The largest I've ever seen / nearly 7"
Discovery of second extant plant of Sorbus pseudomeinichii (confirmed by Dr Tim Rich and Dr Ashley Robertson) only 3 other plants have been confirmed, 2 of which are now deceased. More info at https://globaltrees.org/news-blog/evolution-and-discovery-on-the-isle-of-arran/
Collection #: 2023MCB213
Wet mossy vertical cliffs in spray zone of river (Ghunsa Khola). Tens of thousands in bloom. Scale is in cm with mm divisions. KATH Herbarium collection 143010. E. Byers # 2032.
Harris Dam shelter to Collie on the Bibbulmun Track (walking between Dwellingup and Collie).
This was not in iNat's computer vision -- it only has 64 observations -- but it was in a little foldout laminated all-in-one field guide that Overseas Adventure Travel handed out (https://49southphoto.com/shop/, for nearby Los Glaciares). It's in a mostly South American family, the Alstroemeriaceae. Essentially no leaves at flowering time, just a flower with some bracts growing straight out of the ground. Perhaps it grows for years to store up energy for this single showy flower and large seed capsule.
Under the selection of the relentless Patagonian wind, most of the plants have become dense shrubs, low cushion plants and short-stalked herbs. This one take short-stalked to extremes.
Growing by a roadside in a small dry oak wood. Leaves were thick, shiny, and densely hairy on the underside. Most leaves had irregular shapes with indistinct lobes that ended in pins. My best guess is ilicifolia, but very few of the leaves had the characteristic shape. There were a few ilicifolia not to far from this tree that had the distinctive leaves, and non of them were as tall as this one. I know bear oak leaves can vary quite a bit, but I’m still not sure