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It is a Gaura lindheimeri in the park.
Squirrel eating a nut on a tree branch
Squirrel in a tree looking cute.
Opening white flowers of Sorbus aria in May
Rhododendron tomentosum flower growing in Italian countryside. High quality photo
The Manuka flower in bloom on a Tea Tree in soft focus.
Arrowwood Eskimo branch with flowers - Latin name - Viburnum Eskimo
Viburnum dilatatum, commonly called linden viburnum because its leaves resemble those of the linden tree, is native to East Asia, including Japan. White flowers in showy, domed clusters appear in late spring (April to early June). Flowers give way to bright red fruits that mature to black in fall and winter. Berries are attractive to birds.
White rhododendron with blue skies in flower.
Squirrel on a tree branch looking at the camera.
blooming viburnum (Viburnum opulus) in the garden
Grey Squirrel feeds on pine kernel in Pine tree. The Grey Squirrel is the most common tree squirrel found in the forests and woodlands of Britain, often regarded as a pest and predator of the Red Squirrel. Photographed in Dorset, England, UK
A view of the Lyngvid Fyr lgithouse on the North Sea coast of Jutland in Denmark
Onion flower close up photo.
Spiraea Vanhoutei flower tree
Squirrel on the tree
White Phlox Bunch on Shrub
Flowering yarrow (Achillea millefolium). Pennine Alps. Piedmont. Italy.
Beautiful Flower for Background
Viburnum plicatum, or Japanese snowball, produces 2 to 3 inch wide showy, snowball-type clusters of white flowers in spring.  It is a dense, upright, multi-stemmed, deciduous shrub with somewhat horizontal branching that grows 3 to 4 meters high.
Beautiful flowers along the Seattle waterfront.
White flowers
close-up of a beautiful flowering plant in the sun
Viburnum × carlcephalum - Large-flowered snowball
Numerous species of hawthorn are used medicinally and edible, they are also cultivated as ornamentals, and their wood is used
Squirrel sitting on a branch looking down towards the viewer.
The viburnum vat is a plant of the Caprifoliaceae family, widespread in the Mediterranean basin and in south-eastern Europe, commonly called laurotino or lentiline.
Pyracantha is a genus of thorny evergreen large shrubs in the family Rosaceae, with common names Firethorn or Pyracantha. They are native to an area extending from Southeast Europe east to Southeast Asia, resemble and are related to Cotoneaster, but have serrated leaf margins and numerous thorns (Cotoneaster is thornless).\nPyracanthas are valuable ornamental plants, grown in gardens for their decorative flowers and fruit, often very densely borne. Their dense thorny structure makes them particularly valued in situations where an impenetrable barrier is required. Pyracantha berries are not poisonous as commonly thought; although they are very bitter, they are edible when cooked and are sometimes made into jelly.[2] In the UK and Ireland Pyracantha and the related genus Cotoneaster are valuable sources of nectar when often the bees have little other forage during the June Gap.\nThe plants reach up to six metres tall. The seven species have white flowers and either red, orange, or yellow berries. The flowers are produced during late spring and early summer; the pomes develop from late summer, and mature in late autumn (source Wikipedia).
White spring and fragrant flower of shrub Viburnum Lantana.
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Free Images: "bestof:Notholithocarpus densiflorus var. echinoides - Regional Parks Botanic Garden, Berkeley, CA - DSC04274.JPG Notholithocarpus densiflorus var echinoides � Tanbark"
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