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@playinprogress@assemblag.es
2026-04-28 13:05:06

Variety here is "Queen Rania". I am not generally a fan of flower-variety naming conventions, but I do like this flower, in spite of its monarchic name.
#bloomScrolling #tulips #pink

closeup of a pink tulip flower seen from above in bright sunlight, behind it some grey and brown out focus surfaces and its own green leaves. the sun is making its pink petals shimmer
closeup of a pink tulip flower seen in profile in bright sunlight, behind it some brown soil and green leaves
closeup of a pink tulip flower seen from above in raking evening or morning sun making interesting shadows on its petals, behind it some brown soil in dark shadow and green leaves
even closer closeup of the same flower as in the previous image, cropping out the ends of the petals and focusing on the sculptural insides of the flower
@scott@carfree.city
2026-02-16 03:38:15

Today in the drizzle I stopped by the Living Library, a beautiful native plant garden near SF's Balboa Park at the San Jose/Seneca intersection. Highly recommend a visit to see some #ceanothus in bloom and California poppies and island mallows beginning to, and much more.

A lush green garden with various shrubs and forbs, a curving stone path to the left, a couple of trees, and there's a two-story school building with sand-colored walls off to the side. There's an information panel that's too distant to make out the text in this photo.
A shrub with large leaves and a few small pink flowers. Seems to be Malva assurgentiflora, or island mallow.
A row of two or three shrubs that look like one shrub at first glance, but there are two distinct types of flowers: one variety is more blue-indigo and larger, the other is smaller and purple. They have dark green leaves and are something in the Ceanothus genus, or mountain lilac.
Information panel titled: "California Native Plants: The ecological benefits of planting Native San Francisco. Life frames a living library."

A bunch of text I can't fit here about the benefits of planting native, restoring nature, one plant at a time. A colorful drawing shows some California native plants and their associated pollinators: California poppy and native bees, milkweed and monarch butterfly, yarrow and hummingbird, buckwheat and native bee, toyon and cedar waxwing.
@UP8@mastodon.social
2026-02-02 20:53:57

😎 Memory justifications remain surprisingly stable even as memories fade over time, study shows
medicalxpress.com/news/2026-01

@fathermcgruder@jorts.horse
2026-04-14 22:42:16

In and of itself these bills are a good thing, but it seems bad that that we're essentially letting landlords off the hook and expecting tenants to make this investment in solar power. It should be treated like other appliances, such as ovens and refrigerators, that we expect landlords to provide. Furthermore, it's not apparent that this legislation forces landlords (or HOAs for that matter) to allow for these systems to be installed.