Bushwalking pictures.
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Sat 15 Jan, 2011 7:33 pm
Over the last few weeks there has been some good flower scenery at Mt Field NP.
Here is a sample from a recent walk to Newdegate Pass. There are more at this link.----------------
- Attachments
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- Milligania densiflora
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- Richea scoparia
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- Dracophyllum minimum
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- Cushions at Newdegate Pass
Last edited by
PeterJ on Tue 25 Jan, 2011 8:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Sat 15 Jan, 2011 7:53 pm
That first picture is beautiful Peter. I've never seen a flower like that before, what is it??
Sat 15 Jan, 2011 8:38 pm
ILUVSWTAS wrote:That first picture is beautiful Peter. I've never seen a flower like that before, what is it??
Unless I am mistaken it looks very much like Sprengelia incarnata, Pink Swamp Heath and it is found in damp peaty heathland (not common in the SW) But then again it could be a close up of Dracophyllum milliganii Tree Heath

and nice photographs Peter.+
Nah flowers are too big and wrong shape for Tree Heath
corvus.
Sun 16 Jan, 2011 4:26 am
Thanks Corvus.
If your right, that may explain why i've never seen in it the SW.
Sun 16 Jan, 2011 3:36 pm
Having a closer look I now think it may be the Tree Heath as it is common in Mt Field where the photograph was taken, must get my eyes checked
corvus
Mon 17 Jan, 2011 7:35 am
corvus wrote:Having a closer look I now think it may be the Tree Heath as it is common in Mt Field where the photograph was taken, must get my eyes checked
corvus
Quite correct corvus, Dracophyllum - mountain. Curly or mountain heath are two other common names.
Tue 25 Jan, 2011 4:05 pm
Beautiful photos Peter ... it's been a spectacular summer for flowers, and such a privilege to be out among them. You've captured that so well.
I'll post a few of my scoparia images from around Lake St Clair later (with a taster below).
BTW - I think you'll find your first photo is of a
Milligania densiflora aka silky alpinelily or silky milligania.
cheers
Peter
- Attachments
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- Scoparia - white form - near Mt Rufus
Tue 25 Jan, 2011 8:53 pm
whynotwalk wrote: .... BTW - I think you'll find your first photo is of a Milligania densiflora aka silky alpinelily or silky milligania.
Good thanks for that - I have changed the caption.
Tue 25 Jan, 2011 9:56 pm
whynotwalk wrote:BTW - I think you'll find your first photo is of a Milligania densiflora aka silky alpinelily or silky milligania.
I think you are right about the genus
Milligania, but not sure if you've nailed the species. But hard to say without specific knowledge of the plant and just looking at one photo. Yours are very pink, other photo I've seen of M.densiflora are not so pink.
Thu 27 Jan, 2011 11:23 am
walkinTas wrote:
I think you are right about the genus Milligania, but not sure if you've nailed the species. But hard to say without specific knowledge of the plant and just looking at one photo. Yours are very pink, other photo I've seen of M.densiflora are not so pink.
Good point walkinTas. I had read that
Milligania desiflora flowers can occasionally be "tinged with red". But these are clearly pink rather than cream. So I checked with a botanist colleague, who said:
1) She's never seen the pink form (although I'm sure I have on previous occasions)
2) It's still almost certainly
densiflora given the growth habit and location.
So PeterJ ... you may have photographed a rarety!
cheers
Peter
Thu 27 Jan, 2011 12:32 pm
Its Milligania lindoniana.
I asked at the Uni and am reliably informed that, "Mt Field is all lindoniana (red flowers, plants mostly rather small) or stylosa (white flowers, plants mostly rather large)".
Thu 27 Jan, 2011 1:54 pm
hey wT - short of "botanists at 100m"

I'm not sure how we resolve this.
I'm happy to leave it to PeterJ to decide. Also happy to admit you could be right suggesting
lindoniana... and to conclude by saying again what a great pic. of a lovely flower
cheers
Peter
Thu 27 Jan, 2011 3:17 pm
PM sent - I forgot to ask permission to post the correspondence here. I'm very happy with my source. (
No credit to me... I'm not familiar with the species at all. I'm just confidently passing on what I discovered. 
)
One of the problems I had was finding other pictures of
M. lindoniana. The common name is Red-Flowered Milligania. If it helps, there is a picture of the same plant on
flickr and the poster there has identified the plant as
M. lindoniana.
Its and excellent picture.

Thanks PeterJ.
Fri 28 Jan, 2011 11:58 am
wT and I have come to a considered agreement, namely that he was right and I was wrong

Yummm - humble pie tastes so good!
So PeterJ's lovely (first) photo is
Milligania lindoniana ... we'll all know that pinkish form next time we see it!
And just for a sense of completion, here's a photo I took of
Milligania densiflora on the Du Cane Range a few years back,
cheers
Peter

- Silky milligania (Milligania densiflora)
Sat 29 Jan, 2011 10:29 pm
Just back from Pelion area so only just caught up with the debate. I have a couple more photos of the milligania so will pop those up within the next 24 hours.
Mon 31 Jan, 2011 7:56 pm
I don't suppose there's a Milligania Spikeii?
Mon 31 Jan, 2011 9:01 pm
Lesson learned

Must check out all of my resourses before I make a nong of myself by picking a (wrong) flower from one photograph

At least it is a Mt Field local and M. densiflora is more common.
c
Tue 01 Feb, 2011 12:00 am
Just completed a walk in Mt Field and found this curious plant growing straight out of rock on Naturalist Peak

- What is it?
The whole place is a wonderful garden - and we were delighted to still find large areas of brightly coloured scoparia flowering.

- Scoparia fields
Tue 01 Feb, 2011 7:39 am
Love that second photo eggs, gorgeous!
We are very lucky to have Mt Field so close to Hobart, a beautiful park.
Tue 01 Feb, 2011 11:08 am
Ditto Brian - great photographs.
After a little searching, I think I've identified that plant among the dolerite as Cheesemania radicata. It's a brassica (yes, like a cabbage) that is found in rocky places at the highest altitudes,
cheers
Peter
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