Baby fluff
Le Conte's Sparrow
Flowers of spring
The purity of white
White-crowned Sparrow / Zonotrichia leucophrys
Red-necked Grebe
Cow Parsnip / Heracleum maximum
Such cute little hands and feet
Hollyhock buds
Needed a change of colour
Red-edged petals
Grasshopper Sparrow / Ammodramus savannarum - OR i…
Sleeping down at the pond
Clay-colored Sparrow / Spizella pallida
Ornamental Spurge / Euphorbia polychroma (Cushion…
Tattered and torn - and still beautiful
Chilean Flamingo
Red River Hog / Potamochoerus porcus
Yesterday's summer hail
Egyptian Walking Onion
Showy Milkweed / Asclepias speciosa
Southern Bald Ibis / Geronticus calvus
Ladybug larva on Showy Milkweed
Hawk in Fish Creek Park - juvenile Northern Goshaw…
Blue Lettuce / Lactuca tatarica
Bold and beautiful
They can't see me
Juvenile Swainson's Hawk
Shakin' all over
Osprey family in the city
Loved by Monarch butterflies
Beauty in the forest
Don't call me 'Gopher'
Snake's head fritillary / Fritillaria meleagris
Finely iridescent
Red Baneberry
Canada Goose
03 Blowing in the wind
The joy of spring
Periwinkle / Vinca minor
First day out in the big, wide world
Colour
Matching colours
A bird of many colours
Busy parent
Nuttall's Sunflower / Helianthus nuttallii
Snake's Head Fritillary / Fritillaria meleagris
Close-up of bee colony
The art of preening for a young owl
Early Cinquefoil
Perched in the sun
Hepatica
After the rain
Large Bee colony
One of my favourite spring garden flowers
Always a good mother
Indian Breadroot
American Wigeon pair
Purple Rain
Backlit beauties
Hellebore beauty
Grainy but cute
American Wigeon male, resting on a log
Elephant Ears / Bergenia cordifolia
A handsome mate
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Keywords
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Striped Coralroot / Corallorhiza striata
This is one of our small, wild Orchids, Striped Coralroot. It is a native plant and grows in open woods. Grows 15-40 cm tall, June-July. Always a good feeling when we come across a few clumps of this attractive plant. Yesterday afternoon, 31 May 2016, I went for a botany walk with a group of friends. I have missed almost all the outings this spring, so thought I had better go. We walked in North Weaselhead, where we saw these beautiful orchids, hidden in their usual little spot.
"Corallorhiza striata is a species of orchid known by the common names striped coralroot and hooded coralroot. This flowering plant is native to much of North America, especially Canada and the northern and western United States. It is a member of the coniferous understory flora, where it lives in the layer of decaying plant matter on the ground obtaining nutrients from fungi via mycoheterotrophy. Like other coralroots, 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. The fruit is a capsule one or two centimeters long."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corallorhiza_striata
"Corallorhiza striata is a species of orchid known by the common names striped coralroot and hooded coralroot. This flowering plant is native to much of North America, especially Canada and the northern and western United States. It is a member of the coniferous understory flora, where it lives in the layer of decaying plant matter on the ground obtaining nutrients from fungi via mycoheterotrophy. Like other coralroots, 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. The fruit is a capsule one or two centimeters long."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corallorhiza_striata
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