Four-nerve daisy bud
A Tetraneuris scaposa bud opening on February 15 in northwest Austin: this is a minimalist and more sinuous take than the one you saw last fall.
© 2012 Steven Schwartzman
Perspectives on Nature Photography
A Tetraneuris scaposa bud opening on February 15 in northwest Austin: this is a minimalist and more sinuous take than the one you saw last fall.
© 2012 Steven Schwartzman
Written by Steve Schwartzman
March 5, 2012 at 5:34 AM
Posted in nature photography
Tagged with buds, macro, minimalism, native plants, nature, photography, Texas, wildflowers
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Interesting flower!
TBM
March 5, 2012 at 5:49 AM
I’m fond of the way the disk flowers are packed together in their yellow bundle.
Steve Schwartzman
March 5, 2012 at 7:19 AM
There isn’t much to it at this stage, but it sure is beautiful! I love how bright and soft looking the yellow center is. ~ Lynda
pixilated2
March 7, 2012 at 12:36 PM
I’m glad you join me in finding it beautiful, Lynda. At this early, fuzzy stage I think it’s especially cute.
Steve Schwartzman
March 7, 2012 at 1:00 PM
[…] the past few months these pages have brought you several views of the four-nerve daisy, which exists in central Texas as two similar species of Tetraneuris. Both of them do the same […]
Four-nerve daisy’s folding and fading phase « Portraits of Wildflowers
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