Blog launched: November 10, 2009

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Cyclamen graecum

804_1527 [Cyclamen graecum]
 
Cyclamen is a perennial Autumn flower that includes about 15 species
found in the Mediterranean regions at altitudes of up to 1200 m.
 
In Greece, specifically, there are 6 native species
with ‘graecum’ probably being the most prevalent
in Southern Greece and the Aegean islands.
It grows particularly in rocky slopes and generally sun-exposed places
from September to November.
The flowers vary in color from white to pink.
 
Undoubtedly, it is a well-known and well-sung flower
that remains one of the most beautiful ornaments of nature in Autumn.
 
Mt. Hymittos: September 18, 2024
 
 
WBVL6972 [Cyclamen graecum]

Mt. Hymittos: October 01, 2020
 
 
IMG_1615 [Cyclamen graecum]

The heart-shaped leaves appear after the flowers have bloomed.
 
Mt. Hymittos: November 26, 2022
 

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Chondrilla juncea

8
04_1511 [Chondrilla juncea]
 
This is a thin, noxious weed native to Europe, Asia and North America
but it can also be found in many other parts of the world.
It develops numerous branches up to 125 cm tall
and produces daisy-like yellowish flowers (2cm in diameter)
that eventually turn into a fruit topped with a pappus. (See picture below.)
 
Although it can reach more than a meter in height,
it usually passes unnoticed by the photographer’s eye
but remains a noxious pest in the eyes of land cultivators.
 
In any case, its yellow flowers, whether noticed or unnoticed,
contribute in their own way to nature’s overall beauty!
 
 
304_6927 [Chondrilla juncea]


 from a flower to a pappus
 
Each of juncea’s yellow flower gradually turns into a pappus
that lets its numerous parachute-like seeds be drifted by the wind
to new locations and achieve reproduction of the species.
 
Photographed on Mt. Parnitha on Sept 7, 2024


Saturday, September 14, 2024

Colchicum bivonae

804_1493 [Colchicum bivonae]
 
Colchicum bivonae is an Autumn flowering plant
that blooms from early September to mid-November
in mountainous regions (300-1300m) of Italy, the Balkans ang Greece
with the exceptions of Crete and the Cyclades islands.
 
Beautiful but also highly poisonous
due to colchicine existing in all parts of the plant:
the leaves, the flower and especially in the bulb. 
 
 
IMG_4370 [Colchicum bivonae]

 
801_7542 [Colchicum bivonae]

Photographed on Mt. Parnitha on Sept. 7, 2024
 
For a 2-min slideshow of Colchicum bivonae please click HERE.
 
 

Saturday, September 7, 2024

Pancratium maritimum

IMG_0002 [Pancratium maritimum]

Pancratium maritimum,
commonly known as the Sand Lily or Sand Daffodil,
thrives in coastal sands and is seen in full bloom
from August to October.
 

 For more info, pictures and video please see older posts HERE.