Such a thrill - from my archives
Blue Stain / Chlorociboria aeruginascens
Concretions at Red Rock Coulee
Abandoned
Autumn colours at JJ Collett Natural Area
Yucca plant in second bloom
Milk Thistle / Silybum marianum
Physcia adscendens lichen
Purple Shamrock / Oxalis triangularis
Little beauty
A real treat on Sunday
Lophocolea minor liverwort
Bold and simple
Fragile rock brake fern / Cryptogramma-stelleri
Psora decipiens lichen
Swainson's Hawk
The blue teapot wall
Oh, so handsome
Happy Thanksgiving weekend, everyone
Candleflame lichen / Candelaria concolor
Harvest time
Happy Thanksgiving!
A beautiful welcome
Split personality
A look that needs to be shared : )
Mt. Yamnuska, Kananaskis
Fake but fun
A touch of autumn colour
Creeping Thistle
At least there were cows
Pink for Breast Cancer Awareness month
Common Sargeant / Athyma perius
Coral Fungus sp
A joy to see
Wall decoration
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Erosion at Red Rock Coulee
Strawberry and Rhubarb tart
Seven-spotted Ladybug on Yucca seedpod
Replica of a Chinese warrior
Ominous clouds after the harvest
A bird walk treat
Splendour
Just for fun
White Pigeon
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Pinedrops with bokeh


Spent an amazing four day (three night) road trip down to SE Alberta with two friends, from 20-23 September 2013. Our furthest destination was Elkwater in the Cypress Hills, but we did a lot of driving all over the SE part of the province. All new territory to me, so I was extremely lucky to get this chance. We were all thrilled to bits to be taken to see these Pinedrops, which none of us had ever seen before, by a delightful young woman. We had met her the previous day, on a trip with people from Medicine Hat College to see and monitor an area of Yucca plants growing in the wild. The tallest Pinedrops plant that we saw was just over 1 metre tall! Unfortunately, we were too late to see the plants in bloom.
"The visible portion of Pterospora andromedea is a fleshy, unbranched, reddish to yellowish flower spike (raceme) 30-100 cm in height, though it has been reported to occasionally attain a height of 2 meters. The above-ground stalks (inflorescences) are usually found in small clusters between June and August. The inflorescences are hairy and noticeably sticky to the touch. This is caused by the presence of hairs which exude a sticky substance (glandular hairs). The inflorescences are covered by scale-like structures known as bracts. The upper portion of the inflorescence has a series of yellowish, urn-shaped flowers that face downward. [4] The fruit is a capsule.
Like all members of the Monotriopoidiae (see Monotropa), Pterospora andromedea lacks chlorophyll (trace amounts have been identified, but not enough to provide energy for the plant or to color it).[5] Plants exist for most of their life as a mass of brittle, but fleshy, roots. They live in a parasitic relationship with mycorrhizal fungi, in which plants derive all their carbon from their associated fungus, but the relationship is not yet well understood. The term for this kind of symbiosis is mycoheterotrophy." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterospora
"The visible portion of Pterospora andromedea is a fleshy, unbranched, reddish to yellowish flower spike (raceme) 30-100 cm in height, though it has been reported to occasionally attain a height of 2 meters. The above-ground stalks (inflorescences) are usually found in small clusters between June and August. The inflorescences are hairy and noticeably sticky to the touch. This is caused by the presence of hairs which exude a sticky substance (glandular hairs). The inflorescences are covered by scale-like structures known as bracts. The upper portion of the inflorescence has a series of yellowish, urn-shaped flowers that face downward. [4] The fruit is a capsule.
Like all members of the Monotriopoidiae (see Monotropa), Pterospora andromedea lacks chlorophyll (trace amounts have been identified, but not enough to provide energy for the plant or to color it).[5] Plants exist for most of their life as a mass of brittle, but fleshy, roots. They live in a parasitic relationship with mycorrhizal fungi, in which plants derive all their carbon from their associated fungus, but the relationship is not yet well understood. The term for this kind of symbiosis is mycoheterotrophy." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterospora
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