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Yarrow (Achillea millefolium)
Close-up of small white elderflowers. The flowers are covered with tiny dewdrops. The background is dark
White gooseneck loosestrife, Lysimachia clethroides, white flower spike in close up with a blurred background of leaves.
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Many small, white flowers of the Common Yarrow (Achillea millefolium), comprising a single inflorescence, growing in the margins of an agricultural field in central Scotland. The species is native to many areas in the northern hemisphere and has been used by many peoples both to feed livestock and because its essential oils contain many medicinal properties and include the painkiller aspirin.
Yarrow, Achillea, millefolium, herb, flora
A shallow focus shot of a bunch of young white Sweet Alyssum flowers (Lobularia Maritima)
A bunch of chrysanthemums
Blossomed Yarrow Flowers Against a Blurry Background.  Panorama. Web banner. For design.
white Queen Anne's lace flower against green background
Small white flowers of Quebec in close-up in sunlight
Flowering yarrow (Achillea millefolium). Pennine Alps. Piedmont. Italy.
blooming white spiraea flower bush in garden
Small, rather slender Tree, with smooth silvery-gray Branches. Leaves pinnate, with 5-7 pairs of oblong toothed leaflets, green, hairy beneath. Flowers 8-10mm, in domes clusters.\nHabitat: Woodland, Hedgerows, Moors and Mountains to 2400m, mainly on light Soils. \nFlowering Season: May-June.\nDistribution: Western Europe, except the far North.\n\nThis is a common Species in the Netherlands. Also planted in Parks.
Achillea millefolium,  common yarrowwhite flowers in meadow macro selective focus
Gypsophila paniculata, full frame image
Hoya flower blooms in the garden
Lobularia maritima (L.) Desv.\nSweet alyssum\nBrassicaceae
White yarrow, Achillea millefolium, flowers in macro close up with a background of blurred leaves.
Summer day: single hoverfly on a blooming white queen annes lace
A single hemlock flower with leaf on white
White flowers
The miniature world of Gypsophila
Candytuft flowers
A cluster of wild carrot flowers, daucus carota, in bloom beside a roadside in Wisconsin.
Pyracantha is a genus of thorny evergreen large shrubs in the family Rosaceae, with common names Firethorn or Pyracantha. They are native to an area extending from Southeast Europe east to Southeast Asia, resemble and are related to Cotoneaster, but have serrated leaf margins and numerous thorns (Cotoneaster is thornless).\nPyracanthas are valuable ornamental plants, grown in gardens for their decorative flowers and fruit, often very densely borne. Their dense thorny structure makes them particularly valued in situations where an impenetrable barrier is required. Pyracantha berries are not poisonous as commonly thought; although they are very bitter, they are edible when cooked and are sometimes made into jelly.[2] In the UK and Ireland Pyracantha and the related genus Cotoneaster are valuable sources of nectar when often the bees have little other forage during the June Gap.\nThe plants reach up to six metres tall. The seven species have white flowers and either red, orange, or yellow berries. The flowers are produced during late spring and early summer; the pomes develop from late summer, and mature in late autumn (source Wikipedia).
Rusty blackhaw viburnum white flowers on green shrub
Ammi majus flower close-up
Blooming bush of spirea. Spring time. Spirea blossom
buckwheat field
Free Images: "bestof:Solidago caesia02.jpg ;Species Solidago caesia seeds ;Family Asteraceae Downloaded from http //plants usda gov/cgi_bin/topics cgi earl plant_profile cgi symbol"
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