I've had these flowering most summers for the past 15 years now. This year they are particularly turquoise, right from the petal margins deep down into the throats. It's been a very long cool wet spring leading into summer and my hunch is that this seasonal factor is the cause as i recall having suck turquoise flowers the year after the millennium drought broke which was also a really wet spring. In drier seasons they are turquoise on the outer rims but show more blue in the throats. They also appear different hues in variable light conditions.
Yes, the profusion of orange pollen is a pollinator's delight but they are not self fertile - require separate plants to successfully cross pollinate. I've occasionally had a pod of seed from a single flowering but the seed are 99.9% non viable. This year I got lucky and had a second flower kick in just at the end of this one so a small window of opportunity for cross pollination which I do with a small cosmetics brush.
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If you want it to last, build it with stone. That's a lot of work, and nicely done.
bruceking
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Some mornings we are “above it all”.
Mike
Mike Noble
my name is Matt
December 31, 2021 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
SPP
Low elevation (2500ft) snow last week in the foothills outside Yosemite.
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After reading a blog entry on porcupine dens from the local Hawthorne Valley Farmscape Ecology Program, we realized we had a similar looking tree on our property that we'd never looked at carefully. So we went out and took a closer look - lots of porcupine poop. And we found a quill!
my name is Matt
Flat Coated Retriever?
We get asked that a lot but we're 95% sure she's mainly Black Lab and Chow- she's got the purple tongue and the noticeable "lion's mane" of the latter.
my name is Matt
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