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Trip Report

Mount Townsend — Tuesday, Jul. 22, 2025

Olympic Peninsula > Hood Canal

The flowers are very good with a great variety! We saw 111 speciesofplantsinbloom, thanksPaul for the list! We really enjoyed the flowers we've only seen on the peninsula: Olympic bellflower (photo 1), mountain death camus (photo 2), nodding onion (photo 3), woolly vetch (photo 4), elegant sandwort, and more. The prairie smoke on the top is thick and beautiful (see slideshow). The trail is in great shape, the views are spectacular.

PLANTS IN FLOWER (111 species)

white (41)

common yarrow (Achillea millefolium)

vanilla-leaf (Achlys triphylla)

pearly everlasting (Anaphalis margaritacea)

sharp-tooth angelica (Angelica arguta)

woolly pussytoes (Antennaria lanata)

raceme pussytoes (Antennaria racemosa)

mountain / glaucus death-camas (Anticlea elegans)

goatsbeard (Aruncus dioicus)

chickweed, species uncertain (Cerastium sp.)

alpine sandwort (Cherleria obtusiloba)

little prince’s-pine (Chimaphila menziesii)

Siberian spring-beauty (Claytonia sibirica)

queen’s cup (Clintonia uniflora)

dwarf dogwood / bunchberry (Cornus unalaschkensis)

talus willowherb (Epilobium clavatum)

thread-leaf / mountain sandwort (Eremogone capillaris)

Flett’s / Olympic Mountain daisy / fleabane (Erigeron flettii)

mountain strawberry (Fragaria virginiana)

common bedstraw (Galium aparine)

cow parsnip (Heracleum maximum)

alpine alumroot (Heuchera glabra)

small-flowered alumroot (Heuchera micrantha)

white-flowered hawkweed (Hieracium albiflorum)

western starflower (Lysimachia latifolia)

starry false Solomon’s seal (Maianthemum stellatum)

rusty saxifrage (Micranthes ferruginea)

little-leaf montia (Montia parvifolia)

one-sided wintergreen (Orthilia secunda)

locoweed (Oxytropis campestris)

three-toothed mitrewort (Ozomelis trifida)

silver-leaf phacelia (Phacelia hastata)

white rhododendron (Rhododendron albiflorum)

dwarf bramble / creeping raspberry (Rubus lasiococcus)

thimbleberry (Rubus parviflorus)

trailing blackberry (Rubus ursinus)

boreal stichwort / arctic sandwort (Sabulina rubella)

spotted / matted saxifrage (Saxifraga bronchialis / austromontana)

campion / catchfly, maybe Parry’s (Silene, maybe parryi)

fringecups (Tellima grandiflora)

foamflower (Tiarella trifoliata)

Sitka valerian (Valeriana sitchensis)

yellow (19)

trail plant / pathfinder (Adenocaulon bicolor) — some yellow, others white

pale agoseris (Agoseris glauca)

mountain arnica (Arnica latifolia)

Parry’s arnica (Arnica parryi)

shrubby cinquefoil (Dasiphora fruticosa)

cushion buckwheat (Eriogonum ovalifolium)

Oregon sunshine (Eriophyllum lanatum)

western / sand dune wallflower (Erysimum capitatum)

large-leaf avens (Geum macrophyllum)

Martindale’s desert-parsley / biscuit-root (Lomatium martindalei)

Flett’s groundsel (Packera flettii)

fan-leaf cinquefoil (Potentilla flabellifolia)

slender cinquefoil (Potentilla gracilis)

tall / meadow buttercup (Ranunculus acris)

lawn buttercup (Ranunculus repens)

spreading stonecrop (Sedum divergens) 

spearleaf stonecrop (Sedum lanceolatum)

Rocky Mountain goldenrod (Solidago multiradiata)

streamside / pioneer violet (Viola glabella)

reddish: pink to red to red-purple (28)

nodding onion (Allium cernuum)

