Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Zarza de California (Rubus ursinus)Observ.
alyssaballDescripción
Trailing to 5m or more. Curved, unflattened prickles that are smaller than non-native blackberries. White or pink flowers large (to 4cm across). Alternate, deciduous with three toothed leaflets.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Dedalera (Digitalis purpurea)Observ.
alyssaballDescripción
Leafy stems, 0.5-1.8m tall. Leaves egg-lance-shaped, green and soft hairy above, grey-wooly below. Flowers tube or tuba like, pink-purple with deeper purple spots inside.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Zarzamora del Himalaya (Rubus armeniacus)Observ.
alyssaballDescripción
Rounded, toothed (not deeply incised) oval leaves, more or less evergreen, trifoliate. Leaves of evergreen blackberry are more deeply incised and jagged and greenish on the undersurface. Stout purplish prickles along the stem.
Also known as Himalayan blackberry (Pojar and MacKinnon)
Specimen found forming a dense thicket near gravel road, covered in coating of dust.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Trébol Blanco (Trifolium repens)Observ.
alyssaballDescripción
Flowerheads on long stocks, leaves are 3 leafed (rarely 4) and not directly below the flowers so not Red clover. Flowers not as pink as Aslike clover.
Fotos / Sonidos
Qué
Tuya Gigante (Thuja plicata)Observ.
alyssaballDescripción
Branches that spread or droop and then turn upward in J-shaped bows. Reddish-brown bark, tearing off in long fibrous strips unlike Yellow cedar which does not tear off in very long strips. Leaves have two opposite rows of folded leaves and 2 unfolded rather than than four rows that are all the same like Chamaecyparis nootkantensis (Yellow-cedar). Outside the range of Incense cedar (Calocedrus decurrens) which is found only in the Oregon Cascades.