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Ron Brind Posts: 19041 Joined: 26th Oct 2003 Location: England | quotePosted at 09:52 on 31st May 2008 Ruth, don't worry about it and trust me, there are a whole load of knuckleheads and dim bulbs in this forum, isn't that right Andy? |
Andy Edwards Posts: 1900 Joined: 14th Mar 2008 Location: UK | quotePosted at 09:55 on 31st May 2008 Well Ron, when you say a whole load...........................? |
Sue H Posts: 8172 Joined: 29th Jun 2007 Location: USA | quotePosted at 10:08 on 31st May 2008 I love the Hawthorn in May, and it seems that this May it's spectacular. |
L Posts: 5656 Joined: 10th Jun 2004 Location: UK | quotePosted at 10:57 on 31st May 2008 I think I have a Hawthron in my garden, the birds must have dropped the seeds, its got things on it that look like gooseberrys, is that it?I've uploaded it but its not been approved yet. |
Denzil Tregallion Posts: 1764 Joined: 26th May 2008 Location: UK | quotePosted at 18:05 on 31st May 2008 Thats a goosebery bush Lyn |
Ruth Gregory Posts: 8072 Joined: 25th Jul 2007 Location: USA | quotePosted at 18:50 on 31st May 2008 On 31st May 2008 08:44, Andy Edwards wrote:
Actually the one-seed and the Utah are the most common here, Andy, although their communities have become decadent and are encroaching on historic grasslands in the higher elevations, which doesn't bode well for our pronghorn antelope herds. My favorite juniper though, is the alligator. |
Andy Edwards Posts: 1900 Joined: 14th Mar 2008 Location: UK | quotePosted at 18:55 on 31st May 2008 I know. |
Ruth Gregory Posts: 8072 Joined: 25th Jul 2007 Location: USA | quotePosted at 18:58 on 31st May 2008 You're a walking natural history book, you are. |
Andy Edwards Posts: 1900 Joined: 14th Mar 2008 Location: UK | quotePosted at 19:02 on 31st May 2008 Log in, log out, log in etc etc. |
Andy Edwards Posts: 1900 Joined: 14th Mar 2008 Location: UK | quotePosted at 19:10 on 31st May 2008 Brilliant thing, google! Have I logged back in? |