Olympic / scalloped onion (Allium crenulatum)

candystick (Allotropa virgata)

rosy pussytoes (Antennaria microphylla)

red columbine (Aquilegia formosa)

harsh paintbrush (Castilleja hispida)

scarlet paintbrush (Castilleja miniata)

small-flowered paintbrush (Castilleja parviflora)

fireweed (Chamaenerion angustifolium)

pipsissewa (Chimaphila umbellata)

spotted coralroot (Corallorhiza maculata)

western coralroot (Corallorhiza mertensiana)

foxglove (Digitalis purpurea)

smooth willowherb (Epilobium glaberrimum)

old man’s whiskers (Geum triflorum)

Columbia lewisia (Lewisia columbiana)

twinflower (Linnaea borealis)

pinesap / Indian pipe (Monotropa hypopitys)

sickletop lousewort (Pedicularis racemosa)

spreading phlox (Phlox diffusa)

woodland pinedrops (Pterospora andromedea)

liver-leaf wintergreen (Pyrola asarifolia)

Pacific rhododendron (Rhododendron macrophyllum)

maple-leaf currant (Ribes acerifolium)

swamp gooseberry (Ribes lacustre)

rose, baldhip or peahip (Rosa gymnocarpa or pisocarpa)

sheep sorrel / common sorrel / sour dock (Rumex acetosella)

creeping snowberry (Symphoricarpos mollis)

bluish: violet to blue to blue-purple (15)

Olympic harebell / bellflower (Campanula piperi)

common harebell / bluebell bellflower (Campanula rotundifolia)

edible thistle (Cirsium edule)

subalpine daisy / fleabane (Erigeron glacialis)

northern gentian (Gentiana amarella)

pea, species uncertain (Lathyrus sp.)

broadleaf lupine (Lupinus latifolia)

woodland penstemon (Nothochelone nemerosa)

small-flowered penstemon (Penstemon procerus)

coast penstemon (Penstemon serrulatus)

Jacob’s-ladder, showy or low (Polemonium pulcherrimum or californicum)

Cusick’s speedwell (Veronica cusickii)

American vetch (Vicia americana)

woolly/hairy vetch (Vicia villosa)

early blue violet (Viola adunca)

green (5)

heart-leaf twayblade (Neottia cordata)

slender bog orchid (Platanthera stricta)

white-veined wintergreen (Pyrola picta)

western meadowrue (Thalictrum occidentale)

green false hellebore (Veratrum viride)

orange (2)

orange agoseris (Agoseris aurantiaca)

Columbia / tiger lily (Lilium columbianum)

brown (1)

Oregon boxwood (Paxistima myrsinites)

BIRDS

Varied Thrush

Hermit Thrush

Band-tailed Pigeon

Brown Creeper

Red-breasted Nuthatch

Golden-crowned Kinglet

Horned Lark

Anna’s Hummingbird

BUTTERFLIES

Anise Swallowtail (Papilio zelicaon)

Parnassian, species uncertain (Parnassius sp.)

Snowberry Checkerspot (Euphydryas colon)

Edith’s Checkerspot (Euphydryas editha)

greater fritillary, species uncertain (Speyeria sp.)

lesser fritillary, species uncertain (Boloria sp.)

Crescent, Mylitta or Field (Phyciodes mylitta or pulchella)

Boisduval’s Blue (Icaricia icarioides)

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Comments

judyvla on Mount Townsend

Wonderful observations! I love how the mountain death camus has such a pretty flower! How high up was the hermit thrush? Never seen one up high.

Posted by:


judyvla on Jul 26, 2025 12:07 PM

AlpsDayTripper on Mount Townsend

"Hermit Thrushes are common at high elevations in coniferous forests throughout Washington. They usually replace Swainson's Thrushes at high elevations in the Cascade and Olympic Mountains, although they are less common in the wetter forests of the Olympic Peninsula."

source: https://birdweb.org/BIRDWEB/bird/hermit_thrush

I love the green, liquidy, heart-shaped parts of that flower. I'm guessing it has nectar in it.

Posted by:


AlpsDayTripper on Jul 27, 2025 06:54 AM

Sunny2WA on Mount Townsend

Beautiful photos and extremely detailed list of flowers.

Posted by:


Sunny2WA on Jul 30, 2025 04:45 PM

Posted by:


AlpsDayTripper on Jul 30, 2025 04:46 PM