Sara's Fave Photos Blog

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Published Saturday, March 11, 2023, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Pink pieris

Also called Japanese andromeda, pieris is a stellar shrub that thrives in the Pacific Northwest. And they are fragrant! Little bells of wonderfulness.

Pink pieris, backlit in the late winter sun

Connecting to Through My Lens Monday, Ruby Tuesday 2Tuesday’s Wordless Wednesday, Wordless Wednesday, Little Things Thursday, Skywatch Friday, Pink Saturday, Shadow Shot Sunday 2, and Your Moment Sunday. Thanks so much for visiting here, and hope to see you again soon. Please sign up at upper right for notifications of new posts.

Published Monday, September 26, 2022, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Hardy fuchsia in my garden

Hardy fuchsia is very good in the fall garden, still going strong. Blooms in shade or sun. They look like earrings to me. What do they look like to you?

Red and purple hardy fuchsia flowers

Also on Through My Lens Monday, Ruby Tuesday 2Tuesday’s Wordless Wednesday, Wordless Wednesday, Little Things Thursday, Friday Bliss, Pink Saturday, Shadow Shot Sunday 2, and Your Moment Sunday. Thanks so much for visiting here, and hope to see you again soon. Please sign up at upper right for notifications of new posts.

Published Sunday, March 20, 2022, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Happy Spring forsythia

Today is the first day of Spring in the northern hemisphere. Seattle’s weather still has lots of clouds and wet but my forsythia is in full bloom.

Old fashioned forsythia gives a burst of golden floral sunshine

Linking up with Through My Lens Monday, Tuesday’s Wordless Wednesday, Tuesday Treasures, Wordless Wednesday, Thankful Thursday, Little Things Thursday, Friday Bliss, Pink Saturday and Shadow Shot Sunday 2. Thanks so much for visiting here and hope to see you again soon. Please sign up at upper right for notifications of new posts.

Published Sunday, November 29, 2020, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Cotoneaster berries

The cotoneaster berries are super red this year. Birds and photographers love their winter redness. Note: this plant has an extremely weird pronunciation. You might think it was “cotton Easter,” but no. It’s actually pronounced cuh-tone-ee-AST-er. Isn’t that something?

Brilliant red cotoneaster berries from above

Also connecting with Through My Lens Monday, Our World Tuesday, Ruby Tuesday 2, Tuesday’s Wordless Wednesday, Tuesday Treasures, Wordless Wednesday, My Corner of the World Wednesday 1, Little Things Thursday, Friday Bliss, Pink Saturday, Garden Affair Saturday,  and All Seasons Sunday1. Thanks so much for visiting here and hope to see you again soon. Please sign up at upper right for notifications of new posts.

Published Monday, June 6, 2016, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Croton

Don’t these croton tropical shrubs look like flowers? All the colors on one plant!

Bright yellow, red and green in this conservatory-grown croton plant

Bright yellow, red and green in this conservatory-grown croton plant

Connecting up with Our World Tuesday, I Heart Macro, Macro Monday, Monday Mellow Yellows, Ruby Tuesday 2, Outdoor Wednesday, Photo FridayFloral Friday, Today’s Flowers, Pink Saturday, Straight out of the Camera Sunday, and Saturday Show Off. Thanks for your visit, and please come back soon!

Published Monday, May 2, 2016, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Variegated pieris

More from the Soos Creek garden in Auburn, WA. The foliage on this shrub is so showy it’s like flowers!

Red-leafed new growth on a variety of variegated pieris, in the Soos Creek garden in Auburn, WA

Red-leafed new growth looks like flowers, on a variegated pieris, in the Soos Creek garden in Auburn, WA

Linking to Our World Tuesday, Ruby Tuesday 2, Outdoor Wednesday, Thursday Challenge (Multicolored), Photo Friday, Floral Friday, Today’s Flowers, Pink Saturday, Straight out of the Camera Sunday, and Saturday Show Off. If only one photo shows on this page, please click on Sara’s Fave Photos Blog above to see a few more.

Published Sunday, May 24, 2015, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Scotch broom

I saw a lot of this yellow plant by the roadside when I lived in Northern California. I know it sometimes goes where it is not wanted, but I am so happy to see its cheerful yellow in the springtime.

Yellow Scotch broom plant at Richmond Beach Park, WA

Yellow Scotch broom plant at Richmond Beach Park, WA

Joining up at Our World Tuesday, Outdoor Wednesday, Scenic Weekends, Wednesday Around the World (WATW), Skywatch FridayMonday Mellow Yellows, Floral FridayToday’s Flowers, Pink Saturday, Shadow Shot Sunday 2, Straight out of the Camera Sunday, and Saturday Show Off. Please click on the Sara’s Fave Photos Blog letters above if you see only one picture here. Thanks!

Published Friday, October 3, 2014, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Cotoneaster berries

This is a close up of a cotoneaster (ka-tone-ee-AST-er) shrub in our yard, beloved by birds and photographers alike. The berries are small, about the size of a pea, and they adorn the arching branches in fall and winter. I was amazed to learn its pronunciation, by the way. I was sure it would be something like cotton-Easter. But no.

Bright red cotoneaster berries add color and bird food to a backyard

Bright red cotoneaster berries add color and bird food to a backyard

Linking with Our World Tuesday, Ruby Tuesday 2, Outdoor Wednesday, Garden Party Thursday, I Heart Macro Saturday, Macro Monday, NF Blo-Ma Tuesday, NF Catching the Light Monday, Straight out of the Camera Sunday, My Romantic Home, and Saturday Show Off. If only one photo is visible here, please click on Sara’s Fave Photos above. Thanks!

Published Saturday, December 28, 2013, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Hedge of red berries

These are a kind of cotoneaster, pronounced “co-tone-ee-AST-er,” believe it or not. I mispronounced it awfully when I first saw the word. There are many kinds, from ground covers to big shrubs, and trees for all I know. Birds and squirrels love the winter berries, and they are so photogenic! The berries are about a quarter of an inch, or less than 1 cm.

Red cotoneaster berries on a winter hedge

Red cotoneaster berries on a winter hedge

Joining up at Scenic WeekendsOutdoor Wednesday, Straight out of the Camera SundayRuby Tuesday 2, Macro Monday, I Heart Macro Saturday, My Romantic Home, Thursday Challenge (Bright Colors) and Saturday Show Off. Thank you for your visit and please come back soon! Remember to click on Sara’s Fave Photos Blog above to see the latest photos here.

Published Sunday, March 20, 2011, OK personal/derivative use; link www.lovethatimage.com.

Forsythia in bloom

This shrub used to be seen all over, but not so much any more. Plants have fashions, and this one is passe, apparently. I grew up seeing these blooming forsythias everywhere in the earliest spring. My old house had a big one that was hardly flowering because big trees had grown up around it, shading it, but one branch touched the ground and rooted, so I took it with me. And three years later in some sun, look at it!

Visit Macro Monday, Mellow Yellow Monday, Color Carnival, Outdoor WednesdaySOOC Sunday and Today’s Flowers and be sure to click on Sara’s Fave Photos to view the complete blog if you see only one photo below.

yellow shrub, spring flowers, tiny yellow flowers

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