Late Summer Bounty
Black-Crowned Night Heron (adult)
Majestic Feline
Deep in the Thicket
Warmer Climes
Hanes Classic
Alone At Last
Giving and Taking
Hanes Classic (color)
After Glow
The Hat Weaver
The Hat Weaver (b&w)
Air-Plant Spectacular
Deep Cover
End of an Era - The Passing of the Purple Reign
Purple Rain
Young Doe, Obscured by Branches
Standing Firm in the Face of Adversity
Little Wood Satyr (Megisto cymela)
Hidden Gateway
Full Frontal
Jay at Dawn
Nap Time Over
A Great Star Has Fallen From Our Sky
Life is Sweetest at its Edge
Spring at Last
Diagonal (b&w)
Black Crowned Night Heron
Earth, Sea and Sky (color)
Diagonal
Earth, Sea and Sky (sepia)
Anatomy of an Infestation
Oh Canada!! III
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter III
"Trumpets Voluntary"
Greener Times
Proof of Love II
Moveable Feast II
Out of the Black and Into the Blue
The Digital Age
Hipsters with Canines (color)
Dignity in the Freezing Rain
Backlash
New Leaves in Flight
New Leaves in Flight (color)
See also...
Backlit


Allium Universe
Similar to Allium cristophii with its airy blooms, this appealingly shorter variety sends up large, 6–8″ metallic purple spheres on sturdy stems.
The genus Allium (the Latin means “garlic”) offers colorful, distinctive, and long-lasting forms that are standouts in the early summer garden. Alliums are sun-lovers and prefer well-drained, even sandy, soil. Deer, mice, chipmunks, and related predators generally avoid this group, so you can plant with impunity. Tuck them among clumps of summer-flowering perennials where the Alliums’ withering foliage will be hidden by the expanding perennials.
Late afternoon sun, illuminating from behind. Public Park - May, 2015
(Please view in LightBox or in larger sizes for best effect)
Similar to Allium cristophii with its airy blooms, this appealingly shorter variety sends up large, 6–8″ metallic purple spheres on sturdy stems.
The genus Allium (the Latin means “garlic”) offers colorful, distinctive, and long-lasting forms that are standouts in the early summer garden. Alliums are sun-lovers and prefer well-drained, even sandy, soil. Deer, mice, chipmunks, and related predators generally avoid this group, so you can plant with impunity. Tuck them among clumps of summer-flowering perennials where the Alliums’ withering foliage will be hidden by the expanding perennials.
Late afternoon sun, illuminating from behind. Public Park - May, 2015
(Please view in LightBox or in larger sizes for best effect)
, Ivica Truto, ROL/Photo, and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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