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| JTrogar7. 06. 2011 16:34:04 |
Which flowers are in the pictures? Thanks for the answer. Best, Janez.
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| velkavrh8. 06. 2011 19:55:26 |
I spent quite a while browsing Peter2's list and figured out that the first flower is glacial wild parsnip, while I didn't discover the other flowers. It is similar to bird's milk, which I have in the garden. The spear-like long leaves bother me, as they somehow don't fit. Peter2 will have to help!
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| velkavrh12. 06. 2011 05:37:32 |
On the hike to Štegovnik - Stanko Klinar teaches us that the correct Slovenian pronunciation is Štegovnik and not Stegovnik as it is used. The less established form of the name is Štibovnik.
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| otiv12. 06. 2011 07:03:29 |
@velkavrh Hello! In my handbook I found the third little flower under the name alpine hind. I hope I'm not wrong. Good luck
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| otiv12. 06. 2011 07:13:29 |
Hello Janez! For your second little flower I also looked in the handbook and found it under the name common golden root. If I'm wrong, sorry for misleading you. and greet "my" Golte
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| otiv12. 06. 2011 07:24:11 |
I'd suggest on our forum to arrange flowers by colors and not by alphabet, since when one is searching, one doesn't know the flower's name, and to supplement it and increase the number of pics per flower. Best regards!
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| velkavrh12. 06. 2011 12:32:23 |
Otiv, I'm immediately for your proposal. It would really be simpler and clearer if we had them by colors. Maybe we should call our botanist Peter2 to help us with this. I didn't find Janez's common goldenroot anywhere, nor my alpine deer gentian. But there are quite a few just before descending from the Štegovnik ridge to the window. Today from the walk to the hut on Čemšenik two little flowers!
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| magpie12. 06. 2011 15:10:44 |
hello! @velkavrh: the flowers in the pictures are common goldenroot and alpine deer gentian. The cuckoo flower named common cuckooflower is, however, two-leaved helleborine. best regards
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| velkavrh12. 06. 2011 18:27:01 |
Maqpie, thanks, you're right about the second flower, it looks like I skimmed Peter2's list too quickly. But you have to admit I'm trying. Do you perhaps know a good mountain flowers handbook with quality pictures! B.R.
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| jarsan14. 06. 2011 09:53:19 |
The lily in the first picture is golden apple or Carniolan lily (Lilium carniolicum). A fairly good list of mountain flowers is on the website "www.zaplana.net".
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| peter214. 06. 2011 18:30:39 |
Only now I noticed that this topic is very active I don't know why it's not visible on the first page? Maybe the site administrator will check. Regarding flowers, determination from a photo is often difficult. The yellow flowerlet on the previous page is not yellow saxifrage, probably it's common saxifrage. Next to it probably really July flax. The yellow flower in JTrogar's picture is not glacier hawkweed, I don't know what it is, because there are not enough data. I'm not a botanist myself, I just photograph. I also recommend zaplana.net for flower identification, lots of photos also on the pages http://galerija.foto-narava.com/index.php As I already wrote here: http://www.hribi.net/trenutnerazmere.asp?slo=1&gorovjeid=1&id=1060 I recommend visiting the botanical path where flowers have name plaques.
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| velkavrh15. 06. 2011 10:51:20 |
Peter2, thanks for the detailed reply. If I remember correctly from last year I saw a sign for mountain botanical garden at Vodnik hut. Do you know where it is? I know about the one in Trenta, just haven't visited it yet. Today also adding pics of little flowers from yesterday's hike to Zelenjak and Palec.
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| peter215. 06. 2011 18:20:13 |
The botanical garden at Veliko Polje is designed similarly to other botanical trails in Bohinj (see http://www.gorenjskiglas.si/novice/gorenjska/index.php?action=clanek&id=51211) The plants there are not specially grown, but only those growing there are marked. In the alpine botanical garden Julijana in Trenta, however, they grow plants (from seeds collected in nature) and thus on a small area you can see most alpine plants. I highly recommend visiting Julijana as soon as possible, because it's at low altitude, so alpine flowers bloom out earlier there than in the mountains.
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| velkavrh16. 06. 2011 23:40:34 |
I can add another natural botanical garden - behind the pasture under Lisec on the way to Črna prst, which I visited today. Very instructive. Most of the presented flowers are blooming. Got confirmation that the blue flowerlet is really July flax. I photographed all presented flowerlets. The third flowerlet from my hike to Zelenjak and Palec is common pasque flower and I snapped it right at the parking lot. Its blue really catches the eye. Today presenting four flowerlets not presented at the arboretum.
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| peter217. 06. 2011 07:15:51 |
1. not pink cranesbill but probably great burnet 2. OK 3. probably mountain clematis 4 and 5. alpine rampion
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| otiv17. 06. 2011 21:49:06 |
Fellow flower lovers, please help if I correctly identified the names of three white flowerlets I photographed along the path to Korošica. Thanks and best regards!
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| Tadej18. 06. 2011 09:33:33 |
Hello! The technical issues that were under this section are now resolved. B.R., Tadej
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| GITA18. 06. 2011 10:07:29 |
Otiv, I think on the last picture it's not alpine but Traunfellner's saxifrage. They differ most obviously by the alpine having fuller (rosetted) basal leaves. I'll send you a link to ZS. (I'm not really some botanical expert otherwise, but sometimes when there's time I also play around with identifying some plant and just the other day I took this saxifrage "under the magnifying glass" , so I happen to know... )
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| velkavrh18. 06. 2011 15:31:41 |
Today some flowers from the tour to the bivouac under Grintavec. I must say there's a lot of flowers on the whole tour from Suhadolnik onwards.
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| babim18. 06. 2011 16:37:46 |
velkavrh - second picture yellow little bush is prealpine rockrose
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