Leighton Photography & Imaging

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  • An amazing find! "Forma lutea" growing in an undeveloped block in a Central Florida neighborhood.
    Pale Yellow Crested Coralroot (Hexa..tea)
  • A green southern twayblade with another new plant just sprouting in Levy County, Florida.
    Southern Twayblade (Southern Twaybla..dis)
  • The highly rare and unusual green form of the leafless beaked orchid found in a secret location. This one blew us away! It was unusually large, as well as different from all the other normal ones nearby.
    Leafless Beaked Orchid (Sacoila lanc..dis)
  • An unusual color form of the southern twayblade orchid. The red-brown pigment is missing entirely!
    Southern Twayblade (Neottia bifolia ..dis)
  • A super-rare and incredible find! A true yellow form of the crested coralroot with light pink markings on the lips.
    Pale Yellow Crested Coralroot (Hexa..tea)
  • Two color versions of the western coralroot orchid growing high in the mountains of Stevens Pass near where the dense forest meets the edge of a clear blue subalpine lake. To the left is the typical fuchsia-purple coloring, and to the right is the paler version (forma pallida). I found it unusual to see these growing together like this, but in my first summer in Washington, I plan to expect the unexpected!
    Western Coralroot (Corallorhiza mert..ana)
  • A crested coralroot catches a ray of sunlight in a patch of palmettos.
    Crested Coralroot (Hexalectris spicata)
  • One of the most unusual and striking of Florida's native orchids, the monotropic crested coralroot can be found in heavily wooded areas, such as this one in Citrus County.
    Crested Coralroot (Hexalectris spicata)
  • An exquisitely rare find for even such a rare and beautiful native orchid in its natural environment! This unusual crimson-lipped form (forma welchii) of the mountain lady's-slipper was found alongside a small colony of the typical white-lipped individuals in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness on the eastern side of the Cascade Mountains in Washington State.
    Mountain Lady's-Slipper (Cypripedium..hii)
  • White pine-pink orchid growing in a large colony in the Fakahatchee Strand in Collier County, Florida.
    White Pine-Pink (Bletia purpurea for..lba)
  • White form of the pale grass-pink orchid growing in the Apalachicola National Forest.
    White Pale Grass-Pink (Calopogon pal..rus)
  • Part of a large colony of white pine-pink orchids growing in the Fakahatchee Strand. A curiosty about these is that the white form seems to bloom a month after the usual pink form, and on drier ground.
    White Pine-Pink (Bletia purpurea for..lba)
  • A great find in the Olympic Mountains below hurricane ridge near Port Angeles, Washington! A western spotted orchid (forma intermedia) lacks the normal purplish coloration and instead has a yellowish-tan overall coloration. This terrestrial orchid is one of several members of the Corallorrhiza genus found commonly throughout most of North America, found in rich, undisturbed forests.
    Western Spotted Coralroot (Corallorh..dia)
  • Two varieties of crane-fly orchids found in Gadsden County, Florida in their fall "leaf" phase. The normal spotted version (Tipularia discolor) is growing here with the green version without spots (Tipularia discolor forma viridifolia).
    Cranefly Orchid
  • Two varieties of crane-fly orchids found in Gadsden County, Florida in their fall "leaf" phase. The normal spotted version (Tipularia discolor) is growing here with the green version without spots (Tipularia discolor forma viridifolia).
    Cranefly Orchid