Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
The stem is square, white hair, and overall white-green
A closeup shot of blue flowers of Ajuga reptans Atropurpurea in spring .
Pink flowers.
Purple flowering terminal determinate scorpioid cyme inflorescences of Ecotone Scorpionweed, Phacelia Parryi, Boraginaceae, native annual monoclinous herb in the Santa Monica Mountains, Transverse Ranges, Winter.
Close-up of Potato plants in bloom against dark background. White and yellow flowers of Solanum tuberosum
Oemleria cerasiformis.\n\nTiny white flowers of the Osoberry bloom in early springtime. \nSouthwestern British Columbia.
Material of Chinese Abelia blooming on the side of the road
Identification:\nTot 57-66mm, Ab 39-49mm, Hw 37-42mm.\nIn flight often confused with the related and similar small A. mixta. Ranges less far north, but also migratory and may be invasive in good summers.\nMales are often observed when making low patrols over drying wetlands, showing their noticeable bright colors. The males vivid blue eyes and abdomen and largely green thorax sides are especially distinctive.\nHabitat: Prefers standing waters that dry up over the course of Summer, often overgrown with low rushes, bulrushes or reeds.\nFlight Season: On average, emerges earlier than A. mixta. Seen mainly from May to August, especially in the later months.\nDistribution: Seldom abundant, and only permanently present around the Mediterranean, but scarce in much of Iberia and North Africa. Hot summer weather may lead to influxes further north. Occurs east to Mongolia.\n\nThis Picture is made in a Fen area in Flevoland in half August 2022 by high Summer temperatures.
Dingy skipper Erynnis tages butterfly pollinating in purple blooming lavender flowers.
Mt.Takao, Tokyo, Japan (Oct-2022)
Heracleum  sosnowskyi growing in the woods on a sunny summer day in Norway in Bergen.
Galanthus nivalis was described by the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus in his Species Plantarum in 1753, and given the specific epithet nivalis, meaning snowy (Galanthus means with milk-white flowers).
abelia grandiflora
Green leaves pattern,leaf Ming Aralia tree in the garden
Syringa vulgaris. \n\nTiny purple flowers start to blossom on a branch of a lilac bush. Spring morning on a green belt in Metro Vancouver, Canada.
A closeup of the beautiful Japanese andromeda
Colorful summer flowers,Eifel,Germany.
Pyrgus sidea on the flower
Tot: 45-50mm, Ab 30-37mm, Hw 33-38mm.\nIdentification:\nVery similar to O. cancellatum, with which it is found especially in the south-east, and as far west as France. However, it is sleeker, paler and more contrasting. Named for the contrasting white appendages of both sexes.\nBehavior:\nLike O. cancellatum, male often sits on open ground near the water, making very fast, low flights over the water.\nOccurrence:\nDistribution is patchy, but the species is generally not uncommon, stretching to China and Japan.\nHabitat: Open Ponds and Lakes.\nFlight Season: From the end of May to mid-September.\n\nThis nice Skimmer is photographed during a Vacation in France in May 1990. Scanned from a slide.
Campanula trachelium blossoms on dark background. Summer forest.
Heart-Leaf Pelargonium
Sacred bamboo’s bloom (nandina domestica) in the park , Hong Kong
High angle closeup view of Wild Carrot or Queen Anne’s Lace growing among grasses in the NSW countryside near Armidale
A closeup of white Agapanthus orientalis, lily of the Nile.
A wasp on a flower head of Common Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) on a sunny September day.
butterfly on the flower in spring
Bergenia crassifolia, also called Korean elephant-ear. The plant was belived to be a saxifrage.
Pink Ammania plant, Ammannia gracilis, with blossoms.
Short perennial, the stem with several brown sheaths at the base. Leaves oblong, keeled, shiny-green, the upper leaves smaller and bract-like. Bracts membranous, shorter than the ovary. Flowers greenish-yellow, often with reddish margins and streaks, borne in a slender spike, often many-flowered, each flower manikin-like, with the sepals and petals forming a close hood; lip 12-15mm, pendent, the lateral lobes forming short, narrow ‘arms’ and the central lobe divided into narrow legs; spurless.\nHabitat: Grassland, field boundaries, abandoned quarries, banks and open scrub, rarely along woodland margins, on calcareous soils, to 1500m.\nFlowering Season: May-June.\nDistribution: S & SE Britain, Belgium, Holland, France and Germany.\n\nThis Picture is made during a long weekend in the Eifel (Germany) in June 2019.
Free Images: "bestof:Vischer - Topographia Ducatus Stiriae - 293 Peggau bei Frohnleiten - Duplikat aus anderem Werk.jpg G M Vischers Käyserlichen Geographi Topographia Ducatus"
Ökumene-Subökumene-Anökumene.png
Terms of Use   Search of the Day