Fluidr
about   tools   help   Y   Q   a         b   n   l
User / annkelliott / Sets / Garden flowers 5
Anne Elliott / 300 items

N 64 B 9.9K C 29 E Sep 12, 2015 F Jan 6, 2016
  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • O
  • L
  • M

Snow is in the forecast for later today, so it feels good to see bright colour and things from summer. Actually, when I look at my recent photostream, there is quite a surprising amount of colour for this time of the year. This winter has turned out to be another great one, like last winter, milder than most. We all know that more snow and very cold temperatures will have to be faced before spring arrives - can't believe how this winter seems to be flying by.

On 12 September 2015, I drove further than I'd ever driven before - a total of 410 km (254 miles). I met my daughter at 9:00 am and we headed northwards, with our main destination being the Bowden Sunflower Maze. She was feeling well enough after her recent hospital stay, to get out for a day trip. (She is having surgery in 5 days' time, so once again, she will be out of action while she recovers).

The quickest route from Calgary to Bowden is a distance of 96 km (60 miles), but I wanted to avoid the main, busy route. The backroads are more pleasant to drive - less traffic and, if one is lucky, the occasional old barn. There was one barn in particular that I had seen last year, that I really wanted to show my daughter and this took us a little out of our way.

We drove through the town of Olds, stopping briefly to take a couple of photos of the bright orange grain elevator. Going north, we drove the roads to the west of the main Highway 2, and on our return trip we drove the roads to the east of Highway 2. I think this trip really convinced my daughter, more strongly than ever, that sadly she has a mother with almost zero sense of direction!

"A young sunflower's flower head faces the sun to receive the sunlight it needs for photosynthesis. Heliotropism is the term for a plant's ability to follow the sun. That ability allows a sunflower to move with the sun as it arcs across the sky from east to west; the sunflower's bloom always faces the sun.

When the sunflower plant matures, the neck of its stem no longer grows, and tracking of the sun's arc ceases. The blooms of most mature sunflowers face east, but some face other directions." From homeguides.

homeguides.sfgate.com/sunflower-move-73855.html

A very short (2 minute) time lapse video showing how Sunflowers move to face the sun. Quite beautiful:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8mr0R3ibPU

This was the first time I had ever been to Bowden and the Sunflower Maze. For years, I had wished we had a field of Sunflowers somewhere within reach, as I had seen so many gorgeous photos taken by other people in various parts of the world. I certainly didn't get photos like those, but I was happy to get the shots I did get. Many of the flowers in my photos seem to be facing every possible way, giving a rather messy look! Maybe that's what always happens when the flowers are past their prime? Apparently, that weekend was going to be the last chance to really see the flowers, so we were just in time. This maze at Eagle Creek Farm is apparently the only Sunflower Maze in Canada. There is also an adjoining Corn Maze, but neither of us wanted to walk through that one, thanks to remembering the horror movie, "Children of the Corn"! The farm also has U-pick vegetables and flowers.

www.sunmaze.ca/

Thanks, Rachel, for spending the day with me - and for all your directions getting us there and back to the city! Lucky we went when we did, as it rained the next few days.

Tags:   Alberta Canada Central Alberta N of Calgary Bowden Eagle Creek Farm Bowden Sunflower Maze nature flora garden plant flower Sunflower Helianthus Family: Asteraceae Helianthoideae yellow golden bright colourful field of Sunflowers maze macro close-up insect Ladybug Seven-spotted Ladybug bokeh rural scene outdoor late summer 12 September 2015 FZ200 FZ200#3 annkelliott Anne Elliott

N 44 B 3.6K C 28 E May 27, 2015 F Jan 12, 2016
  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • O
  • L
  • M

I wanted a bright, cheery image this morning, 12 January 2016, to wish my daughter well, and thought these little pink hearts were appropriate. Yesterday, she went in for supposedly day surgery, but phoned me after she was moved from the recovery room, to say that they were keeping her in overnight. She wasn't able to give me any details, so I'm keeping my fingers crossed that it was all straight forward. Speedy recovery, Rachel! At least you are in the best place for the time being, but I hope it won't be too long before you can go home.

Update, early afternoon: my daughter is now home, after complications yesterday. Unfortunately, she now knows that she is most likely going to have to have major surgery with various accompanying problems. I am so upset for her.

On 27 May 2015, I had a volunteer shift and afterwards, as the sun was shining, I called in at the Reader Rock Garden, where I found these beautiful Bleeding Heart flowers. There was rain in the forecast so I thought I'd better make the most of the blue sky while I could. Alberta was bone dry everywhere, with wildfires especially further north. Much as I really dislike the rain, we desperately needed it.

From the Garden, I drove through the adjoining Union Cemetery and then another nearby cemetery, and then called in at a wetland in SW Calgary.

A lot of people have a photo of Bleeding Heart flowers in their photostream - they are beautiful flowers. This garden is situated on a hillside and it's usually windy whenever I go there, lol, so these delicate branches of little pink hearts are a bit of a challenge to keep in the viewfinder.

