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| francimedved8. 07. 2013 21:33:32 |
Interesting little flower which I found today along the path to Šmarna gora.
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| maja.stefe@gmail.com8. 07. 2013 21:38:43 |
oh look, I didn't know it grows under Šmarna gora too, it's called tavžentrožca,
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| Apolonija8. 07. 2013 21:42:39 |
Otiv, good evening! Meadow flowers are beautiful too, especially when photographed by such a good photographer as you. -plant in picture 3 and 7 belongs to genus ŠKROBOTCEV and since it has fringes, probably resasti= Rhinanthus glacialis -picture 9 and 11 IS NOT OSAT. Look closely. In mountains they can be blue-violet colored, there are yellow feathery ones too... Come on, remember Lp
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| Apolonija8. 07. 2013 21:48:12 |
Otiv, one more warning: thistles usually prick
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| otiv8. 07. 2013 21:54:26 |
Apolonija greetings to you too! Thanks! It seemed to me too beautiful for a thistle Is it Kranjski glavinec?
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| Apolonija8. 07. 2013 22:39:50 |
Otiv, it's not Kranjski. If you look at the appendages on the basal leaves, it's most likely the common one. The leaf shape also speaks for that; it is distinguished from the narrow-leaved one by them.
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| Apolonija8. 07. 2013 22:56:41 |
One more question for Velkavrha. Otiv you call Brane, so for Brane. Just now I looked at flowers on previous pages. Came across unknown yellow /on last picture/ on page 41 /14.6, which you think is from genus zlatic. Surely belongs among buttercups. But I wonder if not "photomontage" and you attached two flowers of buttercup Ranunculus repens var. pleniflorus. These flowers are exactly like that. I have it in garden. Maybe you too? Strgarjeva sold it. Lp
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| otiv8. 07. 2013 23:08:14 |
Apolonija and also fragrant greetings from our living room, where the flower in the picture is blooming.
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| Apolonija8. 07. 2013 23:32:12 |
Thanks for such a friendly fragrant greeting. The Christmas rose really smells pleasantly and is also beautiful.
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| velkavrh9. 07. 2013 05:43:27 |
Apolonija, scabious are completely different. This Otiv's flower I found on the nearby field and it grows in fields like a weed - I don't know the name. The pictured flower from Kališče - I found it on the path from Bašelj Saddle somewhere in the middle to the hut on Kališče on that slope by the path among the grass. There were only two plants - about eight cm tall. I've never seen them before. But the picture is really bad. I know garden buttercup and I've already planted tubers in autumn in flower beds, but they somehow don't thrive well - they are too sensitive. Florists offer them as grateful cut flowers and also planted in a pot all winter. These are relatively tall flowers - 30 cm. But I think Strgarjeva's buttercup is a different variety that I don't know. I haven't been there for some years now. About a decade ago I picked almost all they had. We had the septic tank in the mountains surrounded by two hundred large stone troughs and in each a different flower - for example ten kinds of carnations, all kinds and colors of needle-leaved phlox, all kinds of lychnis, on the shady side below all kinds of hostas, on top I also arranged these stone troughs in a circle in two rows and planted one seedling of different buttercups and bearded irises in each. Unfortunately this collection was destroyed about a year ago because the septic tank went into the ground. I managed to transplant only a small part of the plants collected over many years somewhere, because there were simply too many. Best regards.
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| anka 9. 07. 2013 09:07:49 |
All beautiful flowers, the third and the seventh Vitova is the painted zebrat
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| otiv9. 07. 2013 09:59:26 |
What experienced flower experts we have among us. Congratulations to all for the knowledge and praise for the effort, so that our site has more and more known flowers. Warm greetings to all!
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| Apolonija9. 07. 2013 12:49:50 |
otiv, sorry for the mistake. otiv was right. The plant is zebrat, I think, painted /Galeopsis speciosa/
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| Apolonija9. 07. 2013 12:50:53 |
Well, now I read that Anka already wrote it.
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| Apolonija9. 07. 2013 13:17:13 |
Velkavrh was right... Brane, I know you also know garden anemone, but there are many of them. The tuberous ones are really sensitive and for me too "showy", I prefer simpler ones. The one I was talking about is creeping= R.repens and has a double flower, like the one in your picture. When it blooms again, I'll photograph it. You know, it always bothers me if I can't solve the riddle. Prof Bavcon from the Botanical Garden would surely know the answer.
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| Apolonija9. 07. 2013 13:19:45 |
PS: have you seen/photographed chestnut brown clover?
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| Apolonija10. 07. 2013 01:42:30 |
Oh, and nice flowers for nice dreams. Spring pasqueflower has always been more to my liking than the alpine one, and you? -Repnjak might be the dwarf /Arabis bellidifolia/? -pretty cuckoo I think is called small white orchid/Pseudoorchis albida/ -on the last picture it's cuckooflower /Cardamine pratensis/? Now good night
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| velkavrh10. 07. 2013 05:30:56 |
Apolonija thanks, anyway we have to do some botanical tour together. You suggest which and when! This cuckooflower thing doesn't give me peace. These two flowers grew next to each other. To me they don't seem the same. What do you say?
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| Apolonija10. 07. 2013 07:57:03 |
Good morning! You know, with my "namings" I write question marks Cuckooflower, which the plant reminds me of right away, grows on wet meadows, forest, but I don't know how high. Also no basal leaves, rosette visible... So we can say the plant /pink and white/ most likely belongs to the crucifer family, genus and species questionable. The plants you compare also have differences in leaves and stamens IMO. Botanical tours for me /at least now? due to orthopedic issues/ only short hikes, so I follow yours/yours with greater pleasure. Regards
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