It's officially Spring by the date, and Nature thinks so too! There is a carpet next door in the orchard of what we think is Arctotheca acaulis:
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A carpet of Arctotheca acaulis
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In the road, Romulea rosea:
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Romulea rosea
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Oxalis among little Daisies
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Oxalis and Daisies
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Romulea hirsuta var. cuprea:
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Romulea hirsuta var cuprea
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Sour Fig Carpobrotus edulis :
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Sour Fig Carpobrotus edulis
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Drosera, also in the road!
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Drosera
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Here is a large Restio re-growing after the fire with its feathery culms and some of the thick stems starting to come out of the ground.
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Restio re-growing
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We were keen to check up on the flower with the striped bud we had found. What a surprise!
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Spiloxene capensis?
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The stripes are still on the back of the petals:
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Reverse of the petals
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And once we had seen this one open, there were more! These two were growing up inside a bunch of Agapanthus walshii!
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More, growing amongst Agapanthus walshii
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Up close, each petal has a heart-shaped dot in the middle. Are they Spiloxene capensis?:
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There petals have heart-shaped dots at the base
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This Wachendorfia with the sickle-shaped leaves had the most impressive candelabra of flowers!
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Magnificent Wachendorfia
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The Lanaria lanata are pushing up flowers all over!
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Buds on Lanaria lanata, all over the place!
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Can this be a Metalasia? We will be back to check!
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Metalasia?
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Bud detail:
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This is what the bud looks like
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There was a strong Northerly wind, making it very difficult to photograph little flowers!
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What is this?
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Can it be a Geissorhiza? A Romulea flava?
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This is how the plant grows
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'Our' Satyr Orchid is now in full flower:
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Satyr Orchid
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Flower detail:
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Orchid flower up close
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We checked on the Othonna heterophylla but it had been eaten again. We remembered finding another nearby, that was much more photogenic!
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Othonna heterophylla
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One flower had even gone to seed:
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Spent flower of Othonna heterophylla
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More of these which have us stumped!
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What are these?
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A splash of pale pink caught my eye, next to a big rock.
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Gladiolus hirsutus?
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A Gladiolus hirsutus? This is how it's growing, flattened by the wind!
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This is how it's growing, blown flat by the wind!
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Flower detail from the side:
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Flowers and buds, from the side
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At the top we were astonished to find a huge area of recently burned veld completely denuded by a film-shoot!
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Burned veld completely denuded by a film crew!
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It's incredible that this can happen without an Environmental Assessment! Somewhere there was our single Erica longifolia we have been watching for years.... gone! I went across to where the only Phaenocoma prolifera in the whole area we monitor was..... gone too, and the area raked clear! Does money buy anything?
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Everything raked away!
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They even left 'props' behind:
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Props left behind
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Pippa reckoned we needed to check a rocky south-easterly facing slope, her hunch paid off!
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Moraea ochroleuca?
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Moraea ochroleuca? There were many of them, and more to come! They grow at least half a metre tall.
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Flowers from the side
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Re-growing from cracks in rocks, now in flower Teedia (or Oftia?)
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Oftia or Teedia
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Heeria argentea, re-growing nicely from the base!
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Heeria argentea, re-growing
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Then a white Spiloxene (if that's what it is!)
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White Spiloxene?
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.... with the same striped petals underneath.
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The same striped reverse of the petals
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The whole plant
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I've said before the Pelargoniums benefited from the fire. This one's on steroids!
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Pelargonium on steroids!
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:-) A