"Lamprocapnos spectabilis also known as old-fashioned bleeding-heart, Venus's car, Lady in a bath, Dutchman's trousers, or Lyre-flower is a rhizomatous perennial plant native to eastern Asia from Siberia south to Japan. It is the sole species in the monotypic genus Lamprocapnos. It is a popular ornamental plant for flower gardens in temperate climates, and is also used in floristry as a cut flower for Valentine's Day. It usually has red heart-shaped flowers with white tips which droop from arching flower stems in late spring and early summer. White-flowered forms are also cultivated." From Wikipedia.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamprocapnos

Tags:   Calgary Alberta Canada Reader Rock Garden nature flora plant flower garden Bleeding Hearts Lamprocapnos spectabilis Ranunculales Papaveraceae Lamprocapnos Venus's car Lady in a bath Dutchman's trousers Lyre-flower heart-shaped pink hanging bokeh macro close-up outdoor spring 27 May 2015 FZ200 annkelliott Anne Elliott

N 26 B 2.8K C 14 E Sep 17, 2014 F Jan 14, 2016
  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • O
  • L
  • M

Shoo Fly, Shoofly or Shoo-fly, Peruvian Bluebell, even Apple of Peru ... take your pick, lol. It is native to Peru, and it is known elsewhere as an introduced species and sometimes a weed. It is also kept as an ornamental plant, as at the Reader Rock Garden, where this photo was taken on 17 September 2014. This plant is a member of the Nightshade family, Solanaceae. The green or black-mottled calyces have always fascinated me. Branches of the mature Chinese Lantern-style fruits can be dried and used for winter decoration. I will add a couple of photos of the flower in a comment box below.

Tags:   Calgary Alberta Canada Reader Rock Garden nature flora garden plant flower fruit Shoo Fly Peruvian Bluebell Apple of Peru Nicandra physalodes ornamental Nightshade family Solanaceae mottled calyces pale purple flower macro close-up outdoor fall 17 September 2014 FZ200 annkelliott Anne Elliott

N 23 B 1.5K C 8 E Aug 26, 2015 F Jan 18, 2016
  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • O
  • L
  • M

After a bitterly cold day yesterday (17 January 2016), standing in a temperature of -15C with a windchill of -22C, I needed a warm, sunny shot for today.

Fortunately, at least the Hollyhocks and Gladioli were still in bloom and in good condition when I called in briefly at the Reader Rock Garden after an afternoon volunteer shift on 26 August 2015. Most of the flowers there had finished for the season and many of the ones that did still exist were past their prime. Still managed to get a few photos, though, including this beautiful pink Hollyhock flower.

"Alcea (Ál-ce-a), commonly known as hollyhocks, is a genus of about 60 species of flowering plants in the mallow family Malvaceae. Most species are native to southwest and central Asia, although a few are native to southeast Europe or Egypt." From Wikipedia.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcea

I wasn't sure whether I should go there or not that day, as the air quality had been very poor for a number of days, due to smoke blowing across from the devastating forest fires in Washington State, northwest US. Fortunately, the rain that had been falling for a few days helped the firefighters fight the flames.

Tags:   Calgary Alberta Canada Reader Rock Garden nature plant flora flower garden Hollyhock Family: Malvaceae Mallow family Genus: Alcea pink single flower head macro close-up bokeh colourful outdoor summer 26 August 2015 FZ200 FZ200#3 annkelliott Anne Elliott

N 39 B 2.2K C 16 E Jun 24, 2015 F Jan 24, 2016
  • DESCRIPTION
  • COMMENT
  • O
  • L
  • M

Took this macro photo of a vibrant Painted Tongue flower at the Reader Rock Garden, on 24 June 2015 after a volunteer shift. It snowed overnight and it's still snowing this morning, 24 January 2015. After posting several wintry "white" photos the last day or two, I needed something bright and cheery to add to my photostream. As I type, the temperature is -2C (windchill -9C). Not bad at all for a mid-winter temperature in Calgary. Really feel for all those folks on the east coast, dealing with such a major snowstorm!

"This half-hardy, branching annual from Chile, growing about 2 ft. high, produces funnel-shaped flowers 2-1/2 in. long and wide, of velvety texture and in many colors, the interior of the blossoms being strikingly veined .... Salpiglossis belongs to the Nightshade Family. All cultivated sorts are of the species Salpiglossis sinuata or its var. superbissima, which is unbranching and therefore more upright or columnar."

www.plant-care.com/salpiglossis.html.

Tags:   Calgary Alberta Canada Reader Rock Garden nature flora plant garden flower Painted Tongue Salpiglosis red yellow pattern colourful vibrant bright beauty in nature macro close-up flower head outdoor summer 24 June 2015 Panasonic DMC-FZ200 FZ200 annkelliott Anne Elliott


1.7%