Dianthus barbatus (Sweet William)
Little Star
Bracted Lousewort (also known as Wood Betony)
Street scene at Barkerville (1860s British Columbia heritage gold rush town) - A quick look through the guest book reveals that visitors from as far away as the Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland, Scotland, England and Nova Scotia (Canada) arrive here every year. Many of the miners were from Scotland, England, Ireland, China, Germany, Wales, the United States and eastern Canada.
This is our toad friend. His home is this drainage pipe. Usually he scurries away whenever we approach, but today he stayed long enough for a picture.
Orange on orange. There's a butterfly in these tiger lilies; you can just see its wings.
Sitka Burnet (Rose family) - the European species of this flower is red-brown in colour, hence the name "burnet" or "brunette".
Bunchberry (Dwarf Dogwood) - very conspicuous and widespread along the edges of the trails.
White Bog-Orchid (also known as "scent-candle") - found at low to high elevations.
In this scene we see a small orange butterfly restlessly flitting from strawberry leaf to potato leaf, back to strawberry leaf, again to a potato leaf, then once, twice around the garden until a much larger Tiger Swallowtail butterfly suddenly appears and chases the creature off.
Unlike the first butterfly, this Fritillary is very interested in the Painted and Ox-eye Daisies at one end of the garden. Now the first Fritillary approaches the other creating a momentary flurry of wings in the surrounding stillness. This immediately leads to a pursuit the nature of which, I imagine, has something to do with love.
And this ends my tale of two butterflies.
It's going to be a hot day....let's enjoy it.
Columbia Tiger Lily - native to Western North America.
Red-Osier Dogwood - a very attractive shrub in all seasons.
Wild Rose - one of our most abundant roadside flowers.