| THE VEGETATION ON AINOS MOUNTAIN |
Peculiar to the Kefalonian Fir Tree are its needles, which are 15-22mm long and arranged in spirals. Hard and pointed, they are flat and a dark green colour on top, while underneath they are shaped like the keel of a boat with two parallel white lines running along the length. The tree blossoms in May and June. Just like other types of fir tree, the male blossoms are separate from the female ones, although they coexist on the same tree. The tree bears fruit when about 20-30 years old, and continues up to a hundred years old, with a full crop every 2-4 years. Its seeds have only a 60-70% chance of germinating. It thrives in rich, deep soil, which is loose and moist. It can also develop in rocky, chalky ground. It can survive droughts and high temperatures as well as cold winds. OTHER TREES AND BUSHES Apart from the Kefalonian Fir, there are also many other species of trees and bushes, like the hollyoak, holm oak, smoke tree, sumack or Roudi, two types of wild strawberry and many others. You can also see small bushes and grasses, such as asphaka, thyme, ladanies and amaranth. The bush Flomis fruticosa grows everywhere.
Viola cephalonica: appears at a height of 1500-1600m and grows in the crevices of chalky rocks as well as in stony ground. Saponaria aenesia: can be seen at heights of 400-1400m and grows in chalky, stony ground. Scutellaria rubicundasubsp. Cephalonica: found at heights of 1500-1600m and grows in rocky, chalky places. Ajuga orientalis subsp. aenesia: appears at heights of 400-1600m and grows in chalky, stony ground.
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