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Plant nursery at Lucca Botanical Garden, Italy.
Hangzhou, China  - October 13, 2016: Hangzhou Botanical Garden,a Chinese garden in Hangzhou,Zhejiang
Mesembs  (Lithops lesliei) South African plant from Namibia in the botanical collection of supersucculent plants
Meconopsis lancifolia subspecies eximia in London, England
Flowers in Botanical Garden
Garden with Wild Ginger in the back
The trail to Ka‘ena Point follows an old railroad bed and former dirt road that ran along the westernmost point of O‘ahu. The trail leads to Ka‘ena Point Natural Area Reserve, a remote and scenic protected area harboring some of the last vestiges of coastal sand dune habitat on the island, and home to native plants and seabirds. Whales frequent this shoreline during the winter months.\n\nA hike to Ka‘ena Point can take two routes. From the Wai‘anae side, take the trailhead at the end of the paved road in the Keawaula Section of Ka‘ena Point State Park and follow the dirt roadway for 2.4 miles to Ka‘ena Point Natural Area Reserve. This route follows the shoreline on your left (southwest), characterized by boulder beaches and occasional tidepools, while cliffs rise above you on your right (northeast). Midway along the trail are a pair of small blowholes. In places the old road has eroded completely.\n\nStapelia gigantea is a species of flowering plant in the genus Stapelia of the family Apocynaceae.[1] Common names include Zulu giant,[2] carrion plant and toad plant (although the nickname \
Horizontal high angle extreme closeup photo of tiny plants and bright green Star Moss growing on the forest floor in the World-Heritage listed Gondwana rainforest. Gibraltar Range, NSW.
Summer flowering tall plant.
Various flowers in the garden with stones in the landscaped park.
Agave mitis beginning to flower.
variety of succulent plants in a dry climate garden
Several flower spikes of the giant, ground-dwelling Blue Puya Bromeliad (Puya berteroniana), called the Chagual in Chile. A close relative of the pineapple this Bromeliad is unusual in growing rooted in earth rather than being an epiphyte on the branches of a tree. It is also very unusual in the Plant Kingdom in having turquoise flowers, which are usually pollinated by hummingbirds when the plant produces its one and only flower spike after about five years of growth and then dies. The species is endemic to Chile.
Heliamphora pulchella is endemic to some of the table-top mountains in the Guiana highlands. The inside of the pitchers is covered with white hairs.
Kniphofia flowers in detail
One of the views at Nan Lian Garden. Hong Kong
A nature background of a dried tree branch in full frame.
Expired medicine used as fertilizer. Closeup view.
Short, creeping greyish, evergreen perennial forming mats, with erect flower stems. Leaves linear-cylindrical, 8-20mm, pointed, falling when dead. Flowers bright or pale yellow, 14-15mm, drooping in bud; petals often 7.\nHabitat: Rocky places, walls, stony pathways, to 2000m.\nFlowering Season: June-August.\nDistribution: North to S Scandinavia; naturalized in Britain and Ireland. W Europe to the Ukraine.\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the South of Belgium in June 2006.
seeds of Vriesea plant in garden on Tenerife
Stonegarden with waterfalls
Parque de la Paloma, Benalmádena.
Centennial Park Conservatory, Etobicoke, Canada.
One of the views at Nan Lian Garden. Hong Kong
Chandelier plant which is native to Madagascar.
Green plants in Larnachs Castle
This wildflower, commonly known in its native South Africa as sun star, star of Bethlehem or yellow chincherinchee, belongs to the Asparagaceae family.
View of a dark purple succulent plant, California
Cobra plant, also called Darlingtonia Californica and California pitcher, is the only species of the genus Darlingtonia of the New World pitcher plant (Sarraceniaceae). The cobra plant is native to swamps in mountain areas of northern California and southern Oregon and uses its carnivorous pitfall traps to supplement its nutritional requirements in poor soil conditions. The plant’s hooded pitcher₋like leaves resemble striking cobras and bear purple-red appendages that look similar to a snake’s forked tongue or a set of fangs.
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