View allAll Photos Tagged yellow
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Yellow Jacket - Hornet
A brightly colored hornet (yellow jacket) feeds on an ivy bud, it's tiny hairs caught in the sunlight.
Yellow day 27
365 days in colour
This is another rack from my collections, my sister lives near Abergavenny, she spotted this one in a flea market and of course she had to buy it for me.
Fifteen seconds later he was out of the house and lying in front of a big yellow bulldozer that was advancing up his garden path.
I know, I always use that one.
Most likely Stachystemon polyandrus ID from Mike Hislop WAHERB (West Australian Herbarium)
A small yellow flower with large stamens and (not sure about petals and sepals etc)
This one had me tricked for a while. I thought I had seen something like it and was happy to find that it is a Beyeria a plant not seen very often.
15-6-2011 I was wrong. :(( (That's life! :)) Not a Beyeria at all but most likely Stachystemon polyandrus
The Yellow Pohutukawa (Metrosideros excelsa 'Aurea') is a rare colour form. It is a coastal evergreen tree in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, that produces a brilliant display of yellow flowers made up of a mass of stamens. This yellow-flowered form "Aurea" descends from a pair discovered in 1840 on Motiti Island of Tauranga in the Bay of Plenty by a Mr Potts. This coastal tree can reach 20m in height.
I never heard of, let alone seen this majestic Pohutukawa.
these tree line the road to the New Plymouth Airport, a splendid sunny day, good for a shot or more
Sure, my brain caught yellow fever. This makes it 3 yellow flowers in a row.
Common name: Mussaenda, Bedina (Hindi), Hanu-rei (Manipuri),
Botanical name: Mussaenda erythophylla
The mussaenda is an evergreen shrub related to coffee trees and native to Asia. It may be a rather small shrub, or large to 30 feet, like a small tree. Commercial nurseries often train mussaenda to be tree-like in form for landscape use. Their natural habit is to produce many stems and it is quite a rambler. It has silky, hairy, soft medium-green leaves. The plant's color comes from bracts and not the small, often yellow, white or orange, flowers at the center of each bract. This is the same color-producing system used by tropicals such heliconia and bougainvillea. Bracts may be seen in several colors including rose, white, red, pale pink and some mixtures.
Source : www.flowerofindia.net
Explore # 267
I stopped when I heard the singing but I had to look quite hard to find the singer. I was quite surprised to find it was a Yellow Warbler.
Used (for the very first time outdoors) my little macro lens on this very small Yellow Mountain-avens flower three days ago, when I was at Cobble Flats, off Elbow Falls Trail, Kananaskis (i.e. the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains). This is a very low-growing plant, so it really kills my neck to have to be about 6" away from the subject, using this lens! Anyway, this is what one of those small yellow flowers with the drooping heads looks like a bit closer : )