Showing posts with label devil's gulch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label devil's gulch. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

A Trip to Eastern Washington


One a recent trip to Spokane we made several stops in eastern Washington for photos, though one of our stops, a planned hike was cut short by a phone call about a sick friend.  Many of the photos are my wife's and they were taken across eastern Washington from the Cascades to Spokane.

Chiwaukum Creek

dawn



Hooker's Fairy Bells


lichens


Large False Solomon's Seal


Red-banded Polypore


Western Fairy Slipper


Bobcat
(this was the only photo my wife was able to get)


the creek



Near Plain

Balsamroot and Lupine



Western Spotted Coralroot



Devil's Gulch

the trail and the scenery








Lupine


Along the Columbia

near Rockport





the river


Near Medical Lake

fields



Lupine


Missouri Iris




Phlox and Ponderosa


Ponderosa cones


Large-flowered Brodiaea


 Douglas's Onion


 swamp


North Cascades

Diablo Lake Overlook



Monday, August 11, 2014

Orchid Hunting in Eastern Washington (Part 1)


The end of May and beginning of June we went on a two-day orchid hunting trip in eastern Washington with a couple other members of the Washington Native Orchid Society.  We were traveling to Spokane and made this our first stop on the way there.

After traveling across the mountains, we began our search in Blewett Pass,
south of Leavenworth, Washington, and on the east side of the Cascades.







As can be seen from some of the landscape pictures, the wildflowers were at their peak.

Harsh Paintbrush



Tall Silvercrown


Shrubby Penstemon


Scarlet Gilia


 Showy Phlox



 Arrowleaf Balsamroot





We were looking for and found the Mountain Lady's Slipper at several locations.




After Blewett Pass we visited a number of other locations.



We found a few Fairy Slippers still hanging on;



more Mountain Lady's Slippers;



Clustered Lady's Slippers, though these were near the end of their season;




some Phantom Orchids not yet in bloom;


and a lot of Western Spotted Coralroots,
especially the brown and red-stemmed forms.



 There were more wildflowers as well.

Blue Mustard
a non-native


Prairie Smoke




Common Camas
(nearly finished)


Lyall's Mariposa Lily



We also found some seed pods that we were not able to identify.


Finished for the day, we parted ways for the evening to our different accommodations,
ours the back of our van.

The next day we met up near the Washington town of Cashmere for another hike
and more orchid hunting.




Once again there were plenty of wildflowers:

Scarlet Gilia,


Broad-leaved Penstemon,


and Showy Phlox.


The orchids we found were more Mountain Lady's Slippers,




some very unusual color forms of the Western Spotted Coralroot,






and a few Clustered Lady's Slippers that were nearly finished.


On the hike out my wife photographed a Western Gopher Snake, but I missed it.