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| malenka10. 11. 2020 11:57:40 |
Evergreen milkvetch (Astragalus sempervirens) Type: Shrubs Family: Legumes Color: white It is a low, bushy, thorny plant. In mountains from Spain to Greece where it grows, it has several subspecies.
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| malenka10. 11. 2020 15:23:08 |
Glaucous hawkweed (Hieracium glaucum)
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| malenka10. 11. 2020 15:24:57 |
Willow-leaved elecampane (Inula salicina)
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| malenka10. 11. 2020 15:26:51 |
Fly orchid (Ophrys insectifera)
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| malenka10. 11. 2020 15:29:07 |
Maple-leaved buttercup (Ranunculus platanifolius)
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| malenka10. 11. 2020 15:32:17 |
Field pennycress (Thlaspi arvense)
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:12:49 |
Great burnet and alpine globularia. I wouldn't know about the others.
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:13:30 |
Forest homogyne (Homogyne sylvestris)
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:15:07 |
Common rockrose (Helianthemum nummularium)
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:17:43 |
Spotted cat's-ear (Hypochoeris maculata) Type: Flower Family: Asteraceae Color: yellow
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:19:28 |
Mountain rock-parsnip (Peucedanum oreoselinum)
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:21:56 |
Lady's thumb (Polygonum persicaria)
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:25:21 |
River thistle (Cirsium rivulare) Type: Flower Family: Asteraceae Color: red
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:26:56 |
Hedge woundwort (Stachys sylvatica)
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| malenka11. 11. 2020 22:28:10 |
Golden clover (Trifolium aureum)
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| zvončica12. 11. 2020 16:59:42 |
Velkavrh, to your picture of the poppy - no. 9 from 11.11 I'd just add that Petkovšek's poppy is our endemic. It is a subspecies of Kerner's poppy and grows in our Julian Alps in the Bohinj-Krn group. LP
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| velkavrh15. 11. 2020 12:19:30 |
Again I have too much time and I'm reviewing the forwarded flower treasures from malenka. I started with 10.11.2020 and stopped at the cat-tailed monkshood. Some time ago I presented my photographed monkshoods and findings, which were unfortunately wrong too. I studied malenka's response again and now I better understand what grows here. So as malenka said eight species of monkshoods grow here. Four species have subspecies too. Maybe we could divide them into yellow and blue ones. The yellow ones are narrow-helmeted, which have subspecies. As I saw that's the common monkshood - Aconitum lycoctonum subsp. vulparia - (listed at Zaplana.net) Grows in the forest in shade - inflorescence is branched. I always see it at the start of the path to Črna prst - sadly I don't have it photographed, then narrow-helmeted - Aconitum lycoctonum subsp. lycoctonum - only one stem with flowers. Here we have golden one too - as presented on the botanical path of Črna prst - here I get a bit tangled in Latin naming. Better not to elaborate on that. Yellow is also the coastal one, which has subspecies too, but I don't know it and think I haven't seen it there yet. Then follow blue colored - we have five species - cat-tailed - subspecies is lobelii - I don't know it. Similar to Turkish - grows only in KSA. They are very similar - we'll distinguish them exactly only by flower - Turkish has short curved hairs on outer side of flower. If we macro shoot flowers exactly we'll notice that. We have narrow-leaved too - that's our Julian endemic. By leaves we can't mix it with others. Don't know Vitos one. Then only flat and painted follow, which are similar in growth. Flat and painted I probably mix. Now at least I hope I correctly understand our monkshoods.
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| velkavrh15. 11. 2020 15:11:49 |
Next in line was Scopoli's hawkweed. There was already a debate if it's this hawkweed that I photographed on Virnikov Grintavec some year ago. I'll go photograph it again next year. It grows right on the top.
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| velkavrh15. 11. 2020 15:30:08 |
I'll continue in order as malenka presented them to us. Evergreen vetch has interesting leaves. Hoppe states it grows on limestone soils of Western Alps (eastward to Bernese Alps and Ticino). Flowers look like alpine vetch, only white. Milkworts grow here over forty species. Many grow in the valley-in the forest too... I find the blue one in the forest next to my home too. But I don't have it photographed. Willow-leaved fleabane also grows on that slope near my village. Cat's ears I saw only on a botanical trip some years ago in Kozjansko Park. The local guide actually showed us every tiny flower. I don't find them on Kamniški vrh. Plane-leaved golden saxifrage is common. Burnet-leaved I don't know. Field bladderpod I find on field paths near my home. Don't have it photographed. Forest rockcress is common in the forest at the start of our mountain paths. Common toadflax-at least I think so-grows already on that slope I mention often. Spotted sow thistle I find in the forest-near my home. Mountain saw-wort also grows on that slope. True, these thistles cause me problems in exact identification. Stream thistle I find on marshy terrains at the start of my mountain paths. Birch speedwell grows in the field. Forest speedwell grows almost on my meadow. Golden clover I saw on Kamniški vrh-but don't have it photographed. We could look for similarity with chestnut-colored clover.
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