Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Wildflowers and Orchids on Whidbey and Fidalgo Islands


April 11th we managed to get away for the day - our day out that week - and visited a number of sites on Whidbey and Fidalgo Islands looking for orchids and other wildflowers and found plenty of both.  The day was overcast and wet when we arrived at our first stop but the rain soon went away and though the sun did not come out it was a good day for wildflower photography.

We found the Western Fairy Slippers still blooming at several locations and the Western Spotted Coralroots just starting to bloom.  At one location found a few plants of the red form of the Western Heart-leaved Twayblade and at another several plants of the albino form of the Western Fairy Slipper.  Along with them we found an abundance of other flowers.

raindrops on everything







raindrops on Camas


Fairy Slippers




Heart-leaved Twayblade


Spotted Coralroot



British Soldier Lichens


Panther Cap


Seep-spring Monkeyflower


Woodrush


Miner's Lettuce


Sea Blush




 Giant Blue-eyed Mary



Chocolate Lilies



Fawn Lilies



Field Chickweed


Few-flowered Shooting Star


Common Camas


Fairy Slippers



white Fairy Slippers



Spotted Coralroots


Monday, April 18, 2016

Catherine Creek


After spending more than a day in Mount Hood National Forest we traveled across the Columbia River, back into Washington, to the Catherine Creek Natural area, one of our favorite places in spite of its heavy use.  We go there nearly every year, though at different times, to see the wildflowers and we were not disappointed this time.  We spent several hours there enjoy the views of the Columbia River with Mount Hood in the distance and photographed a seemingly endless array of wildflowers, the blue Camas and pink Sea Blush really putting on an especially good show.  Finished and tired we headed home through the Kittitas and Yakima Valleys with their views of Mount Adams and with Mount Rainier just visible to the north of Adams.


At Catherine Creek we walked a series of paved trails between the road and the Colombia River and did not venture down by the creek or up to the bluffs above the road and the river.  We found plenty to photograph lower down and were tired as well from the previous day's hiking.  One thing we noticed was that most of the Ponderosa Pines were dead or dying.  This is from an outbreak in the eastern Columbia River gorge of the California Fivespined Ips Bark Beetle.  This outbreak began in 2012 and hopefully is past its worst.  The wildflowers, however, made up for the sad condition of the Ponderosas and we had several wonderful hours there.

Common Camas









 Red-stem Storksbill



 White-top Clover


Giant Blue-eyed Mary


 Bugloss Fiddleneck


 Death Camas



 Prairie Star


 Sea Blush
 

 Small-flowered Lupine



 False Agoseris


 Early Saxifrage


Naked Broomrape



 Bi-colored Triteleia



Few-flowered Shooting Star



 Arrow-leaf Balsamroot



 Smooth Desert Parsley




Twelve-spotted Ladybug


Common Camas and Sea Blush




Mount Hood





 the Columbia River, the bluffs and the trails














 Oregon White Oak



Ponderosa Pine





 Western Serviceberry