Showing posts with label Bee Orchid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bee Orchid. Show all posts

Monday, 17 June 2019

Frog Orchid





Searching closer to home today, looking for Frog Orchids at Fairmile Bottom. We had seen a couple there last year so had one area to search but we were fortunate in meeting up with two of the West Sussex countryside rangers who look after the site. An exchange of information and we had another area for Frog Orchids and also some helliborines to investigate.

Fairmile Bottom is a big area and Frog Orchids are not easy to find but with an idea on where to look we ended up finding about a dozen spikes. The lime green colour of the fresh spikes gives them away even when growing in long grass and they are best spotted when viewed at a low angle rather than looking down on them.



Frog Orchid - Dactylorhiza viridis



Frog Orchid - Dactylorhiza viridis



Frog Orchid - Dactylorhiza viridis



Frog Orchid - Dactylorhiza viridis



Frog Orchid - Dactylorhiza viridis


There were a good number of Bee Orchids around the area with some still looking fresh but Fly Orchids have mostly gone over



Bee Orchid - Ophrys apifera
.

I got a bit excited when I saw one of the Bee Orchids. It looks as though it should be something unusual but it's just a bee orchid where the lip and nib have not turned under.



Bee Orchid - Ophrys apifera









Monday, 3 June 2019

Military Orchid





Another week and another journey in search of Orchids. This time to the Chilterns with the first stop Homefield Woods for the Military Orchid. Follow the postcode for the Beds, Bucks and Oxon Wildlife Trust site. Use a map for the last couple of hundred metres to the small car parking area. Pass through the gate and about a hundred and fifty metres in, up a path on the right, you are in a small meadow with the Military Orchids.

It was my first visit and I was surprised to get such easy access to such a rare orchid. As far as I am aware there are only three sites in the country where this orchid can be see, two in the Chilterns and one up near Mildenhall.

My pocket guide shows the flowering period as mid May to Mid June but when we arrived on the third of June the bulk of the plants were past there best. We found a couple of good specimens to record but I wouldn't have wanted to be any later.



Military Orchid  -  Orchis militaris



Military Orchid  -  Orchis militaris



Military Orchid  -  Orchis militaris



Military Orchid  -  Orchis militaris



Military Orchid  -  Orchis militaris



Military Orchid floret  -  Orchis militaris


Twayblades, Fly and Bee orchids could also be found in the same small area and there was another meadow area a bit further on which we did not visit. 



Bee Orchid  -  Ophrys apifera



Bee Orchid  -  Ophrys apifera



A quick record of the Bee Orchid and we were off to our next location, the wonderfully named Bix Bottom for the Warburg Nature Reserve. It has to be said that this was a bit of a disappointment. Again this was our first visit. We wanted to have a look around the reserve but our real target was the Lesser Butterfly Orchid. 

It is a big area to cover and we had been hoping that there would be someone on site to give advice. Without that we ended up covering a large area but saw very few orchids, no Butterfly Orchids, not even a Greater and only one White Helleborine. They were probably there somewhere but we were running short of time and decided to cut our losses and head off to Hartslock to look for the Lady/Monkey Hybrids.



White Helleborine  -  Cephalanthera damasonium



Parking up in Goring we walked the mile or so to the Hartslock Reserve. No problem here, the orchids were easy to find, however, they were all well past there best. Careful selection of plants and the use of camera angle and we got acceptable record shots but another couple of days and we would have missed them.



Lady/Monkey Hybrid  -  Orchis purpurea x simia



Lady/Monkey Hybrid  -  Orchis purpurea x simia



Lady/Monkey Hybrid Floret  -  Orchis purpurea x simia



Lady/Monkey Hybrid  -  Orchis purpurea x simia



Lady/Monkey Hybrid  -  Orchis purpurea x simia



The hybrid is quite a robust plant probably dwarfing both its parents. I say probably as there were no Lady Orchids in the area and only a few of the much smaller Monkey Orchids.



Monkey Orchid  -  Orchis simia



Monkey Orchid  -  Orchis simia


We had also intended to have a look for Common Clubtail Dragonflies, at the railway bridge, about a mile up river from Hartslock. It's a reliable site for them but again we were running out of time and so decided to call it a day and head for home.


Another good day with the orchids and at least they don't fly away when you are trying to take a picture.








Thursday, 7 June 2018

Orchids





On Tuesday I may have made a fatal mistake. Poor returns on the Sussex Commons, with very few birds found and with a cold easterly wind keeping the butterflies in cover, left us with an afternoon and nowhere to go. Dave suggested having a look for a particular orchid that he wanted to photograph and I was happy to go along with the idea.

I have spent many a session standing by whilst Dave crawled around on his hands and knees gardening and photographing wild flowers, but I have never really understood the fascination with orchids. This would have probably just been another one of those sessions except that we didn't find the the target species.

Nothing brings the "train spotting" genes to the fore like missing a target and Wednesday morning having regrouped and clarified our search data we set off for another go. It wasn't exactly easy to find but after a bit of searching we were successful, the Bee Orchid v flavescens.



Bee Orchid v flavescens  -  Ophrys apifera v flavescens



Bee Orchid v flavescens  -  Ophrys apifera v flavescens



Floret of the Bee Orchid v flavescens  -  Ophrys apifera v flavescens


Also in the same area, the Common Spotted Orchid, more Bee Orchid and also a few Frog Orchids.



Common Spotted Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza fuchsii



Common Spotted Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza fuchsii



Common Spotted Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza fuchsii



Common Spotted Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza fuchsii



Bee Orchid  -  Ophrys apifera



Bee Orchid  -  Ophrys apifera



Bee Orchid  -  Ophrys apifera



Frog Orchid  -  Coeloglossum viride



Frog Orchid  -  Coeloglossum viride



Then on to Ferring Rife where Southern Marsh Orchids seem to grow in profusion. I say seem to, as there are references on the web, to some experts believing most of them to be hybrids of the Common Spot and Early Marsh Orchids, both of which are present on the site in smaller numbers.

With my knowledge of Orchids that level of identification is beyond me. It looks like a Southern Marsh Orchid so that is what I will call it.



Southern Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza praetermissa



Southern Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza praetermissation



Southern Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza praetermissa



Floret of the Southern Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza praetermissa


And the Early Marsh Orchid



Early Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza incarnata



Early Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza incarnata



Early Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza incarnata



Floret of the Early Marsh Orchid  -  Dactylorhiza incarnata


Then I managed to find a picture of a Dark-red Helleborine that we photographed on Gait Barrow a few years ago. It was a bit past its best but I am glad I took the time to record it.



Dark-red Helleborine  -  Epipactis atrorubens



I thought this would be easy. Just take a few pictures of Orchids and identify them from pictures on the web. I can't believe how complex the identification can be. Hybrids, sub-species, variants and colour morphs, all have left me with little confidence in anything I am putting a name to. Two days lost just reading up on Orchids.

It has been suggested that I have picked up a dose of  "Orchidelirium" a highly contagious disease. I really didn't need this. Life is too short.