No 4 is definitely ( in my humble opinion ) a rose, not Cistus. Just look at the leaves.
1. Lychnis
2. Star of Bethlehem (as Ma called it)
the white daisy could well be Ox eye but without seeing the leaves we can't be sure and the same goes for the yellow one - we need to see the whole plant.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Peeps are right when saying that we need to see the leaves for the white and yellow daisies to be certain. But I think the white one is almost definitely a shasta daisy. The shasta flower has an almost flat centre, whereas the ox eye has a pronounced convex centre.
Hi everyone and thanks for all your thoughts and identifications. I realize now that I should have taken a picture of the full plant to help with identifications, so although we have taken a few today (to process later in the week), we have tried to include more of the whole plant. The foilage of the last flower are very feathery, quite small and delicate.
Posts
What cistus? I can't see one
I'd say Dog Rose for 4, not Cistus
I always think Star of B is a lovely plant. Worth having
I'd have said Anthemis for the last one too. The bits of feathery foliage look right - assuming they're coming from the same plant
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
No 4 is definitely ( in my humble opinion
) a rose, not Cistus. Just look at the leaves.
1. Lychnis
2. Star of Bethlehem (as Ma called it)
the white daisy could well be Ox eye but without seeing the leaves we can't be sure and the same goes for the yellow one - we need to see the whole plant.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Peeps are right when saying that we need to see the leaves for the white and yellow daisies to be certain. But I think the white one is almost definitely a shasta daisy. The shasta flower has an almost flat centre, whereas the ox eye has a pronounced convex centre.
Hi everyone and thanks for all your thoughts and identifications. I realize now that I should have taken a picture of the full plant to help with identifications, so although we have taken a few today (to process later in the week), we have tried to include more of the whole plant. The foilage of the last flower are very feathery, quite small and delicate.