Hello fellow Smokers and Growers, Gardeners and casual Readers of my blog!
Today I thought I'd try to deviate from my favorite content line and check in on the photography community. There is a lot of beautiful diversity around me that would be unfairly hidden from you behind marijuana bushes. And so, let's get started.
Yesterday I went out with my camera for a walk in my sun-drenched garden and was amazed at the vibrant colors of spring in my flowerbeds
The first thing that caught my eye turned out to be a wild violet. These flowers remind me of someone's imaginary face.
There are more than 500 species of this plant. I have here the wildest of them all. In our region, this plant is called "pansy eyes".
Small buds of garden buttercup successfully contrast yellow against dark earth and greenery
The common field daisy looks like the cap of a mushroom when viewed from the side of the plant
Chamomile has a lot of useful properties and healing components, that's why every spring we make a stock of these dried flowers to be able to add them to tea throughout the year
I have been told that this blossoming carnation bud resembles a dancing parrot in flight... We'll come back to those flowers again below
This is the flowering of the common dill, which we eat as a spice.
Those parts of the plant that are used for food are usually cut early, before flowering begins. But in order to have seeds for the next year, you can leave the flowers on several plants until the seed is ripe
These are the shots I liked the most from yesterday's episode, which is why they are the most in this post. These images have not been bleached in any way, on the contrary, my color correction is aiming for more contrast and color saturation. Because of the darkening, the background looks like black and white
Cerástium - genus of herbaceous plants of the family Carnationaceae, distributed in temperate zones of the Northern Hemisphere. The total number of species is about 200
At the end of blooming peonies bare their center and we can see what is hidden under the many lush petals
The tea rose in macro mode also looks ethereal.
The delicately scarlet, pastel color of her petals is very difficult to convey in a photograph
A marigold bud that hadn't bloomed yet was already home to a small bug. Also, one of the bright orange petals of a marigold has already laid its eggs on one of the bright orange petals of the marigold
Dianthus plumarius - An unremarkable species of carnation that is carpeted and unpretentious in care
It has a delicate hue, a strong clove odor and tattered petal edges
Another shot of a budding carnation bud that reminds me more of a spinning star than a dancing parrot
The hardest part about photo posts is typing the right length of interesting text, but I think I've done pretty well.))