Smooth Blue Beardtongue, Penstemon nitidus
Blue-eyed Grass
Early Blue Violet
Arrow-leaved coltsfoot / Petasites sagittatus
Shootingstars / Dodecatheon
Little jewel of the forest
Brightening up the Badlands
Shootingstar
A colourful rocky spot
Wild Strawberry
Long-fruited Wild/White Prairie Parsley / Lomatium…
Canada Violet
A beautiful display of Elephant's Head
Mother Nature at her best
Indian Paintbrush
A splash of colour
Against the cabin wall
White Campion, male
My favourite Thistle
One-sided Pyrola / Orthilia secunda
Fireweed - for a change of colour
Dwarf Dogwood
The joy of vibrant Fireweed
A beautiful display of Fireweed
Embracing the sun
Yellow Penstemon
Asters plus fly
Sainfoin / Onobrychis viciifolia
Harebell and tiny visitors
The fancy web work of a spider
Fall colours of Common Tansy
Eye-catching Fireweed
Similar to a Dandelion
From pale to vibrant
Like rays of sunshine
Moss Phlox
Creamy peavine / Lathyrus ochroleucus
Purple Avens
Ice crystals on Prairie Crocus
Brrr ... shiver
Early Blue Violets
Prairie Crocuses covered in water droplets
Night-flowering Catchfly / Silene noctiflora
Growing at Pine Coulee Reservoir
Sparrow's-egg Orchid
Bird's-eye primrose / Primula mistassinica
Arrow-leaved Coltsfoot / Petasites sagittatus
Before they go to seed
Arrowleaf Balsamroot with Crab Spider
Yellow Lady's-slipper
The dreaded Goat's-beard / Tragopogon dubius
Purple avens / Geum rivale
Mariposa Lily / Calochortus apiculatus
Nodding Silverpuffs / Microseris nutans
Mountain Lady's Slipper / Cypripedium montanum
Shrubby Penstemon / Penstemon fruticosus
Rosy Pussytoes / Antennaria rosea
Wood Lily
Wild Chives / Allium schoenoprasum
Ambrosia sp.
Spotted Coralroot / Corallorhiza maculata
Unidentified plant along Bertha Falls Trail, Water…
Brightening up the forest
Sticky Locoweed / Oxytropis borealis var. viscida
Early Yellow Locoweed
Early Blue Violet / Viola adunca
I love Dandelions
Joyful Prairie flowers
A taste of spring before the snow returns
Half way open
Just a few more weeks
Goat's-beard
Maximilian Sunflower
Yucca seedpods
Summer joy
Yellow Lady's-slipper
Narrowleaf Stoneseed
In all its purple glory
Pinedrops with bokeh
Silene sp
Hawkweed
Butter-and-eggs
Looking towards Bow Glacier and Bow Glacier Falls
Drummond's Thistle
White Prairie-clover
Shootingstar
Woundwort / Stachys pilosus
Crab Spider on Richardson's Geranium
The electric shock look : )
Delicate Harebells
Sunny Gaillardia
Star-flowered Solomon's Seal
Crab Spider on Gaillardia
Is this an Orsodacnid Leaf Beetle
Prickly Rose
Heart-leaved Arnica
Beauty in miniature
Prairie Gentian
Hoary Plantain
Grouseberry
Scarlet Mallow
Paintbrush
Wild Lily-of-the-Valley
Common Labrador Tea
Mealy Primrose
Low Larkspur
Mountain Shootingstar
A rare, wild beauty
Pygmy-flower
Sagebrush Buttercup
Face to the sun
Roseroot
Common Knotweed
Tall Buttercup
Sparrow's-egg Orchid
Northern Grass-of-Parnassus
Fairybells
Goldenrod
Tartarian Honeysuckle
Blazingstar
Bracted Honeysuckle
Campion
One-flowered Wintergreen
Asparagus
Wandering Daisy, Erigeron peregrinus
See also...
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Striped Coralroot
This is the second photo posted this morning that the description "vanished" as soon as I had finished it. This is another photo from my archives, taken on 27 June 2011, at Bow Valley Provincial Park, W of Calgary, at the foot of the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains. I always think the tiny, individual flowers of this wild Orchid are so pretty, especially when seen in macro size.
"Corallorhiza striata is a species of orchid known by the common names striped coralroot and hooded coralroot. This flowering plant is widespread across much of Canada and Mexico, as well as the northern and western United States. It lives in the layer of decaying plant matter on the ground in forested regions, obtaining nutrients from fungi via mycoheterotrophy.
Like other coralroot orchids, it has reduced leaves and no chlorophyll and relies upon its parasitism of the fungi for sustenance. This coralroot has an erect stem which may be red, pink, purple, or yellow-green to almost white. It is mostly made up of an inflorescence of orchid flowers. Each flower is an open array of sepals and similar-looking petals which may be pink or yellowish and have darker pink or maroon stripes. Inside the flower is a column formed from the fusion of male and female parts, which may be spotted with purple or red." From Wikipedia.
"Corallorhiza striata is a species of orchid known by the common names striped coralroot and hooded coralroot. This flowering plant is widespread across much of Canada and Mexico, as well as the northern and western United States. It lives in the layer of decaying plant matter on the ground in forested regions, obtaining nutrients from fungi via mycoheterotrophy.
Like other coralroot orchids, it has reduced leaves and no chlorophyll and relies upon its parasitism of the fungi for sustenance. This coralroot has an erect stem which may be red, pink, purple, or yellow-green to almost white. It is mostly made up of an inflorescence of orchid flowers. Each flower is an open array of sepals and similar-looking petals which may be pink or yellowish and have darker pink or maroon stripes. Inside the flower is a column formed from the fusion of male and female parts, which may be spotted with purple or red." From Wikipedia.
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