very nice
now that i know what this is..
i want more...

i am more interested in the blue flower partly seen in your first picture
did you follow that too?
usha di

On Tue, Dec 25, 2012 at 9:14 PM, surajit koley <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Sir,
>
>
>    - Bengal Plants describes only one *Fumaria* - *Fumaria parviflora*
>     Lamk. <http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-2815524>; F. I.
>    iii. 217; F. B. I. i. 128; E. D. F. 723
>    - F. B. I. i. 128. describes only one - *Fumaria parviflora* subsp. *
>    vaillantii* 
> Loisel.<http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-2815533>(sp.)
>    - F. I. iii. 217, describes only one - *Fumaria parviflora Willd. iii.
>    p. 868.* and the description goes thus - "Annual, diffuse.......
>    ...... Beng. BUN SULPA ...... A native of Bengal ..... It has the habit of
>    *F. officinalis* but in the Indian plant, the ultimate segments of the
>    leaves are filiform and the stigma bifid"
>    - Hortus Suburbanus Calcuttensis describes *F. parviflora* Lam, and *F.
>    officinalis* L.
>
>
> I found this herb in a kitchen garden, well in villages it is hard to
> demark a kitchen garden with that of agri-land, on 19-12-12, in Hooghly.
>
> Regards,
>
> surajit
>
>  --
>
>
>
>



-- 
Usha di
===========

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