Jim Fowler's photos with the keyword: sandstone

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 134
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 154
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 148
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Home to Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) -…

18 Jun 2012 142
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 137
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 138
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 228
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 160
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 139
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 130
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 161
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 138
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 126
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 145
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 142
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 144
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 152
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

Epidendrum magnoliae (Green-fly orchid) - Broxton,…

18 Jun 2012 151
A group of seven of us: Neil, Jen, Alan, Steve, Max, Walter, and I were very fortunate to be able to get into a Nature Conservancy property called Broxton Rocks. This protected area consists of a large exposure of consolidated sandstone called Altamaha grit. It's fifty or sixty or more feet deep, and is fractured into large fissures and canyons. This environment hosts many rare plants as well as one particular orchid that is not considered rare, but the fact that it grows on the canyon walls of Altamaha grit is very unusual -- bordering on unique. It usually grows on the limbs and trunks of trees... high up on the trees. Which makes them difficult to photograph. This type of plant is called an epiphyte. When it's found growing on rocks, it's call a lithophyte. The ones we photographed today were growing at eye level or lower... on the rocks. How cool is that!

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