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Floral
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photo 138 - Close Up Heather.
Close up Heather.
A delicate little flower.
A delicate little flower.
photo 130 - Dappled Light.
Dappled light.
As light filters through the tree's it reflects the colour of the bluebells and picks up on a spiders web. It kind of looks magical and I certainly feel blessed when up the bluebell wood, near Roseberry Topping. UK
As light filters through the tree's it reflects the colour of the bluebells and picks up on a spiders web. It kind of looks magical and I certainly feel blessed when up the bluebell wood, near Roseberry Topping. UK
photo 129 - Bluebells.
Bluebells.
A protected species and I can see why. This is my favorite English flower and is a first sign of spring.
Bluebells are connected to Queen Charlotte, and are a sign of ancient woodland.
A protected species and I can see why. This is my favorite English flower and is a first sign of spring.
Bluebells are connected to Queen Charlotte, and are a sign of ancient woodland.
photo 72 - Lucky Heather
Scottish legend says, Malvina, daughter of a Celtic bard, was ingaged to a warrior named Oscar. Oscar was killed in battle, and the messenger that delivered the news gave her heather as a token of Oscar’s love. As her tears fell on the heather, it turned white. Though she was sad, she wished happiness on others and hoped that anyone who found white heather would have good luck.
54.386370, -2.903558
54.386370, -2.903558
photo 123 - Daffodil
With their meaning of rebirth, motherhood and new beginnings, daffodils have become associated with the beginning of new chapters and are commonly given as a congratulatory gift to new mothers.
photo 100 - Poppies.
Poppies blowing in a warm summer breeze.
photo 122 - Pink.
Pink cherry blossom.
First sign of spring.
First sign of spring.
photo 98 - English Garden.
In the quaint English Garden, you can enjoy a scone with some cream, and a cuppa tea.
photo 63 - First Spring
To find the universal elements enough; to find the air and the water exhilarating; to be refreshed by a morning walk or an evening saunter... to be thrilled by the stars at night; to be elated over a bird's nest or a wildflower in spring - these are some of the rewards of the simple life.
photo 62 - Black and White, Tulip
Mama was my greatest teacher—a teacher of compassion, love, and fearlessness. If love is sweet as a flower, then my mother is that sweet flower of love.
photo 61 -Tulip
The Tulip
“If I had a single flower for every time I think about you, I could walk forever in my garden.”
“If I had a single flower for every time I think about you, I could walk forever in my garden.”
photo 60 - Grape Hyacinths
Grape Hyacinths
Man needs bread and hyacinths: one to feed the body, and one to feed the soul.
Man needs bread and hyacinths: one to feed the body, and one to feed the soul.
photo 57 - Rose Garden
Beautiful Roses in an English Country Garden.
photo 51 - Blossom
A white blossom in a black and white photo.
photo 27 - Poppy Meadow
Poppy flowers have long been associated with sleep, peace, and death: Sleep because they provide opium for sedative effects, and death because the red poppy in particular is commonly known as a blood-red flower. In addition to being a symbol of remembrance, the red poppy also represents hope for a peaceful future as well as a way to honor fallen soldiers - specifically those who died during the Second World War. As opposed to the solemn symbolism associated with them in Western cultures, poppies in Eastern cultures generally symbolize love and success instead.
photo 12 - Daffodils
Spring is synonymous with daffodils, a flower symbolizing rebirth and new beginnings. Shakespeare celebrated them as the flower that comes before the swallow dares, and flower girls in London sold bunches of wild blooms. Cut-flower farming, however, did not begin before the late 19th century. A potato farmer on the Isles of Scilly in January 1875 was struck by a semi-wild narcissi in full bloom on the tracks and verges of his farm. In 1859, the railway link from Penzance to London was opened, allowing him to ferry early blooms from the island up to London within 48 hours of picking, weeks before they flowered on the mainland. Trevellick received 7 shillings and 6 pence for thirty experimental bunches sent in a hatbox, and a week later, he earned £1 for thirty more bunches.
photo 5 - Orchid Floral Art
The most highly coveted of ornamental plants, the delicate, exotic and graceful orchid represents love, luxury, beauty and strength.
photo 4 - Bluebell Woods
Roseberry Topping the Great North East UK. One of the best places to see bluebells in the UK is Newton Wood Yorkshire, an arboreal blanket cloaking the lower slopes beneath. Great Ayton Moor. The purple haze and delicate scent of bluebells spreads through the understory of this 400-year-old forest, joined by the distinctive aroma of wild garlic. And dotted throughout are the small white flowers of greater stitchwort, wood sorrel and wood anemone.
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