Yellow (3 x PiPs)
Sycamore Lantern
The Bee and the Ladybird (2 x PiPs)
Becky in her element; she loved the fells of the L…
Hackness Spring greens
Two in Purple (2 x PiPs)
Grass of Silver
Hebridean View
Last Rose of Summer After Autumn Rain
Filtered sun over field and forest
Shiny new fence (HFF everyone)
White to Black (1 x PiP)
Hunting in the long grass
Rowan in Autumn Sunlight (HFF Everyone)
Autumn Fruits (2 x PiPs)
Al little autumn light under the canopy (3 x PiP)
Forest floor food (Not for human consumption)
Foggy day in Wykeham Forest (3 x PiPs)
Just had a wash n' blow dry, courtesy of the Skye…
Common Inkcap
Autumn Larch after a damp and foggy night
Faded autumn tones
Spring in November
Summer storm clouds passing by
A walk through Sawdon Dale (5 x PiPs)
Long straight tracks and a big blue sky (3 x PiPs)
Shadows in the shadows
Mollie's Roses
Fauna on Flora (2 x PiPs)
Red Campion among the Cow Parsley
Yellows and Greens (2 x PiPs)
Flora and Fauna in the undergrowth (4 x PiPs)
Subdued Sunset (2 x PiPs)
RED
Rural lane in Spring
Park Farm
The 'Ice Poppy'
Starling garden visitors
Bleeding
The last drop
Rowan (Mountain ash) blossom bursting out
Public footpath (HFF Everyone) (1 x note)
Bidens ferulifolia
Nature's Spring display (4 x PiPs)
Spring display 001
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Oxeye Daisy, en masse (1 x PiP)


The flowers cover an area of approximately 7 to 8 square metres. They grow to a height of approximately 2 feet (60 cm).
A typical grassland plant, the oxeye daisy thrives on roadside verges and waste ground, as well as in traditional hay meadows and along field margins, as is the case in the picture. Its large blooms appear from July to September and are so bright that they appear to 'glow' in the evening, hence the other common names of 'moon daisy' and 'moonpenny'.
A typical grassland plant, the oxeye daisy thrives on roadside verges and waste ground, as well as in traditional hay meadows and along field margins, as is the case in the picture. Its large blooms appear from July to September and are so bright that they appear to 'glow' in the evening, hence the other common names of 'moon daisy' and 'moonpenny'.
Stefani Wehner, trester88, Nouchetdu38, Marco F. Delminho and 16 other people have particularly liked this photo
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