In this opening photograph, you can see three lovely Oxalis articulata flowers. Oxalis articulata is a plant native to temperate regions of South America. It was introduced in Europe as an ornamental plant for gardens but it spread to wild places.
Here you can take a look at the leaves of the Tilia platyphyllos tree. Tilia platyphyllos is a very common tree across Europe but is not so common here in my area. Besides the forest parks of Pula, I don't remember seeing these trees in the local woods.
In this photograph, I'm holding a leaf with a dead Issus coleoptratus planthopper on it.
Here you can take another look at the Oxalis articulata flowers.
In this vertical shot, you can see two Cercopis vulnerata froghoppers resting on the large leaf of some plant that I wasn't able to identify.
Yes, this last "shot" is actually a set of three photographs merged into a single picture to upload. So the harmony between the title and the content is abruptly destroyed just before the end of the post. "Who cares" that's all I can say about it. THE END
It was an ordinary summer day. Hot and sunny. I was rambling around the forest park on the outskirts of the city with a small compact camera in hand. In this post, you'll see six old grainy shots I took on that occasion. I mean, I took more than six photographs but some of them were already published here on HIVE, and others ended up deleted. Yeah, that's all I planned to say, I think. It's a very modest post because today I have things to do and places to visit, so I have to keep my online activities short. The only reason to put this post together was the date on which the photographs were taken. All those "six" looked like catchy material for a title. When I got the title, I decided to make a post out of a bunch of old photographs.
AND THAT'S IT. AS ALWAYS HERE ON HIVE, THE PHOTOGRAPHS ARE MY WORK.