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Trond, I am very sorry to hear that you have lost your Mother. I send my sincere condolences to you and your Family.
as do I.
Enjoying your photos tremendously, Trond. So sorry to hear about your mother.
And I too. My mother introduced me to alpine plants in my teens, and to propagating plants for the local WI market, and it has never left me...
Trond,Yes , I too send my condolences to you and your family.I enjoyed your photographs. Leucanthemum vulgare has naturalized in our part of California, especially near streams. It is cheerful to see them blooming naturalized or not.Our good thoughts are with you and your family......Always.
No mountain ranges to be seen from my place, Robert! No mountain at all to be seen from my summer-house either. Down here for a few days . . . .It is dry here now, need some xeric plants I think! We have no formal garden but garden plants are spread among wild ones. We have very little soil, just some crevices and hollows filled by sand and a little organic soil.
Trond,I thoroughly enjoyed the photographs of your countryside! In a small way it helps me get a feel for the area.Are the Ash (Fraxinus) and Oak (Quercus) native? What species?It seems that Lotus corniculatus gets around. It has naturalized in the higher elevation of the Sierra Nevada. I wonder where else it has naturalized.Asplenium trichomanes grows in the rock crevices as many of our California native rock ferns.All very beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
Is it my imagination, or are these photos from your July outing even better than ever? Perhaps it's that you are "catching" some favourite plants of mine - or the glimpses across water, which are so calming? Whatever - it's areal pleasure, thank you!