Category: NRID | Photo Title: | PIMO: Pilot Mountain State Park |
File Name: 1_Daffodil_(Narcissus_ pseudonarcissus)_PIMO_20130 [pid 23214] | Original File Size: 4928 x 3264 pixels | Google Map |
Photographer: J. Mickey | Date photo taken: 2013-04-08 | Vascular Plants of North Carolina |
Group: VASCULAR PLANT | Order: LILIALES | Family: LILIACEAE |
SciName: Narcissus pseudonarcissus | ComName: Common Daffodil | Also available in sizes up to 4928 x 3264
Page 1 - showing 20 of 23 photos for Common Daffodil - Narcissus pseudonarcissus. Click link at bottom of page for additional photos. | |||
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Photo 1 ENRI | Photo 2 ENRI | Photo 3 ENRI | Photo 4 ENRI |
Photo 5 ENRI | Photo 6 ENRI | Photo 7 JORI Blooming next to 100A Ranger House | Photo 8 LANO |
Photo 9 MARI | Photo 10 MARI | Photo 11 MARI | Photo 12 MARI |
Photo 13 MARI | Photo 14 PIMO | Photo 15 PIMO May not be the common variety since there are many cultivated garden forms. | Photo 16 STMO |
Photo 17 STMO | Photo 18 STMO | Photo 19 STMO A Narcissus, ‘Telamonius Plenus’, aka ‘Van Sion’. It is a very old flower in American gardens. For all its unattractiveness, it’s about one of the toughest daffodils going. It is a wild sport double, domesticated at least by the early 1600’s. It was grown in the London garden of the Dutchman Van Sion (hence the secondary name). In some pristine settings in the mountains of western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee it can be seen in its ideal form, with the perianth whole and the doubling all confined to the trumpet. It’s called the Easter Flower there. | Photo 20 WIUM |
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