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Flower Poems

Where the passion flower grows
      
Lay down on your pillow
and turn the lights down low
let me take you to the garden
where the passion flower grows

Close your eyes and enter dreams
as love's emotion sets the scene
and flitters through the garden
where the passion flower grows

Touch the tender petals
of the flower as she grows
a tentative endeavour
as your feelings overflow

Let me draw you to the place
where ecstasy can be embraced
the beauty of the garden
where the passion flower grows

Feel your mind exploding
in the heavy scented air
experience the shiver
as your captured unaware

A little touch of heaven
where imagination flows
the valley in the garden
where the passion flower grows.

Charles M. Moore


 


 
Spring Beauty
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Friday, 22 May 2009

Spring Beauty, common name for a category of small, spring-blooming wildflowers that thrive in the rich, damp soil of woodlands. Spring beauties are native to Europe and the Americas and are sometimes grown in rock gardens and woodland gardens. They are among the first woodland wildflowers to bloom in the spring.

Most of the 20 species of spring beauties are perennials, plants that live for at least three years. They are all 30 cm (1 ft) or less in height and have thick, fleshy stems and leaves. The leaves may grow at the base of the stem, along the stem, or both. The dainty five-petalled flowers are white or pink and often have dark pink veins. The flowers bloom from March through May and form clusters at the end of the stem. Many species store carbohydrate food in corms, solid underground stems that resemble bulbs, using this stored energy to grow in the spring.

Spring BeautyThere are three common species. Spring beauty, or Virginia spring beauty, has a pair of hairless, linear leaves, about 12.5 cm (about 5 in) long and 1.2 cm (0.5 in) wide, which attach halfway up the stem; there may also be leaves at the base of the stem. The plant may have one or several stems 15 to 30 cm (6 to 12 in) tall. The flowers are white or pink with dark pink stripes and are arranged in a loose spike 8 to 15 cm (3 to 6 in) long.

 

Carolina spring beauty is similar to Virginia spring beauty, but its leaves are wider and have long leaf stems that attach to the main stem. Each flowerhead, or cluster, contains from 2 to 15 flowers.

Lanceleaf spring beauty has no leaves at the base; long, narrow leaves with three to six veins attach to the stem. The flowers are pink or white and may have yellow blotches. The petals are notched at the tip.

Scientific classification: Spring beauty belongs to the purslane family, Portulacacea. The scientific name for Virginia spring beauty is Claytonia virginica, Carolina spring beauty is Claytonia caroliniana, and lanceleaf spring beauty is Claytonia lanceolata.

 

Last Updated ( Friday, 22 May 2009 09:44 )
 
 


 

 

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