Theme

This week’s theme is about thinking up a flower, bush, tree, or whatever other plant you want. The weirder the better :)

Voting process

Everyone can submit their image to this post. At the end of the week all images will be collected and shared in a new voting post wherein people can vote on their favorite image. This will be up for at least 24 hours before a winner is made.

There are no extra points to be earned, OP will decide on a winner in case of a tie.

Rules

  • Follow the community’s rules above all else
  • One comment and image per user
  • Embed image directly in the post (no external link)
  • Workflow/Prompt sharing encouraged but not required (we’re all here for fun and learning)
  • OP will declare winner in case of a tie
  • The challenge runs for about a week.
  • Down votes will not be counted
  • Voting and final scoring will be done in a separate post.

Scores

At the end of the challenge the image with the most votes, wins!

The winner gets to pick the next theme. As always, have fun everyone!

Previous entries

  • cloudless@piefed.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 day ago

    In everyday conversation, mushroom is considered to be a vegetable. Even I would call that a vegetable. But I have never heard anyone (in everyday conversation) calling mushroom a plant.

    By the way, strawberries are not technically nuts. They are actually considered an aggregate accessory fruit.

    • Deceptichum@quokk.auM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 day ago

      Yet a vegetable by definition is either a plant or part of a plant.

      We didn’t even know what fungi were a few hundred years ago without microbiology, they were always ‘plants’. Plants are anything that sticks in the ground and grows, or vaguely follows the other socially acceptable combination of features such as leaves, etc.

      • cloudless@piefed.social
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 day ago

        Culinary categories mix biological types all the time - tomato (a fruit), mushroom (a fungus), seaweed (an algae) - yet all are treated as vegetables in cooking.

        You’re falling into a logic trap by using an overly narrow definition of ‘vegetable’. A vegetable is best understood as a plant or plant-like food used in savoury dishes - and that includes mushrooms, even though they’re not biologically plants.

        Since ‘vegetable’ is a culinary term, not a scientific one, it’s not valid to reverse that and argue that mushrooms must be plants just because they’re vegetables.