Showing posts with label western fairy slipper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label western fairy slipper. Show all posts

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Chiwaukum Creek


On our way to eastern Washington we hiked (dwadled is more accurate) along part of the Chiwaukum Creek trail, which if followed far enough takes one into the Alpine Lakes Wilderness.  We did not go nearly that far, but far enough to see the damage caused by the 2014 wildfires.  The Chiwaukum Complex fire burned nearly 14,000 acres in the area between mid-July and the end of August.  The area we hiked was already recovering and the wildflowers were in abundance.  We not only found the Western Fairy Slippers we were looking for but also found the first Lewisias of the season.  Know as Mountain Roses, Lewisia tweedyi grows only in the Wenatchee area of the Central Cascades.  There had been rain the night before so everything was bejeweled with water drops and we took a lot of pictures of those as well as of the wildflowers.

the trail and the creek




burned trees from the 2014 fires


raindrops




Spring Orange Peel Fungus



fungus on wild roses


Sword Fern



Arrowleaf Balsamroot






Upland Larkspur





Cliff Painbrush



Ballhead Waterleaf


Stony-ground Lupine


Mountain Rose (Lewisia tweedyi)





Naked Broomrape


Slender Woodland Star


 Large False Solomon's Seal


 Martindale's Desert Parsley


 Hooker's Fairy Bells


conifer


Martin Creek
(along the Old Cascade Highway)


 the Enchantments


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