RHH's photos with the keyword: fasciculatum
Clustered Lady's Slipper
10 Jun 2013 |
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This was photographed in the area of Leavenworth, Washington, and is our smallest and rarest Lady's Slipper. It is also very hard to find since it grows low to the ground and is often hidden by the grasses and other vegetation.
ronaldhanko-orchidhunter.blogspot.com/2013/05/orchid-hunting-in-leavenworth-area.html
Cypripedium fasciculatum
21 Jul 2011 |
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The Brownie or Clustered Lady's Slipper is one of our rarest orchids here in the Pacific Northwest. It is also much smaller and much less showy than the other Lady's Slippers and easily goes unnoticed. We knew exactly where these were to be found and it still took us a half-hour of searching to find them.
nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2011/07/c...
Cypripedium fasciculatum fma. purpureum
20 Mar 2013 |
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The picture I posted earlier of this species was of a very pale form. This is one of the darker forms, sometimes referred to as forma purpureum. The color forms shade into each other and are usually found growing together. This example was photographed in the Greenwater area north of Mount Rainier.
nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2012/08/b...
Cypripedium fasciculatum fma. purpureum
23 Mar 2013 |
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One more photo of this unique Cypripedium, this time showing some of the detail of the flowers. The Brownie or Clustered Lady's Slipper is the smallest by far of our native Cypripediums and also one of the rarest. The flowers are about an inch in size (2.5 cm) and the plant less than 12 inches tall.
nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2012/08/b...
Cypripedium fasciculatum
24 May 2013 |
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This is the rarest and smallest of our native Lady's Slippers. I was out last week in eastern Washington at a site I was acquainted with and found a few plants. I checked out another site and didn't find any there. Their common name is Clustered Lady's Slipper or Brownie Lady's Slipper and while the leaves are 4-6 inches across the plants are only a few inches tall and tend to hide under other plants. The flowers vary in color from green to a very deep mahogany.
nativeorchidsofthepacificnorthwest.blogspot.com/2013/05/sixth-week-of-native-orchid-season.html
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