Articles

African Alpine Bamboo African Alpine Bamboo African Fan Palm Amaryllis American Beech Anemone Annual Hibiscus Anthora Arizona queen of the night Asian Palmyra Palm Asteraceae Australian Tree Fern Azalea Baboon Flower Balsam Fir Barbel Palm Bear's Breeches Bittercress Black Tree Fern Bleeding heart Blue Grama Blue Spruce (Colorado Spruce) Blue Wild Indigo Borage Boxwood Broad-leaved Brachysema Bronze Butterfly Brown Boronia Bur-marigold Bushman's Friend Cactus Calla Lily Camellia Cane Bluestem Chinese hibiscus Chinese Prickly Ash Chrysanthemum Cinnamon Fern Cinnamon Myrtle Cockscomb (Celosia) Coco Common Daisy Common Star Lily Comptonia Coontie Cotton Tree Coyote Brush Crown Brodiaea Cyclamen Daffodil Dahlia Daisy Daisy Bush Darwin's Barberry Datura wrightii Daylily Death Camas Dwarf White Bauhinia Elephant Tree Everlasting pea Fairy Lily Flame of the Forest Flannelbush Forget-me-not Fuchsia Gastrolobium melanopetalum Giant Salvinia Gold Coast Bombax Golden Cereus Golden Everlasting Grampians Bauera Grugru Palm Guadua Gumbo-limbo Hanging Fork Fern Hawaiian Tree Fern Heartsease Heath Aster (Aster ericoides) Hebe Hercules' Club Honeycup Honeysuckle Hong Kong Orchid Tree Hyacinth Hydrangea Illawarra Flame Tree Interrupted Fern Iris Japanese Box Japanese Royal Fern Josephine's Lily Kurrajong Ladys Slipper Lanceleaf Thorow-wax Lavender Lemon Myrtle Lilac Marigold Mexican Blue Palm Narcissi Northern Blue Monkshood Old World Climbing Fern Orchid Tree Orchids Palo Santo Pansy Paper Flower Paurotis Palm Phlox Pink Fairy Lily Ponytail Palm Protea Queensland Bottle Tree Reindeer moss Rock Thyme Royal Fern Rubber Tree Sahara Mustard Sand-verbena Silver Tree Fern Snowdrop Southern Adder's-tongue Spiderwort Spiral Ginger Star thistle Stellaria Strelitzia Summer Lilac Sunflower Swan River Pea Sweet Chestnut Tagetes Tiger lily Tulip Turnip Mustard Utah Butterfly Bush Violet Waterlily Wenatchee Mountains Checker-mallow Whisk Fern White Baneberry White Forsythia Wild Mustard Wild Rice Yellow Birch Yellow Pansy Yellow rattle Zauschneria Zinnia Zygopetalum

Latest Thoughts



Daffodil


Credit: Wikipedia
Download full size image

Daffodils form a group of large-flowered members of the genus Narcissus. Most daffodils look yellow, but yellow-and-white, yellow-and-orange, white-and-orange, pink, and lime-green cultivars also exist. Daffodils grow perennially from bulbs. In temperate climates they flower among the earliest blooms in spring: to this extent daffodils both represent and herald spring. They often grow in large clusters, covering lawns and even entire hillsides with yellow.

All daffodils have a central trumpet-shaped corona surrounded by a ring of petals. The traditional daffodil has a golden yellow color all over, but the trumpet may often feature a contrasting color. Breeders have developed some daffodils with a double or triple row of petals, making them resemble a small golden ball. Other cultivars have frilled petals, or an elongated or compressed central trumpet.

All daffodils belong to the narcissus genus, but not all narcissi classify as daffodils. Some people refer to daffodils as "jonquils", from the Spanish name for the flower, although properly this name belongs only to one specific type of narcissus.

The daffodil serves the national flower of Wales. One species, Narcissus obvallaris, grows only in a small area around Tenby.

In the language of flowers, daffodils signify chivalry and/or respect.

The name of the flower forms a variant on asphodel. From at least the sixteenth century "Daffadown Dilly" or "daffadowndilly" has appeared as a playful synonym of "daffodil".

William Wordsworth's short poem "I wandered lonely as a cloud" has often become linked in the popular mind with the daffodils which form its main image.



redOrbit Friends