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Which flower is this?

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Majstro15. 08. 2018 22:16:41
Collecting herbarium, eternal student headache, right? velik nasmeh Well, one has to manage.

1. in my opinion Biscutella laevigata
2. to me looks like mother of thyme
5. looks like Parnassia palustris

With the rest I agree with Velkavrh.
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Apolonija15. 08. 2018 23:00:13
Vid, I agree with Majster.
1. common buckler-mustard has those characteristic pods that cannot be mistaken - like glasses. Belongs to crucifers.
2. mother of thyme
5. marsh grass-of-Parnassus, characteristic leaves and sepals

Brane, I have come to realize that sometimes we decide too quickly for a plant, and it's better to stay with the genus if we are not 100 percent sure. That's already a lot.nasmeh
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Sitback16. 08. 2018 11:22:54
Hi! Is there some handy booklet with pictures and descriptions of alpine flowers, suitable to take on hikes?
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zlatica16. 08. 2018 12:31:50
Sitback, there are several books, depending on what's available in bookstores at the moment. Each has something the other doesn't, but it's good to start with one, then you know better how to structure wishes for suitable literature. For starters, I'll list three that deal more with alpine flowers and are of suitable format:
Wolfgang Lippert Alpine flowers (Cankarjeva publishing) - probably no longer available
Hoppe: Alpine flowers (Narava publishing)
dr. Helga Hofmann: Alpine flowers (MK - Nature in hand)
There are more books on flowers dealing more with lowland flowers, others are larger format for home use.
I wish you good study of little flowers. lp
P.S. I also checked Emko and saw that the last two books are available:
https://www.emka.si/rezultati-iskanja?iskanje=alpske+cvetlice
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Zvonček16. 08. 2018 14:45:16
Zlatica, thanks. I thought it could be touch-me-not, but with such large flowers!? I've known touch-me-not only from photos so far. If I'd known that, I'd have pulled them all. LP
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zlatica16. 08. 2018 14:51:52
Yes, it's true, Zvonček, the flower is interesting, no doubt, but the feelings when you know it's an invasive, are not the best..velik nasmeh
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Apolonija16. 08. 2018 20:10:49
Common touch-me-not (Impatiens noli-tangere) is ours though.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impatiens_noli-tangere#/media/File:NoliTangere_Pflanze.jpg

And why the name touch-me-not? You probably have experience already. If you touch its seed pod, it explodes and "sows" the seeds.nasmeh
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velkavrh17. 08. 2018 12:18:40
photos by Vida

for picture no. 1 I cannot agree that it's the common buckler-mustard. I reviewed photos of leaves from several authors and undoubtedly determined that the leaves are flat - they are not serrated, as in the photo.

for no.2 - I really couldn't identify

for no. 5 I really missed it.

But I have never tried identifying mountain or other flowers that are already dried.

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Zvonček17. 08. 2018 18:24:16
Quite by chance I came across an article from Planinski vestnik, November 2014, about touch-me-nots. There are four and only one, as Apolonija said, is ours, native, that's the common touch-me-not. The other three are big invasives that came to us because of beautiful flowers as ornamental plants and unwittingly spread beyond our gardens. Those are glandular touch-me-not, small-flowered and Balfour's touch-me-not. Dense stands of glandular touch-me-not prevent the growth of common horsetail, thistles, mint and other native species. But our touch-me-not really has beautiful, vivid yellow flowers. A slightly more poetic name in English: Touch-me-not. Well, now we all know about touch-me-nots. LP to all flower lovers!
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zlatica17. 08. 2018 19:05:07
Zvonček, today I tested if it works, that the seed shoots away as if fired when you touch the touch-me-not, and yes it is, it flies off so fast that you get scared. velik nasmeh cheers
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Apolonija17. 08. 2018 20:40:43
Brane, good that you doubt. But look at the leaves and capsules in the picture...Chicories have flower heads and then, when the seed ripens, "lanterns". Here there are characteristic "goggles".


http://dbiodbs.units.it/carso/chiavi_pub28?usr=admin&n=960&specie=2626
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zlatica18. 08. 2018 18:27:16
From a walk around Gradiško Lake ... cheers
black-fruited service tree1
common monkshood2
oil pouches3
annual xerophytes4
Canadian goldenrod - has a slightly hairy stem5
Comparison of Canadian goldenrod (left) with giant goldenrod (right), which has a completely smooth stem6
Flattened two-rowed polypore, protected, from the chanterelle family7
Comparison of club-like chanterelle (left) with two-rowed polypore8
Fruit of red dogwood9
Marsh fleabane10
Cutleaf rudbeckia11
Leaf of pinnate rudbeckia12
Common ragwort13
Windflower.14
Fruits of marsh fleabane15
pennyroyal (Mentha pulegium)16
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otiv18. 08. 2018 18:52:05
I was also by the "lake", but the cows drank all the water and reeds remained and among them I found the plant simple hedgehog...
1
2
3
4
5
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zlatica18. 08. 2018 20:13:57
Yes, this hedgehog is nice and interesting. I know about it, but haven't seen it live yet. Good that the cows were at work, right Otiv? velik nasmeh
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Zvonček18. 08. 2018 21:45:22
Today at the beginning of the path to Črna prst by the road I came across our native common touch-me-not. There aren't many flowers anymore, but I was glad to find the last flowers of silver avens at the top.
common touch-me-not1
2
fringed thistle3
narrow-leaved catchfly4
Narrow-helmeted helleborine5
Siberian juniper6
silky gentian7
Gentianella8
9
rock speedwell10
silver burnet11
12
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trma55520. 08. 2018 01:26:02
I can't find the name of this beautiful golden flower. Can you help me?
1
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miri20. 08. 2018 07:19:55
I think it's alpine poppy.
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zlatica20. 08. 2018 09:04:47
To me it looks more like a cinquefoil.
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Apolonija20. 08. 2018 13:48:42
zlatica is right. On the picture it's cinquefoil. Alpine poppy has different sepals like parsley and grayish.

zvonček, your gentian won't be narrow-leaved, this one has even more "parsley-like" leaves and different flowers. I think it's broad-leaved. You already know a lot of little flowers.nasmeh

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Zvonček20. 08. 2018 17:44:20
Apolonija, thanks. The gentian is really broad-leaved. Under Olševa I found Turkish (or turnip-like - I wouldn't distinguish them) gentian. I learned they grow only in KSA. LP
Turk's cap lily1
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