Snowberry buds in morning dew-light
(c) riverwindphotography
469 notes
·
View notes
this is what i needed the snow name for :)
this au
203 notes
·
View notes
Was feeling motivated so I drew a semi low-effort sketch of Snowberry.
8 notes
·
View notes
instagram | jannelford
267 notes
·
View notes
snowberry
3 notes
·
View notes
Worm, but give it leg
131 notes
·
View notes
wings of fire :D
5 notes
·
View notes
A little bit of Skyrim in real life. 😊
Today's harvest of snow berries (viburnum) from my little garden. 🍒
When the first frost comes, these berries become sweet and delicious. I make vitamin tea from them and honey. It warms and adds comfort. Have a nice evening friends 💜
19 notes
·
View notes
snowberry the guinea pig
147 notes
·
View notes
Upgrades people upgrades!
Someday all my body will be covered in flowers herbs and leafs
4 notes
·
View notes
Snowberry leaves in late October
(c) riverwindphotography, October 2021
273 notes
·
View notes
If my research is correct, these are snowberries. Until now I only knew the german name for them: Knallerbsen ✨
The first painting in the Plants & Granulation series where the background is the most inconspicuous when it come to the gold splatters. I’ll take & add a picture the next time the sun is out to show the full effect. 🌟
17 notes
·
View notes
The mystery of the whisper of twilight is hidden from our consciousness 🌿
17 notes
·
View notes
Another Snowberry sketch. One of these days I’ll get a new tablet and do digital again. One of these days. 🤷♀️
5 notes
·
View notes
Common Snowberry, Symphoricarpos albus
Thinking it would make a lovely knee-highish boarder plant near the walk. Because of course I would maintain it and it would behave as such. Several years later it grew to four feet and ate the walk.
I can also attest from firsthand experience that the berries are not so much as toxic as they are inedible. Unless of course you like the taste and texture of styrofoam made from soap, in which case, have fun with that.
Update: Found out from the great interweb that snowberry berries contain saponins which is used to make soap all soapy. Confirmation that my tastebuds are, for the time being, still functioning as evolution intended.
Second Update: Snowberry also whacked to the ground, pondering what new unreasonable thing to replace it with. Don’t worry, it spread into the adjacent shrubbery, so not completely out of my life.
3 notes
·
View notes
I love finding plants in unusual places like this burdock. It was on the edge of a field that's usually mowed short by the city and yet this one, and there was only one, was allowed to bloom. If it's still there in a week or so I might be able to get seeds from it.
Elderberry that was clearly planted there on purpose to attract wildlife, and wild buckwheat that's very common here and was literally everywhere
I also found two invasive species that had crept under someone's fence. Fig trees and snowberries are both pretty common in urban gardens but don't spread out much on their own.
4 notes
·
View notes