More beautiful and strange flowers in the park garden

By madventure | Nature, Photography | 27 Sep 2025


Butterfly stonecrop

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This is the first time I've seen this flower in a park garden. Perhaps I wasn't paying enough attention, distracted by the beautiful summer flowers, but now, in the absence of anything else, I noticed this beautiful specimen.

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The photos show a stately sedum in various stages of development. The plant is a nectar plant and is home to a wide variety of pollinating insects.

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The plant is native to Asia, particularly favored in Japan, Korea, and China, but it also thrives in European climates because it doesn't have any demanding cultivation requirements.

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The inflorescence appears now, at the turn of summer and early autumn, and looks spectacular and smells wonderful.

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Panicled hydrangea

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This is another surprise, as I hadn't expected a hydrangea to take on such a form. It's quite different from the familiar, large clusters of common hydrangeas.

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The inflorescence is scattered, and the flowers are sparse and very delicate. A distinctive feature is only four petals per flower. The plant is also melliferous and attracts all pollinating insects.

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Hosta ventricosa

And finally, the decline of the hosta inflatata, which graced my post in July. Back then, it was magnificent, beautiful, and alluring.

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Today, only a few flowers remain, most have withered, and the plant is preparing for winter.

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madventure
madventure

backpackers, traveler, nature lover, photographer, dreamer


Nature, Photography
Nature, Photography

Everything about nature and photography

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