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White Ligusticum scoticum aka Scots lovage or Scottish licorice root flowers
Pasture field in europe
Conopodium majus plant in bloom
Mountain hill at Sorška planina covered with white alpine flowers blooming, apiaceae. Hills over the ski town Cerkno.
Sweet cicely
Blossoming pear tree in spring
an uncultivated meadow in springtime with different grasses and flowering perennials
Flowers of anthriscus sylvestins, hedge parsley, mother die or Queen Anne's lace.
A beautiful chamomile grows in a field and insects crawl on it. CREATIVE. A flower with white petals and a yellow center. Insects are on the flower. The wind blows a flower growing in a clearing.
Orlaya grandiflora, also called White Lace flower, is a species of flowering plant in the family Apiaceae, native to Mediterranean Europe. It bears lovely fern-like foliage and clusters of pure white flowers, which appear over a long period in summer, often lasting until the first frost.
Green fields, fantastic clouds and big mountains
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).
Caraway; true; Carum, carvi
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Landscape and ground road whit sculpture
Blossoms of Meum athamanticum - Bärwurz, a medical plant in Europe.
Blooming on a field of white flowers
Weiße Schafgarbe auf einer Blumenwiese
flowering cow parsley between long grasses in a green meadow in springtime closeup
Alpenrose (Rhododendron ferrugineum) flowers captured in the swiss alps at an altitude of 1700m.
A small turtle is floating between tree leafs in the river canal.
The flowers of meadowsweet or filipendula ulmaria
Amazing, beautiful and majestic nature on the banks of the Tavor River, in the Galilee, near the Afula city, in northern Israel.
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.
Grota Haiducilor, DN22D 12, Caugagia, Europe, Romania, 2024 year
white flowers
Lichen grows on rotten wood
buckwheat field
Yarrow rises into the sky.
A flower-head of the Poison Hemlock (Conium maculatum), an introduced and toxic species, growing in central Chile. All parts of the plant are poisonous, possibly even deadly to humans, and remain so even months or years after the plant dies at the end of its two-year lifespan.
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