Usually when you hike the 2.6 miles that connects Wahkeena Falls to Angel’s Rest you can count on solitude and an almost hypnotic shift from deep shade to brilliant sunshine, that and the comfort of relatively flat terrain, a welcome relief after the 1.6 mile climb up the Wahkeena trail.
Tuesday, though, I was also greeted by an outburst of flowers, apparently caused by our unusually wet Spring and last winter’s snowpack. Most of the flowers were ones you would expect to see in early Spring.
My favorite would have to be this Tough-Leaved Iris, a flower I’d only seen once or twice before in my many hikes here.
But there was a huge variety of other flowers competing for the hiker’s attention, too many to show. Here’s a brilliant yellow flower that I can’t remember ever seeing before.
There were even more purple flowers, the most abundant being this variety of Penstemon,
followed closely by the Columbine,
and the far fewer Columbia Tiger Lilies were impossible to overlook.
Did I mention that I saw more Tough-Leaved Irises in this 2.6 miles than I’ve seen in my entire lifetime?
On this day at least, the hike reminded me of the legendary Hanging Gardens of Babylon. At times the trail was obscured by the taller flowers, and I was forced to wade my way through flowers to keep going. If I still lived in Vancouver, I would be back up there today rather than sitting here looking into a computer screen.
Judging by this and other recent posts, it’s a beautiful time of year in your part of the world!
Yet more beautiful flower photographs. I am envious; you put my work to shame.
While I wish your teeth well, I wish you good health too, still, I love these return trips south, you always bring back a bounty.kjm
I have never heard of that iris – but they are gorgeous!
The yellow one is a wallflower, common in California mountains but maybe rarer in your neck of the woods. Great pics, as always, and your landscapes are particularly lovely. Wish we were there!
Thanks 4 who ever put these pics on here.There helping me on my report.