Andy Perrin Posted May 31, 2018 Share Posted May 31, 2018 A rose is a rose is a...well, I dunno what this is, but it's pretty? NEX-7, 330WB70, EL-Nikkor 80mm/5.6, F/22, 10", ISO200, sharpened and denoised. Link to comment
Cadmium Posted May 31, 2018 Share Posted May 31, 2018 Rosa Acicularis, Prickly Rose...Wild Rose...https://en.wikipedia...Rosa_acicularis Link to comment
Andy Perrin Posted May 31, 2018 Author Share Posted May 31, 2018 It looks like that one, but it also looks like dozens of other wild roses. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted May 31, 2018 Share Posted May 31, 2018 The UV frame is excellent. Roses are really tough to ID*. Was this one wild? I have not seen an orange wild rose. It is striking! *Well, for me anyway. I have not practiced enough with them I suppose. "-)Rosa keys are very botanically technical and require up-close views of styles, hypanthium, old growth and new growth and so on. Added 2 minutes later: https://gobotany.new...org/genus/rosa/Yikes, looks like 21 possibilities if wild in New England. Link to comment
Andy Perrin Posted May 31, 2018 Author Share Posted May 31, 2018 Thanks! And yeah, I always check GoBotany first. Like I said, “rose-like flower.” Heh. I am not sure if it is wild or cultivar- in the location I found it, it might have been either. It’s nearby if someone wants a challenge. I can obtain more photos. I do not put any effort into my visual photos since I consider them to be for ID and to give an idea of what the flower looks like, not “art.” Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted May 31, 2018 Share Posted May 31, 2018 It could almost be a Rubus instead of a Rosa. But again the color is wrong. I don't think this one will key out in GoBotany. There just aren't any orange-red wild roses there. Seems like it might be a domestic "escape". Link to comment
nfoto Posted June 1, 2018 Share Posted June 1, 2018 This is most definitively a species belonging to Rosa. The odd colour hints at a cultivar origin. Differentiating and naming Rose species is, to put it mildly, a botanist's nightmare. The taxonomy and nomenclature are a mess, too. A small handful of the wild roses are pretty distinct, though, so I tend to stick to these and ignore the others. The above notwithstanding. it sure is pretty, and the UV record is first class. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted June 1, 2018 Share Posted June 1, 2018 Birna: it sure is pretty, and the UV record is first class. It sure is!! Andy, why not add this to the Cultivar section? You can use the title "Rosa sp. [Orange Cultivar]". For a reference, the Rosa entry on Wikipedia is descriptive.. And for the comment simply mention you went on a walk and found this pretty thing. (Or whatever...) Our Cultivar section is a lttle more informal. :D Link to comment
Andy Perrin Posted June 1, 2018 Author Share Posted June 1, 2018 Thanks, all! Andrea, I may do that. Link to comment
dabateman Posted June 17, 2018 Share Posted June 17, 2018 Excellent, image. What I find fascinating is how different that baby bottom petal is to the larger ones in UV. Very striking, and real. Do all the flowers have that baby petal or was it just this one? Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now