View Single Post
  #6   Report Post  
Old 17-01-2015, 06:22 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Bob Hobden Bob Hobden is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,056
Default Double flower mystery

"David Hill" wrote

Spider wrote:
Something that has always puzzled me is the way the very double-flowered
dandelion attracts bees and seems to be so good for them. With most
other double flowers, bees gain very little because the many tiny
florets which make up the 'cushion' at the centre of the flower have
been turned to petals by (mostly) breeders or freaks of nature.

Does anyone here with a better grasp of botany have an explanation for
this apparent anomoly?



A dandylion flower is in fact a head of flowers, consisting of a large
ni#umber of florets, each of which is in fact a flower.
I like the description of a dandylion flower as the sun when in flower, the
moon when a seed head and the stars when the seeds are blowing around.


Stars are not what I call them when they are blowing onto our plot from
neighbours. :-(

--
Regards. Bob Hobden.
Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK