That's so great! Love seeing prehistoric plants getting some love π
That's so great! Love seeing prehistoric plants getting some love π
For sure! I've been really enjoying it so far. I really like how it includes the environment that each plant would live in and that is very helpful.
At the top of the image is a red box of 12 gouache paints from Holbein. It is the irodori Autumn set. In the center of the image is a book called The Princeton Field Guide to Mesozoic Plants. It has a beige cover with images of cycads and conifers.
I hope you all have some peaceful and stressless holidays! β€οΈ My husband and I don't buy each other Christmas gifts. We just buy our own and then pretend the other gave it to us. So I would like to thank @robinbougie.bsky.social with all my heart as visions of prehistoric forests dance in my headπ²πͺ΄
Ah-mazing!
It was meant to be π
That's so good!
Sweet babies! I love the tradition of naming your kitties after baked goods π§π₯§
One kitty was killed πΏ
I fold small seed packs from origami paper and carry some on my person at all times, especially this time of year. They come in super handy π
Lost in the sauce π
Thank you! It really, truly is my pleasure
A photo of a street receding in the distance with a brick building on the left that the sun is glinting off of. In the foreground is a garden of weedy looking native plants.
In the foreground are yellow flowers called Sneezeweed ( Helenium autumnale) There is an out of focus urban building in the background against a blue sky.
A close up of purple daisy-like flowers with yellow centers of Douglas Aster.
A fuzzy Common Eastern Bumblebee sleeping while clinging to the underside of a seed capsule of a Western Columbine
Late summer at the boulevard garden. As a shoe-box apartment dweller, I'm so grateful to have the privilege of caring for a tiny patch of Earth to help decompress from the day and world events π±
This is amazing! Very inspiring π
So cool!
One of my fav paintings to come out of the Vancouver island art retreat!
I know this apartment building! I recognized it right away. We take care of the Green Street garden on the corner. I'll definitely have to check out this show.
Hello! Instagram is probably the best place. www.instagram.com/rebecca_dart...
It was a fun time!
Oh how I wish I was that Triceratops right now.
A cartoon drawing of a brown bear in overalls and a green frog wearing a hat and carrying a hose. There are hearts and bees floating around them.
A photo of the most handsome man in the world wearing heart rainbow sunglasses and a pointy birthday hat sitting in a blue chair in the park.
Happiest of birthdaysπ₯³ my true love @robinbougie.bsky.social He is my best friend, he makes me laugh constantly, he is a supportive team player and the best human I've ever met ( our nicknames for each other is Frog and Bear) πΈπ»
A photo of the beginning of a flower spike from an agave plant, behind it is a large evergreen shrub and blue sky.
I'm thinking of the flowers before they open, when they really do look like an asparagus spear. You can really see the family resemblance (not my photo).
Yep, that's why those giant agave flower spikes look like a giant stalk of asparagus π
Yep, they need about 2 to 3 weeks of cold stratification. I usually just place the seeds in pots and put them outside about early to mid-February. Being in the carrot family they are tap-rooted, so you have to be careful they don't get too pot bound. I π©΅ them too π They are as tough as nails.
A+ water pups!
A close-up of the spiky, blue Sea Holly flowers with a fuzzy yellow bumblebee near the center enjoying a nectar snack.
Two yellow-faced bumblebees on top of a round, blue flower of a globe thistle
Yellow Goldenrod flowers against a blue sky with many bumblebees searching for nectar.
A black and yellow wasp called a Beewolf on top of a white cluster of yarrow flowers.
Today's pics from the China Creek North Pollinator Garden are of fuzzy bumblebees and a beewolf. Like the name suggests, the beewolf is a wasp that hunts bees as food for its young. Some of the nectar rockstars right now are Sea Holly, Globe Thistle, Canadian Goldenrod and Yarrow π±
"Juicy Bastard" is a part of my botanical vocabulary now.
This image is a close up of a white yarrow flower head with a small, dark leaf-cutter bee on top.
The sun glows on the horizon through the flowers and foliage of a Sea Holly and a Russian Sage plant. The sky is bright blue.
A blue globe thistle plant that is being backlit by the Sun with golden grass at the bottom of the screen.
Summer evenings in the China Creek North Pollinator Garden are magical. As the sun sets over this east-facing hillside it illuminates the tops of the plants and reveals thousands of pollinators as pinpoints of light zipping around as they travel from flower to flower. π±
A very close up image of a Catmint flowers bud that is covered in hairs . You can see small, glistening beads of oil pockets on the surface.
Microscopic view of the side of a fuzzy, purple Catmint flower with a dark stamen screen right.
Extreme close up of dark purple stamens with white pollen.
An extreme close up of a side view of a purple Catmint flower.
Took out the microscope to look at some small purple Nepeta or Catmint flowers and buds. You can see the glistening pockets of fragrant oils on the bud that gives it that sage/mint smell. Fortunately the cats couldn't care less about this plant as I'm growing many cuttings on our balcony. π±
Yes, agreed, I'm already following π
Haha! I definitely consider that a compliment. We definitely had a lot of fun working on it.