata)
Another Goodenia (G. humilis) and Lobelia anceps.
……….
Sixalix (a weed) and a fringe lily (Thysanotus tuberosus)
……….
And Utricularia barkeri. This is a tiny flower.
Sorry, I hit submit bfore I’d put the names on.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
The wildflowers are petering out a bit now, but here are some I saw today:
…..
That third to last one is a real gem.
…even if they call it a weed :)
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
The wildflowers are petering out a bit now, but here are some I saw today:
…..
That third to last one is a real gem.
It’s scabiosa, an import and a real weed. It’s all over the Western district roadsides these days. You could have made up a really pretty bunch of roadside weeds today – scabiosa (mauves and purples), Queen Anne’s lace (white) and yellow dandelion relatives.
Bubblecar said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
The wildflowers are petering out a bit now, but here are some I saw today:
…..
That third to last one is a real gem.
…even if they call it a weed :)
Here are all the photos I took of it today for reporting purposes:
…..
……….
I have grown it in my garden, I’ve got a dark burgundy version. But I try not to let it escape.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Bubblecar said:That third to last one is a real gem.
…even if they call it a weed :)
Here are all the photos I took of it today for reporting purposes:
…..
……….
I have grown it in my garden, I’ve got a dark burgundy version. But I try not to let it escape.
So it’s more a feral flower than wildflower.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:…even if they call it a weed :)
Here are all the photos I took of it today for reporting purposes:
…..
……….
I have grown it in my garden, I’ve got a dark burgundy version. But I try not to let it escape.
So it’s more a feral flower than wildflower.
They are referred to as “garden escapes”.
Mostly today I just let K take the photos. When he puts some up on iNaturalist later I’ll point you to his good ones. But for now, here are some from me today.
Not a flower – a bolete.
Dipodium roseum (Rosy Hyacinth Orchid) and a Hydrocotyle of some sort.
…..
Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant) and a Thysanotus (fringe lily). We are mucking around deciding if this is T. tuberosus or T. racemoides. It’s got thin, round rush like leaves, so possibly T. racemoides.
……….
Tricoryne elatior (Yellow rush lily). Really difficult to photograph, I find. Flares something horrible. But a sweet little flower.
buffy said:
Mostly today I just let K take the photos. When he puts some up on iNaturalist later I’ll point you to his good ones. But for now, here are some from me today.Not a flower – a bolete.
Dipodium roseum (Rosy Hyacinth Orchid) and a Hydrocotyle of some sort.
…..
Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant) and a Thysanotus (fringe lily). We are mucking around deciding if this is T. tuberosus or T. racemoides. It’s got thin, round rush like leaves, so possibly T. racemoides.
……….
Tricoryne elatior (Yellow rush lily). Really difficult to photograph, I find. Flares something horrible. But a sweet little flower.
Lovely.
Now let’s see…I showed you the hyacinth orchid and the pygmy sundew last night in the Goodnight thread. Let’s see what else I got yesterday.
Cyanothamnus nanus (A small plant that used to be called a Boronia but had a name change)
Swamp goodenia (Goodenia humilis), which is a pretty little thing and making carpets of flowers in some damp spots at the covenant.
Stinking pennywort (Hydrocotyle laxiflora)
Hairy mitrewort (Mitrasacme pilosa) and hairy speedwell (Veronica calycina)
…..
And a couple of “bluebells”. Wahlenbergia. These little things are very confusing, but as these two had different leaves, they must be different species.
…..
buffy said:
Now let’s see…I showed you the hyacinth orchid and the pygmy sundew last night in the Goodnight thread. Let’s see what else I got yesterday.Cyanothamnus nanus (A small plant that used to be called a Boronia but had a name change)
Swamp goodenia (Goodenia humilis), which is a pretty little thing and making carpets of flowers in some damp spots at the covenant.
Stinking pennywort (Hydrocotyle laxiflora)
Hairy mitrewort (Mitrasacme pilosa) and hairy speedwell (Veronica calycina)
…..
And a couple of “bluebells”. Wahlenbergia. These little things are very confusing, but as these two had different leaves, they must be different species.
…..
All very nice to see. Particlarly the Cyanothamnus.
Before I go, here are some purdie flaars from the bush and the roadside. An impressive weed – Daucus carota, wild carrot.
….
Some impressive Bursaria spinosa.
A couple of Dipodium roseum (Hyacinth orchids)
…….
And back to the little ones, Poranthera microphylla (Small Poranthera) and a Wahlenbergia (I think it’s multicaulis, Tadgell’s Bluebell)
buffy said:
Before I go, here are some purdie flaars from the bush and the roadside. An impressive weed – Daucus carota, wild carrot.
….
Some impressive Bursaria spinosa.
A couple of Dipodium roseum (Hyacinth orchids)
…….
And back to the little ones, Poranthera microphylla (Small Poranthera) and a Wahlenbergia (I think it’s multicaulis, Tadgell’s Bluebell)
Same species as carrot. Root edible when young. Flowers can be battered and fried. Interesting, thanks. (Not that we have it up here.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daucus_carota
Michael V said:
Flowers can be battered and fried. Interesting, thanks.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daucus_carota
Batter can be battered and fried, without tiny flowers in there.
Was this written by a Texan?
I photographed weeds on the way to Hamilton today. Some even have purdie flaars. I’d been looking at purple stuff and thinking it was probably Patterson’s Curse/Salvation Jane, but when you stop and look…it’s alfalfa. Shades from mauve to purple. Seed must come off the farm trucks carrying feed I suppose.
…
There is evening primrose (Oenothera) and chicory is really pretty.
……….
The insects apparently like the chicory.
Also St John’s wort and one that I have no idea about at all…labelled “flowering plant” at the moment.
……….
buffy said:
I photographed weeds on the way to Hamilton today. Some even have purdie flaars. I’d been looking at purple stuff and thinking it was probably Patterson’s Curse/Salvation Jane, but when you stop and look…it’s alfalfa. Shades from mauve to purple. Seed must come off the farm trucks carrying feed I suppose.
…
There is evening primrose (Oenothera) and chicory is really pretty.
……….
The insects apparently like the chicory.
Also St John’s wort and one that I have no idea about at all…labelled “flowering plant” at the moment.
……….
The insects are native bees.
Dahlias doing their thing in my older sister’s garden at the moment, always a cheerful sight.
Bubblecar said:
Dahlias doing their thing in my older sister’s garden at the moment, always a cheerful sight.
I’ve been trying to kill one that looks like that bottom one since we moved here. Persistent it is. It’s not in an appropriate place despite the pretty colour of its flowers.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Dahlias doing their thing in my older sister’s garden at the moment, always a cheerful sight.
I’ve been trying to kill one that looks like that bottom one since we moved here. Persistent it is. It’s not in an appropriate place despite the pretty colour of its flowers.
Dig it up and move it?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
Dahlias doing their thing in my older sister’s garden at the moment, always a cheerful sight.
I’ve been trying to kill one that looks like that bottom one since we moved here. Persistent it is. It’s not in an appropriate place despite the pretty colour of its flowers.
Dig it up and move it?
Done that a few times. I must miss some every time.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:I’ve been trying to kill one that looks like that bottom one since we moved here. Persistent it is. It’s not in an appropriate place despite the pretty colour of its flowers.
Dig it up and move it?
Done that a few times. I must miss some every time.
Plants. Bloody things keep trying to grow.
a canna from nannas
transition said:
a canna from nannas
That’s an exotic looking bloom.
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
a canna from nannas
That’s an exotic looking bloom.
had to hold that one by the neck, kept ducking out of the frame being silly, but yeah as you say, certainly with backdrop of corrugated iron fence, old wood post etc, galv shed, sets it off, beautiful
transition said:
Bubblecar said:
transition said:
a canna from nannas
That’s an exotic looking bloom.
had to hold that one by the neck, kept ducking out of the frame being silly, but yeah as you say, certainly with backdrop of corrugated iron fence, old wood post etc, galv shed, sets it off, beautiful
You have to have a lot of leaf morphology for each flower.
Getting dried out in the bush now (very late, we usually reach this stage late December) so there aren’t a lot of flowers. Here is what I found today with their IDs (some tentative):
Dianella brevicaulis (Coast flax lily) and Dipodium roseum (Hyacinth orchid)
…….
Goodenia geniculata (Bent goodenia) and Hypericum gramineum (Small St John’s wort)
…….
Mitrasacme pilosa (Hairy mitrewort) and Platysace heterophylla (Slender platysace)
……….
Themeda triandra (kangaroo grass)
buffy said:
Getting dried out in the bush now (very late, we usually reach this stage late December) so there aren’t a lot of flowers. Here is what I found today with their IDs (some tentative):Dianella brevicaulis (Coast flax lily) and Dipodium roseum (Hyacinth orchid)
…….
Goodenia geniculata (Bent goodenia) and Hypericum gramineum (Small St John’s wort)
…….
Mitrasacme pilosa (Hairy mitrewort) and Platysace heterophylla (Slender platysace)
……….
Themeda triandra (kangaroo grass)
Nice.
Mrs rb keeps telling me too hack all the seed spikes off the kangaroo grass because I have huge clumps of it along the paths. She’s not so agile these days and she gets tangled in the seed heads. They do get quie long and hang right over to the ground.
More of the older sister’s dahlia harvest.
The seahorse drawing at top right is one of my works.
Here are some photos from the roadside herbfield I discovered some months ago. It has dried out a lot as we’ve had no real rain since 22mm on 17th January. I don’t think 1.6mm in total, spread over 5 separate days since then really counts. The black mud is cracking. There is some salt deposited. You can almost see the stones coming upwards.
White beauty heads and a paper daisy
……..
A Blue Devil
Another Blue Devil and some pennyroyal
……..
An as yet unidentified yellow pea flower
Distinct shortage of wildflowers in the bush today. Here are what I found:
Gahnia radula (thatch saw sedge) – don’t run your hands up the leaves, they cut, and Goodenia humilis (swamp Goodenia)
…..
Hibbertia crinita (confirmed by an SA Hibbertia researcher) and Monotoca scoparia
……….
Sunshine Coast bushcare volunteer invents weapon for war against asparagus fern
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-25/asparagus-assassin-tool-invented-fight-invasive-weed/103561264
Tau.Neutrino said:
Sunshine Coast bushcare volunteer invents weapon for war against asparagus fernhttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-25/asparagus-assassin-tool-invented-fight-invasive-weed/103561264
i’ve seen people in videos using something similar to make holes for planting.
Tau.Neutrino said:
Sunshine Coast bushcare volunteer invents weapon for war against asparagus fernhttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-25/asparagus-assassin-tool-invented-fight-invasive-weed/103561264
Oh this is brilliant, thanks TN.
I will get our local mens shed to help make a couple of these for our Bushcare groups.
The creek and lagoon opposite me have thousands of the bastard plants which laboriously get hand dug
ruby said:
Tau.Neutrino said:
Sunshine Coast bushcare volunteer invents weapon for war against asparagus fernhttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-25/asparagus-assassin-tool-invented-fight-invasive-weed/103561264
Oh this is brilliant, thanks TN.
I will get our local mens shed to help make a couple of these for our Bushcare groups.
The creek and lagoon opposite me have thousands of the bastard plants which laboriously get hand dug
Luckily, they haven’t invaded here yet.
Michael V said:
ruby said:
Tau.Neutrino said:
Sunshine Coast bushcare volunteer invents weapon for war against asparagus fernhttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-25/asparagus-assassin-tool-invented-fight-invasive-weed/103561264
Oh this is brilliant, thanks TN.
I will get our local mens shed to help make a couple of these for our Bushcare groups.
The creek and lagoon opposite me have thousands of the bastard plants which laboriously get hand dug
Luckily, they haven’t invaded here yet.
Well if they do, get onto the first one and dig it out!
There is an invasion of Ochna (the mickey mouse plant) in the area too, perhaps this tool might be a good weapon in the fight against it.
*cracks knuckles in anticipation
ruby said:
Michael V said:
ruby said:Oh this is brilliant, thanks TN.
I will get our local mens shed to help make a couple of these for our Bushcare groups.
The creek and lagoon opposite me have thousands of the bastard plants which laboriously get hand dug
Luckily, they haven’t invaded here yet.
Well if they do, get onto the first one and dig it out!
There is an invasion of Ochna (the mickey mouse plant) in the area too, perhaps this tool might be a good weapon in the fight against it. *cracks knuckles in anticipation
Mattock gets rid of that.
ruby said:
Tau.Neutrino said:
Sunshine Coast bushcare volunteer invents weapon for war against asparagus fernhttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-25/asparagus-assassin-tool-invented-fight-invasive-weed/103561264
Oh this is brilliant, thanks TN.
I will get our local mens shed to help make a couple of these for our Bushcare groups.
The creek and lagoon opposite me have thousands of the bastard plants which laboriously get hand dug
Herbicides that can be used for weed control in asparagus include1234:
clethodim (Intensity One, Select, Arrow)
fluazifop (Fusilade DX)
sethoxydim (Poast)
2,4-D (Formula 40, Embed Extra)
dicamba (Clarity)
glyphosate (Roundup)
paraquat
Glyphosate and paraquat are non-selective herbicides with no soil residual activity that can be used in asparagus3. Pre-emerge herbicides with long residual activity (e.g., trifluralin or simazine) can be applied in the early spring before spears begin to emerge to control annual weeds4.
Learn more:
lily of the valley
Aconite.
sarahs mum said:
![]()
lily of the valley
Aconite.
That doesn’t look like “Lily of the Valley”, the bulb flower?
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
![]()
lily of the valley
Aconite.
That doesn’t look like “Lily of the Valley”, the bulb flower?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clethra_arborea
also nothing looks right like this.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
![]()
lily of the valley
Aconite.
That doesn’t look like “Lily of the Valley”, the bulb flower?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clethra_arborea
also nothing looks right like this.
. It is sensitive to frost and likely to die if the temperature falls below −3 °C.
—-
it’s never had a set back so it can do the odd light frost and odd outrageously cold night.
I found very few flowers today.
Still a very few swamp goodenia (Goodenia humilis) in flower:
The prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia) is still working out how to open its buds:
And not a flower…pretty maidenhair fern:
buffy said:
I found very few flowers today.Still a very few swamp goodenia (Goodenia humilis) in flower:
The prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia) is still working out how to open its buds:
And not a flower…pretty maidenhair fern:
i have a different, but similar, monotoca out the front.
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I found very few flowers today.Still a very few swamp goodenia (Goodenia humilis) in flower:
The prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia) is still working out how to open its buds:
And not a flower…pretty maidenhair fern:
i have a different, but similar, monotoca out the front.
There is an observation on iNaturalist for Monotoca glauca at Margate.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/190988715
buffy said:
sarahs mum said:
buffy said:
I found very few flowers today.Still a very few swamp goodenia (Goodenia humilis) in flower:
The prickly broom heath (Monotoca scoparia) is still working out how to open its buds:
And not a flower…pretty maidenhair fern:
i have a different, but similar, monotoca out the front.
There is an observation on iNaturalist for Monotoca glauca at Margate.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/190988715
yes. that’s my one.
Flowers were few and far between today. I knew where to look for the Fringed Hare Orchids (Leporella fimbriata) but I nearly missed them. They are tiny. And there are no leaves until after the flowers. Such little cuties though.
And I picked three for more controlled photos, and they will be pressed for my collection. Here is one of them.
…
…
buffy said:
Flowers were few and far between today. I knew where to look for the Fringed Hare Orchids (Leporella fimbriata) but I nearly missed them. They are tiny. And there are no leaves until after the flowers. Such little cuties though.
And I picked three for more controlled photos, and they will be pressed for my collection. Here is one of them.
…
…
In your defence, that one clearly surrendered.
buffy said:
Flowers were few and far between today. I knew where to look for the Fringed Hare Orchids (Leporella fimbriata) but I nearly missed them. They are tiny. And there are no leaves until after the flowers. Such little cuties though.
And I picked three for more controlled photos, and they will be pressed for my collection. Here is one of them.
…
…
Cute they are.
I suppose I shouldn’t leave out the rushy type things which are also flowering.
Tentatively Leptocarpus and Lepidosperma. Awaiting someone to have a go on iNaturalist to help me with these. They grow prolifically in the teatree swamp area which is not at all swampy at the moment.
…………
buffy said:
I suppose I shouldn’t leave out the rushy type things which are also flowering.Tentatively Leptocarpus and Lepidosperma. Awaiting someone to have a go on iNaturalist to help me with these. They grow prolifically in the teatree swamp area which is not at all swampy at the moment.
…………
The leaf size and shape are often important too.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
I suppose I shouldn’t leave out the rushy type things which are also flowering.Tentatively Leptocarpus and Lepidosperma. Awaiting someone to have a go on iNaturalist to help me with these. They grow prolifically in the teatree swamp area which is not at all swampy at the moment.
…………
The leaf size and shape are often important too.
There are more photos, I just put the flowering bits up here. The rest are on iNaturalist.
buffy said:
Flowers were few and far between today. I knew where to look for the Fringed Hare Orchids (Leporella fimbriata) but I nearly missed them. They are tiny. And there are no leaves until after the flowers. Such little cuties though.
And I picked three for more controlled photos, and they will be pressed for my collection. Here is one of them.
…
…
Cuties indeed, I like the hand for scale. Nice photos.
ruby said:
buffy said:
Flowers were few and far between today. I knew where to look for the Fringed Hare Orchids (Leporella fimbriata) but I nearly missed them. They are tiny. And there are no leaves until after the flowers. Such little cuties though.
And I picked three for more controlled photos, and they will be pressed for my collection. Here is one of them.
…
…
Cuties indeed, I like the hand for scale. Nice photos.
The hand also helps the point and shoot camera to behave and not focus on the grass and litter on the ground, which is apparently more fascinating to my camera than what I want to photograph.
:)
buffy said:
ruby said:
buffy said:
Flowers were few and far between today. I knew where to look for the Fringed Hare Orchids (Leporella fimbriata) but I nearly missed them. They are tiny. And there are no leaves until after the flowers. Such little cuties though.
And I picked three for more controlled photos, and they will be pressed for my collection. Here is one of them.
…
…
Cuties indeed, I like the hand for scale. Nice photos.
The hand also helps the point and shoot camera to behave and not focus on the grass and litter on the ground, which is apparently more fascinating to my camera than what I want to photograph.
:)
Oh yes. The zhooz zhooz of the frustrated camera trying to find what to focus on! I know it well
The Shady Nook @ My Front Entrance
Ogmog said:
The Shady Nook @ My Front Entrance
Them’s is Purdie.😁
Do they just drop seed and grow more??
https://www.instagram.com/reel/C6EzSmPtf5v/?igsh=MXdoNWwycHpta2xzOA==
Not really a flower. It’s a timelapse of a pine tree growing.
dv said:
https://www.instagram.com/reel/C6EzSmPtf5v/?igsh=MXdoNWwycHpta2xzOA==Not really a flower. It’s a timelapse of a pine tree growing.
Cool. Ta.
:)
Woodie said:
Ogmog said:
The Shady Nook @ My Front Entrance
Them’s is Purdie.😁
Do they just drop seed and grow more??
And here are today’s flowers. They were few and far between. I walked for a couple of hours. But…I did find the orchid that I haven’t seen at the covenant since 2007. In a different location. They are tiny. Difficult to notice. Here it is…Parson’s bands.
…..
And some more of the Fringed Hare Orchids I saw last week. I picked half a dozen and then Mr buffy ran over the patch with the high cut mower. They flower right through May, so we may have chopped off a few, but the rest will be easy to see when they pop up.
……….
Also saw some pretty little lichens.
buffy said:
And here are today’s flowers. They were few and far between. I walked for a couple of hours. But…I did find the orchid that I haven’t seen at the covenant since 2007. In a different location. They are tiny. Difficult to notice. Here it is…Parson’s bands.
…..
And some more of the Fringed Hare Orchids I saw last week. I picked half a dozen and then Mr buffy ran over the patch with the high cut mower. They flower right through May, so we may have chopped off a few, but the rest will be easy to see when they pop up.
……….
Also saw some pretty little lichens.
The Parson’s looks happier than the surrendering one. A sort of “yipee!” pose.
