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| otiv17. 04. 2015 10:08:57 |
Dear company!  We'll have to go together sometime on an excursion among the flowers and check flower knowledge at the end. May is the ideal month, only if Zofka and the Ice Men don't turn it into a winter month.  Apolonija is not a mushroom, but a piece of sawn beech.
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| Apolonija17. 04. 2015 11:19:56 |
Otiv, you fooled me well. If I'd looked better on the right side, I'd have seen it's wood, ha-ha
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| otiv17. 04. 2015 11:25:01 |
Reward for the effort, Apolonija. 
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| Apolonija17. 04. 2015 12:26:34 |
Otiv, not effort, but pleasure, like your beautiful narcissus
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| Apolonija17. 04. 2015 12:27:55 |
Brane, instructive presentation of gentians. But I read that in the low one rosette leaves are as long as on the stem, in spring one they are 2X longer. Otherwise spring one flowers earlier
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| slavkoo17. 04. 2015 17:18:59 |
I photographed these little flowers at the viewpoint above the Lim Canal. Does anyone have any idea what they are called?
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| zlatica17. 04. 2015 18:13:18 |
If I learned correctly recently, the white flower is early penny-cress, at least that's how it looks to me. For the purple one I don't know, but it looks like it is from the aster family?! Apolonija, Brane, Otiv, invited..
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| velkavrh17. 04. 2015 18:16:41 |
slavkoo, it's garden anemone-Anemone hortensis (pink little rose) and overgrown pennycress-Thlaspi perfoliatum. Early and overgrown pennycress are very similar.
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| zlatica17. 04. 2015 18:19:49 |
Brane, bravo, I had a feeling you'd show up soon. You say there's great similarity with the early one? And what's the small difference? In the flowers? Thanks for the explanation in advance. lp
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| Apolonija17. 04. 2015 19:21:00 |
I already wrote the names, but a visit interrupted me, meanwhile you figured everything out, bravo. This garden anemone is beautiful. It is native to the Mediterranean area (alongside Anemone blanda). Brane, I'm also curious how you'll describe differences between these two penny-cresses, besides the early one blooming sooner.
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| otiv17. 04. 2015 19:22:25 |
@zlatica, as I have read, it is necessary to have seed for exact distinguishing of pennycress, so with flowers it's very hard.
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| velkavrh17. 04. 2015 19:51:14 |
Otiv is right. It's hard to separate these two pennycresses by flowers. For early pennycress it should hold that the inflorescence is at the top of the stem. For the overgrown one it is more characteristic that flowers are arranged also from the top down the stem. In Zlatica's pics the difference is well visible.
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| Apolonija17. 04. 2015 21:57:34 |
Brane, look at older plants of early pennycress, when flowers gradually drop off and fruits form. Also there the inflorescence is stretched along the stem and vice versa - also overgrown ones are clustered at the top at the start. http://www2.arnes.si/~bzwitt/flora/thlaspi_perfoliatum.html Myself I would hardly decide on the species from the picture alone. Not even for yours, Zlatica. True, I have little live experience with them.
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| zlatica18. 04. 2015 08:51:52 |
Good morning. You've tried hard. Thanks for enriching us all with these thorough thoughts and observations. Obviously these two pennycress species are a tougher nut for distinguishing. Today I also noticed the nicely renovated flower section. Don't know only who sorts pictures into that section. A Tadej? And where does he get them from? E.g., if you manage to find a flower that still has no photo under that name, how to include it? This interests me more in principle, since I don't count on that lucky one being me. 
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| Tadej18. 04. 2015 09:18:25 |
Hello, if someone photographs a flower that is not yet in the list and wants it added to the flowers list, the best is to write me a private message. You have probably also noticed that the flower section is somewhat renovated. Otiv and I didn't manage to sort all flowers into what goes where. We wanted to divide all flowers among flowers, grasses, shrubs... If someone has time and is willing to help, they can also write me a private message. Otherwise, I thank all who helped in creating the renovated section once again. Lp, Tadej
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| otiv19. 04. 2015 10:22:13 |
Does anyone know marsh flowers? I shot this today instead of the sunny sunrise, which the fog took 
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| velkavrh19. 04. 2015 14:48:40 |
This is a common flower of slightly damper terrain -meadow cuckooflower-Cardamine pratensis-belongs to crucifers. It is a relative of the forest flower -three-leaved cuckooflower. It blooms near my home too. At your little flowers the blooms are not yet open.
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| otiv19. 04. 2015 19:35:39 |
Thanks, Brane! Along the Path of Memories and Comradeship we also find little flowers.
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| Apolonija19. 04. 2015 19:46:17 |
Vito, you know- "horse laugh" Brane, what do you say to hairy bittercress (Cardamine hirsuta)? It's also good for salad.
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