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#1
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It was real breezy today so I cut a few twigs from a tree with a ton of
these blooms and shot them inside. Thus, the black background. They look like little Azaleas but the tree was 15 feet tall. Not a bush. They also look a little like orchids but obviously they are not. A local called them pink magnolias. Any ather ideas? Bob Williams |
#2
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Bob Williams wrote:
It was real breezy today so I cut a few twigs from a tree with a ton of these blooms and shot them inside. Thus, the black background. They look like little Azaleas but the tree was 15 feet tall. Not a bush. They also look a little like orchids but obviously they are not. A local called them pink magnolias. Any ather ideas? Bob Williams ------------------------------------------------------------------------ where are you gardening? just to let you know..........Azaleas can grow to be more than twenty feet tall, looking like bushy, scraggly trees. They sure LOOK like Azaleas...........the wild one here in Eastern Tennessee called Flame Azalea gets about 16 to 18 feet tall............Magnolia's bear chalice like, upright to outwards facing pink, white (star like), pinkish white, an unusual new yellow one, plum, deep pink and what people don't realize is a magnolia, the tulip poplar has yellow with orange flame brush marks at the base of the petals flowers. What you've taken a picture of sure looks like Azalea, and even clusters of Rhododendrons (same family as Azalea) have their blossoms that are trumpet like with long stamen and pistils that look like this as well. I'd hesitate a good solid confirmation that you've got a great picture of Azalea.........locals calling it pink magnolia would be what? Alabaman's? Georgians? Tennesseans? Texans? Californians? Ohioians? Michiganders? Floridians? where you at Bob? madgardener up on the ridge, back in Fairy Holler, overlooking English Mountain in Eastern Tennessee, zone 7, Sunset zone 36 |
#3
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![]() madgardener wrote: Bob Williams wrote: It was real breezy today so I cut a few twigs from a tree with a ton of these blooms and shot them inside. Thus, the black background. They look like little Azaleas but the tree was 15 feet tall. Not a bush. They also look a little like orchids but obviously they are not. A local called them pink magnolias. Any ather ideas? Bob Williams ------------------------------------------------------------------------ where are you gardening? just to let you know..........Azaleas can grow to be more than twenty feet tall, looking like bushy, scraggly trees. They sure LOOK like Azaleas...........the wild one here in Eastern Tennessee called Flame Azalea gets about 16 to 18 feet tall............Magnolia's bear chalice like, upright to outwards facing pink, white (star like), pinkish white, an unusual new yellow one, plum, deep pink and what people don't realize is a magnolia, the tulip poplar has yellow with orange flame brush marks at the base of the petals flowers. What you've taken a picture of sure looks like Azalea, and even clusters of Rhododendrons (same family as Azalea) have their blossoms that are trumpet like with long stamen and pistils that look like this as well. I'd hesitate a good solid confirmation that you've got a great picture of Azalea.........locals calling it pink magnolia would be what? Alabaman's? Georgians? Tennesseans? Texans? Californians? Ohioians? Michiganders? Floridians? where you at Bob? madgardener up on the ridge, back in Fairy Holler, overlooking English Mountain in Eastern Tennessee, zone 7, Sunset zone 36 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I live in San Diego, CA. When I lived in Houston TX., I had a Pink Magnolia (an 8' spindly tree) that looked like what you described. It looked kinda like a Pink Tulip. but larger. Thanks for your quick response........Bob Williams |
#4
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![]() Bob Williams wrote: It was real breezy today so I cut a few twigs from a tree with a ton of these blooms and shot them inside. Thus, the black background. They look like little Azaleas but the tree was 15 feet tall. Not a bush. They also look a little like orchids but obviously they are not. A local called them pink magnolias. Any ather ideas? Bob Williams ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I revisited the tree where I got these blooms and noted that although there were many hundreds of flowers on the tree, there were virtually no leave present. Not like a typical Azalea Bush which has lots of leaves and flowers at the same time. Still Puzzled in San Diego.........Bob Williams |
#5
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![]() Bob Williams wrote: Bob Williams wrote: It was real breezy today so I cut a few twigs from a tree with a ton of these blooms and shot them inside. Thus, the black background. They look like little Azaleas but the tree was 15 feet tall. Not a bush. They also look a little like orchids but obviously they are not. A local called them pink magnolias. Any ather ideas? Bob Williams ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I revisited the tree where I got these blooms and noted that although there were many hundreds of flowers on the tree, there were virtually no leave present. Not like a typical Azalea Bush which has lots of leaves and flowers at the same time. Still Puzzled in San Diego.........Bob Williams After viewing V_Coerulea'a "Deciduous Azalea" (above) and Googling on that plant, I'm almost certain that is what these flowers are. The tree loses its leaves at a certain time of year while the flowers care still present. Bob Williams |
#6
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![]() Bob Williams wrote: Bob Williams wrote: Bob Williams wrote: It was real breezy today so I cut a few twigs from a tree with a ton of these blooms and shot them inside. Thus, the black background. They look like little Azaleas but the tree was 15 feet tall. Not a bush. They also look a little like orchids but obviously they are not. A local called them pink magnolias. Any ather ideas? Bob Williams ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I revisited the tree where I got these blooms and noted that although there were many hundreds of flowers on the tree, there were virtually no leave present. Not like a typical Azalea Bush which has lots of leaves and flowers at the same time. Still Puzzled in San Diego.........Bob Williams After viewing V_Coerulea'a "Deciduous Azalea" (above) and Googling on that plant, I'm almost certain that is what these flowers are. The tree loses its leaves at a certain time of year while the flowers care still present. Bob Williams Here is what the leaf looks like. It was a LOT greener when I picked it 4 hours earlier. You could almost watch the leaf turn brown as it sat on the table. Bob Williams |
#7
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![]() "Bob Williams" wrote in message ... Hi, Bauhinia purpurea, sometimes called Hong Kong Orchid tree but this one has seed pods and the real HKO (Bauhinia blakenea) has none. HTH -_- how no NEWS is good |
#8
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![]() how wrote: "Bob Williams" wrote in message ... Hi, Bauhinia purpurea, sometimes called Hong Kong Orchid tree but this one has seed pods and the real HKO (Bauhinia blakenea) has none. HTH -_- how no NEWS is good Yep! That's it. The unusual leaf cinched it. Thanks for the I.D. Bob |
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