Do weeds count as Purdie flaars? That’s all there was in flower at Boram Boram cemetery today. Here are two different yellow daisies:
Hypochaeris radicata (Cat’s ear) and Leontodon saxatilis (Lesser hawkbit)
……….
And some scarlet pimpernel (Lysimachia arvensis)
The pretty little orchids were out today. Difficult to see, good camouflage.
………….
Very few flowers today, but I did find some.
Pink heath and a teatree. I can’t decide if it’s Leptospermum continentale (prickly teatrea) or Leptospermum scoparium (Manuka) It wasn’t as prickly as I thought it would be when I touched it, and maybe the leaves are a bit widish, so I’ve labelled it with L. scoparium for now. Neither of them are in flowering period at the moment, so it’s a rascal, whatever it is.
……….
Flame heath
And black nightshade. A pretty flower, even if it is a weed. I pulled the plants out after I’d photographed them to stop them seeding.
Only one flaar today…pink heath.
But I did see a few fungi, which almost count as flaars. Except fungi are closer to animals than to plants.
Chlorophyllum bruneum (this one is here at home)
Gymnopilus of some sort, I think.
Heterotextus
Little Brown Mushroom (LBM)
Lichenomphalia
And also some moss and lichen.
“ Chlorophyllum bruneum”
But fungi lack chlorophyll.
OCDC said:
“ Chlorophyllum bruneum”But fungi lack chlorophyll.
>>The species epithet brunneum, meaning brown, was first used in the name Lepiota brunnea introduced by American mycologists William Farlow and Edward Burt in 1929, in reference to the distinct brown patch in the pileus centre. The epithet was used at the level of variety in the name Macrolepiota rhacodes var. brunnea. However, in 2002 mycologist Else Vellinga working at University of California Berkeley, transferred the epithet to Chlorophyllum. The name Chlorophyllum was originally introduced for a species with green spores, hence the derivation of the name, from the ancient Greek chloros (green) and phyllon (leaf, in reference to the lamellae). Today, species with both green and white spores are contained within Chlorophyllum. This results in the genus name not matching the properties of all its species. Nevertheless, the rules of nomenclature (naming) require retention of the original name.<<
REF: “Wild Mushrooming. A Guide for Foragers” by Alison Pouliot and Tom May.
buffy said:
OCDC said:TIL“ Chlorophyllum bruneum”>>The species epithet brunneum, meaning brown, was first used in the name Lepiota brunnea introduced by American mycologists William Farlow and Edward Burt in 1929, in reference to the distinct brown patch in the pileus centre. The epithet was used at the level of variety in the name Macrolepiota rhacodes var. brunnea. However, in 2002 mycologist Else Vellinga working at University of California Berkeley, transferred the epithet to Chlorophyllum. The name Chlorophyllum was originally introduced for a species with green spores, hence the derivation of the name, from the ancient Greek chloros (green) and phyllon (leaf, in reference to the lamellae). Today, species with both green and white spores are contained within Chlorophyllum. This results in the genus name not matching the properties of all its species. Nevertheless, the rules of nomenclature (naming) require retention of the original name.<<But fungi lack chlorophyll.
REF: “Wild Mushrooming. A Guide for Foragers” by Alison Pouliot and Tom May.
OCDC said:
buffy said:However the last sentence is incorrect.OCDC said:TIL“ Chlorophyllum bruneum”>>The species epithet brunneum, meaning brown, was first used in the name Lepiota brunnea introduced by American mycologists William Farlow and Edward Burt in 1929, in reference to the distinct brown patch in the pileus centre. The epithet was used at the level of variety in the name Macrolepiota rhacodes var. brunnea. However, in 2002 mycologist Else Vellinga working at University of California Berkeley, transferred the epithet to Chlorophyllum. The name Chlorophyllum was originally introduced for a species with green spores, hence the derivation of the name, from the ancient Greek chloros (green) and phyllon (leaf, in reference to the lamellae). Today, species with both green and white spores are contained within Chlorophyllum. This results in the genus name not matching the properties of all its species. Nevertheless, the rules of nomenclature (naming) require retention of the original name.<<But fungi lack chlorophyll.
REF: “Wild Mushrooming. A Guide for Foragers” by Alison Pouliot and Tom May.
OCDC said:
OCDC said:buffy said:However the last sentence is incorrect.>>The species epithet brunneum, meaning brown, was first used in the name Lepiota brunnea introduced by American mycologists William Farlow and Edward Burt in 1929, in reference to the distinct brown patch in the pileus centre. The epithet was used at the level of variety in the name Macrolepiota rhacodes var. brunnea. However, in 2002 mycologist Else Vellinga working at University of California Berkeley, transferred the epithet to Chlorophyllum. The name Chlorophyllum was originally introduced for a species with green spores, hence the derivation of the name, from the ancient Greek chloros (green) and phyllon (leaf, in reference to the lamellae). Today, species with both green and white spores are contained within Chlorophyllum. This results in the genus name not matching the properties of all its species. Nevertheless, the rules of nomenclature (naming) require retention of the original name.<<TILREF: “Wild Mushrooming. A Guide for Foragers” by Alison Pouliot and Tom May.
I rather suspect Tom May knows a lot about these things…
buffy said:
OCDC said:Tom may need to update himself.OCDC said:I rather suspect Tom May knows a lot about these things…TILHowever the last sentence is incorrect.
https://academic.oup.com/ofid/article/10/1/ofac559/6974385
OCDC said:
buffy said:OCDC said:Tom may need to update himself.However the last sentence is incorrect.I rather suspect Tom May knows a lot about these things…
https://academic.oup.com/ofid/article/10/1/ofac559/6974385
>>It is important to note that fungal nomenclature changes must strictly follow the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants , and any wish to preserve certain names or parts thereof, is overridden by the nomenclatural priority of previous legitimate names for the species.<<
I’m having a bit of trouble with that sentence.
OCDC said:
OCDC said:buffy said:However the last sentence is incorrect.>>The species epithet brunneum, meaning brown, was first used in the name Lepiota brunnea introduced by American mycologists William Farlow and Edward Burt in 1929, in reference to the distinct brown patch in the pileus centre. The epithet was used at the level of variety in the name Macrolepiota rhacodes var. brunnea. However, in 2002 mycologist Else Vellinga working at University of California Berkeley, transferred the epithet to Chlorophyllum. The name Chlorophyllum was originally introduced for a species with green spores, hence the derivation of the name, from the ancient Greek chloros (green) and phyllon (leaf, in reference to the lamellae). Today, species with both green and white spores are contained within Chlorophyllum. This results in the genus name not matching the properties of all its species. Nevertheless, the rules of nomenclature (naming) require retention of the original name.<<TILREF: “Wild Mushrooming. A Guide for Foragers” by Alison Pouliot and Tom May.
It is NOT incorrect. When organisms are reviewed, new genera are often created, or other existing genera used to redefine a new species with radically different features, or to place an existing species into a more appropriate classification. This is what happens continually, and with large families, the changes can be dramatic and far reaching. However, existing genera names are not discarded simply because of spelling mistakes or are thought inappropriate, because if existing species still fit its classification criteria the genera name remains in use. New genera are created to accommodate newly discovered and less related species.
The main reason why an existing genus name is changed is because an earlier name of the genus is discovered, then that will become the new genus name. Very rarely is the entire genus scraped unless it is considered to be very closely related to another genus, then the genus name is changed, but the species from the old genus retain their species names in their new genus classification.
The majority of name classification changes relate to species, as these get separated out from the mix of multiple species within a genus that had been lumped together due to a lack of detailed investigation.
The name Chlorophyllum is derived from the “Greek Chloro meaning green and phyllo meaning leaf (or gill in this case).” Wiki. This is not a critical error and considering the age and development of scientific fungi classification and when this was group was described it is quite acceptable.
PermeateFree said:
OCDC said:
OCDC said:TILHowever the last sentence is incorrect.
It is NOT incorrect. When organisms are reviewed, new genera are often created, or other existing genera used to redefine a new species with radically different features, or to place an existing species into a more appropriate classification. This is what happens continually, and with large families, the changes can be dramatic and far reaching. However, existing genera names are not discarded simply because of spelling mistakes or are thought inappropriate, because if existing species still fit its classification criteria the genera name remains in use. New genera are created to accommodate newly discovered and less related species.
The main reason why an existing genus name is changed is because an earlier name of the genus is discovered, then that will become the new genus name. Very rarely is the entire genus scraped unless it is considered to be very closely related to another genus, then the genus name is changed, but the species from the old genus retain their species names in their new genus classification.
The majority of name classification changes relate to species, as these get separated out from the mix of multiple species within a genus that had been lumped together due to a lack of detailed investigation.
The name Chlorophyllum is derived from the “Greek Chloro meaning green and phyllo meaning leaf (or gill in this case).” Wiki. This is not a critical error and considering the age and development of scientific fungi classification and when this was group was described it is quite acceptable.
Tom May is the head mycologist at Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne. I think he is probably correct.
:)
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
OCDC said:
However the last sentence is incorrect.
It is NOT incorrect. When organisms are reviewed, new genera are often created, or other existing genera used to redefine a new species with radically different features, or to place an existing species into a more appropriate classification. This is what happens continually, and with large families, the changes can be dramatic and far reaching. However, existing genera names are not discarded simply because of spelling mistakes or are thought inappropriate, because if existing species still fit its classification criteria the genera name remains in use. New genera are created to accommodate newly discovered and less related species.
The main reason why an existing genus name is changed is because an earlier name of the genus is discovered, then that will become the new genus name. Very rarely is the entire genus scraped unless it is considered to be very closely related to another genus, then the genus name is changed, but the species from the old genus retain their species names in their new genus classification.
The majority of name classification changes relate to species, as these get separated out from the mix of multiple species within a genus that had been lumped together due to a lack of detailed investigation.
The name Chlorophyllum is derived from the “Greek Chloro meaning green and phyllo meaning leaf (or gill in this case).” Wiki. This is not a critical error and considering the age and development of scientific fungi classification and when this was group was described it is quite acceptable.
Tom May is the head mycologist at Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne. I think he is probably correct.
:)
And he also really, really up with nomenclature…being on the nomenclature committee and all.
https://www.rbg.vic.gov.au/science/science-staff/tom-may/
Here Yous Go https://www.iapt-taxon.org/nomen/main.php Go Lawyerise Yourselves Out
Who Doesn’t Like A Good Appeal To Authority
SCIENCE said:
Who Doesn’t Like A Good Appeal To Authority
I have been involved with many Research Scientists whose work is based on the International Code of Nomenclature. Buffy and I fully support the code, whilst OCDC does not seem to appreciate how it works in practice. My post is purely a clarification.
PermeateFree said:
SCIENCE said:
Who Doesn’t Like A Good Appeal To Authority
I have been involved with many Research Scientists whose work is based on the International Code of Nomenclature. Buffy and I fully support the code, whilst OCDC does not seem to appreciate how it works in practice. My post is purely a clarification.
Who Doesn’t Have Main Character Syndrome Andor Other Ideas Of Reference
SCIENCE said:
PermeateFree said:
SCIENCE said:
Who Doesn’t Like A Good Appeal To Authority
I have been involved with many Research Scientists whose work is based on the International Code of Nomenclature. Buffy and I fully support the code, whilst OCDC does not seem to appreciate how it works in practice. My post is purely a clarification.
Who Doesn’t Have Main Character Syndrome Andor Other Ideas Of Reference
You are a nasty piece of shit SCIENCE, with nothing to contribute other than your juvenile smartarse comments.
PermeateFree said:
SCIENCE said:
PermeateFree said:
I have been involved with many Research Scientists whose work is based on the International Code of Nomenclature. Buffy and I fully support the code, whilst OCDC does not seem to appreciate how it works in practice. My post is purely a clarification.
Who Doesn’t Have Main Character Syndrome Andor Other Ideas Of Reference
You are a nasty piece of shit SCIENCE, with nothing to contribute other than your juvenile smartarse comments.
Says the contributor who contributed this¡
PermeateFree said:
SCIENCE said:Who Doesn’t Like A Good Appeal To Authority
I have been involved with many Research Scientists whose work is based on the International Code of Nomenclature. Buffy and I fully support the code, whilst OCDC does not seem to appreciate how it works in practice. My post is purely a clarification.
I respect both buffy’s work and research. I also respect PF’s knowledge of Botany and the science of Taxonomical nomenclature.
I understand OCFC questions.
I don’t grok why in the name of SCIENCE that attacks are made.
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/nzUoruZjJaZTq5Nj/?mibextid=D5vuiz
Consider what Sir David Attenborough has to say about the electricity of flowers and bees.
Conservationists unite to save charming spider orchid as habitat loss threatens survival
ABC article to which I have not a link
OCDC said:
Conservationists unite to save charming spider orchid as habitat loss threatens survivalABC article to which I have not a link
There are quite some purdy flaars images in the article.
OCDC said:
Conservationists unite to save charming spider orchid as habitat loss threatens survivalABC article to which I have not a link
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-07-07/native-charming-spider-orchid-evolution-conservation/104054088
Dendrosenecio, Kilimanjaro
They look very Lost in Space.
dv said:
![]()
Dendrosenecio, Kilimanjaro
“I don’t think we’re in Kansas any more, Toto.”
OCDC said:
They look very Lost in Space.
Yeah
captain_spalding said:
dv said:
![]()
Dendrosenecio, Kilimanjaro
“I don’t think we’re in Kansas any more, Toto.”
Huh….in the Asteraceae family…..crikey.
Related to sunflowers.
The whacko family member.
There are a few flowers starting to show up in the bush, but it’s still very, very dry out there.
Corybas diemenicus (helmet orchid) and Epacris impressa (pink heath)
…….
Hibbertia fasciculata (bundled guinea flower)
Isopogon ceratophyllus (Horny conebush)
On my bit of a bushwalk I found many greenhoods. Lots of flowering Pterostylis nana, some had already been pollinated.
Saw some Pterostylis rufa that hadn’t opened any flowers yet. Spider orchid spikes were rising and the Diuris maculata isn’t far off flowering. Eight Calochilus robertsonii are half grown, so there may be more when they raise their heads high enough to see.
Milk maids are well into their flowering.
roughbarked said:
On my bit of a bushwalk I found many greenhoods. Lots of flowering Pterostylis nana, some had already been pollinated.
![]()
Saw some Pterostylis rufa that hadn’t opened any flowers yet. Spider orchid spikes were rising and the Diuris maculata isn’t far off flowering. Eight Calochilus robertsonii are half grown, so there may be more when they raise their heads high enough to see.
Milk maids are well into their flowering.
I’m pretty sure your milkmaids are not Burchardia but early Nancies, Wurmbea.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
On my bit of a bushwalk I found many greenhoods. Lots of flowering Pterostylis nana, some had already been pollinated.
![]()
Saw some Pterostylis rufa that hadn’t opened any flowers yet. Spider orchid spikes were rising and the Diuris maculata isn’t far off flowering. Eight Calochilus robertsonii are half grown, so there may be more when they raise their heads high enough to see.
Milk maids are well into their flowering.
I’m pretty sure your milkmaids are not Burchardia but early Nancies, Wurmbea.
Looks like Wurmbea are called spike lilies by iNaturalist. I’ve always known them as Early Nancies. Here is the NSW map of observations, I’m not sure exactly where you are.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=6825&subview=map&taxon_id=120086
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
On my bit of a bushwalk I found many greenhoods. Lots of flowering Pterostylis nana, some had already been pollinated.
![]()
Saw some Pterostylis rufa that hadn’t opened any flowers yet. Spider orchid spikes were rising and the Diuris maculata isn’t far off flowering. Eight Calochilus robertsonii are half grown, so there may be more when they raise their heads high enough to see.
Milk maids are well into their flowering.
I’m pretty sure your milkmaids are not Burchardia but early Nancies, Wurmbea.
Yes. Sorry my slip of the tongue. Early Nacy’s is what I should have said. Don’t know why I typed that without spotting the error. Thanks.
buffy said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
On my bit of a bushwalk I found many greenhoods. Lots of flowering Pterostylis nana, some had already been pollinated.
![]()
Saw some Pterostylis rufa that hadn’t opened any flowers yet. Spider orchid spikes were rising and the Diuris maculata isn’t far off flowering. Eight Calochilus robertsonii are half grown, so there may be more when they raise their heads high enough to see.
Milk maids are well into their flowering.
I’m pretty sure your milkmaids are not Burchardia but early Nancies, Wurmbea.
Looks like Wurmbea are called spike lilies by iNaturalist. I’ve always known them as Early Nancies. Here is the NSW map of observations, I’m not sure exactly where you are.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=6825&subview=map&taxon_id=120086
Early Nancy is what I’ve always called them. I don’t actually get milkmaids here.
At least I was calling them that for quite a while.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/roughbarked/4896846948/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/roughbarked/4896332877/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/roughbarked/20359216975/
Daffodils are daffodil-ing:
……….
And the Helleborus are helleboring:
buffy said:
Daffodils are daffodil-ing:
……….
I see you also have some oxalis.
My gardens are more wild.
roughbarked said:
My gardens are more wild.
Weird how the last one is upside down?
buffy said:
Daffodils are daffodil-ing:
……….
On walking tracks in the UK they often plant daffodils at the base of signage along the way, it’s a nice touch.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Daffodils are daffodil-ing:
……….
On walking tracks in the UK they often plant daffodils at the base of signage along the way, it’s a nice touch.
They certainly brighten up dull days.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Daffodils are daffodil-ing:
……….
I see you also have some oxalis.
How many thousand bulblets would you like?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
Daffodils are daffodil-ing:
……….
I see you also have some oxalis.
How many thousand bulblets would you like?
None thanks. I don’t have that one and am not keen on acquiring it.
The first Spreklia.
Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
SCIENCE said:
Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿Plantæ, IINM.
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
OCDC said:
SCIENCE said:
Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿Plantæ, IINM.
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
🇪🇺karyota
SCIENCE said:
Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
I’d like to know what this is please
Tamb said:
SCIENCE said:Plantæ, IINM.Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
I’d like to know what this is please
Tamb said:
SCIENCE said:Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
I’d like to know what this is please
The orchid was known as Dendrobium speciosum but who knows what they call it today.
SCIENCE said:
Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
Can you do a better photo than that?
roughbarked said:
SCIENCE said:
Need some of yousr genius help here any of yous know what this¿
Size pretty small, flower diameter about 5 mm.
Can you do a better photo than that?
thanks, will do next time we walk down that road, it’s a dry prickly bush with a strong smell if you disrupt it, used to have it near the home when we were much younger but now it’s almost nowhere to be found
I photographed some wattles today. Four species and one more that isn’t out yet.
Acacia exudans (Casterton wattle), which is on the critical list but certainly occurs in abundance around our covenant.
Acacia melanoxylon (blackwood wattle), magnificent trees, we have them in many stages from very young to very old.
Acacia oxycedrus (spike wattle). I only know of one tree of this, but there are probably more.
Acacia suaveolens (sweet wattle). Again, I only know of one of these but there must be more. I don’t like going in to photograph this one because I have to bash through the bracken and make sure I don’t trip on logs or stand on snakes.
buffy said:
I photographed some wattles today. Four species and one more that isn’t out yet.Acacia exudans (Casterton wattle), which is on the critical list but certainly occurs in abundance around our covenant.
Acacia melanoxylon (blackwood wattle), magnificent trees, we have them in many stages from very young to very old.
Acacia oxycedrus (spike wattle). I only know of one tree of this, but there are probably more.
Acacia suaveolens (sweet wattle). Again, I only know of one of these but there must be more. I don’t like going in to photograph this one because I have to bash through the bracken and make sure I don’t trip on logs or stand on snakes.
It is the season for a lot of the wattles.
I’d plant a A. melanoxylon but it isn’t really suitable country for them. Way too dry. Though I recall a car park planting I did at the Dept. of Ag. The main tree I planted was A. melanoxylon for shade but they’d be irrigated.
Drosera were getting started.
Moss and lichen.
Even found one creeping violet.
Diiuris maculata and Caladenia carnea.
roughbarked said:
![]()
Diiuris maculata and Caladenia carnea.
I get a lot of double i’s in the wrong places. Must be a shaky finger.
There are Micromyrtus ciliata in back and Grevillea floribunda with some pink fingers beneath.
