Spring in November
Red Campion among the Cow Parsley
Flora and Fauna in the undergrowth (4 x PiPs)
Nature's Spring display (4 x PiPs)
Bluebells and Nerys
At the field edge
Cowslips behind the wire (HFF everyone)
Cowslips behind the Wire close (HFF everyone)
Rural lane in Spring
Out from the shade (2 x PiPs)
Hedgerow View
Snowdrops under the hedgerow
Down among the grasses
Harbour flowers (HFF everyone)
Summer Haze
Vale of York & Vale of Mowbray (1 x PiP)
Orange
Daffodils with a sea view
Bluebell Dyke
Sun Seekers
Castlegate Cottages 1
Castlegate Cottages 2
Bluebells in a Bubble
Bluebells by the Hedgerow (1 xPiP)
East Ayton Lodge 2
Castlegate, East Ayton (2 x Pip's)
Spring Blooms
Roadside Spring Blooms (1 x PiP)
Woodland Snowdrops
HFF from Wykeham
Daffodils by Brough Beck - Helmsley
Daffodil Fence, Whitby (HFF everyone)
In the forest undergrowth 2
In the forest undergrowth 1
Mist at Dawn
In the Garden
Foxgloves by the gatepost
Clifftop Flowers
North Yorkshire Coast at Scarborough
Ayton Castle, North Yorkshire (2)
Ayton Castle, North Yorkshire (1)
Ayton Castle in Spring meadow, North Yorkshire (P…
A Touch of Spring - HFF Everyone
Snowdrop Woodland - Wykeham, North Yorkshire
The Willowherb grows tall
English Summer Meadow
Robin Hood's Bay from Ravenscar Old Peak, North Yo…
Forest Primrose
Spring flowers in bloom
Daffodil ranks by the Borough Beck, Helmsley, Nort…
Cumbrian cottage garden, Lake District
Wildflowers in a Summer Meadow, North Yorkshire
Bluebells and Wood Anemone carpet the glade
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Oxeye Daisy, en masse (1 x PiP)
The flowers cover an area of approximately 7 to 8 square metres. They grow to a height of approximately 2 feet (60 cm).
A typical grassland plant, the oxeye daisy thrives on roadside verges and waste ground, as well as in traditional hay meadows and along field margins, as is the case in the picture. Its large blooms appear from July to September and are so bright that they appear to 'glow' in the evening, hence the other common names of 'moon daisy' and 'moonpenny'.
A typical grassland plant, the oxeye daisy thrives on roadside verges and waste ground, as well as in traditional hay meadows and along field margins, as is the case in the picture. Its large blooms appear from July to September and are so bright that they appear to 'glow' in the evening, hence the other common names of 'moon daisy' and 'moonpenny'.
Stefani Wehner, trester88, Nouchetdu38, Marco F. Delminho and 16 other people have particularly liked this photo
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