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Twinflower / Linnaea borealis

Twinflower / Linnaea borealis
Yesterday evening, I finally got round to backing up all the photo files (626 GB) on my hard drive to another, larger external hard drive. After a few hours, I checked to see how it had done and discovered that only maybe half the photos had been copied. So, I started a second copy, hoping that this time, all the files would be successfully copied. This morning, I found that it was successful. So, I decided to delete the first copy, forgetting that the second copy was actually downloaded within the first copy. So another nine hours wasted! Tonight, I will have to start all over again, and then I need to do the same with a second, larger hard drive. I am almost out of room on my computer hard drive and need to start deleting a lot of my oldest images, or I will not be able to download new photos to it, and I will start to have a lot of problems. I don't use my computer while the back-up is in process, which is a bit frustrating. Yes, I would much rather be out on a nice drive : )

On 13 July 2018, I more or less repeated my drive from two days earlier, except that I also called in at Brown-Lowery Provincial Park to see if there was any sign of fungi growing. It is still not the peak of the fungi season, so I was not too hopeful. I barely entered the forest, as it still gives me the creeps, - Bears, Cougar and Moose are seen there, and I have been told so many times not to go by myself. So far, I have only seen a very large Moose. I did find a cluster of very tiny mushrooms and several clumps of orange Coral Fungus in their usual location. Took a few wildflower shots, too, which I don't do very often these days, unlike a few years ago.

"Linnaea is named after Carolus Linnaeus 1707-78), the ‘father of botany’, who established the classfication system of plants and animals which assigns each organism a two word name (genus and species). Borealis is named for the Greek god of the north wind, Boreas, which means ‘northern’.

The flowers are small (6 mm to 15 mm long), pinkish white, bell-shaped, and are fragrant, especially towards evening. Flowers occur in pairs on V-shaped stalks." From link below.

plantwatch.naturealberta.ca/choose-your-plants/twinflower/

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