Smee Again Posted October 26, 2020 Share Posted October 26, 2020 Actually, they are a variety of "Spider Lilies", but the locals here in southeast Arkansas refer to them as "Naked Ladies". They show up in early to mid September and last to early / mid October Dan C, StuartRc and John Rostron 2 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
carl123 Posted October 27, 2020 Share Posted October 27, 2020 Did you draw these? Smee Again 1 Quote To save time I am currently using an automated AI to reply to some posts on this forum. If any of "my" posts are wrong or appear to be total b*ll*cks they are the ones generated by the AI. If correct they were probably mine. I apologise for any mistakes made by my AI - I'm sure it will improve with time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joachim_L Posted October 27, 2020 Share Posted October 27, 2020 What a click bait article! I am disappointed!! No, nice photography! Smee Again and Paul Mudditt 2 Quote ------ Windows 10 | i5-8500 CPU | Intel UHD 630 Graphics | 32 GB RAM | Latest Retail and Beta versions of complete Affinity range installed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Rostron Posted October 27, 2020 Share Posted October 27, 2020 I was expecting to see a pic of Colchicum autumnale, (aka Autumn Crocus or Meadow Saffron, or Naked Ladies). The name Naked Ladies comes from the fact that the flowers appear in autumn, well before the leaves. The genus Colchicum is an Old World one, though it is grown worldwide. What is the botanical name of the flower you show? Is it a Nerine or an Amaryllis? I would guess that it does the same trick of flowering separately from the foliage. John Quote Windows 10, Affinity Photo 1.10.5 Designer 1.10.5 and Publisher 1.10.5 (mainly Photo), now ex-Adobe CC CPU: AMD A6-3670. RAM: 16 GB DDR3 @ 666MHz, Graphics: 2047MB NVIDIA GeForce GT 630 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Smee Again Posted October 27, 2020 Author Share Posted October 27, 2020 Don't know the actual name, only that it is a variety of spider lilly. The name is just one applied by locals here. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Smee Again Posted October 27, 2020 Author Share Posted October 27, 2020 8 hours ago, carl123 said: Did you draw these? Nope, photo. Wish I were patient enough to do work like that in Affinity. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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