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wildflower ID
On the Niagara Escarpment in Ontario, Canada, I've found a flower I
can't ID. It is in some ways reminiscent of a lady's slipper. The leaves are the same size and shape, alternate with numerous creases and climbing up the round hairy stem for about eight inches. Above that is a spike of 12 or 16 small drooping, greenish-white flowers. Subtly beautiful. Each bloom itself has the lady's slipper shape -- with a pouch bottom that is blackish-purple inside, and a smaller overhanging part, with subtle coloured markings, a little green, a little bit of brown. This part of the bloom is less than an inch long. There are also two other spade-shaped petals that are white with a pale green creases and are kind of peering over the shoulders of the lady-slipper part. The flower looks quite delicate but is, in fact, kind of waxy and somewhat stiff. Beneath the bottom pouch is a dark green seedy-looking bulge. Surrounding the flower, there are three waxy spade-shaped sepals that look very much like the white petals, only a dark green colour, and that together with the two white petals provide a kind of cowl around the lady's slipper type bloom. Beneath the sepals, a three-sided, darker green, creased sac connects to the stem. It seems an extraordinarily complex flower. It is growing in a rocky knoll (dolomite and limestone), in leaf litter collected in a crevice. It was a shady location with wild raspberries, wild gooseberries and white birch growing nearby. The whole region is known for its wild orchids, and I?m wondering if this might be one. Any suggestions? |
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