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Phacelia tanacetifolia blue tansy
One blue black caraway flower on a green background. Web banner.
In the field a small Spermacoce verticillata bush with flowers
Maianthemum racemosum (treacleberry, feathery false lily of the valley, false Solomon's seal, Solomon's plume or false spikenard; syn. Smilacina racemosa, Prairie Creek Redwood State Park;
Close-up of white crown flower or giant Indian milkweed
Rittersporn - Delphinium Belladonna 'Cliveden Beauty
Close-up of ornamental onion flower about to come into full bloom. Small dew drops (rain drops) are visible. Defocused garden background.
Sweet clover, Melilotus officinalis, is an important medicinal and medicinal plant and with white or yellow flowers. Sweet clover, Melilotus officinalis, is an important medicinal plant and has white or yellow flowers.
White veronicastrum virginicum or Culver's root flowers in a garden
Lysimachia punctata - Gilbweiderich in the garden
the small island of baltrum in germany
Fruits of masterwort (Peucedanum ostruthium). Pennine Alps. Piedmont. Italy.
Sempre-viva - Chapada Diamantina - Bahia - Brazil - May 9, 2015: Morro dos Três Irmãos, in Chapada Diamantina
Nigella damascena, also known as Love-in-a-mist and Devil in the bush, is an annual garden flowering plant, which belongs to the buttercup family Ranunculaceae. Native to southern Europe, north Africa and south-west Asia, it is found on neglected, damp patches of land. Its common name “Love-in-a-mist” comes from the flowers being nestled in a ring of multifid, lacy bracts. The flowers, blooming in early summer, are most commonly different shades of blue, but can be white, pink or pale purple, with 5 to 25 petals.
Close up of a garden sage (salvia officinalis) plant in bloom
Ornamental onion flower about to come into full bloom. Small dew drops (rain drops) are visible. Defocused garden background with beautiful bokeh light spots. Space for copy.
euphorbia dendroides
Epipactis helleborine, the broad-leaved helleborine, is a terrestrial species of orchid with a broad distribution. It is a long lived herb which varies morphologically with ability to self-pollinate. \nDescription:\nEpipactis helleborine can grow to a maximum height of 1 m or more under good conditions, and has broad dull green leaves which are strongly ribbed and flat The flowers are arranged in long drooping racemes with dull green sepals and shorter upper petals. The lower labellum is pale red and is much shorter than the upper petals. \nFlowering occurs June–September. \nHabitat:\nFound in woods and hedge-banks and often not far from paths near human activity. It is one of the most likely European orchids to be found within a city, with many sites for example in Glasgow, London and Moscow. Sometimes spotted beside car parks. \nEpipactis helleborine is known for its successful colonization of human-made or anthropogenic habitats such as parks, gardens or roadsides. These roadside orchids exhibit special features such as large plant size and greater ability to produce flowers. Pollination plays a huge role as pollinators such as Syrphidae, Culicidae, Apidae etc. possess greater species diversity and visits the flowering sites more in anthropogenic habitats as compared to native ones. The visitation rates along with the reproductive success of these orchids are higher in large populations as they are more attractive to pollinators. \n\nDistribution:\nThis species is widespread across much of Europe and Asia, from Portugal to China, as well as northern Africa (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis is a very common Species in the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
A closeup of Xanthium Spinosum or Bathurst Burr, showing the sharp thorny spikes. An invasive pest weed, otherwise known as spiny cockleburr,
Flowering shrub horse chestnut (Aesculus parviflora), Strauch-Rosskastanie
A closeup shot of Typha latifolia and grass
St. john's wort (hypericum perforatum) in the meadow
Dendrobium speciosum, commonly known as the rock orchid or cane orchid, is a species of Australian orchid. Its varieties can be found in a range of habitats as epiphytes (on branches or trunks of trees) or lithophytes. It has a continuous distribution along the east coast of Australia and in distinct populations along the Tropic of Capricorn.
A macro image of field  penny cress also know as Thlaspi arvense
Ferns are plants that have lived on earth since ancient times. Pteridophytes do not produce flowers, but grow as sporophytes and seedlings. There are many types of fern plants, and each type has a leaf shape and properties that match the ecological environment.
Ballon Plant Flowers
Equisetum arvense, the field horsetail or common horsetail is a herbaceous perennial plant, native throughout the arctic and temperate regions of the northern hemisphere. It has separate sterile non-reproductive and fertile spore-bearing stems, growing from a perennial underground rhizomatous stem system.
Euphorbia x martini 'Ascot Rainbow' in Kent, England
Flowering of the white Hydrangea Paniculata in the city park. Tardiva grade
Similar to N. arvensis, but the upper leaves in a close whorl just below the flower. Flowers pale to mid-blue, 25-40mm. Follicles closely united. Fruit capsule inflated, papery when ripe; seeds black.\nHabitat: Dry open places, fields and waste places, disturbed ground.\nFlowering season: June-July.\nDistribution: Indigenous in S. Europe and West Asia. Naturalized in Belgium, Holland, France and Germany. Frequently cultivated in gardens; forms include blue, pink and white flowers.
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