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| Apolonija16. 08. 2017 19:22:23 |
Zlatica, have you become a poet too? It suits you. Whether there is also a hairy škržolica, I don't know offhand. Of these I know long-haired škržolica (Hieracium pilosella) and hairy škržolica Hieracium villosum, Jacq. Maybe someone just shortened the first name What do your books say? Otiv, what if some chamois accidentally uprooted your eyebright ? Your rock speedwell has lime scales on the leaves, but they are not in characteristic rosettes for the clustered one, so it's the scaly one. Do you agree?
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| otiv16. 08. 2017 20:10:31 |
Zlatica, thanks!  Apolonija, from what I saw it was almost 100% chamois on two legs. Marmots also tempted him, as there were none there either. It will hold that it's the scaly one, I enlarged the photo a lot and really no characteristic rosettes visible. Thanks 
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| zlatica17. 08. 2017 06:59:48 |
Apolonija, just a reply: after studying škržolice because of my yellow one I learned that there is also H. piliferium translated as hairy škržolica. But let's leave those niceties, it's quite too hard for me as a layman, there are differences between hairy and long-haired, but škržolice are so demanding already for botanists, let alone for us.   
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| Apolonija17. 08. 2017 08:14:45 |
Zlatica, thanks. Now from the Latin name I see it has many subspecies too.
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| zlatica18. 08. 2017 22:09:39 |
ah, Apolonija, good thing we have you. This quasi sunflower reminds me more of a dahlia, as it has exactly that flower structure, so I thought before it escaped from some garden. But usually it's wild in nature, is it cultivated?
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| velkavrh19. 08. 2017 05:35:56 |
zlatica under #2. I think you have the common woodland angelica (Angelica sylvestris). We recognize it by the leaves, if I see correctly. The bristly cow-wheat I haven't seen this year yet. Along the Triglavska Bistrica path there were plenty of only hairy bellflowers. Need to go higher next week.
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| Apolonija19. 08. 2017 06:37:13 |
Helianthus x multiflorus - that x in the name indicates the plant is a hybrid. As far as I know, in nature it's one with single flowers, this one really escaped.
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| potka19. 08. 2017 07:01:54 |
Bristly cow-wheat, it was the only one
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| zlatica19. 08. 2017 07:23:36 |
Excellent, Branko, you figured it well, on your hint I checked the literature myself and the leaves prove your correct determination. Thanks! Best
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| zlatica19. 08. 2017 19:23:43 |
Thanks for the edelweiss, kati, which your "entry through flowering gates" into Kamnik-Savinja Alps brought me..  
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| zlatica20. 08. 2017 17:12:26 |
Deniss, nice that you uploaded your flower package too, from beautiful Zois's bellflowers, F. cow-wheat, wolf's strawberries, beautiful hairy bellflowers and more. Quite a colorful flower selection you found on your mountain visit. Best  
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| darinka421. 08. 2017 18:33:06 |
Along the path from Golak on Sunday. Does anyone know it?
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| otiv21. 08. 2017 19:33:29 |
Lords-and-Ladies...poisonous flower Lords-and-Ladies (Arum maculatum) - Zaplana.net www.zaplana.net › zaplana.net › Slovenian flowers
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| zlatica21. 08. 2017 19:48:01 |
I just wrote it, but see that Otiv already replied. So just to agree, it's the spotted one, because there are several together, leaves appear in spring. lp
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| otiv21. 08. 2017 20:09:34 |
And also my unknown one... 
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