And today’s flaars are a couple of weeds:
Erigeron (horseweed) and Erodium (storks bill)
…..
And a couple of natives:
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum growing in the gravel path by the highway (such a wonderful name) and a sedge of some sort.
……….
buffy said:
And today’s flaars are a couple of weeds:Erigeron (horseweed) and Erodium (storks bill)
…..
And a couple of natives:
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum growing in the gravel path by the highway (such a wonderful name) and a sedge of some sort.
……….
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum is also known as Jersey cudweed.
That sedge looks like a very thin little Christmas tree.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And today’s flaars are a couple of weeds:Erigeron (horseweed) and Erodium (storks bill)
…..
And a couple of natives:
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum growing in the gravel path by the highway (such a wonderful name) and a sedge of some sort.
……….
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum is also known as Jersey cudweed.
That sedge looks like a very thin little Christmas tree.
It’s considered native throughout Australia
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And today’s flaars are a couple of weeds:Erigeron (horseweed) and Erodium (storks bill)
…..
And a couple of natives:
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum growing in the gravel path by the highway (such a wonderful name) and a sedge of some sort.
……….
Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum is also known as Jersey cudweed.
That sedge looks like a very thin little Christmas tree.
It’s considered native throughout Australia
We have lots of different sedges here.
I took a mere 10 photos at the bush this morning, there is very little about to photograph. Which is annoying the hell out of me because there are heaps of photos of flowers in the Grampians going up on iNaturalist. Anyway, have a couple of flowers.
Acacia myrtifolia (Myrtle wattle)…………………………………………………………..Pterostylis pedunculata (Maroonhood)
……..
And a mushroom of some sort. I didn’t bring it home, so I’ll have to use supermarket mushroom in our stirfry tonight…
buffy said:
I took a mere 10 photos at the bush this morning, there is very little about to photograph. Which is annoying the hell out of me because there are heaps of photos of flowers in the Grampians going up on iNaturalist. Anyway, have a couple of flowers.Acacia myrtifolia (Myrtle wattle)…………………………………………………………..Pterostylis pedunculata (Maroonhood)
……..
And a mushroom of some sort. I didn’t bring it home, so I’ll have to use supermarket mushroom in our stirfry tonight…
Phew, praise the lord
kryten said:
buffy said:
I took a mere 10 photos at the bush this morning, there is very little about to photograph. Which is annoying the hell out of me because there are heaps of photos of flowers in the Grampians going up on iNaturalist. Anyway, have a couple of flowers.Acacia myrtifolia (Myrtle wattle)…………………………………………………………..Pterostylis pedunculata (Maroonhood)
……..
And a mushroom of some sort. I didn’t bring it home, so I’ll have to use supermarket mushroom in our stirfry tonight…
Phew, praise the lord
Nice.
Two differernt Diuris.
roughbarked said:
Is it Diuris pardina in your part of the world. Top right one looks like what we call D. pardina here. But there are three or four leopard orchids in Victoria, depending on where you are.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Is it Diuris pardina in your part of the world. Top right one looks like what we call D. pardina here. But there are three or four leopard orchids in Victoria, depending on where you are.
I’ve mentioned it on iNaturalist last year and mistakenly stated that I hadn’t seen it this year but today I learned that I was looking about 40cm away from where it actually is/was last year. So it is still there.
D. pardina was one of the names I thought it could be but am unsure. I originally called it D.aequalis and haven’t had a confirm on what it is yet. My iNaturalist
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Is it Diuris pardina in your part of the world. Top right one looks like what we call D. pardina here. But there are three or four leopard orchids in Victoria, depending on where you are.
I’ve mentioned it on iNaturalist last year and mistakenly stated that I hadn’t seen it this year but today I learned that I was looking about 40cm away from where it actually is/was last year. So it is still there.
D. pardina was one of the names I thought it could be but am unsure. I originally called it D.aequalis and haven’t had a confirm on what it is yet. My iNaturalist
I looked at iNaturalist for your area and there is one research grade observation for D. pardina. eamon_c is a very knowledgeable orchid identifier in my experience.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Is it Diuris pardina in your part of the world. Top right one looks like what we call D. pardina here. But there are three or four leopard orchids in Victoria, depending on where you are.
I’ve mentioned it on iNaturalist last year and mistakenly stated that I hadn’t seen it this year but today I learned that I was looking about 40cm away from where it actually is/was last year. So it is still there.
D. pardina was one of the names I thought it could be but am unsure. I originally called it D.aequalis and haven’t had a confirm on what it is yet. My iNaturalist
I looked at iNaturalist for your area and there is one research grade observation for D. pardina. eamon_c is a very knowledgeable orchid identifier in my experience.
He does sound like he knows his stuff. Yes.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:I’ve mentioned it on iNaturalist last year and mistakenly stated that I hadn’t seen it this year but today I learned that I was looking about 40cm away from where it actually is/was last year. So it is still there.
D. pardina was one of the names I thought it could be but am unsure. I originally called it D.aequalis and haven’t had a confirm on what it is yet. My iNaturalist
I looked at iNaturalist for your area and there is one research grade observation for D. pardina. eamon_c is a very knowledgeable orchid identifier in my experience.
He does sound like he knows his stuff. Yes.
It is in the foreground here with an usual Leopard in background.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:I looked at iNaturalist for your area and there is one research grade observation for D. pardina. eamon_c is a very knowledgeable orchid identifier in my experience.
He does sound like he knows his stuff. Yes.
It is in the foreground here with an usual Leopard in background.
Can you please make a new observation of this year’s flower and take it off last year’s observation. It makes a mess of the data if you add them onto an observation for a different time.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:He does sound like he knows his stuff. Yes.
It is in the foreground here with an usual Leopard in background.
Can you please make a new observation of this year’s flower and take it off last year’s observation. It makes a mess of the data if you add them onto an observation for a different time.
OK. Yes. That makes sense. I’ll keep observing it of course and add new photos for this year.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:It is in the foreground here with an usual Leopard in background.
Can you please make a new observation of this year’s flower and take it off last year’s observation. It makes a mess of the data if you add them onto an observation for a different time.
OK. Yes. That makes sense. I’ll keep observing it of course and add new photos for this year.
I’ve not made many observations at iNat as of yet. I still have to learn how to remove the image and anyway eamonn_c has already commented and like you has leaned towards a mutant D. pardina.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Can you please make a new observation of this year’s flower and take it off last year’s observation. It makes a mess of the data if you add them onto an observation for a different time.
OK. Yes. That makes sense. I’ll keep observing it of course and add new photos for this year.
I’ve not made many observations at iNat as of yet. I still have to learn how to remove the image and anyway eamonn_c has already commented and like you has leaned towards a mutant D. pardina.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
Compare illustration with your one.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:OK. Yes. That makes sense. I’ll keep observing it of course and add new photos for this year.
I’ve not made many observations at iNat as of yet. I still have to learn how to remove the image and anyway eamonn_c has already commented and like you has leaned towards a mutant D. pardina.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
Compare illustration with your one.
Thanks but the location of the observation you have shown is several hundreds of km from the location I have photographed this one at.
I see what you are pointing out as a possibility but as I’ve said. There are a few buts. To be sure of ID I’d have to section out the flower or get someone who is actally more capable that myself of doing that?
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:I’ve not made many observations at iNat as of yet. I still have to learn how to remove the image and anyway eamonn_c has already commented and like you has leaned towards a mutant D. pardina.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
Compare illustration with your one.
Thanks but the location of the observation you have shown is several hundreds of km from the location I have photographed this one at.
I see what you are pointing out as a possibility but as I’ve said. There are a few buts. To be sure of ID I’d have to section out the flower or get someone who is actally more capable that myself of doing that?
By the way, it isn’t occurring in what would normally be described as grassland either. It is in Acacia doratoxylon, Casuarina stricta , Euc. dwyerii type country.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:I’ve not made many observations at iNat as of yet. I still have to learn how to remove the image and anyway eamonn_c has already commented and like you has leaned towards a mutant D. pardina.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
Compare illustration with your one.
Thanks but the location of the observation you have shown is several hundreds of km from the location I have photographed this one at.
I see what you are pointing out as a possibility but as I’ve said. There are a few buts. To be sure of ID I’d have to section out the flower or get someone who is actally more capable that myself of doing that?
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+punctata
I think this occurs in your district, so not as far-fetched as you infer.
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+sulfurea
Compare illustration with your one.
Thanks but the location of the observation you have shown is several hundreds of km from the location I have photographed this one at.
I see what you are pointing out as a possibility but as I’ve said. There are a few buts. To be sure of ID I’d have to section out the flower or get someone who is actally more capable that myself of doing that?
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+punctata
I think this occurs in your district, so not as far-fetched as you infer.
A possibility again. Though I’ve extensively researched the areas where orchids still occur on land that isn’t privately owned around here and have never seen a D.punctata of any type around here. I’ll have to go do some measurements. I only have the one specimen so I can’t pull it up and examine the whole plant.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Can you please make a new observation of this year’s flower and take it off last year’s observation. It makes a mess of the data if you add them onto an observation for a different time.
OK. Yes. That makes sense. I’ll keep observing it of course and add new photos for this year.
I’ve not made many observations at iNat as of yet. I still have to learn how to remove the image and anyway eamonn_c has already commented and like you has leaned towards a mutant D. pardina.
All you need to do is open your observation, click edit (near the top right of the screen) and untick that photo. Then click on the save observation button (down near bottom left if I remember correctly)
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:OK. Yes. That makes sense. I’ll keep observing it of course and add new photos for this year.
I’ve not made many observations at iNat as of yet. I still have to learn how to remove the image and anyway eamonn_c has already commented and like you has leaned towards a mutant D. pardina.
All you need to do is open your observation, click edit (near the top right of the screen) and untick that photo. Then click on the save observation button (down near bottom left if I remember correctly)
Thanks.
By the way, https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&showsyn=&dist=&constat=&lvl=in&name=Diuris~punctata~var.+punctata was found only in Condobolin.
Catalogue number: NSW231415
Record number: 3265
Institution: The Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust
Collection: National Herbarium of New South Wales
Purple Donkey-orchid
Diuris punctata var. punctata
Collector: Cunningham, G.M. | Milthorpe, P.L.
Event date: 1974-10-13
Condobolin is around 225km distant. The tails on the flower are long.
In Plants of Western NSW, the closest flower is D.pedunculata.
There is constant renaming of the orchids of recent years as the DNA information is now coming through. One of the yellow Diuris in this area has changed from D. corymbosa to D. orientis. D. corymbosa is now considered to be endemic in WA. They look very similar…they are one of the yellow ones with brown splodges. Another of the brown splodged ones here goes as D. pardina on iNaturalist but Gary Backhouse’s latest book explains that that name, strictly speaking, is now considered endemic to SA and D. curvifolia (an old name) has been reinstated for Victoria. This “new” (old) name is not yet in the systems for iNaturalist and VicFlora. And then there is D. leopardina, also recently hived off from the curvifolia group according to Backhouse’s book. This group needs sorting out. To me they look very, very similar in pictures. In the flesh I’ve only seen orientis at our covenant.
buffy said:
There is constant renaming of the orchids of recent years as the DNA information is now coming through. One of the yellow Diuris in this area has changed from D. corymbosa to D. orientis. D. corymbosa is now considered to be endemic in WA. They look very similar…they are one of the yellow ones with brown splodges. Another of the brown splodged ones here goes as D. pardina on iNaturalist but Gary Backhouse’s latest book explains that that name, strictly speaking, is now considered endemic to SA and D. curvifolia (an old name) has been reinstated for Victoria. This “new” (old) name is not yet in the systems for iNaturalist and VicFlora. And then there is D. leopardina, also recently hived off from the curvifolia group according to Backhouse’s book. This group needs sorting out. To me they look very, very similar in pictures. In the flesh I’ve only seen orientis at our covenant.
Yeah. Constantly revising older classifications.
Maybe I should look n those new orchid books I’ve got.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
There is constant renaming of the orchids of recent years as the DNA information is now coming through. One of the yellow Diuris in this area has changed from D. corymbosa to D. orientis. D. corymbosa is now considered to be endemic in WA. They look very similar…they are one of the yellow ones with brown splodges. Another of the brown splodged ones here goes as D. pardina on iNaturalist but Gary Backhouse’s latest book explains that that name, strictly speaking, is now considered endemic to SA and D. curvifolia (an old name) has been reinstated for Victoria. This “new” (old) name is not yet in the systems for iNaturalist and VicFlora. And then there is D. leopardina, also recently hived off from the curvifolia group according to Backhouse’s book. This group needs sorting out. To me they look very, very similar in pictures. In the flesh I’ve only seen orientis at our covenant.
Yeah. Constantly revising older classifications.
Maybe I should look n those new orchid books I’ve got.
and that didn’t help at a first glance. Time to go and take various measurements.
I’ve noted that of the Diuris present at the site, there is quite some variation evident.
ie:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
There is constant renaming of the orchids of recent years as the DNA information is now coming through. One of the yellow Diuris in this area has changed from D. corymbosa to D. orientis. D. corymbosa is now considered to be endemic in WA. They look very similar…they are one of the yellow ones with brown splodges. Another of the brown splodged ones here goes as D. pardina on iNaturalist but Gary Backhouse’s latest book explains that that name, strictly speaking, is now considered endemic to SA and D. curvifolia (an old name) has been reinstated for Victoria. This “new” (old) name is not yet in the systems for iNaturalist and VicFlora. And then there is D. leopardina, also recently hived off from the curvifolia group according to Backhouse’s book. This group needs sorting out. To me they look very, very similar in pictures. In the flesh I’ve only seen orientis at our covenant.
Yeah. Constantly revising older classifications.
Maybe I should look n those new orchid books I’ve got.
and that didn’t help at a first glance. Time to go and take various measurements.
I’ve noted that of the Diuris present at the site, there is quite some variation evident.
ie:
I think they would all get the pardina label here. No two splodges are the same!
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Yeah. Constantly revising older classifications.
Maybe I should look n those new orchid books I’ve got.
and that didn’t help at a first glance. Time to go and take various measurements.
I’ve noted that of the Diuris present at the site, there is quite some variation evident.
ie:
I think they would all get the pardina label here. No two splodges are the same!
Plants of Western NSW didn’t mention D. pardina. Called them D. maculata but I’m tending to agree that they more likely fit into D. pardina.
No Golden Moth orchids at the cemetery yet. I found some Pauridia (not sure which one) and some early nancies. Very sparse numbers yet.
………………
And the Craspedia paludicola is starting to flower in the table drain and wet roadside on the Dunkeld Road. This will possibly be a mass of flowers in about a month. My old Field Naturalist friend is fond of these ones.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:and that didn’t help at a first glance. Time to go and take various measurements.
I’ve noted that of the Diuris present at the site, there is quite some variation evident.
ie:
I think they would all get the pardina label here. No two splodges are the same!
Plants of Western NSW didn’t mention D. pardina. Called them D. maculata but I’m tending to agree that they more likely fit into D. pardina.
D. pardina is now considered endemic to South Australia according to Backhouse. (I think I put that in a post earlier this morning?). Every source I can find on the web still seems to use pardina in a more general sense. I make the assumption that Gary Backhouse knows something about the subject.
Pink fingers were probably at their peak.
Spiders are just starting. Some are in full flower but most are still coming.
P. nana are mostly in seed and P. multifida is currently out in full.
Twining glycine is not quite yet at its best.
We do need another fall of rain.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:I think they would all get the pardina label here. No two splodges are the same!
Plants of Western NSW didn’t mention D. pardina. Called them D. maculata but I’m tending to agree that they more likely fit into D. pardina.
D. pardina is now considered endemic to South Australia according to Backhouse. (I think I put that in a post earlier this morning?). Every source I can find on the web still seems to use pardina in a more general sense. I make the assumption that Gary Backhouse knows something about the subject.
I have the Orchids of NSW anf ACT by L.M. Copeland and G.N. Backhouse. Only recently obtained and yet to be fully perused.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Plants of Western NSW didn’t mention D. pardina. Called them D. maculata but I’m tending to agree that they more likely fit into D. pardina.
D. pardina is now considered endemic to South Australia according to Backhouse. (I think I put that in a post earlier this morning?). Every source I can find on the web still seems to use pardina in a more general sense. I make the assumption that Gary Backhouse knows something about the subject.
I have the Orchids of NSW anf ACT by L.M. Copeland and G.N. Backhouse. Only recently obtained and yet to be fully perused.
Have a look and see what they have done with pardina. It should be the same as the explanation in the Victorian book. Assuming it is set out the same way, you need to read the notes at the end of the section for each Diuris that looks splodgy because he references back to old names there.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:D. pardina is now considered endemic to South Australia according to Backhouse. (I think I put that in a post earlier this morning?). Every source I can find on the web still seems to use pardina in a more general sense. I make the assumption that Gary Backhouse knows something about the subject.
I have the Orchids of NSW anf ACT by L.M. Copeland and G.N. Backhouse. Only recently obtained and yet to be fully perused.
Have a look and see what they have done with pardina. It should be the same as the explanation in the Victorian book. Assuming it is set out the same way, you need to read the notes at the end of the section for each Diuris that looks splodgy because he references back to old names there.
Thanks. I’ve just got back from the site where I took some photos and measurements.
Saw a lot more orchids today. Found two new purple bearded orchid sites. Pink fingers ae in their glory. Just sheets of them whichever way one looked, in certain places. Spiders were better in new sies found as well. More protected from these winds.
I don’t remember ever seeing a spider orchid in real life.
roughbarked said:
Saw a lot more orchids today. Found two new purple bearded orchid sites. Pink fingers ae in their glory. Just sheets of them whichever way one looked, in certain places. Spiders were better in new sies found as well. More protected from these winds.
I’ll have to turn those the right way up.
buffy said:
I don’t remember ever seeing a spider orchid in real life.
Thousands of them here, if you find the right spots.
Indigo is starting.
turned up.
roughbarked said:
turned up.
These, I am reasonably sure that they are the Green Comb Spider orchid and that is Caladenia dilatata, by the Plants of Western NSW book. The nomenclature may have changed siince 1980
roughbarked said:
Indigo is starting.
I’ve just done several IDs for that on iNat.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
turned up.
These, I am reasonably sure that they are the Green Comb Spider orchid and that is Caladenia dilatata, by the Plants of Western NSW book. The nomenclature may have changed siince 1980
My pet name for them is clown orchid.
It was horribly wind for doing this but I needed Mrs rb to attempt to hold the rulers straight and steady because she works tomorrow and today had to be it.
Strangely enough we met my friendly farmer neighbour and his wife out there as they came back from a long wallk through the area finding new plants I hadn’t yet recorded. Not really strange as I had text imaged the photos from yesterday to his phone.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Plants of Western NSW didn’t mention D. pardina. Called them D. maculata but I’m tending to agree that they more likely fit into D. pardina.
D. pardina is now considered endemic to South Australia according to Backhouse. (I think I put that in a post earlier this morning?). Every source I can find on the web still seems to use pardina in a more general sense. I make the assumption that Gary Backhouse knows something about the subject.
I have the Orchids of NSW anf ACT by L.M. Copeland and G.N. Backhouse. Only recently obtained and yet to be fully perused.
Did you check today’s green comb orchid in this book?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:D. pardina is now considered endemic to South Australia according to Backhouse. (I think I put that in a post earlier this morning?). Every source I can find on the web still seems to use pardina in a more general sense. I make the assumption that Gary Backhouse knows something about the subject.
I have the Orchids of NSW anf ACT by L.M. Copeland and G.N. Backhouse. Only recently obtained and yet to be fully perused.
Did you check today’s green comb orchid in this book?
Not yet.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:I have the Orchids of NSW anf ACT by L.M. Copeland and G.N. Backhouse. Only recently obtained and yet to be fully perused.
Did you check today’s green comb orchid in this book?
Not yet.
I asked my other half to write down what I was attempting to measure with a pair of dividers in the wind with a precious orchid. This is what I got.
Mind, I was also asking her to hold a ruler and I think she also needs hearing aids. It was windy.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Did you check today’s green comb orchid in this book?
Not yet.
I asked my other half to write down what I was attempting to measure with a pair of dividers in the wind with a precious orchid. This is what I got.
