Anne Elliott's photos with the keyword: ripe seeds
Green for the Irish
17 Mar 2013 |
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This looked sharper on my computer late last night, when I was looking for something green to post today, St. Patrick's Day, lol! I guess that's why I never posted it before. Oh, well, I have to get ready to go out for the day shortly, so no time to look for something else. This is a macro shot of the seeds of the extremely tiny Naked Mitrewort / Mitella nuda. Taken in West Bragg Creek, Kananaskis, on 27 July 2010.
This native plant belongs to the Saxifrage family, Saxifragaceae. It is also called Bare-stemmed Mitrewort, Bishop's Cap, Common Mitrewort, Miterwort, and Northern Bishop's Cap. There are 5-8 tiny flowers on the upper half of the slender, flowering stems, 7-20cm high. Each exquisite flower has 5 greenish-yellow or white, snow-flake design petals, with ten stamens, 6mm (just under quarter of an inch) across.
plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=MINU3
www.borealforest.org/herbs/herb24.htm
It is supposed to snow again today, cold, with no sunshine, so it's not going to be very pleasant for our day's outing. Hope we see something really nice, though : ) A bit later: see my comment further down the page, saying that I decided to stay home, as the weather is dreadful - non-stop snow and windy. It's -14C (windchill -26C).
Happy St. Patrick's Day to those who celebrate it!
Naked Mitrewort / Mitella nuda
18 Aug 2010 |
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If you're not familiar with this wonderful, very tiny plant, you wouldn't believe how extremely tiny it is. Stems are 3 - 20 cm tall, and (in my eyes) look like a short, thin strand of thread, almost invisible amongst the other plants in the forest. The seed capsules, 2 - 3 mm long, open widely into shallow cups containing shiny, black seeds that ripen in late-summer. Also known as "Bishop's-Cap". Needless to say, this is a supermacro : ) Photographed at Brown-Lowery Provincial Park.
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