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Yellow Flowers on the way to O Cebreiro

CSmith

New Member
Time of past OR future Camino
June 2017
Can anyone tell me what the yellow flowers are on the road to O Cebreiro? I would post a picture but can't figure out how.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
Can anyone tell me what the yellow flowers are on the road to O Cebreiro? I would post a picture but can't figure out how.
There are three buttons at bottom right corner of the post box. Hit the middle one (Upload a file).
 
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From a distance, and given its abundance, this looks like Common Broom, Spanish Broom in this case, aka retama negra.
Yes, almost sure that's it. Very common on hillier parts of Frances. Also at Alto del Perdon, Foncebaddon etc.
 
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My grandmother always told me that "Kissing is in season when Gorse is in flower." Some may have noticed that Gorse will flower throughout the year: a lucky break for those of us that enjoy the occasional kiss. Broom on the other hand has only a brief flowering season, though that will vary by location and altitude, from your photograph it appears that you have hit 'peak broom' in Galicia.
 
We have what one of my hiking buddies Dan calls Scottish Broom around here in the foothills (below 4000 feet) in Northern California. It looks similar to the link that Falcon269 provided. Dan gets incensed every time he sees one and pulls it out immediately grumbling something about non-native ugly introduced harmful species from Europe. Strangely enough he is of Scottish heritage. Personally I think they are attractive plants.
 
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It appears to be called "broom" everywhere. Is it because it is (was) used as such?
You must forgive me. I am not familiar with this plant; but I am interested in origins of names (and words too). :)
 
We have what one of my hiking buddies Dan calls Scottish Broom around here in the foothills (below 4000 feet) in Northern California. It looks similar to the link that Falcon269 provided. Dan gets incensed every time he sees one and pulls it out immediately grumbling something about non-native ugly introduced harmful species from Europe. Strangely enough he is of Scottish heritage. Personally I think they are attractive plants.

Yes there is a lot of Scotch Broom along the American River in Sacramento area too. (I lived in Carmichael/Fair Oaks area for 20+ years and studied horticulture at American River College.)
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
We have what one of my hiking buddies Dan calls Scottish Broom around here in the foothills (below 4000 feet) in Northern California. It looks similar to the link that Falcon269 provided. Dan gets incensed every time he sees one and pulls it out immediately grumbling something about non-native ugly introduced harmful species from Europe. Strangely enough he is of Scottish heritage. Personally I think they are attractive plants.
I think your buddy Dan is right. :)
http://www.broombusters.org/
http://www.shim.bc.ca/invasivespecies/_private/Scotchbroom.htm
 
It appears to be called "broom" everywhere. Is it because it is (was) used as such?

According to Wikipedia the tool appears to have been named after the plant and not the other way around.

"Old English bróm is from a common West Germanic *bráma- (Old High German brâmo, "bramble"), from a Germanic stem bræ̂m- of unknown origin, with an original sense of "thorny shrub" or similar. Use of the branches of these plants for sweeping gave rise to the term broom for sweeping tools in the 15th century, gradually replacing Old English besema (which survives as dialectal or archaic besom)."
 
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According to Wikipedia the tool appears to have been named after the plant and not the other way around.
Wow! It is not often that the original name of the material used was retained instead of the function; and a common household tool too. Thanks much Bradypus.

Now I'm wondering if there used to be special brambles used by the likes of Harry Potter, or was it the stick stuck in the bramble that gave it power? :oops: Oops, forget it; OT.
 
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It appears to be called "broom" everywhere. Is it because it is (was) used as such?
You must forgive me. I am not familiar with this plant; but I am interested in origins of names (and words too). :)

In Spanish it is called retama, and according to Wikipedia, the origin ratamá is Andalusian Arabic.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.

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