I was going to edit them but they'd just duplicate. ;-;
Sorry for the dark/super saturated pictures...
Aquatic pictures...
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limeslide2, on Flickr
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limeslide2, on Flickr
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limeslide2, on Flickr
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Now, let's move on to what ya'll actually want.
Nepenthes x andrewensis ;Keith "ellisonk001"
Nepenthes mirabilis from Mengkuang Titi, Penang, Malaysia Seed Grown ;Mark "Exo" Bibby
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limeslide2, on Flickr
Stylidium debile ;Steve "elgecko" (NASC Benefit Auction, 2010)
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limeslide2, on Flickr
Pinguicula primuliflora ;Liz "I<3carnivores"
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limeslide2, on Flickr
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limeslide2, on Flickr
Sarracenia x [flava var. atropurpurea x var. ornata] ;"jht-union"
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limeslide2, on Flickr
Now, it was a nice day outside so I decided to look at the urban x wild landscape that makes up our backyard. Most are surprisingly overly saturated despite it being a cloudy day, then again it was 1:00pm
Ehretia anacua. aka Sandpaper Tree, considered a pest for its ugly leaves and red berries it scatters all over the place in the summer, but it looks like a white cherry tree in the spring and fall with butterflies swarming all over it.
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limeslide2, on Flickr
I always find this yew in only one populace, either in a pot as a volunteer, in the cracks on the pavilion, or in the grass as a sprawling weed, but it always just grows in one small colony and makes these beautiful blue flowers. They decided to take root next to the garage this year.
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limeslide2, on Flickr
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limeslide2, on Flickr
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limeslide2, on Flickr
I find these little field flowers everywhere, amazing little dainty things...
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limeslide2, on Flickr
Aloe ciliaris, a birthday present, possibly my favorite succulent this time of year.
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limeslide2, on Flickr
A guava tree decided our yard would be a good home, I think so too, it's making fruit already.
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limeslide2, on Flickr
My family loves these penquin chilis, they grow as tall bushes, this one was possibly collected in the forest when it was a seedling, when we used to go camping in Mexico. The mockingbirds love to eat these.
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limeslide2, on Flickr
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My mom likes to throw random fruit scraps on the yard, sometimes plants sprout from them, like this enormous papaya, among some. They frosted over last winter and grew new growth points which I can safely say are now the tallest plants in the yard at fourteen feet.
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limeslide2, on Flickr
I wish I had more to share, I like making posts like these.