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The stem is square, white hair, and overall white-green
Flowers wild primrose (Primula veris) closeup on the blurry background
Unedited photo of flowers in the garden
Dasiphora fruticosa at Jackson (Jackson Hole) in Teton County, Wyoming. This was originally known as potentilla.
Close up of yellow candelabra primrose (primula bulleyana) flowers in bloom
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Beautiful yellow flowers of Wallflower (Erysimum cheiri) in a spring garden. Selective focus.
Short to medium, slightly hairy annual or biennial. Basal leaves forming a rosette, elliptical toothed or untoothed; stem leaves usually untoothed, unstalked. Flowers white, 3mm. Fruits linear, 5-20mm, hairless, not flattened.\nHabitat: Arable and cultivated land, waste places, banks, walls and hedgerows, often on rather dry sandy soils.\nFlowering Season: March-October.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except for much of the north, the Faeroes and Iceland, often abundant.\n\nThis is a very common weed in the Netherlands in the described Habitats.
Close-up of Yellow inflorescences of Giant goldenrod (solidago gigantea) in wetland. Beautiful invasive plant. Drôme, France.
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.
Yellow flowers Alyssum obovatum in the garden
Flowers, plants and trees on mountain side in South Africa, Western Cape
Forest lungwort (Pulmonaria) bush in early spring. Blooming purple-blue lungwort with dark green leaves. Early forest flowers appear among dry grass and have many flowers. Medicinal plant
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Citril finch (Carduelis citrinella) ready to take a bath at a paddle
Variable medium to tall perennial, covered with flattened hairs attached from the middle. Leaves oblong-lanceolate, untoothed, the uppermost narrower. Flower yellow or orange-brown, large, 20-25mm, in elongating racemes, very fragrant. Fruit a slender siliqua, 25-75mm, erect, flattened.\nHabitat: Rocky places, cliffs and walls, generally at low attitudes.\nFlowering Season: March-June.\nDistribution: SE Europe. Widely naturalized in Britain, Belgium, Holland France and Germany. Widely cultivated in gardens, as an ornamental and as a cut flower.\n\nThis Picture is made in my Garden in April of 2022, where it appeared spontaneously.
Primula palinuri flowers closeup
Several yellow flowers of an unidentified species of Wood Sorrel starting to unfold in central Chile. The Wood Sorrel group has many species in South America, the taxonomy of which is not well characterised.
Little Yellow Flowers and Green Grass Pattern
A skylark (Alauda arvensis) on open farmland.
Tagetes lucida branches with yellow flowers. Mexican tarragon culinary plant.
Beautiful Spring Flower
Flower in Rebun island
Very variable, low to tall, hairy or hairless perennial. Basal leaves oblong, broader above the middle, stalked; stem leaves linear-lanceolate, decreasing up to the stem, unstalked.\nFlowerheads bright yellow, 15-18cm, in lax, rather narrow panicles.\nHabitat: Dry places, on calcareous or acid soils.\nFlowering Season: July to September.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe.\nGoldenrod is known as Herbal Medicine.\n\nThis is not a common Species in the described Habitats in the Netherlands.
Solidago speciosa (Showy Goldenrod) Native North American Wildflower
Intentional camera movement of bunch of orange flowers
Yellow Wallflowers isolated on white background
Wild violet weed
Small white flowers with a yellow center. White  Saxifraga  is a perennial herbaceous  plant for Alpine slides.  Spring flowers. Top view. Selective focus.
Wild flower in the mountains
Free Images: "bestof:Juncus biflorus NRCS-1.jpg en Juncus biflorus Elliott - bog rush 1989 http //plants usda gov/java/largeImage imageID jubi_001_ahp tif USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database"
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