Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Bitterroot

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Newly budding bitterroots growing at the top of the hills near Whiskey Dick Mountain near the Columbia River in Eastern Washington. A sometime food source of many of the Native Americans who inhabited the Western plains and sagebrush deserts where the bitterroot grows, the first European explorers found the roots too bitter to be palatable, so the first to arrive - the French named this plant the "racine amer" translated literally as bitter root. Not are these some of the most beautiful of all the flowering plants of the summer, these are also the toughest!

Copyright
©2017
Image Size
6000x4000 / 26.1MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
Angiosperms, Caryophyllales, Core eudicots, Eudicots, Kittitas County, Ktanxa, L. rediviva, Lewisia, Lewisia rediviva, Montiaceae, Oregon bitter-root, PNW, Pacific Northwest, Plantae, Portulacaceae, Vantage, Washington, Whiskey Dick Mountain, beautiful, beauty, bitter root, black medicine, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bud, color, dicot, flora, flower, flowers, forb, fresh, green, hand-peeled, herb, mo'ôtáa-heséeo'ôtse, nakamtcu, naqam¢u, native, natural, nature, perennial, pink, plant, plants, purslane, racine amère, sagebrush desert, spetlem, spetlum, spring, sp̓eƛ̓m̓, white, wild, wildflower, wildflowers
Contained in galleries
Montiaceae (Bitterroot and Miner's Lettuce Family), Pink Wildflowers
Newly budding bitterroots growing at the top of the hills near Whiskey Dick Mountain near the Columbia River in Eastern Washington. A sometime food source of many of the Native Americans who inhabited the Western plains and sagebrush deserts where the bitterroot grows, the first European explorers found the roots too bitter to be palatable, so the first to arrive - the French named this plant the "racine amer" translated literally as bitter root. Not are these some of the most beautiful of all the flowering plants of the summer, these are also the toughest!