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Stachys recta, stiff hedgenettle, perennial yellow-woundwort.
Germany - Salem - architecture and plant
Landscape and ground road whit sculpture
Mountain hill at Sorška planina covered with white alpine flowers blooming, apiaceae. Hills over the ski town Cerkno.
Old house covered with ivy
Blooming horseradish (Armoracia rusticana). Medicinal plant of the year 2021.
Cracow, Poland - 4th of July 2021: A part of Wawel Castle Complex with an ivy-covered facade.
Leafy layers of lush green plant
Black bryony,Tamus communis leaves in the forest in autumn. Dioscoreaceae leaves
Thyme creeping up on small pebbles in backyard garden
Stock photo showing the surface of a pond carpeted with green duckweed (Lemnoideae). If left unchecked duckweed can take over a pond and cause it to stagnate, however, when well managed the plants are a great way of helping to keep pond water clean and clear.
close up of a wall covered with a green ivy
Leaf of butterbur plant surrounded by wild lush foliage
henbit\nHotkenoza
Spring in the forest
Sweet cicely
Wood Sorrel in grass area looks similar to clover.  Wood Sorrel has heart shaped leaves.
Medieval window with red and white wooden shutters in a wall covered with green ivy, Slovenia
View of the green stucco wall with windows in old german multistory house
Ramson field under a mountain
A close-up of an Thyme plant in full frame.
In the wild it blooms rare, Red Book, medicinal and ornamental plant Dictamnus albus
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.
Siberian bugloss plants growing in Indonesian rice fields
Green leaves and road concrete as background, concept of environmental issue, nature and construction concept
Beautiful Flowers in the garden at Chiangrai Thailand
Green leaves of climbing plants on the wall of a building
Fence of beautiful fresh green leaves on the big two floors builging. Nature concept.
Luxuriant pasture at Sankoh Prairie(桑科草原), Gansu Province, China
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