Have any of you noticed the copious flowers gracing our metropolis this first week of spring?
Looking closely you can notice these passionate precocious posies peeling back their wildly vivid sheer petals in the welcome spring sun to reveal their yearning aroused pistils wet with stigma in hopes of beckoning a lecherous bee to participate in unbridled pollination.
Many plants have a anthropic aspect to them.
I'm thinking....
Scleroderma_citrinum.jpg
An edible desert fungi
hydnora_africana.jpg
Although it is unfortunately mistaken for a Morral mushroom, the Phallus Hadriani is slightly poisonous.
phallus_hadriani.jpg
Beware that the Capsicum annuum, an East Texas native pepper contains pungent capsaicins and shouldn't be consumed in large numbers
peter-peppers.jpg
Perky shrooms photographed in Grand Tetons national forest.
champignon-en-forme-de-sein.jpg
Not Sure why I included this pic.
still_thinking.jpg
No Comment.
cactus.jpg
It has been written that the Flower of the Carob tree smells of semen. In it's native country these blooms are high prized as a delicacy.
carob_fruit_semen.jpg
A newly discovered flowering fungus, Thismia Megalongensis, in New Zealand gives off a distinctly rotten fish odor.
Thismia_megalongensis.jpg
The fruit of the Polynesian Breadfruit tree smells like freshly baked bread.
breadfruit.jpg
Not quite ripe.
sexy-strawberry.jpg
An interesting link for you botanists:
http://www.hgtv.ca/blog/carnivorous-...emale-tourism/
Thanks for learning.