Mind, I was also asking her to hold a ruler and I think she also needs hearing aids. It was windy.
I believe 25cm was really mm.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Not yet.
I asked my other half to write down what I was attempting to measure with a pair of dividers in the wind with a precious orchid. This is what I got.
Mind, I was also asking her to hold a ruler and I think she also needs hearing aids. It was windy.
I believe 25cm was really mm.
Or how high it was.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Not yet.
I asked my other half to write down what I was attempting to measure with a pair of dividers in the wind with a precious orchid. This is what I got.
Mind, I was also asking her to hold a ruler and I think she also needs hearing aids. It was windy.
I believe 25cm was really mm.
This is from her phone.
At the end of the upright stick. Another 60cm away was this Diurus. That’s me with the tape measure.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:I asked my other half to write down what I was attempting to measure with a pair of dividers in the wind with a precious orchid. This is what I got.
Mind, I was also asking her to hold a ruler and I think she also needs hearing aids. It was windy.
I believe 25cm was really mm.
Or how high it was.
It was just shy of nine inches tall by the rule that was by it.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:I believe 25cm was really mm.
Or how high it was.
It was just shy of nine inches tall by the rule that was by it.
https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/2192002/
What’s “just shy of nine inches” in cubits.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Or how high it was.
It was just shy of nine inches tall by the rule that was by it.
https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/2192002/
and. it had more flowers and was taller, last season.
Peak Warming Man said:
What’s “just shy of nine inches” in cubits.
Now yer talkin’.
I’ll add. Nowhere near it
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:It was just shy of nine inches tall by the rule that was by it.
https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/2192002/
and. it had more flowers and was taller, last season.
However, It could yet make more flowers and be taller but in this wind, I don’t thing many of the orchids in this site will last to do the extras.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/2192002/
and. it had more flowers and was taller, last season.
However, It could yet make more flowers and be taller but in this wind, I don’t thing many of the orchids in this site will last to do the extras.
Thing think. How did I make that typo?
Peak Warming Man said:
What’s “just shy of nine inches” in cubits.A smidgen of a furlong.
OCDC said:
Peak Warming Man said:What’s “just shy of nine inches” in cubits.A smidgen of a furlong.
Things are getting way out of hands breadth.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Not yet.
I asked my other half to write down what I was attempting to measure with a pair of dividers in the wind with a precious orchid. This is what I got.
Mind, I was also asking her to hold a ruler and I think she also needs hearing aids. It was windy.
I believe 25cm was really mm.
Flower stalk, from the photos you showed earlier.
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:I asked my other half to write down what I was attempting to measure with a pair of dividers in the wind with a precious orchid. This is what I got.
Mind, I was also asking her to hold a ruler and I think she also needs hearing aids. It was windy.
I believe 25cm was really mm.
Flower stalk, from the photos you showed earlier.
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:I believe 25cm was really mm.
Flower stalk, from the photos you showed earlier.
yeah.
She is a teacher.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:I believe 25cm was really mm.
Or how high it was.
It was just shy of nine inches tall by the rule that was by it.
Which is close to 25cm (not exactly the same, but close). Presumably your scribe was just writing down what you called out. Why would you do some measures in imperial and some in metric?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Or how high it was.
It was just shy of nine inches tall by the rule that was by it.
Which is close to 25cm (not exactly the same, but close). Presumably your scribe was just writing down what you called out. Why would you do some measures in imperial and some in metric?
Bluddy ruler was upside down.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:It was just shy of nine inches tall by the rule that was by it.
Which is close to 25cm (not exactly the same, but close). Presumably your scribe was just writing down what you called out. Why would you do some measures in imperial and some in metric?
Bluddy ruler was upside down.
Had the mm upside down.. Too much maths.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
Michael V said:Flower stalk, from the photos you showed earlier.
yeah.
She is a teacher.
How is that relevent?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:yeah.
She is a teacher.
How is that relevent?
She is probably smarter than me?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:She is a teacher.
How is that relevent?
She is probably smarter than me?
Well, you were the one doing the measuring…any error is not down to the scribe. She wasn’t holding the ruler upside down.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:She is a teacher.
How is that relevent?
She is probably smarter than me?
Anyway, because with all this wind, time is short.
I will attempt to get my friendly neighbourhood farmer friend to go out earlier in the day if the wind is quieter tomorrow.
and do a more scientific assessment.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:How is that relevent?
She is probably smarter than me?
Well, you were the one doing the measuring…any error is not down to the scribe. She wasn’t holding the ruler upside down.
I was also trying to hold the camera, the dividers and the measuring stick, while she was doing what she was doing.
Buffy, is there a way to see how many views of a posted image that have been on iNaturalist?
roughbarked said:
Buffy, is there a way to see how many views of a posted image that have been on iNaturalist?
Not that I know of. I’ve never been interested in that. Perhaps there is. I’ll look at one of mine and see what is there. But right at the moment iNaturalist isn’t loading well here.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Buffy, is there a way to see how many views of a posted image that have been on iNaturalist?
Not that I know of. I’ve never been interested in that. Perhaps there is. I’ll look at one of mine and see what is there. But right at the moment iNaturalist isn’t loading well here.
Not a signidicant waste of your time and energy. I’ll have a look myself.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Buffy, is there a way to see how many views of a posted image that have been on iNaturalist?
Not that I know of. I’ve never been interested in that. Perhaps there is. I’ll look at one of mine and see what is there. But right at the moment iNaturalist isn’t loading well here.
Not a signidicant waste of your time and energy. I’ll have a look myself.
No, doesn’t look like it. Probably not useful information.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Not that I know of. I’ve never been interested in that. Perhaps there is. I’ll look at one of mine and see what is there. But right at the moment iNaturalist isn’t loading well here.
Not a signidicant waste of your time and energy. I’ll have a look myself.
No, doesn’t look like it. Probably not useful information.
Thanks for looking.
Only one sort of flower of interest at the roadside herbfield this morning. Since it’s rained it’s a bit wet in there again. A buttercup of some sort.
Bearded orchid not quite yet.
Nice drive out.
buffy said:
Only one sort of flower of interest at the roadside herbfield this morning. Since it’s rained it’s a bit wet in there again. A buttercup of some sort.
Ranunculus glabrifolius, IDd by someone who knows their buttercups.
buffy said:
buffy said:
Only one sort of flower of interest at the roadside herbfield this morning. Since it’s rained it’s a bit wet in there again. A buttercup of some sort.
Ranunculus glabrifolius, IDd by someone who knows their buttercups.
:)
roughbarked said:
Enough. I’d better go get some marring done.
No Golden Moth orchids at our cemetery yet, but I did find some other flowers, one of which I hadn’t seen there before (the buttercup).
Drosera gunniana (I think, might be hookeri, no common name) and an Erodium (introduced species)
……….
Pauridia vaginata (yellow star) and Ranunculus lappaceus (Australian buttercup)
…..
Wurmbea dioica (Early Nancy)
Now I’ve cropped and sorted and named, I’ll upload them to iNaturalist and see if I’ve IDd them correctly.
Then I went to the wetland reserve (and ascertained that indeed I do need to mow along the sides of the walking path again) and photographed some flowers there too.
Acacia paradoxa (hedge wattle, part of the revegetation, but may be the wrong one for the area)
Melicytus dentata (tree violet. Also a reveg planting many years ago, could well be one born at the reserve by now)
Stellaria media, an introduced plant and considered a weed. Pretty though.
A couple of fungi were “flowering” too. Volvopluteus gloiocephalus was very young and slimy.
And some Laccaria.
I, too, partook in fungi today.
The Purple Bearded orchids are just starting and since this year I’ve fouund more than 20 plants, There should be ample display
We are just on the cusp of Spring, but I did find some early wildflowers:
Some different sorts of wattle.
…..
A really pretty Boronia, a lot of it out now.
Blue stars just starting, a bit pale. They will be a stronger blue as the season goes on.
Love creeper tying up a grass tree.
A Billy Button. This is a new one for my plant list. I’d not recorded it before, although it is apparently a reasonably common plant.
buffy said:
We are just on the cusp of Spring, but I did find some early wildflowers:Some different sorts of wattle.
…..
A really pretty Boronia, a lot of it out now.
Blue stars just starting, a bit pale. They will be a stronger blue as the season goes on.
Love creeper tying up a grass tree.
A Billy Button. This is a new one for my plant list. I’d not recorded it before, although it is apparently a reasonably common plant.
You have so much variation botanically.
buffy said:
We are just on the cusp of Spring, but I did find some early wildflowers:Some different sorts of wattle.
…..
A really pretty Boronia, a lot of it out now.
Blue stars just starting, a bit pale. They will be a stronger blue as the season goes on.
Love creeper tying up a grass tree.
A Billy Button. This is a new one for my plant list. I’d not recorded it before, although it is apparently a reasonably common plant.
Lovely boronia. Does it have a scent?
….and….some more!
A climbing sundew. I know where this plant is and this is now the third year I’ve seen it in flower.
“Pink heath” – but the white version.
A bundled guinea flower.
And running postman. Seems to be a bit pink, it’s usually a bright red colour.
And the one and only orchid flower I found – a nodding greenhood.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
We are just on the cusp of Spring, but I did find some early wildflowers:Some different sorts of wattle.
…..
A really pretty Boronia, a lot of it out now.
Blue stars just starting, a bit pale. They will be a stronger blue as the season goes on.
Love creeper tying up a grass tree.
A Billy Button. This is a new one for my plant list. I’d not recorded it before, although it is apparently a reasonably common plant.
You have so much variation botanically.
Oh, this is just the beginning of the season. In late September and October there is a fabulous variety. There is waaaay more than this out there. I haven’t counted the species. I have recorded 22 orchid species, two of them endangered.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
We are just on the cusp of Spring, but I did find some early wildflowers:Some different sorts of wattle.
…..
A really pretty Boronia, a lot of it out now.
Blue stars just starting, a bit pale. They will be a stronger blue as the season goes on.
Love creeper tying up a grass tree.
A Billy Button. This is a new one for my plant list. I’d not recorded it before, although it is apparently a reasonably common plant.
Lovely boronia. Does it have a scent?
Yes, quite a pleasant one. Not so evident today because it was damp and cold.
buffy said:
….and….some more!A climbing sundew. I know where this plant is and this is now the third year I’ve seen it in flower.
“Pink heath” – but the white version.
A bundled guinea flower.
And running postman. Seems to be a bit pink, it’s usually a bright red colour.
And the one and only orchid flower I found – a nodding greenhood.
You have so much flora. I must be a wonder every time you go out and look.
Check to see if this pink Kennedia you see has others. It may be a natural mutant.
A lovely collection of flowers Buffy.
The nursery I work at can’t grow enough billy buttons. They have become very popular.
They are also having trouble sourcing seed. They asked me to grow some and collect the seed for them. Well…if I must….
:)))
ruby said:
A lovely collection of flowers Buffy.
The nursery I work at can’t grow enough billy buttons. They have become very popular.
They are also having trouble sourcing seed. They asked me to grow some and collect the seed for them. Well…if I must…. :)))
Seed is problematic.
and again, the plants are susceptible to all manner of dieback situations before seed is made/.
roughbarked said:
ruby said:
A lovely collection of flowers Buffy.
The nursery I work at can’t grow enough billy buttons. They have become very popular.
They are also having trouble sourcing seed. They asked me to grow some and collect the seed for them. Well…if I must…. :)))
Seed is problematic.
and again, the plants are susceptible to all manner of dieback situations before seed is made/.
I’ve spent much of my life working with plants when I wasn’t working on people’s timepieces.
I came to realise that any plant can be grown from as much as a single bud or even only a leaf petiole. Then there were meristem clones and all that.
Billy buttons cam be separated and propagated even if seed fails but, they can also die off and frustrate your whole program.
ruby said:
A lovely collection of flowers Buffy.
The nursery I work at can’t grow enough billy buttons. They have become very popular.
They are also having trouble sourcing seed. They asked me to grow some and collect the seed for them. Well…if I must…. :)))
We only have 2 over here as far as I can see…Craspedia paludicola (I know where some of them are, you need gumboots to get near them) and C. variabilis (the one I saw today, I think). Which one is used commercially, is it Pycnosorus?
buffy said:
ruby said:
A lovely collection of flowers Buffy.
The nursery I work at can’t grow enough billy buttons. They have become very popular.
They are also having trouble sourcing seed. They asked me to grow some and collect the seed for them. Well…if I must…. :)))
We only have 2 over here as far as I can see…Craspedia paludicola (I know where some of them are, you need gumboots to get near them) and C. variabilis (the one I saw today, I think). Which one is used commercially, is it Pycnosorus?
The nursery I’m at sources a number of plants from Victoria, they often take the plant road less travelled. I shall check but I think Craspedia variabilis is one.
You are right that Pycnosorus globosus is the more usual one in the trade…natural range is more inland but I shall see how it likes a bit more humidity. The boss says the problem is not in the growing, just being around when the seed is ripe
Some of the purdie flaars out at the moment in the bush around here…
fsm said:
Some of the purdie flaars out at the moment in the bush around here…
Bloody nice.
:)
fsm said:
Some of the purdie flaars out at the moment in the bush around here…
Your bush is very brightly coloured.
:)
buffy said:
fsm said:
Some of the purdie flaars out at the moment in the bush around here…
Your bush is very brightly coloured.
:)
The tall one is some kind of orchid.
fsm said:
buffy said:
fsm said:
Some of the purdie flaars out at the moment in the bush around here…
Your bush is very brightly coloured.
:)
The tall one is some kind of orchid.
The mauve one? I’d have said Patersonia of some sort. But I don’t know your area (or even where you are!)
buffy said:
fsm said:
buffy said:Your bush is very brightly coloured.
:)
The tall one is some kind of orchid.
The mauve one? I’d have said Patersonia of some sort. But I don’t know your area (or even where you are!)
I think he means the photo underneath, a Prasophyllum, commonly known as a leek orchid.
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:
fsm said:The tall one is some kind of orchid.
The mauve one? I’d have said Patersonia of some sort. But I don’t know your area (or even where you are!)
I think he means the photo underneath, a Prasophyllum, commonly known as a leek orchid.
Yes, I just had another look – I must have skipped over that one because there wasn’t a lot of detail. But you beat me to it before I could come back and correct myself.
:)
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:
buffy said:The mauve one? I’d have said Patersonia of some sort. But I don’t know your area (or even where you are!)
I think he means the photo underneath, a Prasophyllum, commonly known as a leek orchid.
Yes, I just had another look – I must have skipped over that one because there wasn’t a lot of detail. But you beat me to it before I could come back and correct myself.
:)
Here are some other pics of it.
fsm said:
buffy said:
PermeateFree said:I think he means the photo underneath, a Prasophyllum, commonly known as a leek orchid.
Yes, I just had another look – I must have skipped over that one because there wasn’t a lot of detail. But you beat me to it before I could come back and correct myself.
:)
Here are some other pics of it.
They really are pretty, but so small. I’ve seen an onion orchid (once) but so far not a leek orchid. I suspect I haven’t got my eye in for them.
buffy said:
fsm said:
buffy said:Yes, I just had another look – I must have skipped over that one because there wasn’t a lot of detail. But you beat me to it before I could come back and correct myself.
:)
Here are some other pics of it.
They really are pretty, but so small. I’ve seen an onion orchid (once) but so far not a leek orchid. I suspect I haven’t got my eye in for them.
This one was about a metre tall.
fsm said:
buffy said:
fsm said:Here are some other pics of it.
They really are pretty, but so small. I’ve seen an onion orchid (once) but so far not a leek orchid. I suspect I haven’t got my eye in for them.
This one was about a metre tall.
Looking at my Backhouse orchid book, there seem to be a couple of Victorian ones at around 90cm, but most are 60cm or less, and a lot are 40cm or less. I sort of hope I might notice something 50cm or taller.
Hinze Dam photograph by Whitney Lee
https://www.whitneylee.com.au/
(Not exactly flowers, but flora).
dv said:
![]()
Hinze Dam photograph by Whitney Lee
https://www.whitneylee.com.au/
(Not exactly flowers, but flora).
Looks like the everglades?
Lake Cakora in New South Wales
Photographer: Derry Moroney
Don’t have a general nature photography thread so this was close enough.
I’ve been out to the cemetery again to check progress. The orchid officionado I’ve been talking to on iNaturalist will be here Tuesday to look at (and photograph) them. It’s looking good so far. On Tuesday there were one or two in flower. Today there are probably four or five out fully and quite a lot of buds. By next Tuesday I hope there are plenty for him to look at.
And there are hundreds of Early Nancies out there now too.
buffy said:
I’ve been out to the cemetery again to check progress. The orchid officionado I’ve been talking to on iNaturalist will be here Tuesday to look at (and photograph) them. It’s looking good so far. On Tuesday there were one or two in flower. Today there are probably four or five out fully and quite a lot of buds. By next Tuesday I hope there are plenty for him to look at.
And there are hundreds of Early Nancies out there now too.
Fine blooms.
Here is my purdiest flower of the day. It may be Caladenia ornata (which is endangered). I’m about to put the photo up on iNaturalist to see if I am howled down with the ID.
…………
First batch…these are the flowers from the cemetery. There were quite lot of weeds, some of them pretty (the bottom one is a weed, I think). And the yellow moth orchids are gaining in numbers
…………
buffy said:
First batch…these are the flowers from the cemetery. There were quite lot of weeds, some of them pretty (the bottom one is a weed, I think). And the yellow moth orchids are gaining in numbers
…………
Those gooseberry things look a bit alien.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
First batch…these are the flowers from the cemetery. There were quite lot of weeds, some of them pretty (the bottom one is a weed, I think). And the yellow moth orchids are gaining in numbers
…………
Those gooseberry things look a bit alien.
They are sundews. They eat insects…
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
First batch…these are the flowers from the cemetery. There were quite lot of weeds, some of them pretty (the bottom one is a weed, I think). And the yellow moth orchids are gaining in numbers
…………
Those gooseberry things look a bit alien.
They are sundews. They eat insects…
Thought they might be but I couldn’t recall their name.
And some more…
Craspedia paludicola and some lapwing eggs. I don’t know where the bird was, but I didn’t get bombed
….
A couple of weeds, Oxalis purpurea and Parentucellia latifolia (broad leaved glandweed)
…
And a couple of natives, Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum (as seen last week – Jersey cudweed) and Wurmbea dioica (Early Nancy)
…….
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:Those gooseberry things look a bit alien.
They are sundews. They eat insects…
Thought they might be but I couldn’t recall their name.
That one is the Grassland Sundew. It’s sort of yellowish green, many branched, and small.
buffy said:
First batch…these are the flowers from the cemetery. There were quite lot of weeds, some of them pretty (the bottom one is a weed, I think). And the yellow moth orchids are gaining in numbers
…………
Love the Drosera shot.
I photographed about 80 species of plants yesterday at the covenant. And 6 fungi. Here are some pretty ones.
A couple of wattles
…..
A pink Boronia
A blue star (these flowers are only about a cm across)
Love creeper, magnificent when it goes up through a wattle tree in bloom. But I didn’t find any doing that yesterday.
And back to my uploading to iNaturalist.
buffy said:
I photographed about 80 species of plants yesterday at the covenant. And 6 fungi. Here are some pretty ones.A couple of wattles
…..
A pink Boronia
A blue star (these flowers are only about a cm across)
Love creeper, magnificent when it goes up through a wattle tree in bloom. But I didn’t find any doing that yesterday.
And back to my uploading to iNaturalist.
Lovely.
:)
Michael V said:
buffy said:
I photographed about 80 species of plants yesterday at the covenant. And 6 fungi. Here are some pretty ones.A couple of wattles
…..
A pink Boronia
A blue star (these flowers are only about a cm across)
Love creeper, magnificent when it goes up through a wattle tree in bloom. But I didn’t find any doing that yesterday.
And back to my uploading to iNaturalist.
Lovely.
:)
Bewdies.
And I photographed 5 species of sundews (Drosera). I’ve recorded 6 species out there.
D. aberrans
D.auriculata
……….
D. glanduligera
D. hookeri
D. planchonii
buffy said:
And I photographed 5 species of sundews (Drosera). I’ve recorded 6 species out there.D. aberrans
D.auriculata
……….
