Showing posts with label sharpe park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sharpe park. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2014

Sharpe Park


On April 14th we visited Sharpe Park on Fidalgo Island looking for Fairy Slippers.  Sharpe Park is on the coast and has wonderful views of the Straits of San Juan, a wonderful wetland area, great wildflowers, lots of Fairy Slippers, and some of the most beautiful Madrone trees that we've seen.  The day started sunny but soon turned overcast and we were somewhat disappointed with the views of the Straits.




The wetlands are near the start of the trails.







We photographed some Red-flowering Currant there (Ribes sanguineum),
though it was also blooming elsewhere.




The Giant Horsetails (Equisetum telmatiea) were magnificent.



The trails are through the most beautiful woodlands.




We found Western Fairy Slippers (Calypso bulbosa var. occidentalis) all along the trail,




including one nearly white flower.


The Fawn Lilies (Erythronium oregonum) were at their peak
when we came near the more open coastal areas.







There's always a lot of moss and lichens in our northwest forests.
I believe this is Common Witch's Hair (Alectoria sarmentosa).


On the balds and the bluffs we photographed a number of wildflowers
including the Broad-leaved Stonecrop,



the Common Camas (Camassia quamash),


and the Sheep Sorrel (Rumex acetosella), a non-native, and the only one in bloom,



beside the Seaside Dandelion (Agoseris apargioides), a Dandelion-like native.

We took some pictures of the Straits but not as many as usual.






We also found a Rush on the bluffs,
which I believe to be the Many-flowered Wood-rush (Luzula multiflora).


The only fungus was the Red-banded Polypore (Fomitopsis pinicola).


Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Sharpe Park


We recently discovered Sharpe Park on Fidalgo Island south of Anacortes.  It is a county park and completely undeveloped, though there is development on both sides.  It is 110 acres and includes 2-3 miles of trails that take one out to the bluffs above the Salish Sea and to some incredible views from Sares Head.  The park includes also a wetlands that is home to a family of beavers and a good place for birding.




We made several visits to Sharpe Park recently, the first to explore the park and the second to see the Fairy Slippers and other wildflowers that were blooming there.  We intend to check out the park over the late spring and summer months to look for other native orchids there, but the park is convenient to two other favorite locations, Washington Park and Deception Pass, all of which can be visited in a day.

The Wetland Area




A Pacific Tree Frog we found near the wetlands




The woods
(I'm always trying to capture what the northwest forests are like but seldom succeed).









The Pacific Madrones
(this park has some of the most beautiful old Madrone trees I've ever seen).








Sares Head and the Bluffs


















The Fairy Slippers we found blooming in the park







The other wildflowers
(Oregon Fawn Lilies, Red-flowering Currant and Dwarf Oregon-grape)











And a few odds and ends
(Horsetails and a mushroom)




Pacific Tree Frog - Pseudacris regilla
Horsetail - Equisetum telmatie
Dwarf Oregon-grape - Mahonia nervosa
Red-flowering Currant - Ribes sanguineum
Oregon Fawn Lily - Erythronium oregonum
Western Fairy Slipper - Calypso bulbosa var. occidentalis
Pacific Madrone - Arbutus menziesii