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Flowers And Aromatic Plants In A Botanical Garden: A Bush Of White Azalea, Rhododendron
Arrowwood Eskimo branch with flowers - Latin name - Viburnum Eskimo
Raceme of blooming acacia flowers with green leaves on white background. File contains clipping path.
Pale pink rhododendron
elderberry blossom on white, ingredient for herbal tea
White rose flowers isolated on white background
Close-up shot of the virginal mock-orange (philadelphus x virginalis) 'Girandole' - double-flowered deciduous hybrid shrub flowering with showy, white flowers in the park
Close up of a field hedge made of hawthorn, in full blossom in late Spring.
A blooming bush of white azalea flowers against the background of other flowers in a botanical garden. Floral spring backgroun
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Elderberry with flowers and leaves isolated on a white background. Blossoming elder. Sprig of sambucus with green leaves and flowers.
Flowering rhododendron arboreum
Blossoming acacia with leafs isolated on white background, black locust, Acacia flowers, Robinia pseudoacacia with copy space for your text. White acacia.
A hydrangea bush in bloom. Shot with a Canon 5D Mark IV.
Cape jasmine or garden gardenia, gerdenia flower
Pyracantha is a genus of thorny evergreen large shrubs in the family Rosaceae, with common names Firethorn or Pyracantha. They are native to an area extending from Southeast Europe east to Southeast Asia, resemble and are related to Cotoneaster, but have serrated leaf margins and numerous thorns (Cotoneaster is thornless).\nPyracanthas are valuable ornamental plants, grown in gardens for their decorative flowers and fruit, often very densely borne. Their dense thorny structure makes them particularly valued in situations where an impenetrable barrier is required. Pyracantha berries are not poisonous as commonly thought; although they are very bitter, they are edible when cooked and are sometimes made into jelly.[2] In the UK and Ireland Pyracantha and the related genus Cotoneaster are valuable sources of nectar when often the bees have little other forage during the June Gap.\nThe plants reach up to six metres tall. The seven species have white flowers and either red, orange, or yellow berries. The flowers are produced during late spring and early summer; the pomes develop from late summer, and mature in late autumn (source Wikipedia).
Jasmine. The branch of Jasmine flowers on a white background. Jasmine isolated on white. Material for design
고운 식물원에서 담은
White flower bush leaves plant isolated with clipping path
White flower of the snowball viburnum Buldenezh in bloom
Close-up of small white elderflowers. The flowers are covered with tiny dewdrops. The flowers grow in spring.
White flowers close-up. (shallow depth of field)
White Flowers
candytuft flowers full frame
Blooming rhododendron bush on a bright sunny summer day. Park and garden ornamental cultivated shrubs.
Rhododendron - a very large genus of about 1,024 species of woody plants in the heath family (Ericaceae).
photo of white azalea flowers on white background
white bougainvillea flowers on black background
Mapleleaf Viburnum is blooming in Piedmont North Carolina in June.
Colorful azalea flowers in full bloom in public parks in Tokyo, Japan.
Free Images: "bestof:Ericales - Rhododendron 'Cunningham's White' - kew 2.jpg en Rhododendron 'Cunningham's White' flowers closeup; at Kew Gardens England hu Fehér Rhododendron"
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