D. glanduligera
D. hookeri
D. planchonii
You certainly have a plethora of Drosera.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
And I photographed 5 species of sundews (Drosera). I’ve recorded 6 species out there.D. aberrans
D.auriculata
……….
D. glanduligera
D. hookeri
D. planchonii
You certainly have a plethora of Drosera.
There are thousands of aberrans and auriculata and hookeri. I know of 2 planchonii (but there must be more). The little ones, glanduligera and pygmaea are more difficult to notice, but there are probably quite a lot of them too. Perhaps that just means there are plenty of insects for them to eat. There were certainly mosquitoes in the swampy area yesterday.
buffy said:
And I photographed 5 species of sundews (Drosera). I’ve recorded 6 species out there.D. aberrans
D.auriculata
……….
D. glanduligera
D. hookeri
D. planchonii
I have only seen one Drosera in this region – Drosera spatulata.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
And I photographed 5 species of sundews (Drosera). I’ve recorded 6 species out there.D. aberrans
D.auriculata
……….
D. glanduligera
D. hookeri
D. planchonii
You certainly have a plethora of Drosera.
There are thousands of aberrans and auriculata and hookeri. I know of 2 planchonii (but there must be more). The little ones, glanduligera and pygmaea are more difficult to notice, but there are probably quite a lot of them too. Perhaps that just means there are plenty of insects for them to eat. There were certainly mosquitoes in the swampy area yesterday.
Amazing how that when the Droseras can perform, mossies are in abundance. Even in country where you’d likely not expect it, that little slightly moist gully in extremely dry terrain, mossies annoying.
Here are some more flaars:
(Gaudium myrsinoides) teatree and (Glossodia major) waxlip orchid:
…
A Hibbertia (guinea flower) and (Kennedia prostrata) running postman:
…….
(Leucopogon virgatus) beard heath and a (Pterostylis pedunculata) maroonhood orchid:
………
(Tetratheca ciliata) pink bells and (Viola hederacea) ivy leaved violet:
………
While everyone is distracted, I’ll pop some photos from this morning in here. I think I’m getting the hang of the 1cm macro setting.
Creeping Bossiaea and Bulbine lily
…..
Golden moth orchid and Drosera gunniana
…..
Yellow star and a buttercup
…
Early Nancy
buffy said:
While everyone is distracted, I’ll pop some photos from this morning in here. I think I’m getting the hang of the 1cm macro setting.Creeping Bossiaea and Bulbine lily
…..
Golden moth orchid and Drosera gunniana
…..
Yellow star and a buttercup
…
Early Nancy
Some pleasing forms there. Drosera gunniana looks like a micro-rose.
buffy said:
While everyone is distracted, I’ll pop some photos from this morning in here. I think I’m getting the hang of the 1cm macro setting.Creeping Bossiaea and Bulbine lily
…..
Golden moth orchid and Drosera gunniana
…..
Yellow star and a buttercup
…
Early Nancy
All very pretty and your early nancy’s have rounded petals whereas the ones around here have sharp points.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
While everyone is distracted, I’ll pop some photos from this morning in here. I think I’m getting the hang of the 1cm macro setting.Creeping Bossiaea and Bulbine lily
…..
Golden moth orchid and Drosera gunniana
…..
Yellow star and a buttercup
…
Early Nancy
All very pretty and your early nancy’s have rounded petals whereas the ones around here have sharp points.
So yours is presumably not Wurmbea dioica then? PlantNET list 5 species of Wurmbea for NSW.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
While everyone is distracted, I’ll pop some photos from this morning in here. I think I’m getting the hang of the 1cm macro setting.Creeping Bossiaea and Bulbine lily
…..
Golden moth orchid and Drosera gunniana
…..
Yellow star and a buttercup
…
Early Nancy
All very pretty and your early nancy’s have rounded petals whereas the ones around here have sharp points.
So yours is presumably not Wurmbea dioica then? PlantNET list 5 species of Wurmbea for NSW.
Aha, I was guessing that it was a different species but with the same common name.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:All very pretty and your early nancy’s have rounded petals whereas the ones around here have sharp points.
So yours is presumably not Wurmbea dioica then? PlantNET list 5 species of Wurmbea for NSW.
Aha, I was guessing that it was a different species but with the same common name.
What is yours?
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:So yours is presumably not Wurmbea dioica then? PlantNET list 5 species of Wurmbea for NSW.
Aha, I was guessing that it was a different species but with the same common name.
What is yours?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Aha, I was guessing that it was a different species but with the same common name.
What is yours?
Yours will be a Wurmbea. Here is the key to work it out:
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=gn&name=Wurmbea
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:What is yours?
Yours will be a Wurmbea. Here is the key to work it out:
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=gn&name=Wurmbea
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
Yours will be a Wurmbea. Here is the key to work it out:
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=gn&name=Wurmbea
These are all local but two are from 60km away.
I think the bottom photo is Wurmbea citrina
PermeateFree said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:Yours will be a Wurmbea. Here is the key to work it out:
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=gn&name=Wurmbea
These are all local but two are from 60km away.
I think the bottom photo is Wurmbea citrina
Yes. I was leaning that way.
Went for a long ramble with friends yesterday at Somersby and got surprised by very early Christmas Bells
We’ve been finding lots of waratahs this season.
I’m hoping enough will be left to go to seed for even more of them in years to come
And a tiny little pea flower, we have put it to a friend who heads up the pea study group to ID it
ruby said:
Went for a long ramble with friends yesterday at Somersby and got surprised by very early Christmas Bells
We’ve been finding lots of waratahs this season.
I’m hoping enough will be left to go to seed for even more of them in years to come
And a tiny little pea flower, we have put it to a friend who heads up the pea study group to ID it
Cheery blooms.
The sun orchids are leafing and budding, but they are shy. Here is what I found just now out the road (not as clear as I’d like, but the wind is gusting welll into the 40s out there):
This is what they look like when you sneak up on them and catch them open (19th October last year)
There are also grassland sundews and some weeds (Sparaxis, I think)
…..
buffy said:
The sun orchids are leafing and budding, but they are shy. Here is what I found just now out the road (not as clear as I’d like, but the wind is gusting welll into the 40s out there):
This is what they look like when you sneak up on them and catch them open (19th October last year)
![]()
There are also grassland sundews and some weeds (Sparaxis, I think)
…..
Do you pull the weeds like Sparaxis?
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The sun orchids are leafing and budding, but they are shy. Here is what I found just now out the road (not as clear as I’d like, but the wind is gusting welll into the 40s out there):
This is what they look like when you sneak up on them and catch them open (19th October last year)
![]()
There are also grassland sundews and some weeds (Sparaxis, I think)
…..
Do you pull the weeds like Sparaxis?
There are kms and kms of them. I’ve got enough to do without that as well.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The sun orchids are leafing and budding, but they are shy. Here is what I found just now out the road (not as clear as I’d like, but the wind is gusting welll into the 40s out there):
This is what they look like when you sneak up on them and catch them open (19th October last year)
![]()
There are also grassland sundews and some weeds (Sparaxis, I think)
…..
Do you pull the weeds like Sparaxis?
There are kms and kms of them. I’ve got enough to do without that as well.
Yes. I feel the same way about Gazanias.
Question for wise peeps this place, some of our associates had this knocked off the bulb, reckon we would be able to grow any back from this¿
SCIENCE said:
Question for wise peeps this place, some of our associates had this knocked off the bulb, reckon we would be able to grow any back from this¿
How long has it been off the bulb and what is it?
roughbarked said:
SCIENCE said:
Question for wise peeps this place, some of our associates had this knocked off the bulb, reckon we would be able to grow any back from this¿
How long has it been off the bulb and what is it?
12 hours one of those native grass sticks on a bulb things
SCIENCE said:
roughbarked said:
SCIENCE said:
Question for wise peeps this place, some of our associates had this knocked off the bulb, reckon we would be able to grow any back from this¿
How long has it been off the bulb and what is it?
12 hours one of those native grass sticks on a bulb things
might not be native we d’n‘o’ to be honest
SCIENCE said:
roughbarked said:
SCIENCE said:
Question for wise peeps this place, some of our associates had this knocked off the bulb, reckon we would be able to grow any back from this¿
How long has it been off the bulb and what is it?
12 hours one of those native grass sticks on a bulb things
Looks like an ‘air plant’?
If it is, then I reckon that is a big enough piece to be able to grow.
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
roughbarked said:
How long has it been off the bulb and what is it?
12 hours one of those native grass sticks on a bulb things
Looks like an ‘air plant’?
If it is, then I reckon that is a big enough piece to be able to grow.
oh the top does look a bit like that, but definitely in the ground
we did more searching and it’s probably this
SCIENCE said:
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
12 hours one of those native grass sticks on a bulb things
Looks like an ‘air plant’?
If it is, then I reckon that is a big enough piece to be able to grow.
oh the top does look a bit like that, but definitely in the ground
we did more searching and it’s probably this
Ahhh, pony tail palm.
Might be enough to grow a new one. They’re pretty easy, should grow if you just stick it in the ground.
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
ruby said:
Looks like an ‘air plant’?
If it is, then I reckon that is a big enough piece to be able to grow.
oh the top does look a bit like that, but definitely in the ground
we did more searching and it’s probably this
Ahhh, pony tail palm.
Might be enough to grow a new one. They’re pretty easy, should grow if you just stick it in the ground.
Will it be better to pull off the lower leaves, some pages are suggesting.
SCIENCE said:
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
oh the top does look a bit like that, but definitely in the ground
we did more searching and it’s probably this
Ahhh, pony tail palm.
Might be enough to grow a new one. They’re pretty easy, should grow if you just stick it in the ground.
Will it be better to pull off the lower leaves, some pages are suggesting.
Yep. Sorry. Should have mentioned that.
Pull a few leaves off in a downwards direction. You need to leave a small bare piece of stem if possible, but it is a small piece and I fear there may not be enough stem left once you start taking leaves off.
Keep the soil just moist but not wet, too wet and the cutting may rot.
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
ruby said:
Ahhh, pony tail palm.
Might be enough to grow a new one. They’re pretty easy, should grow if you just stick it in the ground.
Will it be better to pull off the lower leaves, some pages are suggesting.
Yep. Sorry. Should have mentioned that.
Pull a few leaves off in a downwards direction. You need to leave a small bare piece of stem if possible, but it is a small piece and I fear there may not be enough stem left once you start taking leaves off.
Keep the soil just moist but not wet, too wet and the cutting may rot.
Thanks, will see how it goes, then if it works and we remember will update.
SCIENCE said:
SCIENCE said:
roughbarked said:
How long has it been off the bulb and what is it?
12 hours one of those native grass sticks on a bulb things
might not be native we d’n‘o’ to be honest
OK. 12 hours without sustenance will kill even the toughest green thing.
If it is a grass tree then it will reshoot from the trunk.
If it is a bulb it should try to reshoot from the bulb.
I’f you had wanted to save the top then you should have given it the best conditions immediately it broke off.
SCIENCE said:
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
12 hours one of those native grass sticks on a bulb things
Looks like an ‘air plant’?
If it is, then I reckon that is a big enough piece to be able to grow.
oh the top does look a bit like that, but definitely in the ground
we did more searching and it’s probably this
If that is what it is then I agree with the above.
SCIENCE said:
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
oh the top does look a bit like that, but definitely in the ground
we did more searching and it’s probably this
Ahhh, pony tail palm.
Might be enough to grow a new one. They’re pretty easy, should grow if you just stick it in the ground.
Will it be better to pull off the lower leaves, some pages are suggesting.
Yes.
SCIENCE said:
ruby said:
SCIENCE said:
Will it be better to pull off the lower leaves, some pages are suggesting.
Yep. Sorry. Should have mentioned that.
Pull a few leaves off in a downwards direction. You need to leave a small bare piece of stem if possible, but it is a small piece and I fear there may not be enough stem left once you start taking leaves off.
Keep the soil just moist but not wet, too wet and the cutting may rot.
Thanks, will see how it goes, then if it works and we remember will update.
Good.
Have some flaars from our local cemetery this morning.
Some weeds. Sparaxis bulbifera and Sparaxis tricolour. South Africans who are weed in Australia, lots of South African bulbs have colonized the roadsides in the Western District of Victoria. There are also thousands of hot pink Ixias out up at the cemetery but I photographed them last week. This week I just collected a good handful and put them on our friend’s grave.
……….
And then the native plants. A couple of burrs…hairy sheeps burr and bidgee widgee.
……….
Woodruff and milkmaids
…..
The golden moths are still flowering, but winding down in numbers.
…..
A tiny little geranium and common riceflowers.
…..
buffy said:
Have some flaars from our local cemetery this morning.Some weeds. Sparaxis bulbifera and Sparaxis tricolour. South Africans who are weed in Australia, lots of South African bulbs have colonized the roadsides in the Western District of Victoria. There are also thousands of hot pink Ixias out up at the cemetery but I photographed them last week. This week I just collected a good handful and put them on our friend’s grave.
……….
And then the native plants. A couple of burrs…hairy sheeps burr and bidgee widgee.
……….
Woodruff and milkmaids
…..
The golden moths are still flowering, but winding down in numbers.
…..
A tiny little geranium and common riceflowers.
…..
Some appealing blooms there.
I wonder which technique buffy uses – using the right arm to draw the string to bend the bow, or using the strength of the whole body to bend the bow to draw the string:
My yeoman father taught me how to draw, how to lay my body in my bow … not to draw with strength of arms as divers other nations do … I had my bows bought me according to my age and strength, as I increased in them, so my bows were made bigger and bigger. For men shall never shoot well unless they be brought up to it.
— Hugh Latimer.
What Latimer meant when he describes laying his body into the bow was described thus:
The Englishman did not keep his left hand steady, and draw his bow with his right; but keeping his right at rest upon the nerve, he pressed the whole weight of his body into the horns of his bow. Hence probably arose the phrase “bending the bow”, and the French of “drawing” one.
— W. Gilpin.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_longbow
buffy said:
Have some flaars from our local cemetery this morning.Some weeds. Sparaxis bulbifera and Sparaxis tricolour. South Africans who are weed in Australia, lots of South African bulbs have colonized the roadsides in the Western District of Victoria. There are also thousands of hot pink Ixias out up at the cemetery but I photographed them last week. This week I just collected a good handful and put them on our friend’s grave.
……….
And then the native plants. A couple of burrs…hairy sheeps burr and bidgee widgee.
……….
Woodruff and milkmaids
…..
The golden moths are still flowering, but winding down in numbers.
…..
A tiny little geranium and common riceflowers.
…..
Lovely.
Saw some orchids today:
Waxlip orchids (Glossodia major), various shades of colour and various sizes
…….
Maroonhoods (Pterostylis pedunculata) in a family group
………
Wallflower orchid (Diuris orientis). First flower of the season
And some other miscellaneous flowers:
A wattle which I think is an unusual form of Acacia paradoxa. Waiting on input from a botanist on this one.
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
Twining fringe lily (Thysanotus patersonii). Very tiny thing. Every season I am surprised how small they are.
buffy said:
And some other miscellaneous flowers:A wattle which I think is an unusual form of Acacia paradoxa. Waiting on input from a botanist on this one.
Love creeper (Comesperma volubile)
Twining fringe lily (Thysanotus patersonii). Very tiny thing. Every season I am surprised how small they are.
Bigness genes appear to be a liability with many of these wildflowers.
buffy said:
Saw some orchids today:Waxlip orchids (Glossodia major), various shades of colour and various sizes
…….
Maroonhoods (Pterostylis pedunculata) in a family group
………
Wallflower orchid (Diuris orientis). First flower of the season
it does look like a wallflower…
buffy said:
Saw some orchids today:Waxlip orchids (Glossodia major), various shades of colour and various sizes
…….
Maroonhoods (Pterostylis pedunculata) in a family group
………
Wallflower orchid (Diuris orientis). First flower of the season
Lovely purdie flaars Buffy
ruby said:
buffy said:
Saw some orchids today:Waxlip orchids (Glossodia major), various shades of colour and various sizes
…….
Maroonhoods (Pterostylis pedunculata) in a family group
………
Wallflower orchid (Diuris orientis). First flower of the season
Lovely purdie flaars Buffy
Going into the Grampians tomorrow with my bushwandering friend and her 4WD wheelie walker. There may be more photos tomorrow evening.
:)
J and I walked most of the track to Beehive Falls in the North part of the Grampians today, but we didn’t get to the base of the falls. The 4WD walker frame is good, but not good enough for the rock steps.
I chose not to do that last 100m either because halfway up what you can see there is a log fallen across the path. I decided not to challenge my left knee with stepping over that.
However…we saw some beautiful flaars. Just out of Dunkeld, both sides of the road were carpeted with Bulbine lilies.
And there was an echidna in there amongst them, but hiding his/her head against a rock. They appear to believe that if they hide their head and can’t see you, you can’t see them.
buffy said:
J and I walked most of the track to Beehive Falls in the North part of the Grampians today, but we didn’t get to the base of the falls. The 4WD walker frame is good, but not good enough for the rock steps.
I chose not to do that last 100m either because halfway up what you can see there is a log fallen across the path. I decided not to challenge my left knee with stepping over that.
However…we saw some beautiful flaars. Just out of Dunkeld, both sides of the road were carpeted with Bulbine lilies.
And there was an echidna in there amongst them, but hiding his/her head against a rock. They appear to believe that if they hide their head and can’t see you, you can’t see them.
:)
Looks a lovely spot.
And a selection of flaars from the walking track to the falls.
Caladenia carnea (Pink lady fingers), Caladenia ornata (Ornate pink fingers) and Pterostylis curta (Blunt greenhood)
…..
…..
Calytrix tetragona (Fringe myrtle) and Drosera glanduligera (Pimpernel sundew)
……….
Goodenia ovata (Hop goodenia) and Grevillea aquifolium (Variable prickly grevillea)
……….
Prostanthera hirtula (Hairy mint bush)
Stypandra glauca (nodding blue lily)
Thryptomene calycina (Grampians thryptomene)
buffy said:
And a selection of flaars from the walking track to the falls.Caladenia carnea (Pink lady fingers), Caladenia ornata (Ornate pink fingers) and Pterostylis curta (Blunt greenhood)
…..
…..
Calytrix tetragona (Fringe myrtle) and Drosera glanduligera (Pimpernel sundew)
……….
Goodenia ovata (Hop goodenia) and Grevillea aquifolium (Variable prickly grevillea)
……….
Prostanthera hirtula (Hairy mint bush)
Stypandra glauca (nodding blue lily)
Thryptomene calycina (Grampians thryptomene)
Nice assortment of blooms. I particularly like the thryptomene spray.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And a selection of flaars from the walking track to the falls.Caladenia carnea (Pink lady fingers), Caladenia ornata (Ornate pink fingers) and Pterostylis curta (Blunt greenhood)
…..
…..
Calytrix tetragona (Fringe myrtle) and Drosera glanduligera (Pimpernel sundew)
……….
Goodenia ovata (Hop goodenia) and Grevillea aquifolium (Variable prickly grevillea)
……….
Prostanthera hirtula (Hairy mint bush)
Stypandra glauca (nodding blue lily)
Thryptomene calycina (Grampians thryptomene)
Nice assortment of blooms. I particularly like the thryptomene spray.
There are hundreds of bushes of it through the Grampians and it is just starting to come out. It’s very pretty.
buffy said:
And a selection of flaars from the walking track to the falls.Caladenia carnea (Pink lady fingers), Caladenia ornata (Ornate pink fingers) and Pterostylis curta (Blunt greenhood)
…..
…..
Calytrix tetragona (Fringe myrtle) and Drosera glanduligera (Pimpernel sundew)
……….
Goodenia ovata (Hop goodenia) and Grevillea aquifolium (Variable prickly grevillea)
……….
Prostanthera hirtula (Hairy mint bush)
Stypandra glauca (nodding blue lily)
Thryptomene calycina (Grampians thryptomene)
Good to see that you didn’t meet a snakey end out there Buffy!
Love both your posts, the field of bulbine lilies is pretty special. And all the orchids.
