

How did you take that first picture on here? I love it!!!
TEN THUMBS PRO AUTUMN LEAVES FREE
I use Paint.NET, a free editing programme. Most photo-editing programmes have the facility to do this. I took a normal photograph of my garden, cropped it to home in on the tulips, and then changed the colour/hue until it turned blue and then very slightly intensified the colour. thanksĭiana Grant (author) from United Kingdom on November 03, Oh thanks. I mean that, it enlivens nostalgia for my longing to have a garden again. Great info about shade tolerant plants, what i needed badly, thanks a lot. Iudit Gherghiteanu from Ozun on November 10, 2011: How awful! Who would have thought a pretty flower could do that much damage?! You're very lucky you only got it on your hands! Wow! I was interested in the Hellabore because of what you said about it blooming around Christmas. I always thought that plants needed lots of sunlight and would just wither in shade. Great pictures! I don't know any of the flower varieties except Azaleas. He went to the doctor and it nearly put me in the hospital.A year or so ago I packed up a plant with roots and sent it to Cornell -Chang couldn't I.D.It's sad that these Agricultural Experts make the big bucks but can't do or erradicate.what they are being paid for.Every Spring it appears in our garden lot-long sleeves,gloves and watch out for cut branches blowing in the breeze.Can't forget how it shut my eyes,neck,ears, bubbled up broke blisters and spread-it wasn't poison oak,ivy,or sumac.My older son's arm was almost twice it's normal sizeīarbara Isbill from New Market Tn 37820 on January 14, 2012: Both my son and I came in contact with it's sap while clearing area. *blessed*!Īnonymous on January 24, There's also a wrapping vine that will attach it's self to almost anything the wind will blow it next to. What a special and rewarding article for those that read this. I've done well with the low-growing Plumbago (beautiful purple flowers) and Rosemary for the dry shady areas, also Juniper. I love azaleas but they don't do well in the desert. Stephanie Tietjen from Albuquerque, New Mexico on February 22, 2012: I learned a lot from you, thanks for the info as well as the pictures of shade loving plants. Thank you for the shade-tolerant suggestions - I need to try a couple. I'll have to try more this spring, thanks. I have about 7/10 of the plants on your lens. I'm looking forward to seeing them in my gardens soon. My favourite shade plant is forget-me-nots. The type I grow ( Mahonia aquifolium) is fairly short, no more than 3 feet high, but my neighbours have a different type which is more like a tree, about 10 feet high. They multiply by sending out sucker-type shoots, so keep them under control.Mahonia is an evergreen shrub with very shiny dark green leaves, a bit like holly and just as spiky, with purple-black berries from autumn through winter, and a mass of bright yellow tiny frothy flowers in spring.Fortunately, there were no lasting ill effects.
TEN THUMBS PRO AUTUMN LEAVES SKIN
It took nearly two weeks for the dead skin to peel off and the pain to go away, leaving a rather red-looking layer of skin underneath, which eventually took on a healthier hue. They were very painful and burning, and I couldn't bear to come into contact with anything for a few days. Over the next few days the skin on my fingers and thumbs turned almost black and became so hard that I could actually hear them scratching like a beetle when I tapped them on the table.
