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Greater Patagonian Trail

253 bytes eliminados, 21:33 16 oct 2015
Spine and Bur-Bearing Plants
Horse-Flyes or Tabanos will form an annoying aerial escort on some parts of the trail. They are abundant in December and January in humid parts of the River- and Lake District. These rather noisy flyers get attracted by dark moving objects in bright sunlight. So avoid dark cloth and do not try to chase them off with rapid movements, otherwise your will attract the attention of more of them. They inflict painful bites but do not leave an itching stitch.
 
===Spine and Bur-Bearing Plants===
{{multiple image
| width = 250
| footer = Cenchrus plant. Image: Jan Dudeck
| image1 = Archivo:Cenchrus(1).jpg
| alt1 = Yellow cartouche
| caption1 = Caution
| image2 = Archivo:Cenchrus(2).jpg
| alt2 = Red cartouche
| caption2 = Ejection
}}
[[Archivo:Cenchrus(1).jpg|thumb|300px|right|Cenchrus plant. Image: Jan Dudeck]]
[[Archivo:Cenchrus(2).jpg|thumb|300px|rightleft|Cenchrus plant. Image: Jan Dudeck]]===Spine and Bur-Bearing Plants===
Along the entire trail you will encounter again and again anoying [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cenchrus Cenchrus] plants with spine-covered seeds, that use bypassing animals to spread their seeds (and now also hikers). Common names include buffelgrass, sandburs and sand spur. When the seeds of these leg-high plants ripen then the very sharp spines harden and the seed easily detaches from the stem.
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