But oh, the Thryptomene calycina. I think I need to see if work has one of those tomorrow, I think my garden needs one. Or three. Or five perhaps.
ruby said:
buffy said:
And a selection of flaars from the walking track to the falls.Caladenia carnea (Pink lady fingers), Caladenia ornata (Ornate pink fingers) and Pterostylis curta (Blunt greenhood)
…..
…..
Calytrix tetragona (Fringe myrtle) and Drosera glanduligera (Pimpernel sundew)
……….
Goodenia ovata (Hop goodenia) and Grevillea aquifolium (Variable prickly grevillea)
……….
Prostanthera hirtula (Hairy mint bush)
Stypandra glauca (nodding blue lily)
Thryptomene calycina (Grampians thryptomene)
Good to see that you didn’t meet a snakey end out there Buffy!
Love both your posts, the field of bulbine lilies is pretty special. And all the orchids.
But oh, the Thryptomene calycina. I think I need to see if work has one of those tomorrow, I think my garden needs one. Or three. Or five perhaps.
Didn’t see any snakes. We did have a snake bandage in the walking frame, just in case. J knows the Grampians well. She is almost 80 and started bushwalking there when she was 16. I’m a bit geographically challenged (like my maternal grandmother…“take her into the back paddock, turn her around 3 times, and she is lost), so I was happy to let her do the driving. She wanted to do it, and she managed very very well. I’m a bit tired (but then I walked for over an hour at our own bush yesterday) but I reckon J will sleep well tonight. She really wanted to go to her old haunt and was very appreciative of me accompanying her. The last time she went to Beehive Falls was when she took her husband a few years ago when he was well into his Lewy body dementia. I told her it’s great learning and consolidation for me, because she has to listen to me rabbiting on with the names of the plants. She is better at bird calls. We were accompanied by pardalottes all day.
All in all, a good day was had by both of us.
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:
Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
buffy said:
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
Are you sure it’s feral.
buffy said:
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
I like those Twining fringe lilies.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
I like those Twining fringe lilies.
They are the most wonderful colour, very small though.
buffy said:
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
So good Buffy. Love them all. And good job Mr Buffy.
I asked if the nursery had any Thryptomene calycina yesterday, but sadly their stock plant got thrown out in a recent clean up.
Sad face. But the nursery owners may be going for a Christmas holiday jaunt to the Grampians, and should bring some back from a Mornington Peninsula grower. Happy face.
This is my purdie flaars from an afternoon walk after work yesterday. Mangrove Mountain.
Second lot of Christmas bells I have seen in two weeks. Anyone would think Christmas is coming….
ruby said:
This is my purdie flaars from an afternoon walk after work yesterday. Mangrove Mountain.
Second lot of Christmas bells I have seen in two weeks. Anyone would think Christmas is coming….
And it’s coming fast.
ruby said:
This is my purdie flaars from an afternoon walk after work yesterday. Mangrove Mountain.
Second lot of Christmas bells I have seen in two weeks. Anyone would think Christmas is coming….
You have some bright things. I was pleased to find some colour now appearing. Today I added Lomandra multiflora to my plant list. Got other Lomandras, but this is my first record of this one.
……………
And I confirmed what I think is Ranunculus lappaceus (Australian buttercup). It’s been on the list for years because I saw some but not confirmed and I hadn’t seen it again.
..
..
The endangered Viola sieberiana is starting to flower. This one amuses me….we have large numbers of these plants and we’ve been slashing over them for over 20 years before I even knew they were there. They are carpeting parts of our walking tracks. Tiny little beautiful things that they are.
………
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
Are you sure it’s feral.
All pines are feral.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
I like those Twining fringe lilies.
They are the most wonderful colour, very small though.
Tiny almost works with twining: Tiny Twining Fringe Lilies.
ruby said:
This is my purdie flaars from an afternoon walk after work yesterday. Mangrove Mountain.
Second lot of Christmas bells I have seen in two weeks. Anyone would think Christmas is coming….
I knew a person who said that all her youth she and her family picked these for sale to feed the family.
roughbarked said:
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
Some sorting has been done. Here is a sample:Some pink finger Caladenia orchids
…
…
Diuris orientis (wallflower orchid)
Glossodia major (Wax lip orchid)
………
Viola sieberiana (Tiny Violet) and Thysanotus patersonii (Twining fringe lily)
……….
And something Mr buffy achieved today…he felled a large feral pine tree. It will be left on the ground to rot.
Are you sure it’s feral.
All pines are feral.
There are 11 species of Pinus in Australia.
They are all introduced and have naturalised, which = feral.
Speaking of Lomandra, There’s this one that is different from most Lomandras I see.
roughbarked said:
Speaking of Lomandra, There’s this one that is different from most Lomandras I see.
Probably L. effusa. Will go back to check the leaves next time I’m out there.
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
No but I’ll look it up. Can you put a ruler on it or just give dimensions? Was it growing on a bush or close to the ground?
dv said:
For which they need pygmy possums and birds to pollinate the flowers.
dv said:
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
No but I’ll look it up. Can you put a ruler on it or just give dimensions? Was it growing on a bush or close to the ground?
Not a great photo for ID but maybe a type of pea?
dv said:
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
No but I’ll look it up. Can you put a ruler on it or just give dimensions? Was it growing on a bush or close to the ground?
It was a skinny, spare tree/shrub, about 1.5 m tall, consisting of 5 or 6 branches of which this one is representative. Probably past its best for this season.
In the photo, the ‘branch’ that extends from the centre to about the 1 o’clock position is 19cm long. The bell-shaped flowers are each 1cm/10mm long.
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
Sorry, can’t help with that one.
captain_spalding said:
dv said:
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
No but I’ll look it up. Can you put a ruler on it or just give dimensions? Was it growing on a bush or close to the ground?
It was a skinny, spare tree/shrub, about 1.5 m tall, consisting of 5 or 6 branches of which this one is representative. Probably past its best for this season.
In the photo, the ‘branch’ that extends from the centre to about the 1 o’clock position is 19cm long. The bell-shaped flowers are each 1cm/10mm long.
Was it in a garden or in the bush?
roughbarked said:
captain_spalding said:
dv said:No but I’ll look it up. Can you put a ruler on it or just give dimensions? Was it growing on a bush or close to the ground?
It was a skinny, spare tree/shrub, about 1.5 m tall, consisting of 5 or 6 branches of which this one is representative. Probably past its best for this season.
In the photo, the ‘branch’ that extends from the centre to about the 1 o’clock position is 19cm long. The bell-shaped flowers are each 1cm/10mm long.
Was it in a garden or in the bush?
It’s growing on a bit of council land which is a ‘wildlife corridor’ and a natural drainage route. But, it’s got suburban housing close by, so it could be an ‘escaped’ garden plant.
captain_spalding said:
roughbarked said:
captain_spalding said:It was a skinny, spare tree/shrub, about 1.5 m tall, consisting of 5 or 6 branches of which this one is representative. Probably past its best for this season.
In the photo, the ‘branch’ that extends from the centre to about the 1 o’clock position is 19cm long. The bell-shaped flowers are each 1cm/10mm long.
Was it in a garden or in the bush?
It’s growing on a bit of council land which is a ‘wildlife corridor’ and a natural drainage route. But, it’s got suburban housing close by, so it could be an ‘escaped’ garden plant.
I’d probably go garden escape, but I really don’t recognize it at all.
buffy said:
captain_spalding said:
roughbarked said:Was it in a garden or in the bush?
It’s growing on a bit of council land which is a ‘wildlife corridor’ and a natural drainage route. But, it’s got suburban housing close by, so it could be an ‘escaped’ garden plant.
I’d probably go garden escape, but I really don’t recognize it at all.
Looks heath like. Perhaps a garden escapee Erica?
Not sure about Queensland Epacris?
ruby said:
buffy said:
captain_spalding said:It’s growing on a bit of council land which is a ‘wildlife corridor’ and a natural drainage route. But, it’s got suburban housing close by, so it could be an ‘escaped’ garden plant.
I’d probably go garden escape, but I really don’t recognize it at all.
Looks heath like. Perhaps a garden escapee Erica?
Not sure about Queensland Epacris?
Ta. I’ll look ‘em up.
buffy said:
captain_spalding said:
roughbarked said:Was it in a garden or in the bush?
It’s growing on a bit of council land which is a ‘wildlife corridor’ and a natural drainage route. But, it’s got suburban housing close by, so it could be an ‘escaped’ garden plant.
I’d probably go garden escape, but I really don’t recognize it at all.
Yeah. It is a weird one. I see that it is almost snapdragon like flowers but yet not good enough photo to tell much at all about it. Maybe try getting a better photo?
captain_spalding said:
ruby said:
buffy said:I’d probably go garden escape, but I really don’t recognize it at all.
Looks heath like. Perhaps a garden escapee Erica?
Not sure about Queensland Epacris?
Ta. I’ll look ‘em up.
There’s only two in Qld as far as I can tell and none of the ones on Wiki look anything like it.
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
Looks like a Polygala sp. possibly P. virgata which is from South Africa but is a widespread feral in many parts of Australia. The native look-a-like is the Australian genus Comesperma
https://keyserver.lucidcentral.org/weeds/data/media/Html/polygala_virgata.htm
PermeateFree said:
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
Looks like a Polygala sp. possibly P. virgata which is from South Africa but is a widespread feral in many parts of Australia. The native look-a-like is the Australian genus Comesperma
https://keyserver.lucidcentral.org/weeds/data/media/Html/polygala_virgata.htm
Think you’ve nailed it. P. virgata is very plausible.
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:
captain_spalding said:
Is anyone able to identify this plant, please?
Looks like a Polygala sp. possibly P. virgata which is from South Africa but is a widespread feral in many parts of Australia. The native look-a-like is the Australian genus Comesperma
https://keyserver.lucidcentral.org/weeds/data/media/Html/polygala_virgata.htm
Think you’ve nailed it. P. virgata is very plausible.
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
PermeateFree said:Looks like a Polygala sp. possibly P. virgata which is from South Africa but is a widespread feral in many parts of Australia. The native look-a-like is the Australian genus Comesperma
https://keyserver.lucidcentral.org/weeds/data/media/Html/polygala_virgata.htm
Think you’ve nailed it. P. virgata is very plausible.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&photo=31&file=11/614/414692.jpg
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Polygala~virgata
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:Think you’ve nailed it. P. virgata is very plausible.
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&photo=31&file=11/614/414692.jpg
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Polygala~virgata
OK, so its a weed.’
Soon to be a dead weed.
captain_spalding said:
roughbarked said:
roughbarked said:https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&photo=31&file=11/614/414692.jpg
https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Polygala~virgata
OK, so its a weed.’
Soon to be a dead weed.
goodo.
I accidentally did some roadside flowers today. Well, I visited my bushwandering friend’s place to photograph her Dianella so we can ID it properly, and on the way back I accidentally on purpose stopped at a couple of places.
Joy’s Dianella.
……….
Arthropodium strictum (Chocolate lily), Lobelia pratioides (no commn name) and Microtis (an onion orchid)
…..
…..
A Ranunculus (buttercup) still awaiting closer ID
And a couple of pretty weeds – Tragopogon, little shiv’ry grass and a South African weed orchid (must be removed and destroyed)
…..
…..
buffy said:
I accidentally did some roadside flowers today. Well, I visited my bushwandering friend’s place to photograph her Dianella so we can ID it properly, and on the way back I accidentally on purpose stopped at a couple of places.Joy’s Dianella.
……….
Arthropodium strictum (Chocolate lily), Lobelia pratioides (no commn name) and Microtis (an onion orchid)
…..
…..
A Ranunculus (buttercup) still awaiting closer ID
And a couple of pretty weeds – Tragopogon, little shiv’ry grass and a South African weed orchid (must be removed and destroyed)
…..
…..
Some more pleasing miniatures.
In contrast, some of my giant hedges are currently in bloom. Here’s a couple snaps.
Bubblecar said:
In contrast, some of my giant hedges are currently in bloom. Here’s a couple snaps.
Your yard must be very strongly perfumed, with those.
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
In contrast, some of my giant hedges are currently in bloom. Here’s a couple snaps.
Your yard must be very strongly perfumed, with those.
Doesn’t actually seem to have much scent at the moment. Or maybe I’m just used to it.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Bubblecar said:
In contrast, some of my giant hedges are currently in bloom. Here’s a couple snaps.
Your yard must be very strongly perfumed, with those.
Doesn’t actually seem to have much scent at the moment. Or maybe I’m just used to it.
Sometimes, we’re almosto verpowered by the scent of the mock-orange tree in the corner of our small back yard (its flowering is one of the signs of some rain to come, maybe).
And then there’s the night-time scent of the neighbours’ jasmine.
My first fiancée found the scent of the jasmine which grew outside the bedroom of the place i was renting to be most intoxicating, and most diminishing of her inhibitions.
I tended it well.
I went out to check if the sun orchids out the road were open after lunch. I knew the roadside had been mowed/slashed in the last week. No orchids to be seen. So I went to the cemetery. Here are some Purdie flaars.
Arthropodium (chocolate lily, but I think this is a more unusual one, I’ve put it up on iNat for opinions), Bulbine bulbosa (bulbine lily) and Burchardia umbellata (milkmaid).
…..
…..
Drosera hookeri (grassland sundew). Lots and lots of this about and because it was sunny and warm the flowers were open.
Geranium retrorsum (a native geranium)
Pimelea humilis (Common rice flower) and Bossiae prostrata (creeping bossiae). There was a lot of the Bossiae creeping along and hiding amongst the kangaroo grass which is now heading up.
…..
buffy said:
I went out to check if the sun orchids out the road were open after lunch. I knew the roadside had been mowed/slashed in the last week. No orchids to be seen. So I went to the cemetery. Here are some Purdie flaars.Arthropodium (chocolate lily, but I think this is a more unusual one, I’ve put it up on iNat for opinions), Bulbine bulbosa (bulbine lily) and Burchardia umbellata (milkmaid).
…..
…..
Drosera hookeri (grassland sundew). Lots and lots of this about and because it was sunny and warm the flowers were open.
Geranium retrorsum (a native geranium)
Pimelea humilis (Common rice flower) and Bossiae prostrata (creeping bossiae). There was a lot of the Bossiae creeping along and hiding amongst the kangaroo grass which is now heading up.
…..
Lovely. Sun orchids were the reason we were out where we saw the owlet-nightjars.
We only found one plant with three seed pods.
By the way. That’s only the first time I’ve seen owlet-nightjars with a camera in hand. The other first time I’ve seen one was to dark to get a good picture anyway on the ground.
As I was about to say, when my wireless internet so rudely interrupted me…although I went for bracken mowing today (which I did get done, quite a lot of it really) I also took over a hundred photos. Now sorted, labelled, iNaturalisted. So here at some of the purdie flaars in the bush. I seem to be specialising in tiny ones at the moment.
Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lily – yes it does smell like chocolate)
Billardiera mutabilis (common apple berry) and Caladenia carnea (pink lady fingers)
…….
A closeup of the Caladenia and Dianella revoluta
…..
Comesperma volubile (love creeper) and Patersonia occidentalis (purple flag)
…..
Stackhousia monogyna (creamy candles) and a stunning little blue Thelymitra (sun orchid). I’ve tagged the person who has a particular interest in little blue sun orchids to look at that one.
……….
Veronica calycina (hairy speedwell) and Wurmbea dioica (early Nancy)
………
buffy said:
As I was about to say, when my wireless internet so rudely interrupted me…although I went for bracken mowing today (which I did get done, quite a lot of it really) I also took over a hundred photos. Now sorted, labelled, iNaturalisted. So here at some of the purdie flaars in the bush. I seem to be specialising in tiny ones at the moment.Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lily – yes it does smell like chocolate)
Billardiera mutabilis (common apple berry) and Caladenia carnea (pink lady fingers)
…….
A closeup of the Caladenia and Dianella revoluta
…..
Comesperma volubile (love creeper) and Patersonia occidentalis (purple flag)
…..
Stackhousia monogyna (creamy candles) and a stunning little blue Thelymitra (sun orchid). I’ve tagged the person who has a particular interest in little blue sun orchids to look at that one.
……….
Veronica calycina (hairy speedwell) and Wurmbea dioica (early Nancy)
………
Some tiny treasures there, ta.
And today’s batch of purdie flaars.
A wattle and a type of heath.
……….
A Goodenia and a Grevillea.
……….
A teatree and an Ozothamnus
……….
A pea bush.
A Prostanthera (mint bush) and some Grampians Thryptomene.
……….
buffy said:
And today’s batch of purdie flaars.A wattle and a type of heath.
……….
A Goodenia and a Grevillea.
……….
A teatree and an Ozothamnus
……….
A pea bush.
A Prostanthera (mint bush) and some Grampians Thryptomene.
……….
Purdie indeed.
SCIENCE said:
Nebula Astronicus.
ChrispenEvan said:
SCIENCE said:
Nebula Astronicus.
sorry
Nebula astronicus.
Along the old Hamilton to Koroit rail line (disused since 1977) at Minhamite, there are quite a lot of wildflowers. A selection from this morning:
Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lilies) by the thousand, and Asperula (woodruff)
…..
Bulbine bulbosa (bulbine lily) by the thousand and Burchardia umbellata (milkmaids) by the hundreds
……….
Hackelia suavoelens (sweet hounds tongue) and Ranunculus lappaceus (Australian buttercup). Only saw one plant of each of these ones.
……….
buffy said:
Along the old Hamilton to Koroit rail line (disused since 1977) at Minhamite, there are quite a lot of wildflowers. A selection from this morning:Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lilies) by the thousand, and Asperula (woodruff)
…..
Bulbine bulbosa (bulbine lily) by the thousand and Burchardia umbellata (milkmaids) by the hundreds
……….
Hackelia suavoelens (sweet hounds tongue) and Ranunculus lappaceus (Australian buttercup). Only saw one plant of each of these ones.
……….
Nice finds. Did you notice a chocolate scent from the chocolate lilies? That’s apparently how they got their name.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Along the old Hamilton to Koroit rail line (disused since 1977) at Minhamite, there are quite a lot of wildflowers. A selection from this morning:Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lilies) by the thousand, and Asperula (woodruff)
…..
Bulbine bulbosa (bulbine lily) by the thousand and Burchardia umbellata (milkmaids) by the hundreds
……….
Hackelia suavoelens (sweet hounds tongue) and Ranunculus lappaceus (Australian buttercup). Only saw one plant of each of these ones.
……….
Nice finds. Did you notice a chocolate scent from the chocolate lilies? That’s apparently how they got their name.
Yes, they do have a scent. There are also vanilla lilies. I’m not particularly good at remembering to sniff the flowers. I really need to get into the habit.
I went for an early morning walk in the local cemetery and then out the road to check how the roadside little native flowers were going. The highway mowing/slashing team has been through in the last couple of days. So it was easier for me to walk, but lots of things have had their heads cut off. They will survive. Lots of them grow low enough to have just gone under the blades without much effect. And some haven’t sent up their flower heads yet, so they will be more excited about doing that now the long grass over the top of them has gone. Here are some flaars I photographed.
Chocolate lily (Arthropodium strictum), bulbine lily (Bulbine bulbosa) and a milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata)…all at the cemetery
…
…
Common everlasting (Chrysocephalum apicum) (I think) and Salt pratia (Lobelia irrigua).
………
Curved riceflower (Pimelea curviflora) and common riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
……….
Samolus repens (Creeping brookweed) This is new to me, I’m waiting for confirmation that I’ve IDd it correctly.
Slender speedwell (Veronica gracilis) from the roadside. Kept her head down.
……
buffy said:
I went for an early morning walk in the local cemetery and then out the road to check how the roadside little native flowers were going. The highway mowing/slashing team has been through in the last couple of days. So it was easier for me to walk, but lots of things have had their heads cut off. They will survive. Lots of them grow low enough to have just gone under the blades without much effect. And some haven’t sent up their flower heads yet, so they will be more excited about doing that now the long grass over the top of them has gone. Here are some flaars I photographed.Chocolate lily (Arthropodium strictum), bulbine lily (Bulbine bulbosa) and a milkmaid (Burchardia umbellata)…all at the cemetery
…
…
Common everlasting (Chrysocephalum apicum) (I think) and Salt pratia (Lobelia irrigua).
………
Curved riceflower (Pimelea curviflora) and common riceflower (Pimelea humilis)
……….
