- deegeese ( @deegeese@sopuli.xyz ) 8•10 months ago
Cotoneaster, I believe.
Don’t eat. Taste bad and may be mildly toxic.
- LallyLuckFarm ( @LallyLuckFarm@beehaw.org ) 5•10 months ago
Hmm maybe. The cluster looks similar to C. lacteus but the leaves don’t appear the same to me. My guess was going to be Pyracantha even though I didn’t spot thorns in the photo.
After looking at possible candidates, my guess is toyon Heteromeles arbutifolia:
https://debspark.audubon.org/news/plant-month-december-2019-toyon
- LallyLuckFarm ( @LallyLuckFarm@beehaw.org ) 4•10 months ago
This might feel like I’m giving you homework[1], but below are pages with images and descriptions for each plant mentioned so far, along with a link to a dichotomous key for identification near the top of each page. There’s a difference in the calyx (the star shape on the bottom, for those unfamiliar) that seems clear to me but it could be an effect of the camera lighting or position.
[1] I totally am
1 ↩︎
Thank you! I like nature homework. Taking up photography has made me more aware of the variations and families of plants. 🌞🌿
- LallyLuckFarm ( @LallyLuckFarm@beehaw.org ) 3•10 months ago
I absolutely love hearing things like this! In case you’re not familiar, I’d highly encourage you to make this hobby even more useful by submitting photos to iNaturalist - they share photos and location data with students and researchers for population studies, and it’s got a pretty decent image recognition rate for suggesting which species you’re looking at.
Good idea, thank you! 🌼
Thank you, they look similar to cotoneaster, yet I think they’re toyon berries (see also my answer to comment below).