Lodgepole Pine cones
Purple elegance
Wilson's Snipe
Striped Coralroot
Taking a nap
Cushion Milk Vetch
Copperleaf
Blue Wave, Myscelia cyaniris
Lichens at Marston Creek
Marston Creek, Kananaskis
Yellow Morel
Marston Creek
Catching the sun
Bergenia Cordifolia
Silverweed
Osprey
Heliconius cydno
To love or not to love?
Morel
Blue Clipper
Baby Richardson's Ground Squirrel
Trillium
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On Hibiscus
Watching Mom preen
Simplicity
Last year's Morel
A shot of colour
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Blue Morpho
Braving the snow
We saw a Sora
Heliconius ismenius telchina on Egyptian Stars
Hanging in the rain
Exploration
Orange glow
What happened to spring?
Yellow Prairie Violet
Heliconius sapho
Monarch green and gold
Lichens
Pretty little lady
European Pasque Flower
Moth on orange
Mountain Bluebird pair
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Early Coralroot


This is the tiniest wild Orchid you could imagine seeing. So easy to miss it, unless your eyes are scanning every inch of ground. We saw this particular plant at the Hibernaculum at Shannon Terrace, Fish Creek Park, recently. We also saw one on a beautiful walk today, north west of the city, to a Provincial Park that is yet not open to the public (and probably won't be for another 1-3 years?). How privileged we were to be allowed to botanize this extensive area. It's called the Glenbow Ranch Provincial Park and is incredibly beautiful land. Will add a link to information about it when I get home this evening - I'm about to dash out down a few gravel backroads : ) I can't take one more step, so driving a car sounds just what I need.
"There are 3 to 15 flowers in a loose cluster at stem tip; individual flowers about 1 cm long, yellowish-white to greenish or even purple, 6 floral parts with a white lobed lip (occasionally spotted with purple); appearing early summer.....
Infrequent but widespread; in shaded forest habitats, in thickets, fens, swamps and on streambanks; especially on fresh/moist mineral soils."
www.borealforest.org/herbs/herb10.htm
"There are 3 to 15 flowers in a loose cluster at stem tip; individual flowers about 1 cm long, yellowish-white to greenish or even purple, 6 floral parts with a white lobed lip (occasionally spotted with purple); appearing early summer.....
Infrequent but widespread; in shaded forest habitats, in thickets, fens, swamps and on streambanks; especially on fresh/moist mineral soils."
www.borealforest.org/herbs/herb10.htm
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