Samolus repens (Creeping brookweed) This is new to me, I’m waiting for confirmation that I’ve IDd it correctly.
Slender speedwell (Veronica gracilis) from the roadside. Kept her head down.
……
Looks right. Creeping brookweed from the internets.
Right then…I’ve uploaded today’s crop to iNaturalist. I seem to have been concentrating on tiny little flowers today. Here are some. More photos than intended because I couldn’t mow.
Caladenia carnea (pink lady finger orchid) and Chamaescilla corymbosa (blue star)
……….
Chiloglottis valida (common bird orchid)
Cyanothamnus nanus (dwarf boronia)
Dianella longifolia (pale flax lily) and Hibbertia crinita (long hair guinea flower)
……….
Hypericum gramineum (small St John’s wort) and Lobelia pachytricha (no common name). This one was exciting…it’s a new one for my plant list
……….
Another picture of the Lobelia – it’s tiny. That is my pointer finger.
Lobelia pedunculata (matted pratia) and Mitrasacme pilosa (hairy mitrewort)
…..
Thysanotus patersonii (twining fringe lily)
buffy said:
Right then…I’ve uploaded today’s crop to iNaturalist. I seem to have been concentrating on tiny little flowers today. Here are some. More photos than intended because I couldn’t mow.Caladenia carnea (pink lady finger orchid) and Chamaescilla corymbosa (blue star)
……….
Chiloglottis valida (common bird orchid)
Cyanothamnus nanus (dwarf boronia)
Dianella longifolia (pale flax lily) and Hibbertia crinita (long hair guinea flower)
……….
Hypericum gramineum (small St John’s wort) and Lobelia pachytricha (no common name). This one was exciting…it’s a new one for my plant list
……….
Another picture of the Lobelia – it’s tiny. That is my pointer finger.
Lobelia pedunculata (matted pratia) and Mitrasacme pilosa (hairy mitrewort)
…..
Thysanotus patersonii (twining fringe lily)
You have many purdie flarrs that I’ve never seen here.
And there are flaars.
Brachyloma depressum (a sort of heath, no common name) and Calytrix alpestris (snow myrtle)
…….
Conospermum mitchellii(Victorian smoke bush) and Dillwynia sericea (showy parrot pea)
…..
Dillwynia glaberrima (smooth parrot pea) and Platylobium obtusangulum (common flat pea)
……….
Tetratheca ciliata (pink bells)
buffy said:
And there are flaars.Brachyloma depressum (a sort of heath, no common name) and Calytrix alpestris (snow myrtle)
…….
Conospermum mitchellii(Victorian smoke bush) and Dillwynia sericea (showy parrot pea)
…..
Dillwynia glaberrima (smooth parrot pea) and Platylobium obtusangulum (common flat pea)
……….
Tetratheca ciliata (pink bells)
Nice.
:)
Michael V said:
buffy said:
And there are flaars.Brachyloma depressum (a sort of heath, no common name) and Calytrix alpestris (snow myrtle)
…….
Conospermum mitchellii(Victorian smoke bush) and Dillwynia sericea (showy parrot pea)
…..
Dillwynia glaberrima (smooth parrot pea) and Platylobium obtusangulum (common flat pea)
……….
Tetratheca ciliata (pink bells)
Nice.
:)
Especially love the pea flaars
Michael V said:
buffy said:
And there are flaars.Brachyloma depressum (a sort of heath, no common name) and Calytrix alpestris (snow myrtle)
…….
Conospermum mitchellii(Victorian smoke bush) and Dillwynia sericea (showy parrot pea)
…..
Dillwynia glaberrima (smooth parrot pea) and Platylobium obtusangulum (common flat pea)
……….
Tetratheca ciliata (pink bells)
Nice.
:)
Shes becoming somthing of a Banksonian.
ruby said:
Michael V said:
buffy said:
And there are flaars.Brachyloma depressum (a sort of heath, no common name) and Calytrix alpestris (snow myrtle)
…….
Conospermum mitchellii(Victorian smoke bush) and Dillwynia sericea (showy parrot pea)
…..
Dillwynia glaberrima (smooth parrot pea) and Platylobium obtusangulum (common flat pea)
……….
Tetratheca ciliata (pink bells)
Nice.
:)
Especially love the pea flaars
There were several pea flowers today. I’ve had a couple of others IDd by someone on iNaturalist who is well versed in the plants of the Grampians. Still a couple more waiting for ID.
buffy said:
And there are flaars.Brachyloma depressum (a sort of heath, no common name) and Calytrix alpestris (snow myrtle)
…….
Conospermum mitchellii(Victorian smoke bush) and Dillwynia sericea (showy parrot pea)
…..
Dillwynia glaberrima (smooth parrot pea) and Platylobium obtusangulum (common flat pea)
……….
Tetratheca ciliata (pink bells)
More fine wild blooms, whole bunches even.
buffy said:
And there are flaars.Brachyloma depressum (a sort of heath, no common name) and Calytrix alpestris (snow myrtle)
…….
Conospermum mitchellii(Victorian smoke bush) and Dillwynia sericea (showy parrot pea)
…..
Dillwynia glaberrima (smooth parrot pea) and Platylobium obtusangulum (common flat pea)
……….
Tetratheca ciliata (pink bells)
Nice. Love the pink bells.
OK, some purdie flaars from today.
Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lily) and Brachyloma ciliatum (a little heathy plant with no common name)
……….
Two types of Dianella (flax lily)
……….
Galium curvihirtum (no common name) and Goodenia geniculata (bent Goodenia)
…..
Lagenophora stipitata (blue bottle daisy)
Lobelia pedunculata (matted pratia) and Lomandra nana (small Lomandra)
….
Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant) and Viola sieberiana (tiny violet – endangered)
…………
Flower stalk on a Xanthorrhoea minor (grass tree). I love the pattern on these spikes.
buffy said:
OK, some purdie flaars from today.Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lily) and Brachyloma ciliatum (a little heathy plant with no common name)
……….
Two types of Dianella (flax lily)
……….
Galium curvihirtum (no common name) and Goodenia geniculata (bent Goodenia)
…..
Lagenophora stipitata (blue bottle daisy)
Lobelia pedunculata (matted pratia) and Lomandra nana (small Lomandra)
….
Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant) and Viola sieberiana (tiny violet – endangered)
…………
Flower stalk on a Xanthorrhoea minor (grass tree). I love the pattern on these spikes.
You’d think the Brachyloma ciliatum would have a common name, it’s very pretty.
The small Lomandra look like bunches of tiny Brussels sprouts.
Ms Kingys bunch:
Kingy said:
Ms Kingys bunch:
I’m not much of a flaarist, I can only pick out Geraldton Wax, Carnation and Lillium.
Anyone know the others?
Kingy said:
Ms Kingys bunch:
Le Fleures
Playing with an old lens I picked up cheap in a Vinnies. Liking it a lot.
Some purdie flaars from today’s walk.
Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lily) and Brunonia australis (blue pincushion)
…….
Burchardia umbellata (milkmaids) and Caladenia carnea (pink lady finger orchid)
…..
Another C. carnea and Comesperma volubile (love creeper)
…..
Cyanothamnus nanus (a type of boronia) and Glycine latrobeana (clover glycine). The Glycine is listed as vulnerable. I’ve been watching the leaves for a couple of years, but seen no flowers until today. The last time I saw flowers was almost 20 years ago. These latest ones are not where I saw them previously.
…..
Viola hederacea (ivy leaved violet)
Viola sieberiana (tiny violet). This one is listed as endangered. We’ve got lots of them in “our” bush.
…..
buffy said:
Some purdie flaars from today’s walk.Arthropodium strictum (chocolate lily) and Brunonia australis (blue pincushion)
…….
Burchardia umbellata (milkmaids) and Caladenia carnea (pink lady finger orchid)
…..
Another C. carnea and Comesperma volubile (love creeper)
…..
Cyanothamnus nanus (a type of boronia) and Glycine latrobeana (clover glycine). The Glycine is listed as vulnerable. I’ve been watching the leaves for a couple of years, but seen no flowers until today. The last time I saw flowers was almost 20 years ago. These latest ones are not where I saw them previously.
…..
Viola hederacea (ivy leaved violet)
Viola sieberiana (tiny violet). This one is listed as endangered. We’ve got lots of them in “our” bush.
…..
Good to see they’re doing well on your watch.
Here are today’s purdie flaars. I stopped at this roadside spot to see if I had got all the weed orchids a week or so back. I found one more weed orchid flower. I hope there aren’t too many I’ve missed. Also, I found some yellow rush lilies (Tricoryne elatior), which I haven’t seen at that spot before. Happy with one of the photos particularly, it shows buds, open flower, and the way the flower twists up after finishing its run.
There are a lot of onion orchids (Microtis, I don’t know which one this is). You can make out in the first photo how the leaf is like an onion leaf, and the flower bursts its way out from inside. The second photo is for a bit more detail of the flowers.
………
Still some sundews (this one is Drosera gunniana because the buds are round and fuzzy, amongst other attributes)
And the tiny matted pratia (Lobelia pratioides) is still flowering down there too. Apparently poisonous to stock.
buffy said:
Here are today’s purdie flaars. I stopped at this roadside spot to see if I had got all the weed orchids a week or so back. I found one more weed orchid flower. I hope there aren’t too many I’ve missed. Also, I found some yellow rush lilies (Tricoryne elatior), which I haven’t seen at that spot before. Happy with one of the photos particularly, it shows buds, open flower, and the way the flower twists up after finishing its run.
There are a lot of onion orchids (Microtis, I don’t know which one this is). You can make out in the first photo how the leaf is like an onion leaf, and the flower bursts its way out from inside. The second photo is for a bit more detail of the flowers.
………
Still some sundews (this one is Drosera gunniana because the buds are round and fuzzy, amongst other attributes)
And the tiny matted pratia (Lobelia pratioides) is still flowering down there too. Apparently poisonous to stock.
Nice collection. I wonder why that flower twists up instead of just falling off.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Here are today’s purdie flaars. I stopped at this roadside spot to see if I had got all the weed orchids a week or so back. I found one more weed orchid flower. I hope there aren’t too many I’ve missed. Also, I found some yellow rush lilies (Tricoryne elatior), which I haven’t seen at that spot before. Happy with one of the photos particularly, it shows buds, open flower, and the way the flower twists up after finishing its run.
There are a lot of onion orchids (Microtis, I don’t know which one this is). You can make out in the first photo how the leaf is like an onion leaf, and the flower bursts its way out from inside. The second photo is for a bit more detail of the flowers.
………
Still some sundews (this one is Drosera gunniana because the buds are round and fuzzy, amongst other attributes)
And the tiny matted pratia (Lobelia pratioides) is still flowering down there too. Apparently poisonous to stock.
Nice collection. I wonder why that flower twists up instead of just falling off.
In order to protect the seed which is stil forming.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
Here are today’s purdie flaars. I stopped at this roadside spot to see if I had got all the weed orchids a week or so back. I found one more weed orchid flower. I hope there aren’t too many I’ve missed. Also, I found some yellow rush lilies (Tricoryne elatior), which I haven’t seen at that spot before. Happy with one of the photos particularly, it shows buds, open flower, and the way the flower twists up after finishing its run.
There are a lot of onion orchids (Microtis, I don’t know which one this is). You can make out in the first photo how the leaf is like an onion leaf, and the flower bursts its way out from inside. The second photo is for a bit more detail of the flowers.
………
Still some sundews (this one is Drosera gunniana because the buds are round and fuzzy, amongst other attributes)
And the tiny matted pratia (Lobelia pratioides) is still flowering down there too. Apparently poisonous to stock.
Nice collection. I wonder why that flower twists up instead of just falling off.
There are a couple of others that do that too.
OK, for those interested. Some of our finds today.
A couple of Arthropodium (chocolate lilies). It’s possible they are not the same species, but the differences are not evident in these two photos (the number of flowers per node. I’ve got more photos for the iNaturalist records that show the details).
……….
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Hackelia suavoelens (sweet hounds tongue). The Hackelia has a very pleasant perfume.
…..
Leptorhynchos (buttons)
Lobelia pratioides and Microtis (onion orchid)
…..
Pelargonium rodneyanum (magenta storks bill) and Pimelea curviflora (curved rice flower)
…….
Prasophyllum (leek orchid) and Ptilotus macrocephala (green mulla mulla). I’d not seen these ones “in the flesh” before. I was surprised how large the mulla mulla was.
……….
Tricoryne elatior (yellow rush lily)
buffy said:
OK, for those interested. Some of our finds today.A couple of Arthropodium (chocolate lilies). It’s possible they are not the same species, but the differences are not evident in these two photos (the number of flowers per node. I’ve got more photos for the iNaturalist records that show the details).
……….
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Hackelia suavoelens (sweet hounds tongue). The Hackelia has a very pleasant perfume.
…..
Leptorhynchos (buttons)
Lobelia pratioides and Microtis (onion orchid)
…..
Pelargonium rodneyanum (magenta storks bill) and Pimelea curviflora (curved rice flower)
…….
Prasophyllum (leek orchid) and Ptilotus macrocephala (green mulla mulla). I’d not seen these ones “in the flesh” before. I was surprised how large the mulla mulla was.
……….
Tricoryne elatior (yellow rush lily)
You’re getting good at this.
Peak Warming Man said:
buffy said:
OK, for those interested. Some of our finds today.A couple of Arthropodium (chocolate lilies). It’s possible they are not the same species, but the differences are not evident in these two photos (the number of flowers per node. I’ve got more photos for the iNaturalist records that show the details).
……….
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Hackelia suavoelens (sweet hounds tongue). The Hackelia has a very pleasant perfume.
…..
Leptorhynchos (buttons)
Lobelia pratioides and Microtis (onion orchid)
…..
Pelargonium rodneyanum (magenta storks bill) and Pimelea curviflora (curved rice flower)
…….
Prasophyllum (leek orchid) and Ptilotus macrocephala (green mulla mulla). I’d not seen these ones “in the flesh” before. I was surprised how large the mulla mulla was.
……….
Tricoryne elatior (yellow rush lily)
You’re getting good at this.
And I’m even getting some of the names to stick in my brain too.
:)
buffy said:
OK, for those interested. Some of our finds today.A couple of Arthropodium (chocolate lilies). It’s possible they are not the same species, but the differences are not evident in these two photos (the number of flowers per node. I’ve got more photos for the iNaturalist records that show the details).
……….
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Hackelia suavoelens (sweet hounds tongue). The Hackelia has a very pleasant perfume.
…..
Leptorhynchos (buttons)
Lobelia pratioides and Microtis (onion orchid)
…..
Pelargonium rodneyanum (magenta storks bill) and Pimelea curviflora (curved rice flower)
…….
Prasophyllum (leek orchid) and Ptilotus macrocephala (green mulla mulla). I’d not seen these ones “in the flesh” before. I was surprised how large the mulla mulla was.
……….
Tricoryne elatior (yellow rush lily)
Another nice assortment. Those mulla mullas are pleasingly odd.
Purple or mauve seems a favoured colour for Aussie wildflowers.
The obsession has still got its teeth in me. I stopped to check on some particular flowers on the way to the supermarket this morning. A type of Arthropodium, like a chocolate lily (A. strictum) but with more than one flower per node. Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
……….
Saw some other flowers too.
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Eryngium ovinum (blue devils)
.
Leptorhyncus (one of the button daisies) and one of the Microtis (onion orchids)
……..
A Wahlenbergia species (Australian bluebell)
buffy said:
The obsession has still got its teeth in me. I stopped to check on some particular flowers on the way to the supermarket this morning. A type of Arthropodium, like a chocolate lily (A. strictum) but with more than one flower per node. Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
……….
Saw some other flowers too.
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Eryngium ovinum (blue devils)
.
Leptorhyncus (one of the button daisies) and one of the Microtis (onion orchids)
……..
A Wahlenbergia species (Australian bluebell)
You have very interesting grasslands.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The obsession has still got its teeth in me. I stopped to check on some particular flowers on the way to the supermarket this morning. A type of Arthropodium, like a chocolate lily (A. strictum) but with more than one flower per node. Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
……….
Saw some other flowers too.
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Eryngium ovinum (blue devils)
.
Leptorhyncus (one of the button daisies) and one of the Microtis (onion orchids)
……..
A Wahlenbergia species (Australian bluebell)
You have very interesting grasslands.
These ones are roadsides. Some of those Arthropodium missed going under the slasher by >< much…
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
The obsession has still got its teeth in me. I stopped to check on some particular flowers on the way to the supermarket this morning. A type of Arthropodium, like a chocolate lily (A. strictum) but with more than one flower per node. Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
……….
Saw some other flowers too.
Convolvulus angustissimus (blushing bindweed) and Eryngium ovinum (blue devils)
.
Leptorhyncus (one of the button daisies) and one of the Microtis (onion orchids)
……..
A Wahlenbergia species (Australian bluebell)
You have very interesting grasslands.
These ones are roadsides. Some of those Arthropodium missed going under the slasher by >< much…
Roadsides are so vulnerable and like rural cemeteries, the last vestiges.
>>Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
I’d suggest Arthropodium Buffyus.
Peak Warming Man said:
>>Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.I’d suggest Arthropodium Buffyus.
make that buffy/us and it will be forum approved.
buffy said:
The obsession has still got its teeth in me. I stopped to check on some particular flowers on the way to the supermarket this morning. A type of Arthropodium, like a chocolate lily (A. strictum) but with more than one flower per node. Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
……….
Oooo, nice one Buffy. Can I show a pic of these to my brother and nursery boss?
This was flowering at the nursery last week. Phaius australis, the largest of the Aussie orchids. This one came from Coffs Harbour. Taller than me.
And on the bench next to it was a Craspedia that was just about to shed its seed. I took it to my boss who said they had collected it in Tasmania. He gave me some of the seed to grow here at home. Happy with that.
ruby said:
This was flowering at the nursery last week. Phaius australis, the largest of the Aussie orchids. This one came from Coffs Harbour. Taller than me.
And on the bench next to it was a Craspedia that was just about to shed its seed. I took it to my boss who said they had collected it in Tasmania. He gave me some of the seed to grow here at home. Happy with that.
There was a time when I actually grew that orchid along with many others. Time has certainly moved on since then.
Peak Warming Man said:
>>Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.I’d suggest Arthropodium Buffyus.
I didn’t discover them. And I don’t like plants named after people. I like the plant name to be descriptive, you know, like, Latin. Much more useful if it’s telling you in the name that it’s got long thin leaves, or lots of flowers or something.
ruby said:
buffy said:
The obsession has still got its teeth in me. I stopped to check on some particular flowers on the way to the supermarket this morning. A type of Arthropodium, like a chocolate lily (A. strictum) but with more than one flower per node. Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
……….
Oooo, nice one Buffy. Can I show a pic of these to my brother and nursery boss?
Yes. There is a page on VicFlora for them.
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/79622410-daf9-4a0c-bb1d-39ec5577cd49
ruby said:
This was flowering at the nursery last week. Phaius australis, the largest of the Aussie orchids. This one came from Coffs Harbour. Taller than me.
And on the bench next to it was a Craspedia that was just about to shed its seed. I took it to my boss who said they had collected it in Tasmania. He gave me some of the seed to grow here at home. Happy with that.
Do you know which Craspedia? We have a stunning one here.
My iNaturalist observation from last month
(The highway side mowing has happened since then. Guess what happened to the swathe of Craspedia…anyway, they seem to be pretty tough, and the slashing was high. Hopefully some seed had set and got spread around. They are a perennial, so I guess they should survive)
ruby – here are my Arthropodium observations on iNaturalist. Most of them are A. strictum, but the ones with just Arthropodium are the ones that may be species 3.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?taxon_id=378610&user_id=elizabethhatfield
buffy said:
ruby said:
buffy said:
The obsession has still got its teeth in me. I stopped to check on some particular flowers on the way to the supermarket this morning. A type of Arthropodium, like a chocolate lily (A. strictum) but with more than one flower per node. Not yet properly named, just called Arthropodium species 3. I saw them last year. They are back again. I’m pleased about that.
……….
Oooo, nice one Buffy. Can I show a pic of these to my brother and nursery boss?
