colors in the kitchen (PIPS)
evening light at the tennis court
bee feast
the ramp - HFF! (PIP)
HBM!
fishing with grandpa
Am I being watched? HFF!
grassy fields (PIP)
"al cartoccio"
life in the park - HBM!
the water mill (PIPS)
il ponte della ferrovia - HFF! (PIP)
Happy Bench Monday!
Visitors (PIP)
Le Murate - HFF! (PIPs)
For Andy: light and dark
Chi si ferma sogna - HBM!
biking to work
definitely no trespassing ... HFF! (PIP)
For Andy: if we could send flowers ...
Sant'Ambrogio's market - (PIPs)
Enthroned - HBM! (PIP)
Some visitors need no entrance ticket
light in the garden
village commons in the last light - HBM!
For Andy: the embrace and the dancers (PIP)
green on green - HFF! (PIP)
For Andy
shadows on country roads - HFF! (PIPS)
light at play in the garden
Spring gardens in black and white (PIP)
Riverview - HBM!
the visitor
Goods Delivery: "Sign here!"
sunny circle of life
Fai del bene e dimentica - HFF! (w/PIP)
in my secret life -- PIP added
heading home - HBM!
poppy core
restaurant gate - HFF! (w/ PIPS)
Casa sulla pescaia - House on the Milldam
wash separately with like colors
Village square bench HBM!
Under the Tuscan sun
Fence and wisteria HFF! (with PIP)
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
135 visits
Nope, not snowing ...


Though they fall in flurries just like snow flakes in the wind, they are not cold and do not melt.
They are the seeds of certain poplars (like the Populus Alba that grows plentiful along the banks of the Arno River). The cottony filaments help the seeds catch a ride on air currents and disperse widely, giving them a better chance to grow away from the mother plant, where they won't have to compete with it for light and nourishment. This particular tree, however, grows in an area sheltered from the wind and had little opportunity to send its "children" off into the blue. Most of them collected on the ground or got caught on the grasses lining the path.
They are the seeds of certain poplars (like the Populus Alba that grows plentiful along the banks of the Arno River). The cottony filaments help the seeds catch a ride on air currents and disperse widely, giving them a better chance to grow away from the mother plant, where they won't have to compete with it for light and nourishment. This particular tree, however, grows in an area sheltered from the wind and had little opportunity to send its "children" off into the blue. Most of them collected on the ground or got caught on the grasses lining the path.
Heidiho, Helena Ferreira, Antje P., RHH and 22 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
In my case, the seeds collect usually in a court, so I never got such a special view of it. On the other hand: I easily get rid of it by setting it on fire ... burns quite quickly to nothing, but you have to make sure that there isn't anything else, that can catch fire.
A very interesting and beautiful picture you captured.
Sign-in to write a comment.