Showing posts with label skunk cabbage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label skunk cabbage. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

More Spring Wildflowers


Since my last post of spring wildflowers I've been out several times with and without my wife to see what was blooming.  Here are the latest, taken over a period of week and half and mostly taken on Fidaglo and Whidbey Islands.  The post, of course, includes not only wildflowers but anything we could find to photograph and the photo above is of Red Alders and Skunk Cabbage at Lake Padden Park.

Wildflowers

Naked Broomrape


 Spring Gold


Small-flowered Blue-eyed Mary


 Evergreen Huckleberry



Harsh Paintbrush


Death Camas 


 Oregon Fawn Lily




 Western Trillium


 Seep-spring Monkeyflower



 Henderson's Shooting Star



 Orchids

Western Fairy Slipper





Albino Western Fairy Slipper


 Western Spotted Coralroot


 Long-spurred Piperia Leaves


Fungi



Miscellaneous

Pacific Madrone


 Columbia Black-tailed Deer.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Padden Ridge


On April 11th we were out with our youngest son, Edward, who was on holiday from school and among other things we hiked the trails at Lake Padden together.  These trails follow Padden Ridge above the lake which is just south of Bellingham, Washington, and in the Chuckanut Mountains, a range of hills that connect the North Cascades with Puget Sound.

It was a beautiful day and a good hike and though we were looking for Fairy Slippers and did not find any, we found plenty of other things to enjoy and photograph including some early wildflowers, including especially the Western Trillium, Trillium ovatum, some of the best we've ever seen, and the Skunk Cabbages, Lysichiton americanus, which were growing in the wet and boggy areas.

The pictures also include a few from another excursion I made on April 28th while looking to see if the Striped Coralroots, an orchid, were blooming (they were not).  That second excursion was on a wet and gray day and I did not take many pictures, but the first hike was on a beautiful sunny day.  Where I'm able I've added identifications to the plants and critters we photographed.




 Western Trillium (Trillium ovatum)







 Pacific Bleeding Heart (Dicentra formosa)


 Skunk Cabbage (Lysichiton americanus)


Devil's Club (Oplopanax horridus)

Noble Polypore (Bridgeoporus nobilissimus)


Meadow Waxy Cap (Hygrophorus praetensis)

Turkey Tail (Trametes versicolor)



Marasmiellus candidus

 Red-banded Polypore (Fomitopsis pinicola)


Brown Creeper (Certhia familiaris)

Dusky Arion (Arion subfuscus)
 

 Oregon Forest Snail (Allogona townsendiana)

Bigleaf Maple (Acer macrophyllum)


 Giant Rattlensnake Orchis (Goodyera oblongifolia)

The Trail and the Trees










Humor
(some had put stones in every hole in the stumps and piles of stones everywhere)