Yes. There is a page on VicFlora for them.
https://vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au/flora/taxon/79622410-daf9-4a0c-bb1d-39ec5577cd49
Oh, I thought you’d found it. They may already know of it. I shall ask in case they don’t. :)))
buffy said:
ruby said:
This was flowering at the nursery last week. Phaius australis, the largest of the Aussie orchids. This one came from Coffs Harbour. Taller than me.
And on the bench next to it was a Craspedia that was just about to shed its seed. I took it to my boss who said they had collected it in Tasmania. He gave me some of the seed to grow here at home. Happy with that.
Do you know which Craspedia? We have a stunning one here.
My iNaturalist observation from last month
(The highway side mowing has happened since then. Guess what happened to the swathe of Craspedia…anyway, they seem to be pretty tough, and the slashing was high. Hopefully some seed had set and got spread around. They are a perennial, so I guess they should survive)
Ummm, they did know which one. I did write it on the bag when I collected it, but promptly forgot it as there was a bit going on that day. My memory bank did not store it but I’ll have a squizz this week and write it down!
I do like your Craspedia paludicola….very very nice indeed. I shall ask if our Mornington Peninsula plant guru has it available….I would love to grow it too.
Thanks Buffy.
buffy said:
ruby – here are my Arthropodium observations on iNaturalist. Most of them are A. strictum, but the ones with just Arthropodium are the ones that may be species 3.https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?taxon_id=378610&user_id=elizabethhatfield
Oooo, some nice variation there Buffy.
My brother has got his plant breeding mojo back again now that he has established himself in Tassie. I’m playing about with a few dribs and drabs here too.
I shall look into what chocolate lillies our Victorian guy has too. :)))
And some of today’s flowers. The star of the day was Thelymitra benthamiana, which VicFlora lists as endangered. I’ve yet to get confirmation on my ID, but I don’t think it can be anything else. It was very shy. I had to open it up to see the inside of the petals.
………
Others were a bit more mundane.
Chocolate lilies still going (ordinary ones) and the Brunonia australis (blue pincushions) are starting to increase in number
……..
Leptospermum continentale (prickly teatree) and Stylidium graminifolium (grass trigger plant)
…….
And the bigger fringe lilies (Thysanotus tuberosus) are now coming out as their little twining cousins finish flowering.
…….
Couple of snaps I took today of the pleasant flowering climber on this wing wall of the old bridge.
I’ve been out looking at one of my roadside flower places. (As well as potting out tomato plants and other things). Here are some purdie flaars. Some are weeds.
Apium prostratum (sea celery). A native, growing in a saline place out the road from here. And Bellardis viscosa (yellow glandweed). A weed, but a very pretty one.
……….
Lotus tenuis (narrow leaf birds foot trefoil). Another pretty weed. And Samolus repens (sea primrose). Which is a native.
…….
buffy said:
I’ve been out looking at one of my roadside flower places. (As well as potting out tomato plants and other things). Here are some purdie flaars. Some are weeds.Apium prostratum (sea celery). A native, growing in a saline place out the road from here. And Bellardis viscosa (yellow glandweed). A weed, but a very pretty one.
……….
Lotus tenuis (narrow leaf birds foot trefoil). Another pretty weed. And Samolus repens (sea primrose). Which is a native.
…….
A nice spray there.
I went out early to one of my roadside spots. Here are some flowers. Not a lot about now, things are starting to dry off.
Apium prostratum (sea celery) and Centaurium erythraea (Common centaury – a weed)
……….
I think this is Centaurium pulchellum (Lesser centaury – a weed), but the colour is lovely.
This is a Dianella (Flax lily), but I don’t know which one.
……….
Goodenia radicans (Selliera). There are thousands of these flowers at the spot I went to.
And Samolus repens (Sea primrose)
buffy said:
I went out early to one of my roadside spots. Here are some flowers. Not a lot about now, things are starting to dry off.Apium prostratum (sea celery) and Centaurium erythraea (Common centaury – a weed)
……….
I think this is Centaurium pulchellum (Lesser centaury – a weed), but the colour is lovely.
This is a Dianella (Flax lily), but I don’t know which one.
……….
Goodenia radicans (Selliera). There are thousands of these flowers at the spot I went to.
And Samolus repens (Sea primrose)
Pretty.
buffy said:
I went out early to one of my roadside spots. Here are some flowers. Not a lot about now, things are starting to dry off.Apium prostratum (sea celery) and Centaurium erythraea (Common centaury – a weed)
……….
I think this is Centaurium pulchellum (Lesser centaury – a weed), but the colour is lovely.
This is a Dianella (Flax lily), but I don’t know which one.
……….
Goodenia radicans (Selliera). There are thousands of these flowers at the spot I went to.
And Samolus repens (Sea primrose)
Nice. I only see the weeds here. The others must be more southerly than here.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
I went out early to one of my roadside spots. Here are some flowers. Not a lot about now, things are starting to dry off.Apium prostratum (sea celery) and Centaurium erythraea (Common centaury – a weed)
……….
I think this is Centaurium pulchellum (Lesser centaury – a weed), but the colour is lovely.
This is a Dianella (Flax lily), but I don’t know which one.
……….
Goodenia radicans (Selliera). There are thousands of these flowers at the spot I went to.
And Samolus repens (Sea primrose)
Nice. I only see the weeds here. The others must be more southerly than here.
We are 70km inland here, but that spot has quite a few plants that don’t mind salinity. I conclude it’s a bit salty there.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
I went out early to one of my roadside spots. Here are some flowers. Not a lot about now, things are starting to dry off.Apium prostratum (sea celery) and Centaurium erythraea (Common centaury – a weed)
……….
I think this is Centaurium pulchellum (Lesser centaury – a weed), but the colour is lovely.
This is a Dianella (Flax lily), but I don’t know which one.
……….
Goodenia radicans (Selliera). There are thousands of these flowers at the spot I went to.
And Samolus repens (Sea primrose)
Nice. I only see the weeds here. The others must be more southerly than here.
We are 70km inland here, but that spot has quite a few plants that don’t mind salinity. I conclude it’s a bit salty there.
I’d come to that conclusin as well. Windblown salt travels a fair way.
roughbarked said:
buffy said:
roughbarked said:Nice. I only see the weeds here. The others must be more southerly than here.
We are 70km inland here, but that spot has quite a few plants that don’t mind salinity. I conclude it’s a bit salty there.
I’d come to that conclusin as well. Windblown salt travels a fair way.
No, there are saline lakes around here. It will be coming up from underneath.
buffy said:
roughbarked said:
buffy said:We are 70km inland here, but that spot has quite a few plants that don’t mind salinity. I conclude it’s a bit salty there.
I’d come to that conclusin as well. Windblown salt travels a fair way.
No, there are saline lakes around here. It will be coming up from underneath.
Yes. We have a lot of salt coming up from below in this area.
Ooh… one of the flowers I photographed this morning is “critically endangered”/“vulnerable” (depending on which list you look at). The local botanist has IDd it for me at iNaturalist. It’s Coronidium gunnianum – Pale swamp everlasting. I got as far as the Coronidium bit, couldn’t go further.
……….
buffy said:
Ooh… one of the flowers I photographed this morning is “critically endangered”/“vulnerable” (depending on which list you look at). The local botanist has IDd it for me at iNaturalist. It’s Coronidium gunnianum – Pale swamp everlasting. I got as far as the Coronidium bit, couldn’t go further.
……….
Poor little blooms. Look after them well.
buffy said:
Ooh… one of the flowers I photographed this morning is “critically endangered”/“vulnerable” (depending on which list you look at). The local botanist has IDd it for me at iNaturalist. It’s Coronidium gunnianum – Pale swamp everlasting. I got as far as the Coronidium bit, couldn’t go further.
……….
Well done.
buffy said:
Ooh… one of the flowers I photographed this morning is “critically endangered”/“vulnerable” (depending on which list you look at). The local botanist has IDd it for me at iNaturalist. It’s Coronidium gunnianum – Pale swamp everlasting. I got as far as the Coronidium bit, couldn’t go further.
……….
Nice.
I think I need a Coronidium hunting mission.
ruby said:
buffy said:
Ooh… one of the flowers I photographed this morning is “critically endangered”/“vulnerable” (depending on which list you look at). The local botanist has IDd it for me at iNaturalist. It’s Coronidium gunnianum – Pale swamp everlasting. I got as far as the Coronidium bit, couldn’t go further.
……….
Nice.
I think I need a Coronidium hunting mission.
And I just checked back on my observations today that I put up on iNat, and one of the grasses may be a vulnerable one. The grass guru hasn’t named it formally, just suggested it might be Lachnagrostis robusta. Which fits with the probable salinity of the area. It’s a great little roadside I’ve picked to watch!
buffy said:
ruby said:
buffy said:
Ooh… one of the flowers I photographed this morning is “critically endangered”/“vulnerable” (depending on which list you look at). The local botanist has IDd it for me at iNaturalist. It’s Coronidium gunnianum – Pale swamp everlasting. I got as far as the Coronidium bit, couldn’t go further.
……….
Nice.
I think I need a Coronidium hunting mission.
And I just checked back on my observations today that I put up on iNat, and one of the grasses may be a vulnerable one. The grass guru hasn’t named it formally, just suggested it might be Lachnagrostis robusta. Which fits with the probable salinity of the area. It’s a great little roadside I’ve picked to watch!
I’ll be falling asleep on my chair soon, so here are a couple of today’s flowers and I’ll put some more up tomorrow.
Arthropodium strictum(chocolate lily)
Brunonia australis (blue pincushion)
Dipodium pardalinum (spotted hyacinth orchid – endangered). I saw more of these than the “common” ones today. Which is a Good Thing.
……….
Dipodium roseum (Hyacinth orchid)
……….
Older sister’s garden in South Hobart is blooming nicely.
Bubblecar said:
Older sister’s garden in South Hobart is blooming nicely.
Are you down there or did she send you pics?
dv said:
Bubblecar said:
Older sister’s garden in South Hobart is blooming nicely.
Are you down there or did she send you pics?
It’s one she put up the other day on her Instagram page.
https://www.instagram.com/theeclectickitchen/
And here is my contribution. I didn’t get so many photos at the bush yesterday, there was still a lot of talking going on. However, some flowers and an interesting bolete.
Acacia mitchellii (Mitchells wattle). I like the dainty leaves on this one. It’s a shrub.
Centaurium tenuiflorum (Slender centary). It’s a weed, but it’s pretty.
Dipodium pardalinum (one of the hyacinth orchids), and Dipodium roseum (another one of the hyacinth orchids)
……..
Patersonia occidentalis (purple flag)
I think this is Boletellus ananiceps (no common name that I know of). It’s a bolete, because it has pores, not gills. And they go blue as soon as you touch/scratch etc. My sister in law took a phone video to show her daughter the blueing.
……
buffy said:
And here is my contribution. I didn’t get so many photos at the bush yesterday, there was still a lot of talking going on. However, some flowers and an interesting bolete.Acacia mitchellii (Mitchells wattle). I like the dainty leaves on this one. It’s a shrub.
Centaurium tenuiflorum (Slender centary). It’s a weed, but it’s pretty.
Dipodium pardalinum (one of the hyacinth orchids), and Dipodium roseum (another one of the hyacinth orchids)
……..
Patersonia occidentalis (purple flag)
I think this is Boletellus ananiceps (no common name that I know of). It’s a bolete, because it has pores, not gills. And they go blue as soon as you touch/scratch etc. My sister in law took a phone video to show her daughter the blueing.
……
Nice assortment.
Obviously something is able to eat that bolete.
I didn’t know the porcini is a bolete:
Many boletes, such as the porcini (Boletus edulis), are edible and considered a delicacy. However, other boletes, such as Suillus and Xerocomellus are considered edible, but not choice. Some boletes, such as Caloboletus and Tylopilus are too bitter to eat. Other boletes, such as ones in the Rubroboletus genus, such as Satan’s bolete (Rubroboletus satanas) are dangerously poisonous. Most poisonous boletes have red pores.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolete
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
And here is my contribution. I didn’t get so many photos at the bush yesterday, there was still a lot of talking going on. However, some flowers and an interesting bolete.Acacia mitchellii (Mitchells wattle). I like the dainty leaves on this one. It’s a shrub.
Centaurium tenuiflorum (Slender centary). It’s a weed, but it’s pretty.
Dipodium pardalinum (one of the hyacinth orchids), and Dipodium roseum (another one of the hyacinth orchids)
……..
Patersonia occidentalis (purple flag)
I think this is Boletellus ananiceps (no common name that I know of). It’s a bolete, because it has pores, not gills. And they go blue as soon as you touch/scratch etc. My sister in law took a phone video to show her daughter the blueing.
……
Nice assortment.
Obviously something is able to eat that bolete.
Yes. I wouldn’t try it though.
The roadside flaars are small now it’s all dried out and there aren’t many of them. Here is today’s selection:
Centaurium (an introduced plant), Lobelia pratioides (a native herb plant, purported to be poisonous to cattle), and
Themeda triandra (kangaroo grass)
…
…
Tricoryne elatior (Yellow rush lily), a pretty native. I felt a bit chuffed that in amongst all the dandelion type weeds my brain went…“Hang on!!! One of those little yellow things is not like the others!!”
…..
Nice. I have the kangaroo grass in my garden.
roughbarked said:
Nice. I have the kangaroo grass in my garden.
Now you need a cow.
There were still a few flaars about this morning. Here is the first lot…weeds!
Some sort of cabbagey thing.
A couple of Centauries. Centaurium erythraea and C. tenuiflorum
………..
Daucus carota (wild carrot)
Mentha pulegium (Pennyroyal)
Oenothera (evening primrose) and Sixalix atropurpurea (sweet scabious)
……….
Sonchus asper (prickly sowthistle) and Verbascum virgatum (wand mullein)
……….
buffy said:
There were still a few flaars about this morning. Here is the first lot…weeds!Some sort of cabbagey thing.
A couple of Centauries. Centaurium erythraea and C. tenuiflorum
………..
Daucus carota (wild carrot)
Mentha pulegium (Pennyroyal)
Oenothera (evening primrose) and Sixalix atropurpurea (sweet scabious)
……….
Sonchus asper (prickly sowthistle) and Verbascum virgatum (wand mullein)
……….
Daucus carota could be a fairy umbrella.
And now for some local plants.
Apium prostratum (sea celery) and possibly a Brachyscome. Might or might not be native. Waiting on help with ID.
……….
Calocephalus lacteus (milky beautyheads)
Eryngium vesiculosum (blue devils)
Goodenia radicans (Selliera)..Without exaggeration, there are thousands of these flowers out there at the moment.
Bubblecar said:
buffy said:
There were still a few flaars about this morning. Here is the first lot…weeds!Some sort of cabbagey thing.
A couple of Centauries. Centaurium erythraea and C. tenuiflorum
………..
Daucus carota (wild carrot)
Mentha pulegium (Pennyroyal)
Oenothera (evening primrose) and Sixalix atropurpurea (sweet scabious)
……….
Sonchus asper (prickly sowthistle) and Verbascum virgatum (wand mullein)
……….
Daucus carota could be a fairy umbrella.
It’s a very pretty flower. And there are many, many, many of them out on the roadsides here at the moment. Once of the ones otherwise known as Queen Anne’s Lace.
buffy said:
And now for some local plants.Goodenia radicans (Selliera)..Without exaggeration, there are thousands of these flowers out there at the moment.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodenia_radicans
‘Goodenia radicans, commonly known as remuremu, swampweed, bonking grass…’
giggles childishly
ruby said:
buffy said:
And now for some local plants.Goodenia radicans (Selliera)..Without exaggeration, there are thousands of these flowers out there at the moment.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodenia_radicans
‘Goodenia radicans, commonly known as remuremu, swampweed, bonking grass…’
giggles childishly
It’s semi succulent…might be a bit squishy…
:)
ruby said:
buffy said:
And now for some local plants.Goodenia radicans (Selliera)..Without exaggeration, there are thousands of these flowers out there at the moment.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodenia_radicans
‘Goodenia radicans, commonly known as remuremu, swampweed, bonking grass…’
giggles childishly
:)
Thanks for the latest crop of purdie flaars Buffy.
My mum used to grow Queen Anne’s Lace. I like it.
ruby said:
Thanks for the latest crop of purdie flaars Buffy.My mum used to grow Queen Anne’s Lace. I like it.
You could pick commercial quantities for the florist industry on the roadsides here. Along with the Sixalix, you could make very pretty bunches. But…they really shouldn’t be there. I pulled out the Sixalix after I had photographed it this morning and it is now in the rubbish bin. I know how that one spreads, and I could only see one plant. I may not hold it off for long, but I can try.
:)
Not many flaars today.
Chicory (a roadside weed) and Eryngium ovinum(blue devils) in a most spectacular deep colour.
…
And there were little blue butterflies hanging around the devils.
buffy said:
Not many flaars today.Chicory (a roadside weed) and Eryngium ovinum(blue devils) in a most spectacular deep colour.
…
And there were little blue butterflies hanging around the devils.
Nice blues.
buffy said:
Not many flaars today.Chicory (a roadside weed) and Eryngium ovinum(blue devils) in a most spectacular deep colour.
…
And there were little blue butterflies hanging around the devils.
Lots of Chicory on our roadsides but I don’t recall seeing much if any blue devils. The blue butterflies are everywhere here as well.
Didn’t get a free calendar from the chemist for the laundry door this year, so I ordered this one from Officeworks:
Bubblecar said:
Didn’t get a free calendar from the chemist for the laundry door this year, so I ordered this one from Officeworks:
I got these sent to me. So, free yeah.
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
Didn’t get a free calendar from the chemist for the laundry door this year, so I ordered this one from Officeworks:
I got these sent to me. So, free yeah.
pftf what’s wrong with ruling a 42*12 grid
SCIENCE said:
roughbarked said:
Bubblecar said:
Didn’t get a free calendar from the chemist for the laundry door this year, so I ordered this one from Officeworks:
I got these sent to me. So, free yeah.
pftf what’s wrong with ruling a 42*12 grid
Nuthin’. I’d do that myself but clearly I dont have to.
I went to the local cemetery this morning but found no flowers, only artificial ones on graves and even the weed flowers were few and far between. Then I went out to my little herb patch out on the side of the highway and was rewarded with a spectacular patch of blue devils (Eryngium vesiculosum)
……….
Not much else about, but a few milky heads (Calocephalus lacteus)
And the wild carrot, although a weed, is pretty, even in seedhead.
……….
Cercis canadensis, which looks like a compositing error.
Some of the dried flower items the Pontville sister has put together recently, for sale at the Handmade Market.
Flowers are all from her own garden.
Gosh, they’re gorgeous!
Bubblecar said:
Some of the dried flower items the Pontville sister has put together recently, for sale at the Handmade Market.Flowers are all from her own garden.
Very pretty and extremely industrious of your sister.
Today there were very few flaars. However…the orchid I went to check on had one flower out and some buds on the way. So two weeks and there should be more of them. Especially if it rains.
Fringed hare orchid (Leporella fimbriata)
……
……
And the Monotoca scoparia bushes are opening up their buds too.
buffy said:
Today there were very few flaars. However…the orchid I went to check on had one flower out and some buds on the way. So two weeks and there should be more of them. Especially if it rains.Fringed hare orchid (Leporella fimbriata)
……
……
And the Monotoca scoparia bushes are opening up their buds too.
Well spotted.
Hare orchid looks like a weird AI ballet dancer.
buffy said:
Today there were very few flaars. However…the orchid I went to check on had one flower out and some buds on the way. So two weeks and there should be more of them. Especially if it rains.Fringed hare orchid (Leporella fimbriata)
……
……
And the Monotoca scoparia bushes are opening up their buds too.
Squeee! Lovely little orchid, Buffy. Nice find.
ruby said:
buffy said:
Today there were very few flaars. However…the orchid I went to check on had one flower out and some buds on the way. So two weeks and there should be more of them. Especially if it rains.Fringed hare orchid (Leporella fimbriata)
……
……
And the Monotoca scoparia bushes are opening up their buds too.
Squeee! Lovely little orchid, Buffy. Nice find.
It’s a great spot…there is a colony there. I’d checked in the last couple of weeks because I knew they were due. I told the local botanist this afternoon that I will let him know when there is a drift of them out. I may be wishful thinking, but we shall see.