264
Canadian Alpine Journal
Orchid-hunting has an irresistible attraction for every lover of Nature. Whether the secret of this fascination lies in the difficulties which beset the search for the rarer species, or whether it is the strange forms, sweet perfumes and tropical appearances of many of the flowers belonging to this eccentric family that inspire so vivid a delight in the breast of man it is hard to determine, but assuredly the traveller does experience a keen thrill of ecstacy on finding one of these uncanny plants closely hidden in some shady swamp, or deep-set amid the tall rank herbage of the hills.
So far I have found twenty-three different species of orchidaceæ in the Rocky and Selkirk Mountains. They are as follows:
Calypso borealis | Calypso. |
Corallorhiza innata | Early Coral-root. |
Corallorhiza multiflora | Large Coral-root. |
Corallorhiza striata | Alpine Coral-root. |
Listera cordata | Heart-leaved Tway Blade. |
Listera convallarioides | Broad-lipped Tway Blade. |
Listera borealis | Northern Tway Blade. |
Spiranthes Romanzoffiana | Ladies' Tresses. |
Goodyera Menziesii | Rattlesnake Plantain. |
Goodyera repens | Small Rattlesnake Plantain. |
Habenaria bracteata | Long-bracted Orchis. |