The IFFA is dedicated to the future of Australian flora and fauna, whether in habitats of world heritage quality or in the urban back yard. Read More
photos
Could we also have a place for people to post their photos, as well?
Judy
I have put some photos on the following website, in order to share information and help with learning our native plants. http://www.nativeplants.smugmug.com If anyone thinks it is useful then I would be happy to link or provide the pics for this site. The good thing about the smugmug site is that you can search the photos, ie wetland or yellow or shrub etc, it just depends on if I have had time to type in the keywords. Descriptions are a little way off. I work in Werribee so most of the pics are limited to this area. I am intending to add a gallery of native gardens, probably later this year. Colleen Miller
Hi, if you have tried the above link and it didnt work I am sorry - I have changed the name of my website to www.victorianflora.com Sorry that it has taken me a while to get back.
Colleen Miller
Photos can already be added to content types book pages, pages, stories and even comments like this. It's tricky to paste your own photos and perhaps we need some instructions in the faq section of the site.You can place references to pictures already on the web - either on IFFA's site or elsewhere. The easy way is to just under the text entry part of the post (when you are adding a post of some sort) click on "enable rich text". Then you can paste a picture copied from another webpage anywhere into the text. The photo below of the Bursaria is done that way.Another way to add a reference to a picture elsewhere on the web is to click on enable rich text then a little picture icon appears below the text entry box. when you click on the icon, a dialog box opens asking for the url to the photo. insert the url, and the other details then click okay. For example, the image of Acacia implexa below is from www.biota-haven.com.au.Also IFFA's wiki pages include indigenous plant descriptions, a perfect place where people can upload photos of indigenous plants.