My
Begonias are up, in full bloom, and very, very beautiful.
Thank you Allan, Doug and John ~ for
your endorsements on LinkedIn
[https://www.linkedin.com/profile/edit?targetSection=SKIL&_mSplash=1&trk=eml-endrs-khc-mng-on_html&midToken=AQH1gyCEfADL-Q&fromEmail=fromEmail&ut=3kEwnyvztr2SQ1]
>>
Sound On >> Best viewed Full Screen >> Darkened Room
on
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-a2c4jkjJ0I
(2:15 minutes)
On
this, my personal blog/website:
>>
Sound On >> Best viewed Full Screen >> Darkened Room
https://youtu.be/-a2c4jkjJ0I
* (2:15 minutes)
With
more modern cameras and computers, since 2013, I now do most all of
my photographic and videographic work in Hi-Definition
HD - 1080p.
Many of my followers, however, do not have a Hi Speed Internet
connections and the images may be pixilated
– see also Wikipedia example. Or, rasterised
(blurry).
There are a few ways of overcoming the problem:
- At the bottom right of any YouTube video click on the gear icon and change the quality of the image from HD 1080p, down to, say 144p, then try increasing it slowly.
- Both the
governments of Alberta
and British
Columbia have made commitments to place Hi Speed Internet
through-out their respective provinces; as is the case in most other
North American jurisdictions.
A note of caution with Begonias: If you decide to grow Begonias outside, they prefer a place that is bright; but never in direct sunlight. Both the blooms and leaves can get easily sun-burnt very easily. Like pansies, roses, and other domesticated species they require a lot of daily maintenance, deadheading (flowers), the pruning of dead flower heads to remove dead leaves and matured flowers. This is to open the plant to the light and so that other fresh flowers will grow in to replace them.
Online Images of Begonias
Following
is from Wikipedia,
the online encyclopedia
"Begoniaceae.
The genus contains more than 1,600 different plant species. The
Begonias are native to moist subtropical and tropical climates. Some
species are commonly grown indoors as ornamental houseplants
in cooler climates. In cooler climates some species are cultivated
outside in summertime for their bright colourful flowers, which have
sepals but no
petals. DescriptionWith more than 1,600 species, Begonia is the sixth-largest angiosperm genus.[1] The species are terrestrial (sometimes epiphytic) herbs or undershrubs, and occur in subtropical and tropical moist climates, in South and Central America, Africa, and southern Asia. Terrestrial species in the wild are commonly upright-stemmed, rhizomatous, or tuberous. The plants are monoecious, with unisexual male and female flowers occurring separately on the same plant; the male contains numerous stamens, and the female has a large inferior ovary and two to four branched or twisted stigmas. In most species, the fruit is a winged capsule containing numerous minute seeds, although baccate fruits are also known. The leaves, which are often large and variously marked or variegated, are usually asymmetric (unequal-sided).
The genus name Begonia,
coined by Charles
Plumier, a French patron of botany,
and adopted by Linnaeus
in 1753, honors Michel
Bégon, a former governor of the French colony of Saint-Domingue
(now Haiti).
Main article: List
of Begonia species
- END -
On
a darker side of life in BC: Cascadia
Megaquake - Cascadia Tsunami and Megatsunami (also known as Iminami)
- The Air Quality Health Index (AQHI) - Metro Vancouver - NE||Metro Vancouver - SE|Metro Vancouver - SW|Metro Vancouver - NW|Eastern Fraser ValleyAlternatively, you can drill down an on a BC provincial interactive map to get to the AQI Readings: For Example: Air Quality in North Vancouver, BC (A BC Interactive Map will open >> click on Metro Vancouver (see inset) >> then Click for stations in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley >> Then Click on Current Air Quality Readings: Mahon Park (the testing station is located on the roof of the Fenn Stadium).
To
view some items in the following, you may need to open your own FREE
account with them:
On
a darker side of life in BC: Cascadia
Megaquake - Cascadia Tsunami and Megatsunami (also known as Iminami)
An
Old Man's Wisdom:
"Success is not final, failure
is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” ~ Winston
Churchill
Hey Thanks for sharing this blog its very helpful to implement in our work
ReplyDeleteRegards
landscaping