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| francimedved7. 12. 2014 22:04:45 |
A couple of flowers that I don't know.
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| otiv8. 12. 2014 06:08:41 |
Franci, just guessing first - golden cinquefoil second - Kerner's poppy third - club-headed anemone fourth - rockrose or sunrose For correctness, let's wait for our professors. Lp
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| velkavrh8. 12. 2014 10:22:48 |
Good day! Under picture no. 3 from francimedved we can't miss it, because there is no similar anemone. Under no. 1 we are already in doubt. Here the so-called large-flowered grow: golden and Crantz's cinquefoil and also large-flowered. By flower we can't determine them correctly somehow. We would succeed by leaves. All have palmately divided leaves. In golden the middle leaf lobe is shorter, the leaf edges seem silver-bordered. I haven't been able to determine them exactly yet. With poppies it's like this. Here three yellow-colored grow. In Karavanke and KSA Kerner's poppy, in Julian Alps Rhaetian and Petkovsek's. Kerner's poppy sometimes colors orange too. Hairy leaves should have Rhaetian, Kerner's not. By picture otiv guessed correctly. Under no. 4 is correctly sunrose or rockrose. We have several of them - common (Helianthemum nummularium), alpine (H. alpestre), and also large-flowered and ovoid. I don't distinguish the species, so it's fine to call them rockrose or sunrose when presenting them. Now I'm studying mountain flowers for the third season. For exact recognition you really have to photograph the flower, stem and leaves well. You can do that well if you go studying flowers alone or with a companion who is interested in the same.
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| otiv8. 12. 2014 11:07:46 |
Brane, thanks for the expert support of my guessing. I hope that next year we will do some joint botanical tour, for me definitely a lesson.  Lp
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| francimedved9. 12. 2014 12:09:20 |
Apolonija, it's true that I already knew them, but it also happens that one forgets something. I only knew the macro, and the picture escaped me when uploading before I added the caption. Thanks for the links. LP
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| otiv9. 12. 2014 21:21:10 |
Maybe someone knows the little flower below. It has leaves similar to foxglove, but the flowers are not similar to foxglove at all.
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| Apolonija10. 12. 2014 00:54:14 |
Otiv, this flower will probably, or would probably sprout a stem in normal conditions. Tough task for such a late hour, when I can hardly see. The plant reminds me of a type of hawkweed.
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| velkavrh10. 12. 2014 08:52:53 |
I think that Otiv's rose is a hawkweed as Apolonija correctly figured out, and specifically the stream hawkweed - Tephroseris crispa. The basal leaves are really similar to trobentica, then it shoots a stem and at the end of the stem, from several peduncles, the characteristic radiate flowers of hawkweeds. The leaves of this hawkweed are not hairy.
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| velkavrh10. 12. 2014 09:31:40 |
Yesterday I presented mountain roses that I saw for the first time in our hills this spring or finally identified. These two tours were the richest in these new roses. Then on a couple of tours I discovered only one or two new ones.
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| otiv11. 12. 2014 08:39:53 |
Apolonija and Brane thanks for your help, now I know a bit more again.  And some more wildlife from yesterday's Porezen. Lp
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| velkavrh11. 12. 2014 09:28:56 |
Today I went a bit through cinquefoils. They belong to the rose family. We have as many as 27 species here. Already last year I delved into Mr. Martin Turjak's diploma thesis, mentored by Nejc Jogan. The thesis is from 2007. It's available online. Somehow we could divide them into white-colored and others, and yellow-colored. Among the whites we'll most often see Clusius's in our mountains, the others like white, prealpine and small-flowered we find more rarely. The most famous is definitely the shining or Triglav rose. The red-colored marsh one I haven't seen yet. Need to look for it in the marshy areas of Pokljuka. There are more yellow-colored ones. Heart-leaved is certainly known to us. Goose cinquefoil we'll recognize by characteristic leaves. Mountain meadows in spring and summer are full of heptaphyllous and ground-hugging. I still can't distinguish ground-hugging. Rocky terrain is liked by golden and Crantz's. On the Karst we find Braun's and Tommasini's, which I probably saw this spring on Vremščica, but didn't recognize them.
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| zlatica11. 12. 2014 20:23:29 |
Otiv, the grassy tuft in picture 5 I really like. Excellent photo, congratulations. Brane, you're really becoming a true botanist. You've tackled cinquefoils so systematically that you've sparked real interest in them for me. I remember far back when I first saw Clusius cinquefoil, I thought it was some faded Triglav rose, well, when I looked it up at home in the literature, it soon became clear to me that it's not so. But I'm wondering why the rose in picture 6 is called heptaphyllous cinquefoil if it has only 5 yellow petals? lp 
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| otiv11. 12. 2014 21:12:25 |
@zlatica, thanks and in fact it was sparkling even more than it looks in the picture. I should have made a video, as the wind was blowing hard and it was sparkling from reflections of sun rays. Now there are no little flowers and such things are also interesting.  Lp
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| Apolonija12. 12. 2014 21:17:36 |
Zlatica, good evening! I see you're really enjoying yourself. Your shots are very nice. A bit guessing and with a bit of imagination, it's probably Tommasini's cinquefoil (Potentilla tommasiniana) in the picture, which grows around here. It has bright yellow flowers and hairy leaves palmately divided into three leaflets. PS: did you mean large-flowered cinquefoil? Lp
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| ločanka12. 12. 2014 21:29:39 |
Zlatica, what are those little coins called on the 4th picture? Today I brought some from Lubnik. I always get them also on the way to Komna in autumn time.
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