(15-12-2018, 11:23 PM)Sam Wrote: (15-12-2018, 05:19 PM)waggy Wrote: The tin can's fine - almost folksy after all the plastic - but really it gives some scale to the plant life. Great shots, Tamara. For the hairy lichen just surf lichens fuerteventura, and take your pick. Sorry about the messy post.
I know, plastic's everywhere. The tin will at least disappear in a couple of years, plastic is here forever. It just makes me sad to see rubbish almost everywhere we go. I'm absolutely sure Tamara cleaned the whole place up and spent at least half an hour filling bags with rubbish.
...messy post sorted 
spent the time yes, but only cleaned a tiny area
1 user says Thank You to TamaraEnLaPlaya for this post
My bug from the Dune Crocus pic - thanks Waggy!
Soldier Bug - Spilostethus pandurus
1 user says Thank You to TamaraEnLaPlaya for this post
3 users say Thank You to TamaraEnLaPlaya for this post
Sunday's walk to Tindaya coast cont:
I believe this is some form of wild onion that is very poisonous but I can't recall the name.
![[Image: KB1zPDL.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/KB1zPDL.jpg)
Tough as old boots Agave, with lethal spines on the ends of the leaves. The flower stems/trunks are used locally as roofing and scaffolding poles and ladders and at this time of year they are decorated as Christmas trees.
![[Image: tYYOSNj.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/tYYOSNj.jpg)
still looking very green in the end of the barranco.
4 users say Thank You to TamaraEnLaPlaya for this post
1 user says Thank You to TamaraEnLaPlaya for this post
The 'shin shredder' has now developed little orange berries:
A quite common succulent, grows rapidly:
2 users say Thank You to TamaraEnLaPlaya for this post
Spotted 2 or 3 specimens of this plant in the last couple of days in Tindaya but it has taken many hours to track down the name: Dipcadi serotine (brown bluebell).
I thought of the colour as a dull orange so was using the wrong search terms.
seen all over the place, lovely little mounds of foliage and flower:
just outside the wall bordering the Mirador de Vallebron and in the scree at the sides of the road, loads of purple/blue echium and the wild onion (possible a squill):
2 users say Thank You to TamaraEnLaPlaya for this post