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  • Looking at..........

    Bugs & Fluff

    A HAPPY PENTAX USER

  • #2
    Interesting that aphids like the milk thistle.. Think if you could lose some of that space on the right to give a similar gap from subject to edge as the left, it would balance better.

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    • #3
      Milk Thistle? I thought they were purple. I think this is just a common old dandelion. Although on the one branched stem, the two elements are ok. You might find this interesting. A time lapse of the dandelion going to seed. View HERE.
      I Shoot A Canon

      Web: isacimages.com / My Gear / Flickr Photostream
      My memory's not as sharp as it used to be.
      Also, my memory's not as sharp as it used to be.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Isac View Post
        Milk Thistle? I thought they were purple. I think this is just a common old dandelion. Although on the one branched stem, the two elements are ok. You might find this interesting. A time lapse of the dandelion going to seed. View HERE.
        Wish I had a spare month to do it.
        A HAPPY PENTAX USER

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        • Isac
          Isac commented
          Editing a comment
          You don't have to be there the whole time eaglem - your camera does all the hard work

      • #5
        Haha good thing it's been done.
        Better a full bottle in front of me
        than a full frontal lobotomy.
        Hans

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        • #6
          Originally posted by Isac View Post
          Milk Thistle? I thought they were purple. I think this is just a common old dandelion. Although on the one branched stem, the two elements are ok. You might find this interesting. A time lapse of the dandelion going to seed. View HERE.
          Can be a bit confusing particularly if you just Google 'milk thistle'. It will invariably throw up the purple variety.

          Milk thistle is used to describe quite a few species but one of the the most common in gardens, lawns and pasture in temperate Australia is one which produces a milky fluid from a broken stem and is prevalent in Tasmania and is known by quite a few common names.

          A picture of the flower and seed ball may well look very similar to a Dandelion however they are quite a bit smaller but the plant can grow much higher. One of the defining differences which caused me to call Eglem's specimen Milk Thistle is the double seed heads on a single stalk. It's impossible to gauge size from the shot but Dandelions tend to have a single flower on a single stalk.

          Here's a bit more info on the plant I thought it was:

          Click image for larger version

Name:	Thistle 3 copy.jpg
Views:	30
Size:	153.7 KB
ID:	447207

          Click image for larger version

Name:	Thistle copy.jpg
Views:	24
Size:	99.7 KB
ID:	447206

          Click image for larger version

Name:	Thistle 2 copy.jpg
Views:	22
Size:	199.5 KB
ID:	447204

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          • #7
            Thanks for that info.
            A HAPPY PENTAX USER

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            • #8
              All good info Greg. Thanks. Milk Thistle it is, I ddn't think we had much of it here in WA. The dandelions are on single stems and the flowers are nearly identical. Cheers.
              I Shoot A Canon

              Web: isacimages.com / My Gear / Flickr Photostream
              My memory's not as sharp as it used to be.
              Also, my memory's not as sharp as it used to be.

              Comment

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