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Here are a few summer on the levadas pics, an orchid for ident
... and a hiding spider
Many thanks for the great pictures. This species is seldom seen. The foliage looks like Merwilla (Scilla) natalensis and little that of the other Scillas.
I envy your optimism: 150 years!!! The way things are going climate wise I hope we will see the coming 15 years. Here in South America species disappear year after year and as we are writing these messages, several Hippeastrums, for instance, may be vanishing to Bulb Heaven.
Thanks for the I.D. on the spider. It's related to members of the same genus here, commonly referred to as "Crab Spiders" or "Flower Spiders".
Obviously, gardening education is failing if we can not persuade such people to dedicate every effort to keep these rare species going. There are enough thousands of "pretty flowers" around to waste this invaluable rarest genetic pool in producing more. If the habitat is gone and a new alternative habitat is eventually found, we need the species alive anyway. If we lose the species now that it is so scarce, what will be the use of the recovered habitatBestAlberto
Hi: We are 35 km SW of Buenos Aires, Argentina, by the Airport. "By" in airport scale, of course!But, people in cold climates never stop surprising me with the perfect Sotuh African and South American specimens they come up with!. What I found particularly amazing is how they compensate for the lack of light. best