robustemagazine.wordpress.com
Flora – ROBUSTE
https://robustemagazine.wordpress.com/liens/flore
Eco-regions of Mediterranean climate. La taille d’olivier. Qu’est-ce qui passe avec le genre Phoenix sp? Getting lost in Cape Lardier. Le jardín botanique l’Albardinal. Le jardin moderne de la Villa Noailles. Marrakech and Jacques Majorelle. Climat méditerranéen du Chili. Flore de l’Ile de Malte. Maroc sous l’influence de la Méditerranée. Région Méditerranée de la Basse Californie Mexique. Tunisie: pays des arômes, saveurs et remèdes. Quinua crop in the Mediterranean eco-region. Fleurs du Maroc Altantique.
rjstreets.com
About | The Real Jerusalem Streets
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The Real Jerusalem Streets. Jerusalem, Israel – what is really happening. TOURISTS OF THE WEEK. I started carrying my camera because of the great shots that got away, the teenage boys, black and white, sharing a can of soda after school or the religious girls’ schools and Muslim school girls sharing a park on a spring day. Life in Jerusalem is not what you see in the media. In this photo blog, we want to share with you the real Jerusalem, photos of daily life. Follow on Tweeter @RealJStreets. Sure our fa...
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: January 2013
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A journey through floral diversity. Sunday, 6 January 2013. The mandrake's screaming reputation. Song of Solomon 7:12-13. Mandrake is known from ancient times, its reputation runs in people's mouths for centuries. The oldest references are to be found in biblical scriptures, Genesis and Song of Solomon (or Song of Songs) where its hebrew name (דודאים) is found to mean literally love plant. The roots of the mandrake with its human shape. Here you can see a professional of the Mandrake catching in action.
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: August 2012
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A journey through floral diversity. Friday, 3 August 2012. Primula’s little secret. 8220;The earthly manifestations of God’s world. Began with the realm of plants, as a kind of direct communication from it. (…) Plants were bound for good or ill to their places. They expressed not only the beauty but also the thoughts of God’s world”. Morphotype 1 cannot fertilize morphotype 2 and vice-versa, as the pollen is only "fertile" with the opposite morphotype. Thrum mophotype ( aa. Pin morphotype ( Aa. 8217;s ch...
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: September 2012
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A journey through floral diversity. Monday, 10 September 2012. The majestic legends of a Sacred and Sad Tree. Had fell in love, couldn’t avoid the pain for this love wasn’t reciprocal, becoming sorrowful for the whole eternity. In short, this is the legend I heard about a tree native to the Indian sub-continent – the Parijat or sad tree. The reason for such a name is something that always made me curious – why was this plant condemned to have such a dreadful and miserable destiny? No wonder though that t...
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: March 2013
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A journey through floral diversity. Thursday, 21 March 2013. Original, traditional and truly American. Seri People in Sonora Desert, Mexico (Photo: Graciela Iturbide, 1979). A - Parabuteo unicinctus. Photo: Walter Meayers Edwards); B - Micrathene whitneyi. Photo: Bruce D. Taubert); C - Zenaida asiatica. D - Bubo virginianus. But the real magic happens during the quiet night, when pollination takes place. Any guess on who’s starring this time? Bat pollination of Saguaro flowers by Leptonycteris yerbabuenae.
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: February 2014
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A journey through floral diversity. Tuesday, 25 February 2014. Parasitic plants are an example that there are no rules for survival in the wild, and obstacles are sometimes to be solved with extreme solutions. Parasitizing others is not the fairest solution, after all the resources used here are robbed and were meant to be used by their hosts, but it was the way these plants found to avoid death and keep on spreading their genes. There is no particular reason, but I want to talk about Osyris. A true feas...
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: January 2012
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A journey through floral diversity. Tuesday, 24 January 2012. Myrtaceae and the Bombacaceous-Malvaceae. After a while I found out I was looking at a Bombax anceps. Flower, a common tree here in northern. Belonging to the old Bombacaceae (now Malvaceae – yes, Malvaceae! The tree is easily identifiable because of the thorns found in the bark, and at this time of the year also because of the big and showy white flowers and no leaves (it is a deciduous tree). Evidence of pollinators having nectar of. There s...
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: June 2012
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A journey through floral diversity. Wednesday, 27 June 2012. The Apple of Sodom. It was another beautiful sunny day in. And I had decided to go outside. And their flowers, as usual, took the breath out of me! On the left side: the gazelle happy family; on the right side: the shrub with the Dead Sea on the background. My astonishment was nothing but the proof of my infinite ignorance: these plants are actually quite common, especially the. This happens only because the fruits are hollow, but unfortunately...
flower-tales.blogspot.com
Flower Tales: March 2015
http://flower-tales.blogspot.com/2015_03_01_archive.html
A journey through floral diversity. Wednesday, 18 March 2015. Eucalypt flowers and the land of wildfires. One of the best things about my job is going to the field and last week this was made possible, my mission was to visit a eucalypt orchard and collect capsules of Eucalyptus globulus. Since I had to collect capsules from the canopy, and eucalypt trees are quite tall, the orchard manager and me had to go in a crane to reach the top of the trees, I couldn’t believe it! 2 – E. kingsmillii. The operculum...