A flower from my orange tree. The smell is indescribably wonderful.
Believe it or not, but this flower comes from a damn weed.
This is just the first bloom. The second one was massive, as you can tell from all the buds
I had no idea pelargoniums could get this large.
I have no idea what this is, but this plant has an extremely strong smell of mint
From a tree in the backyard. After some research, it seems like this one is a Dynamite Crape Myrtle
The trees in the yard surely knows how to bloom. This is in middle of July.
The tree we have in the front yard turned out to be quite the bee attraction. Since bees are getting fewer in California, I don't mind having them swarm our tree at all...as long as they stay away from Mia.
The tree in all its glory. This one is most likely a Natchez Crape Myrtle
A close up of one of the flower clusters on the tree. They are so heavy that the branches are bending downwards
These flowers belongs to a small tree behind the shed. Odorless but nice to look at.
These flowers come from the base of on of my myrtle trees. Interestingly, they are different from the flowers in the rest of the tree.
Another picture of my Dynamite Crape Myrtle in the backyard
I have no idea what type this is, nor is it particularly pretty. However, it bloomed shortly after I revealed its pot which was suffocating under my enormous Pelargonium citrosa (which you can partly spot on the right)
From a daylily that I have in the front yard. Notice the bee
Cluster of not yet ripened passion fruits as well as a flower
Blue Passion Flowers (Passiflora Caerulea) and a fruit
The inside of the passion fruit. The kind I have is Passiflora caerulea, commonly known as the Blue Passion Flower, but the fruit it yield are small and dry. Not something I would eat.
Flower from an ugly looking vine. The flowers are pretty though.
The vine the previous flower came from
Flowers from one of the vines in the backyard.
The previous flower belongs to this plant
An odd looking pelargonium