Plateau Mountain
Cherry-faced Meadowhawk
Marsh Cinquefoil / Comarum palustre
Young Horned Grebe / Podiceps auritus
Split gill
Tall Buttercup
Rock cress sp.
Barred Owl
Yellow Heather / Phyllodoce glanduliflora
Flathead Poplar Borer / Dicerca tenebrica
Amazing beauty
Pygmy/Dwarf Moss Gentian / Gentian prostrata
Wild or domesticated?
On the Arethusa Cirque trail
Glacier Lily seedpod
A sight for sore eyes ....
Glacier Lily on Arethusa Cirque trail
Merlin / Falco columbarius
Emerald Lake
Mountain Sheep
Three-flowered Avens / Geum triflorum
Takakkaw Falls, Yoho National Park
Wild Chives / Allium schoenoprasum
Oh, joy!
Deep purple Rockcress
Leather-leaved Saxifrage / Leptarrhena pyrolifolia
Alpine Arnica
Checkerspot sp.
Stonecrop buds
The uphill climb
Showy Jacob's-ladder / Polemonium pulcherrimum
Grouseberry / Vaccinium scoparium
Ugly duckling of the Ladybug world
Moss Campion / Silene acaulis
Alpine Speedwell, Veronica alpina
It's that time of year again
Roseroot in flower
Pretty little Golden Fleabane / Erigeron aureus
Pink Alpine Forget-me-nots
Let's party, cowboy style
Moss Gentian
White-crowned Sparrow / Zonotrichia leucophrys
Pussytoes sp.
Wild Chives bud
Subalpine Fleabane / Erigeron peregrinus
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White Mountain-avens / Dryas octopetala


There were carpets of these pretty, native wildflowers in the alpine meadows at Plateau Mountain, July 17th.
"Dryas octopetala (common names include mountain avens, white dryas, and white dryad) is an arctic-alpine flowering plant in the family Rosaceae. It is a small prostrate evergreen subshrub forming large colonies, and is a popular flower in rock gardens. The specific epithet octopetala derives from the Greek octo (eight) and petalon (petal), referring to the eight petals of the flower, an unusual number in the Rosaceae, where five is the normal number." From Wikipedia.
"Dryas octopetala (common names include mountain avens, white dryas, and white dryad) is an arctic-alpine flowering plant in the family Rosaceae. It is a small prostrate evergreen subshrub forming large colonies, and is a popular flower in rock gardens. The specific epithet octopetala derives from the Greek octo (eight) and petalon (petal), referring to the eight petals of the flower, an unusual number in the Rosaceae, where five is the normal number." From Wikipedia.
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