Always something new! Today was no exception. In fact, we have more questions than answers!
But first, back to yesterday, going over to Franschhoek in my old Austin Lorry I was compelled to stop on the Pass by a brightly coloured flower on the side of the road.
Only when it was in the viewfinder did I recognise the flower itself as a Muraltia. However, this one grows differently from the single example we have found on our walks. Here the flower is more prominent and the plant more scraggly. It has us guessing whether we're correct with the identity of 'our' one as M. heisteria. The one on the Pass looks like that on the Fernkloof website as M. heisteria. There's a M. stokoei and a M. bolusii which is listed as 'endangered'. There were many of these on the Pass!
The rainwater channel had many Drosera growing in it, with buds almost ready to open, but my photos didn't come out. These are from today on our walk:
Last week, on the way home on the Experimental Farm next door, we spotted a white Erica. It was difficult to get to, so this week we cut through the brambles and clambered across a ditch to get up close:
We think it might be Erica lutea, but it might also be a white version of E. daphniflora. In the pictures on the web and in the books, the leaves aren't shown very well. I bent this branch down to show what these look like:
We found the single purple bulb we spotted last week and Pippa held the stem to show what the whole plant looks like. It was growing in and held up by a tuft of grass:
Flower and bud detail, what is it? Geissorhiza aspera?
Close by was something else, a white bulb
Flower detail, possibly a Hesperantha?
Another one, with flower not fully open:
We were disappointed to find this Skaapsteker dead in the road, apparently driven over:
Psammophylax rhombeatus (Spotted skaapsteker, Rhombic skaapsteker, Spotted grass snake). A few hundred metres away, we found one very much alive. More scared of me than I was of it. We just had to keep the dogs away:
The Wachendorfias lower down are flowering and in some cases have spent flowers and the beginning of their characteristic turban-shaped seed pods forming, yet a few hundred metres further up the hill, hardly a bud is coming up!
This grey-green furry-leafed plant had no flowers last week. Now some of the bright yellow pea-type flowers are out:
There are plenty of buds to open still. The closest we get to identifying it is Liparia vestita:
These Everlastings Helichrysum which had pink buds last week are now more open and snow-white:
Here's a 'new' one! The centre flowers are open, surrounded by buds-in-waiting!
This is how the plant grows:
Detail of the sparse leaves. What could it be?
The wonders of Nature! How can this Daisy (Euryops?) survive and thrive in this crack in a rock?
Where before we had one flower per plant open, for many weeks, they're in full bloom now!
We had some difficulty finding our single example of what we think is Erica longifolia. The Daisy plants are getting thicker and taller around it.
Then I spotted another 'new' plant!
Flower detail. The petals look papery, and the leaves reminded me of chameleon paws in shape and texture. What might it be?
These flowers look white but are pink, so that should make them Teedias
Here and there a Pelargonium flower is out.
We have been seeing these Gladiolus debilis for a few weeks now. This one is growing in a stand of large Restios:
In one area there is a sea of China Flowers Adenandra uniflora. There are still many buds waiting!
Flower detail:
Something else 'new'! I found myself almost standing on this plant, covered in buds. Leaves are sparse, short and close to the stem and the flower clusters are at the ends of each branch:
Some of the buds are opening as white flowers
Always worth a detour into the veld, Saltera sarcocolla:
The strange plant growing out of corms again, which never seems to do anything! Maybe we'll get a pleasant surprise yet!
This picture shows the size of the Lobelia tomentosa flowers which colour the veld throughout the year, it seems!
Finally, this episode is dedicated to Gay PrevĂ´st who passed away in this last week. She was an avid follower of these reports and had opened files for the different plants. We shall miss her!
Andy
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