Today’s Featured Flower Photo of the Day: Viburnum Nudum
Here is today’s featured photo flower presentation. To let this year shine bright, I am featuring fine photos of flowers, continuing to honor the brighter side of life again this year. Today’s Flower of the day is the Viburnum Nudum.
The Viburnum Nudum, or the Possumhaw Viburnum, from the Caprifoliaceae (Diervilla and Weigela) in the Honeysuckle Family, is a clade of dicotyledonous flowering plants from a family containing about 860 species. The flowers are tubular funnel-shaped or bell-like in shape, usually with five outwardly spreading lobes, often being fragrant. The fruit can often be a berry or a just a drupe. That grows to the size of 5-12′ tall and 5-12′ wide. The xxx like a variety of scenarios, and grow to accommodate the area grown, being full Sun (6+ hours), part Sun (4-6 hours), or full Shade (up to 4 hours).
Photo #1 taken with a Samsung Galaxy A71 with the factory Quad camera Standard-wide: 64 MP 1/1.72-inch sensor with 0.8µm pixels and 26 mm-equivalent f/1.8 PDAF lens Ultra-wide: 12 MP sensor with f/2.2 aperture lens.
Photo #2 taken with a Samsung Galaxy A71 with the factory Quad camera Standard-wide: 64 MP 1/1.72-inch sensor with 0.8µm pixels and 26 mm-equivalent f/1.8 PDAF lens Ultra-wide: 12 MP sensor with f/2.2 aperture lens.
Photo #3 taken with a Samsung Galaxy A71 with the factory Quad camera Standard-wide: 64 MP 1/1.72-inch sensor with 0.8µm pixels and 26 mm-equivalent f/1.8 PDAF lens Ultra-wide: 12 MP sensor with f/2.2 aperture lens.
🌱 🌸 💐 ⚘ 🌷 🏵️ 🌹 🌺 🥀 💮 🌻
Another fine photograph to coming right up:
Feature photo: “Flower of the Day” ! ! !
PHOTO OF THE DAY
© 2022 Versatileer
These are so pretty (and smell nice!) There were a lot of them in my old neighborhood. I remember the birds used to eat the berries, which were different colors.