The beauty of an invasive weed
Happy Canada Day
Red-winged Blackbird
Soon to crumble
A splash of colour
Where Dinosaurs used to roam
Brewer's Blackbird with food for his babies
Showy lady's-slipper
The perfection of Mother Nature
Canada Violet
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Like scoops of strawberry & peach ice-cream
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Love those ears
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A Snipe from last year
In the Badlands
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Long-fruited Wild/White Prairie Parsley / Lomatium…
An over the shoulder look
Wild Strawberry
A colourful rocky spot
Yes, yes, YES!
Shootingstar
Handsome male
One less Grasshopper in the world
Almost as good as sunshine
Fascinating forest find
Plain and simple
Water and wind erosion
The beauty of Irises
Great choice of fence post
The last living Dinosaur?
Clusters of colour
The land where the Dinosaurs roamed
Prickly Pear Cactus flowers
Nighthawk - what a treat
Badlands of the Dinosaurs
Brightening up the Badlands
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Himalayan Blue Poppy


It is always a joy to see these Himalayan Blue Poppies growing at Reader Rock Garden, and I was happy to find them in bloom on 25 June 2014.
"Blue Himalayan Poppies are one of the most impressive plants for the shade garden. Plants form a rosette of hairy leaves, bearing large satiny flowers in an amazing shade of true blue. These are not always easy to please, demanding an evenly moist, rich soil and cool woodland conditions. Plants are not long lived, typically flowering in the second or third year, setting seed, then dying out. Gardeners in hot summer climates seldom succeed with these plants, yet they are surprisingly tolerant of cold winter conditions."
www.perennials.com/plants/meconopsis-betonicifolia.html
"Blue Himalayan Poppies are one of the most impressive plants for the shade garden. Plants form a rosette of hairy leaves, bearing large satiny flowers in an amazing shade of true blue. These are not always easy to please, demanding an evenly moist, rich soil and cool woodland conditions. Plants are not long lived, typically flowering in the second or third year, setting seed, then dying out. Gardeners in hot summer climates seldom succeed with these plants, yet they are surprisingly tolerant of cold winter conditions."
www.perennials.com/plants/meconopsis-betonicifolia.html
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