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Botanical help please

Kiwi-family

{Rachael, the Mama of the family}
Time of past OR future Camino
walking every day for the rest of my life
Could anyone tell me what these flowers are? They seem to be not quite lupin, not quite hollyhock, not quite foxglove!
They were flowering in April - these particular ones were after Agés and before Atapuerca.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
1730951345145.webp
 
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Could anyone tell me what these flowers are? They seem to be not quite lupin, not quite hollyhock, not quite foxglove!
They were flowering in April - these particular ones were after Agés and before Atapuerca.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
View attachment 180348
Hi there, Kiwi family,
This plant is Esparcette.
Esparcette is a plant species from the family of the papilionaceous flowers. This is a group of protein-rich plants, which also includes the plant lucerne. Esparcette has long been used as good quality hay for horses that had to work hard on the land.
Buen Camino!
Greetings from Holland,
Frans
 
Onobrychis viciifolia, otherwise known, at least among anglophones, as sainfoin. Good photo showing its typical vetch-like leaves. I wish I’d seen it in such profusion!
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
Onobrychis viciifolia, otherwise known, at least among anglophones, as sainfoin. Good photo showing its typical vetch-like leaves. I wish I’d seen it in such profusion!
I agree, I ran the photo through the app Plantum and got the same answer.

Onobrychis viciifolia, also known as O. sativa or common sainfoin (IPA: ['sænfɔɪn]) has been an important forage legume in temperate regions until the 1950s. During the Green Revolution it was replaced by high yielding alfalfa and clover species. Due to its anthelmintic properties the common sainfoin is a natural alternative to drugs to control nematode parasitism in the guts of small ruminants. This is the main reason why O. viciifolia came back to the scientific agenda during the last years.
Onobrychis viciifolia, otherwise known, at least among anglophones, as sainfoin. Good photo showing its typical vetch-like leaves. I wish I’d seen it in such profusion!
 
This, according to my iPhoto “I” button and Wikipedia:

Onobrychis viciifolia, also known as O. sativa or common sainfoin(IPA: ['sænfɔɪn]) was an important forage legume in temperate regions until the 1950s. During the Green Revolution it was replaced by high yielding alfalfa and cloverspecies.

Due to its anthelmintic properties, common sainfoin is a natural alternative to drugs to control nematode parasitism in the guts of small ruminants.

Hope this helps.

Tom
 

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