"Isn't nature wonderful?" Pammy said as she looked at this image, below.
Pop a parsley seed under the microscope and it's very easy to see why this tough looking customer takes three or four weeks to soften up so it's ready to germinate. |
Here's that nardoo seedpod sitting on a slide. |
The microscope itself is nothing flash, just a reasonable quality kids' beginner model. And the camera used to snap the pix is just my little pocket-sized Ricoh CX2 digital. |
Back to the original photo, of the nardoo pod, I should just fill you in on what we are looking at, close-up. Pictured below is the pond that is home to our now four-year-old goldfish, Paul, where his watery home is topped by the floating fern, nardoo, and a growing forest of Louisiana iris plants.
The nardoo is called a 'floating fern' as that is what it does on our inland waterways. |
The nardoo seedpods are quite small, and a bit hairy, too. |
Split one open and it seems like you are looking at its tiny seed. |
This might look like a photo taken by a space explorer vehicle of the close-up of a distant moon's frosty surface, but it is in fact the seed of a chilli pepper. |
2 comments:
wonderful pictures !and interesting !!!!
Wow, these are beautiful! Fancy you growing nardoo. I remember getting very excited at spotting nardoo in a waterhole in the Western Mac Donald Ranges west of Alice...
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