Invasive Goat's-beard and Baby's breath
Meadow Goat's-beard / Tragopogon pratensis
Back-lit Goat's-beard
Invasive Yellow Clematis
Nodding Thistle / Musk Thistle / Carduus nutans
Beauty of a weed
Nodding (Musk) Thistle / Carduus nutans
Bird vetch / Vicia cracca
Goat's-beard
Dame's rocket
Teasels growing wild
Mountain Ash berries
European Mountain Ash / Sorbus aucuparia
Yellow Clematis / Clematis tangutica
Spotted Knapweed - PROHIBITED NOXIOUS
The dreaded Goat's-beard / Tragopogon dubius
Caragana - invasive beauty
Black Henbane seedpods
The beauty of an invasive weed
Tall Hedge Mustard / Sisymbrium loeselii
Goat's-beard
The inspiration for Velcro
Tartarian Honeysuckle
Canada/Creeping Thistle
European Mountain Ash
Beauty and beast
Misleading beauty
Watch out for its stranglehold
Bee on Baby's breath
Goat's-beard / Tragopogon dubius
Common Tansy in winter
Nodding Thistle
Teasel and bokeh
Teasel
Mission Mountain Range, Montana
Lovin' the light
A beautiful but invasive weed
At least someone likes Goat's-beard
Invasiveness
Goat's-beard
Snow-covered tresses
Skipper on Creeping Thistle
Beautiful but invasive Mountain Ash
Yellow Clematis / Clematis tangutica
Butter-and-eggs / Linaria vulgaris
Oxeye Daisy / Leucanthemum vulgare
Little dancers
Oxeye Daisy bokeh
Tall Buttercup
Amazing beauty
Oxeye Daisy / Chrysanthemum leucanthemum
Two non-natives
Creeping Thistle / Cirsium arvense
Common Burdock / Arctium minus
The kind of day it's been
Nodding Thistle/Musk Thistle / Carduus nutans
Ladybug on Goat's-beard
Horseshoe Canyon
Invasive beauty
Red rules
Invasive beauty
Creeping Bellflower
Damage done
Purple Loosestrife
Black Henbane seedpods
Yellow Clematis
Blowing in the wind
Life is not always a smooth ride
Pretty, but invasive
Goat's-beard
See also...
Keywords
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239 visits
Goat's-beard with visitor
This is the dreaded Goat's-beard, a highly invasive, non-native plant that has spread (and keeps spreading, despite attempts to control it) in our natural areas in the city and beyond. Too bad, because both the beautiful flower and huge Dandelion-like seedhead are most attractive.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragopogon_dubius
On 26 June 2016, a fair-sized group of people spent the morning on a walk led by Erik Butters, out past Cochrane, NW of Calgary. This land consists of rolling, open hills and areas of woodland, with the Rocky Mountains in the distance. This event was the 8th Annual Flora & Fauna Fundraising for Ghost River Watershed Outing.
Fortunately, I knew how to drive to this distant location, so I was able to pick up friend Dorothy and off we went together. We allowed plenty of time to get there, just in case of heavy traffic or else we saw something interesting en route. This meant that there was time for me to stop and take a few photos of a Llama in someone's field, a couple of beautiful Longhorn cattle lying down and a small herd of maybe half a dozen Elk that we saw way off in the distance.
I think everyone was more than ready for lunch by the time our hike was over! Going to our destination was all uphill, which I normally avoid at all cost. Coming down used less energy, but painful knees felt every step on the way down : )
Around 1:00 pm, Erik and his partner provided a great BBQ for those of us from Calgary and for the people who had joined us from elsewhere. As always, the food was delicious! Thank you so much, both of you! Amazingly, the sun shone and there was no rain, despite the weather forecast.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragopogon_dubius
On 26 June 2016, a fair-sized group of people spent the morning on a walk led by Erik Butters, out past Cochrane, NW of Calgary. This land consists of rolling, open hills and areas of woodland, with the Rocky Mountains in the distance. This event was the 8th Annual Flora & Fauna Fundraising for Ghost River Watershed Outing.
Fortunately, I knew how to drive to this distant location, so I was able to pick up friend Dorothy and off we went together. We allowed plenty of time to get there, just in case of heavy traffic or else we saw something interesting en route. This meant that there was time for me to stop and take a few photos of a Llama in someone's field, a couple of beautiful Longhorn cattle lying down and a small herd of maybe half a dozen Elk that we saw way off in the distance.
I think everyone was more than ready for lunch by the time our hike was over! Going to our destination was all uphill, which I normally avoid at all cost. Coming down used less energy, but painful knees felt every step on the way down : )
Around 1:00 pm, Erik and his partner provided a great BBQ for those of us from Calgary and for the people who had joined us from elsewhere. As always, the food was delicious! Thank you so much, both of you! Amazingly, the sun shone and there was no rain, despite the weather forecast.
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