Orchids are rare and beautiful and it is amazing to find them growing in the wild. Last Thursday I went on a hike in a hilly forested area of Prince William County in Virginia. It was cool and overcast, less than idea circumstances for finding the dragonflies that I was seeking. After coming up empty-handed at my favorite dragonfly spots, I decided to switch to Plan B.
I vaguely remembered where in previous years I had seen some Pink Lady’s Slippers (Cypripedium acaule), a beautiful wild orchid that is native to North America, and decided to go off on a quest to find these treasures. I noticed that a lot of trees had fallen over the past year. Although workers at this national park had cleared the trails themselves, the limbs from the fallen trees obstructed my view in my target areas.
Orchids are pretty fragile and require specific habitats and I was worried that those habitats might have been damaged or destroyed. I walked very slowly, scanning the forest floor for hints of red or pink, wondering if I had come too early or too late. Eventually I found one small patch and then a second one a bit later (as shown in the final photo).
Pink Lady’s Slippers are sometimes called “moccasin flowers.” According to the New England Today website, “Native American folklore tells the story of a young maiden who ran barefoot in the snow in search of medicine to save her tribe, but was found collapsed on the way back from her mission with swollen, frozen feet. As a result, beautiful lady slipper flowers then grew where her feet had been as a reminder of her bravery.”
As I did a bit more research I learned more about this delightful flowers, including the specific requirements for them to grow that include a particular type of fungus. According to the U.S. Forest Service, “In order to survive and reproduce, pink lady’s slipper interacts with a fungus in the soil from the Rhizoctonia genus. Generally, orchid seeds do not have food supplies inside them like most other kinds of seeds. Pink lady’s slipper seeds require threads of the fungus to break open the seed and attach them to it. The fungus will pass on food and nutrients to the pink lady’s slipper seed. When the lady’s slipper plant is older and producing most of its own nutrients, the fungus will extract nutrients from the orchid roots. This mutually beneficial relationship between the orchid and the fungus is known as “symbiosis” and is typical of almost all orchid species.”
In a recent posting about Bleeding Hearts, I commented that I really liked heart-shaped flowers. At that time I was referring to the stylized shape that we associate with love. In the case of these Lady’s Slippers, I have always found that they look like actual human hearts, at least as I have seen them in movies that included open-heart surgery. Wow!
Depending on your angle of view, I also find that Pink Lady’s Slippers look like angels. I have tried to show you what I mean in the second photo, in which I have focused on a single flower. Do you see the hovering angel?
The final photo is one that I snapped with my iPhone. It gives you a sense of the habitat in which I found these beautiful little flowers. I feel blessed to have found them again this year and hope to see them again in future springs. According to the U.S. Forest Service article cited above, Pink’s Lady Slippers can live to be twenty years old or more.
© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.
From what I’ve seen in books and on television, these orchids do resemble actual human hearts. How the stylized, counterfactual shape got established, I didn’t know, so I searched and found this article that summarizes proposed origins:
https://www.artandobject.com/news/history-heart-shape
By the way, the Sacred Heart of Jesus stained glass window at All Saints Catholic Church, which is shown in the article, looks to me more like a strawberry than a heart.
So beautiful, Mike!
Beautiful flowers and very interesting commentary!
Aren’t they amazing?!?
You timed it perfectly. We hunt these when we go to the Smoky Mountains. We often arrive too early or too late. Great timing on your part!
It is so cool to see orchids in the wild. I know of only one place to find them at the park, so I was thrilled that I managed to remember more or less where that place was and super happy that my timing worked out too.
Wow, these are realy awesome Michael.
Beautiful orchids and very interesting information about the symbiotic relationship with the fungus!
Wonderful captures of your plan b, Mike! Glad you persevered and found these beauties thriving.
Oh, it takes me back to my childhood. We had a patch of pink Lady’s Slippers in the woods not far from my house along Lake Winnipeg, in Manitoba, Canada. Each spring my sisters and I would anticipate their blooms, regularly running up the hill to check, thrilled when it happened. And well aware that they should not be picked or they might not show up the next year. 😊
Beautiful series of images Mike!