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Stachys recta, stiff hedgenettle, perennial yellow-woundwort.
Mountain hill at Sorška planina covered with white alpine flowers blooming, apiaceae. Hills over the ski town Cerkno.
Conopodium majus plant in bloom
Pasture field in europe
White Ligusticum scoticum aka Scots lovage or Scottish licorice root flowers
Queen Anne's lace close-up, taken in a Connecticut field in midsummer. Note the purple-red floret in the center. The name arises from the legend that Queen Anne of Great Britain pricked her finger with a needle while making lace, and a drop of blood fell onto the center.
Black bryony,Tamus communis leaves in the forest in autumn. Dioscoreaceae leaves
Asplenium scolopendrium, commonly known as the hart's-tongue fern, is an evergreen fern in the genus Asplenium native to the Northern Hemisphere.\nTaxonomy:\nLinnaeus first gave the hart's-tongue fern the binomial Asplenium scolopendrium in his Species Plantarum of 1753. The Latin specific epithet scolopendrium is derived from the Greek skolopendra, meaning a centipede or millipede; this is due to the sori pattern being reminiscent of a myriapod's legs.\nHabitat:\nThe plants grow on neutral, calcium-rich, and/or lime-rich substrates under deciduous hardwood canopies, including moist soil and damp crevices in old walls; they are found most commonly in shaded areas. Plants in full sun are usually stunted and yellowish in colour, while those in full shade are dark green and healthy. The disjunct populations of the North American variation in the southeastern US are found exclusively in sinkhole pits or limestone caves. These populations may be relics of cooler Pleistocene climates.\nDistribution: Western Europe, the United Kingdom and Ireland.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation to Ireland in July 2022.
Umbrella-shaped florets of small white flowers. Awe-Inspiring Salt Mine Journey: Hallstatt's Scenic Treasures.
Heracleum maximum, Cow Parsnip or  Indian Celery, is the only member of the genus Heracleum native to North America. Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve, Oakland, California. Apriaceae.
Green fields, fantastic clouds and big mountains
Wood Sorrel in grass area looks similar to clover.  Wood Sorrel has heart shaped leaves.
blooming elderberry trees on a plantation
Leaf of butterbur plant surrounded by wild lush foliage
Conium maculatum or poison hemlock white flowers blooming in spring
Blossoming pear tree in spring
Yarrow rises into the sky.
High mountain wildflowers, Sierra de Gredos
Butterbur white
Flowers of anthriscus sylvestins, hedge parsley, mother die or Queen Anne's lace.
Landscape and ground road whit sculpture
Valeriana officinalis - Real valerian. Common name, Valerian.
white inflorescence and fresh seeds of Heracleum sphondylium plant
Cow parsley in English hedgerow
Sweet Cicely Over Stream.
wild flower
wild flowers and pond
Medium to tall, rather bristly biennial; stem erect, purple or purple spotted. Leaves 2-3 pinnate, dark green, but eventually turning purple; leaflets oval, toothed. Flowers white, 2mm, in compound umbels which are nodding in bud, the petals hairless; bracts usually absent, bracteoles hairy.  Fruit oblong, tapered towards the apex, 4-7mm, often purple.\nHabitat: Rough grassland, semi shaded places, on well drained soils, generally in low attitudes.\nFlowering Season: May-July.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe; absent from the Faeroes, Iceland, Norway, Finland and Spitsbergen.\n\nThis is a common Species in the Netherlands for the described Habitats.\nToxicity:\nChaerophyllum temulum contains (mainly in the upper parts and fruits) a volatile alkaloid chaerophylline, as well as other (probably glycosidally bound) toxins, the chemistry and pharmacology of which has, as yet, been but little studied. Externally, the sap of the plant can cause inflammation of the skin and persistent rashes. If consumed, the plant causes gastro-intestinal inflammation, drowsiness, vertigo and cardiac weakness. Human poisonings have seldom been observed, because the plant lacks aromatic essential oils that could lead to its being confused with edible umbellifers used to flavour food. It is, however, used occasionally in folk medicine. Animal poisonings by the plant are commoner than those of humans, pigs and cattle thus intoxicated exhibiting a staggering gait, unsteady stance, apathy and severe, exhausting colic, ending sometimes in death. \nHerbal medicine:\nChaerophyllum temulum has been used in folk medicine, in small doses, to treat arthritis, dropsy, and chronic skin complaints, and as a spring tonic. The early modern physician Boerhaave (1668–1738) once successfully used a decoction of the herb combined with Sarsaparilla to treat a woman suffering from leprosy – in the course of which treatment temporary blindness was a severe side effect following each dose (source Wikipedia).
Wild plants. Flowers and trees in the forest in summer. Flora of Northern Hemisphere in June
Spring in the forest
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