Grasmere in Autumn
HFF from Shropshire
SSC
The hallway looking into the study
Springtime
European Larch, Larix decidua
HFF from Ellesmere
Female flower head of Common Bulrush (Typha latifo…
The Easter Bunny
HFF from Ruyton XI Towns
Static electricity
TSC. The Sunday Challenge
TSC shiny
Oilseed rape field
Shrewsbury. Frankwell Bridge
HFF from Shropshire
Blackboard Message
Fishing sign
Rose Amelia
Three little lambs
HFF from Attingham Park
Narcissus jonquilla and hoverfly
TSC. The Swan
Warm glow
HFF from Ruyton. Keeping one's distance.
HBM
The Ruyton XI Towns Fringe
Milly for SSC
HFF from Ruyton XI Towns
Serpentine
Spring blossom
Winter warmers
HFF from Shropshire. Montgomery Canal walk.
Montgomery Canal Walk
Winter hogweed
Captive cones
Control of Transmission.
HFF to you all from Ruyton XI Towns. Stay safe an…
Helix
An ex-fence
Frozen Maesbury Canal
New life
Fatal Attraction?
HFF to you all from Ruyton XI Towns. Stay safe an…
Ice puddle
See also...
Flo.Fam.: Pissenlits , dandelion, löwenzahn, diente de leon
Flo.Fam.: Pissenlits , dandelion, löwenzahn, diente de leon
" Bilder aus der Region wo ich wohne... Photos de la région où je vis ...Pictures from the region where I live ..."
" Bilder aus der Region wo ich wohne... Photos de la région où je vis ...Pictures from the region where I live ..."
Yellow Flowers 2 - CLOSED to be merged into Yellow Flowers
Yellow Flowers 2 - CLOSED to be merged into Yellow Flowers
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Coltsfoot. Tussilago farfara
Today's Sunday Challenge is: Yellow
The common name comes from the leaf's supposed resemblance to a colt's foot. The leaves of coltsfoot appear after the flowers have set seed. The long stems bear scale-leaves that can be seen more clearly in the PiP. Coltsfoot has been used in herbal medicine and the leaves have been used in traditional Austrian medicine internally (as tea or syrup) or externally (directly applied) for treatment of disorders of the respiratory tract, skin, locomotor system, viral infections, flu, colds, fever, rheumatism and gout.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tussilago

The common name comes from the leaf's supposed resemblance to a colt's foot. The leaves of coltsfoot appear after the flowers have set seed. The long stems bear scale-leaves that can be seen more clearly in the PiP. Coltsfoot has been used in herbal medicine and the leaves have been used in traditional Austrian medicine internally (as tea or syrup) or externally (directly applied) for treatment of disorders of the respiratory tract, skin, locomotor system, viral infections, flu, colds, fever, rheumatism and gout.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tussilago

John FitzGerald, Frans Schols, Gary Benson (grbenson3 on flickr), homaris and 28 other people have particularly liked this photo
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