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Sorry to bombard with these tulips, but we enjoyed them so much, so I'm trying to path these feelings. Tulipa biflora often has two flowers branching from one stem, this is the source of the name biflora. This desert tulip is very rare in Israel, it occurs only in the central Negev Highlands (900 m.), but locally very common. The bright flowers are difficult to photograph since the desert background in very pale, my friends shaded the background and it worked well.
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Tulipa biflora is in peak blooming today, we saw millions of them, each so delicate and beautiful. It is a steppe species, occuring in Israel only in the Negev Highlands.
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In early March, in rainy years, the Negev Highlands are full of these small delightful tulpis.
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This desert tulip is very rare in Israel, it occurs only in the central Negev Highlands (900 m.), but locally very common. The bright flowers are difficult to photograph since the desert background in very pale, my friends shaded the background and it worked well. More photos of this tulip in the next days.
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This desert tulip is very rare in Israel, it occurs only in the central Negev Highlands (900 m.), but locally very common. The bright flowers are difficult to photograph since the desert background in very pale, my friends shaded the background and it worked well. More photos of this tulip in the next days.
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This desert tulip is very rare in Israel, it occurs only in the central Negev Highlands (900 m.), but locally very common. The bright flowers are difficult to photograph since the desert background in very pale, so I used a low location to get the sky as a background.
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This desert tulip is very rare in Israel, it occurs only in the central Negev Highlands (900 m.), but locally very common. The bright flowers are difficult to photograph since the desert background in very pale, my friends shaded the background and it worked well.
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Sorry to bombard with these tulips, but we enjoyed them so much, so I'm trying to path these feelings. Tulipa biflora often has two flowers branching from one stem, this is the source of the name biflora. This desert tulip is very rare in Israel, it occurs only in the central Negev Highlands (900 m.), but locally very common. The bright flowers are difficult to photograph since the desert background in very pale, my friends shaded the background and it worked well.