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| velkavrh10. 02. 2014 20:42:21 |
Good evening, cico! Let me tackle your pics - on the tree is definitely sulphur polypore - conditionally edible. Of these parasites I eat only beech ostreatus. On the second we have sunflower or popon. For exact ID we need a closer pic, as there are two very similar. On the left is alpine betony or čober, front and right thyme. The white flower in the back I can't ID. On the third a bunch of about ten or more mostly low mountain flowers mainly in purple tones, I see white and even yellow in between. I wouldn't go into exact ID, too demanding for such a shot - definitely I see nipplewort and daisy-like nebina - similar to daisy, also alpine pečnik and thyme. L.P.
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| Apolonija10. 02. 2014 22:12:40 |
Good evening, Vlado! I agree that on the pine it's conditionally edible sulphur polypore, some call it "chicken meat". Better not eat it raw. I like its look, unfortunately the tree slowly dies. Can't distinguish pink plants around. Could be silene maybe. I really like natural rockeries and screes. On the second pic I too see flowers described by Brane, on the third, besides listed, with some imagination, also larkspur?, bellflowers... beautiful colorful garden. Surely you enjoyed watching and photographing it. I enjoy too. LP
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| Apolonija12. 02. 2014 09:29:45 |
Cico, satisfied with the comments?
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| cico12. 02. 2014 13:44:13 |
Of course, we know some flowers, but every new lesson is useful, at home we have 30-40 dried medicinal flowers for teas, but that's just a fraction of what nature offers us! PS: How do you "stretch" the text, for me it automatically jumps to narrow version?
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| pikica112. 02. 2014 18:38:23 |
@cico hi, no need to stretch the text at all. Just write normally and don't worry that in the window where you write there's so little space. No need to click to next line when reaching edge, it arranges itself. I've explained to you, now you probably understand even less
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| Apolonija12. 02. 2014 18:38:33 |
Then you two are very healthy, since you drink such teas. This year I also plan to pick more. If the text starts narrowing for me, I "lift" the word going to the new line with the backspace (left arrow) key. Experts will give advice.
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| cico12. 02. 2014 19:22:48 |
Uh, 
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| franca12. 02. 2014 22:00:16 |
You can grab the bottom right corner with the mouse and drag it right. Then you have such a loooong rectangle for looots of text 
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| cico12. 02. 2014 22:31:35 |
Pikica, Polona, Franca, nooooooooooooooooooo waaaaay! Thanks for the effort, now I'm really mad, when I get up tomorrow, and embrace the new day, I put this device under my armpit, with it I go to the right building, where they will teach me, how it is with the new era, if it won't work, I'll buy chalk and a blackboard! 
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| Apolonija12. 02. 2014 23:02:13 |
Cico, why are you worrying? Where does it say that stretched text is prettier than narrow? I like it. Let it be your trademark and protect the copyrights,
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| Apolonija12. 02. 2014 23:03:22 |
Cico, why are you worrying. Where does it say that stretched text is nicer than the narrow one. I like it. Let it be your trademark and protect the copyrights. Isn't this nicer??? 
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| mirjam6713. 02. 2014 11:58:31 |
Bellflowers from the Vipava end!
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| velkavrh15. 02. 2014 04:43:23 |
What if it smelled a bit like our mountain pinks!
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| otiv15. 02. 2014 07:43:52 |
Smell, smell, but what when winter scares again, good that the greasy-mouthed carnival comes, that will chase winter to its homeland. The sun is higher and higher in the sky, bye ice. Come spring, I say these words gladly, so it really smells, not just joking. 
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| cico15. 02. 2014 08:15:39 |
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| Apolonija15. 02. 2014 10:01:15 |
otiv, only in the last few days I realized, that you have "open" two more forums: the poetic and the memorial, congratulations.  Cico, have you already "comforted yourself"?
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| otiv15. 02. 2014 13:30:44 |
@cico is laughing, I hope he keeps his fists clenched for spring. Apolonija, thanks for the congratulations, I'm trying to make the forum threads intertwine. 
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| velkavrh15. 02. 2014 15:09:45 |
Pinks or carnations we all admire. The best known of course is the bearded pink (second picture), which we call Turkish carnation at home. It is also a garden plant in different colors. It grows also in lowlands. Most common in mid-mountain and high-mountain is wild pink (third, fourth and fifth pictures). We have two more that are very common. Lower in mid-mountain grows Montpellier pink, it is taller, has more flowers on the stem - it is not in high-mountain. Higher it is replaced by Sternberg pink - it is lower, only one flower per stem. We find also blood-red (first picture) and montane. The srh one only on Kozjansko, the delta one on Goričko, Croatian on Gorjanci, on Karst Liburnian and Triestine. Wonderful pink not yet well researched here. All species protected except bearded.
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| cico15. 02. 2014 19:50:37 |
If we compare larger flowers from these pinks, we call them also wild carnation, why this tiny pink smells so much, that sometimes you smell it before you see it! I assume that rarely any flower is equivalent in fragrance regarding size, am I wrong? Apolonija, what do you say? Best regards! 
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