Yellow Buttercup

Yellow Buttercup

Yellow Buttercup

Yellow buttercup – taken in a summer garden in Castlebar, Co Mayo, Ireland.  Buttercups are a sure sign that summer is here 🙂

© Aisling Jennings Photography
These photos are copyrighted and are not to be used without my permission

Yellow and Purple Flowers

Marco Photography

Yellow and Purple Flowers with raindrops resting on them

© Aisling Jennings Photography

Yellow

Yellow buttercups in June

© Aisling Jennings Photography

colouring pencils

Colouring pencils

© Aisling Jennings Photography

Anthurium Andreanum

This plant is a cultivated hybrid of an Anthurium andreanum and belongs to the family of the Araceae. The flowers are tiny on the yellow stem.

Anthurium is a large species, belonging to the arum family (Araceae). Anthurium can also be called “Flamingo Flower” or “Boy Flower”, both referring to the structure of the spathe and spadix.

Anthurium flowers are small and develop crowded in a spike on a fleshy axis, called a spadix, a characteristic of the Araceae. The flowers on the spadix are often divided sexually with a sterile band separating male from female flowers. This spadix can take on many forms (club-shaped, tapered, spiraled, and globe-shaped) and colors (white, green, purple, red, pink, or a combination).

Dandelions

Dandelions – The dandelion is a perennial, herbaceous plant with long, lance-shaped leaves. They’re so deeply toothed, they gave the plant its name in Old French: Dent-de-lion means lion’s tooth in Old French.

They grow individually on hollow flower stalks 2 to 18″ tall. Each yellow flower head consists of hundreds of tiny ray flowers. Unlike other composites, there are no disk flowers.

The flower head can change into the familiar, white, globular seed head overnight. Each seed has a tiny parachute, to spread far and wide in the wind.  The thick, brittle, beige, branching taproot grows up to 10″ long. All parts of this plant exude a white milky sap when broken.