Home@FlavorJ Astronomic 3D/Stereo
& webring
Scenic/Art You are inside:
Imagery &
3D webring
Other Stuff

Portraits of Plants

... in more or less alphabetical order. Foliage adorns scenes with fractal beauty, often causing an observer to overlook the magnificence of microcosms. Flowers are picked and put in vases to accent a room or table, but rarely does one study the centerpiece. Here then, is your opportunity to contemplate the bodacious subtlety.

124kB
79kB  47kB  45kB
Very purple African violets in blume. Alas, these photos are all that's left of this bunch. I could not propogate them. 60kB
124kB
Aloe barbadensis or Aloe vera, the medicinal plant. True story - cut off a tip and rub the juice on a burn, and it'll heal much faster. Amazing plant.
Vicky's hand vs the mushroom!Vicky lent her hand to show the size of this amanita mushroom, growing in a parking lot median. Sue tells me they come in three colors: this one (dull orange), red, and yellow. 152kB
122kB  195kB  180kB
76kB
65kB  83kB  75kB
207kB
179kB  145kB
This cascade of Baskets of Gold (Alyssum saxatile compactum) grows in our front yard rockery. 37kB
76kB  44kB
This bearded iris grows about three feet tall. The wind was merciful and stayed calm enough to get two shots for the stereo set.
56kB
106kB  82kB
The Bigroot Cranesbill (Geranium mcrorrhizum) is a favorite splash of late-spring color in the shadier part of the rockery. 99kB
85kB  135kB
96kB  93kB
The Bleeding Hearts (Dicentra spectabilis or maybe formosa ) bloom in the spring, and live under the ligustrum hedge. They also move with the tiniest amount of disturbance in the air.
138kB
225kB  129kB
This very Swedish arrangement of colors is provided by blue Wood Hyacinths and yellow Wallflowers 47kB
92kB  53kB  51kB
Daffodils in the back yard. It's not the state flower of Washington, but they're farmed here in serious quantity.
71kB
92kB  98kB
This dahlia was grown in a pot by our neighbor. 231kB
Looking at the top of the rockery, backlit by the morning Sun. Those are poppies about to open, wood hyacinths, and rosemary.
98kB
107kB 
These Gaillardia ("Goblin") bloom all spring and summer long, if you're dilligent about deadheading the flowers. 140kB
129kB  185kB
145kB
These were at some friends' house in Bellingham. Their garden could have a whole page devoted to it.
Hmmm...
75kB
85kB  91kB 
Grape Hyacinths (Muscari of some variety). We've started a colony, but it's still very sparsely populated, 5 years later.
165kB
200kB  160kB
This is a Grecian Windflower (some form of Anemone), living between some rocks out back. 82kB My wife had just watered the Japanese Iris. I like the lighting on this shot.
157kB The kumquat is a citrus fruit about the size of a thumb. The whole thing is edible, except for the seeds, and the skin is the sweet part. 63kB
143kB  70kB  68kB
A cluster of flowers on our French lilac in the front yard. I just learned these are in the olive family. How'd they come up with that
147kB
207kB 
Lithodora. Being an amateur astronomer, I get a special kick out of the flower's shape. 68kB
114kB  69kB
The Money Plant (Lunaria annua) leaves circular seed pods that can be peeled to reveal a delicate membrane indise. Those are often used in (dried) flower arrangements.
103kB
178kB  153kB
Some mushrooms took over a little cave below the mountain ash tree. Reminds me of badger, badger, badger... 64kB
63kB  84kB  99kB
We were given these paper white narcissus for a Christmas. Thanks, Elsa!
66kB
89kB  89kB
The orchid was at our neighbopr's house, and they were just too gorgeous to pass up recording. That's sunlight illuminating it from behind. 52kB
86kB  58kB  60kB
I think this Persian Speedwell is one of the prettiest lawn invaders, and this is one of my favorite photos, as well. Taken in our lawn, the flowers are about a third the size of my little finger nail.
67kB
144kB  83kB
A tall phlox, it was supposed to be dwarf. It's waist-high in our back yard. 62kB
121kB  64kB
Same plant, in shade. This is one of my technically best stereo shots.
64kB
120kB  63kB  58kB
The pieris is a bush that stands beside the end of the sidewalk and issues these clusters of white bells. i suspect it's Pieris japonica, "Temple Bells". 107kB
140kB  101kB
This poor ol' primrose gets hammered by something. Maybe slugs? Beetles? Whatever, I'm surprised it has enough oompf to bloom.
106kB
164kB  155kB
The rhododendron grows right next to the house. It also provided covenient cover for a large bald-faced wasp nest in the next bush over. The closeup of a cluster of flowers on the right is the same plant. 61kB
106kB  67kB
55kB
98kB
A saffron crocus. The red strands (pistils?) are what you pay too much for. I wish we had a lot of these. 149kB
122kB  240kB  242kB
The neighbor's pine with a coating of newly-fallen, strange, puffy, little balls of snow.
67kB
137kB
Our tomato crop of 2001. Okay, so... we're not exactly farmers. 68kB
88kB  88kB  85kB
Our neighbor's tulip, grown in a pot.
77kB
113kB  92kB  89kB
We had hoped this vinca minor vine would cover the ground and choke out pest plants. It sorta works. 79kB
141kB  71kB  66kB
These grow in our back flower yard. Gotta watch them - they can be invasive. Someone thought enough of this image to ask to incorporate it into her site. I'm honored.
67kB
112kB  86kB  84kB
Wood hyacinths, just before blooming (left) and at the height of their blooms (right). 182kB
147kB  213kB  207kB