OK, I also bought a fuchsia
...and a few other potted plants. With my crop sensor Canon 90D, my 105mm macro lens is approximately equivalent to 168mm on a 'full frame' DSLR.
On this stone wall a colony of Asplenium scolopendrium (hart's-tongue fern) have established along with a Fuchsia magellanica (hardy fuchsia). This hardy fern is normally found growing in damp, shady places in woodlands.
And on the subject of foxes and etymology. Fuchsia? The color? It’s named for fuchsia, the plant...
... which was itself named for Leonhart Fuchs, whose family name means fox. Which also means that we’re almost certainly not pronouncing it the way it was intended to be pronounced.
Of course the resemblance of Fuchs to a certain other word in English has long been noted in a bunch of almost certainly apocryphal headlines.
Don’t confuse fuchsia with magenta, originally a fuchsine dye which was renamed after the Italian town of Magenta following the French victory there in 1859.
The long tubular flowers of Fuchsia fulgens (brilliant fuchsia) bloom all year round and are followed by edible fruit. This tender shrub comes from mountain cloud forests of Mexico.