The Wachendorfias are beginning to come out, but strangely it seems at this stage that it's only the ones with the first leaves growing close to the ground after the fire. Those growing 'normally' seem to be far behind.
We hurried up to the plant we've been watching develop, but it seems we must wait a bit longer!
The buds are getting longer and peeling away from the stem from the bottom up... what will it turn out to be?
More of these short grasses........
A berry (and thorns!) on Asparagus lignosus:
After getting excited last week about all the buds on the Othonna heterophylla, guess what? It's been eaten again!
There was even a partly open bud lying next to it on the ground. There are still tightly closed buds.
Here's another we remember; a white five-petalled flower from the top, but the closed bud and the back of the petal is mauve. The stem twines. Common names Baroe (khoi) and Klimop (Afrikaans) Cyphia volubilis.
This is the growing tip of a Liparia splendens we know, now re-growing nicely. I suspect there's a lot of growing to do before we get any flowers.
At the base of a Mimetes cucullatus which was badly burned is this, looking ever more like a 'baby' with red tips to the hairy leaves.
More exciting is what looks like a whole lot more, less than a metre away! This is not all.
This looks like re-growing Pseudoselago serrata which was quite prolific all over the area we are montitoring.
There is a lot of this, growing where we remember China Flower Adenandra uniflora. What could it be?
Now the dam is full again on the experimental far, the Waterblommetjies Aponogeton distachyos have come back and there are already buds on it.
:-)
No comments:
Post a Comment