We are certainly in for a good year of Agapanthus walshii flowers; we hope the worms give them a chance to set seed!
Down on the dam on the Experimental farm next door, the water level is still quite high so it's difficult to get close to the Nymphaea nouchali, so this is a long shot:
There are also patches of small yellow hairy flowers in the water:
Fighting through the undergrowth to get to the edge of the dam, I came across this stand of Combflowers Micranthus:
We have markers out all over 'our' patch to remind us to check on plants. One is hidden from the road behind a Brunia and we haven't checked there for a while. Today we hit paydirt!
We found it last year just after it had flowered and the spent flowers looked as if they'd been pink, but we weren't expecting this! Looking it up was easy, since John Manning has it on the front cover of his Field Guide to Fynbos, Erica longifolia which is found in several colours and bi-colours like this. The flowers are distinctly waxy. This one is growing next to a Cape Snow Syncarpha vestita. There are many more buds still to open.
The Wyrm is helping to take notes!
This must surely be the last Watsonia borbonica in flower. We have spotted it before and although this stalk is short which might make it a W. rogersii, this is actually a side branch of a long stalk which has bent over. The leaves are very wide as can be seen:
We keep thinking the Vygies Mesembryanthemums we are seeing are the last, but there are still odd flowers out!
I was too quick last week to say the Therianthus had come and gone! These are on a track we call Therianthus road. Note how the buds are in a spiral.
Also on that road we found this delicate pink pea-type, complete with tiny pods.
Erica pulchella. Thanks Pat for the reminder of the name!
So easily overlooked, the tiny pink flowers in the fluff of the Lanaria lanata:
It was overcast at times, but it still took a while to find an open Bobartia filiformis.
We were walking cross country looking for Agapanthus which we've never seen flower in this area before, naturally hoping they'd be A. walshii, when we came across another example of the bi-colour Erica longifolia.
We weren't disappointed when we came to what we think is Agapanthus walshii; no less than five flowers on one plant!
This bud is just opening:
We found another close by with two buds on shorter stems at this stage, we're still hoping we'll find white ones!
We haven't noticed this bush before, it looks like a Stilbe, and it's in flower:
Flower detail. The leaves are in sixes, so that would probably rule out S.ericoides, yet another possibility is S. vestita, but that is supposed to have spiky leaves.
We were keen to check on the plant we've been told might be a Campylostachys cernua which is growing elsewhere in the middelmannetjie of a red road. Sure enough, it's flowering too!
This one has a tendency, after standing erect for as long as we've been watching it, to droop down as it flowers!
Therianthus are out all over, this is what the flower looks like up close:
At first glance this looked like another Lobelia jasionoides, but these have symmetrical flowers:
The pencil gives an idea of the size. The individual flowers are long trumpets and the forked stamen protrudes almost as far beyond!
I thought this was another, but it's completely different!
We checked on the other Agapanthus Walsii with the five flowers, all's well there too!
In the week, Pippa pointed out that what I had thought last week was a late Dilatris pillansii was very different.
This one looks more like Dilatris corymbosa. This one is past its best, but we'll watch for it next year!
Pat wrote in in the week to say that the Daisy we thought might have been Athanasia trifurcata is more likely A. Crithmifolia, which means 'with leaves like Sea Fennel' Crithmum maritimum.
From the garden, actually from last week, Sprekelia with two flowers this year!
Happy Christmas to everybody and may we find and share many more beautiful flowers in the coming yyear!
:-) A
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As usual some amazing photos of beautiful flowers. to name a few that caught my eye most are...S.formosissima, Therianthus, Bobartia, and W. barbonica. My favourites though must be A. walshii and the pretty Nymphia in the lake. But the yellow one ? could it be a little worrying is it native or introduced. Again well done and thanks for sharing.
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