Click a photo if you know the plant or flower name.
Or submit your own mystery plant photo and wait for the experts to answer.

 


 
Large Triangular shaped leaves
Large pointed leaves in center with cream colored stamin in center
Gets red berries in winter
Grows even though snow is on the ground - keeps coming back
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
Growing alongside parking lot.
Uploaded By: tcolvin
Small flower under a foot tall growing along roadside. Picture taken on 4/13/12 at 1:30pm.
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest

Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest

Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
the tiny flowers are all shades of pink,  pale,  fuscia, and soft.  the stems a of a waxy feel, tuburous like.  the plant grows from the middle out , woth the center being like a brown mossy textue.
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
This wildflower was found along the Appalachian Trail at approx 1500 ft, low to the ground, maybe 6 to 8 inches tall
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest

Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest

Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
low-to-ground, broad leaved, white, many petals; looks like a wild flower of some kind
Uploaded By: BelknapStreet

Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
Cactus, is all I know!
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
I discovered this plant in my back yard.  It is 5 feet tall and appears to have a baby to its right.  Although the leaves seem to look fuzzy on the close-up picture, they do not feel fuzzy.
Uploaded By: Liz

Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
The plant is common as an ornamental garden plant throughout Panama.  It is a small stemmed plant that grows to about 2 feet.  The flower is approximately 2 inched in diameter. The thin leaf is approximately 6 inches. It may not be present during the dry season, but I do not know that.
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
Growing in an atrium used as a snake cage. Planted amongst many tropical and stalk plants. Atrium was always kept above 80 degrees; F. Please help identify. Could it have cross-bred?
Uploaded By: Jennifer elfstrom
A previous owner built an atrium in our home for the purpose of being a snake dwelling for a red-tail boa. It is filled with many tropical stalk like plants. This one in particular caught my attention. I have never seen anything like it. It recently (just in october) produced round burst like white blooms please help identify this plant if possible. I would like to know its origin if possible or if it could be a cross-breed of some kind. Any information possible would be helpful! Thank you!
Uploaded By: Jennifer elfstrom
Very tall, green purple leaf. looks to me like a red puff of a flower
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
These are photos of the shrub I pulled from my grandfathers pasture in a creek run-off 15yrs ago. My grandfather has been rehoming these shrubs for the past 30yrs and recently since I was 15yrs old I took up my grandfathers hobby. I now have 30 shrubs in total and rehome the new baby plants in the fall for future planting. These shrubs grow very quickly in wet terrain and they grow up to 18 feet tall and 5 feet wide and they produce a small white flower in the spring time. It would mean alot to me if you can find out what the shrub is called. My grandfather has passed away and I would be very interested if you knew what these were.

Thank you
Eric Cortez
 eric@escondidos.org
Uploaded By: A Mysterious Guest
long, thin, opposite leaves sometimes has pink flowers instead of white. common in wine country
Uploaded By: belknapstreet