Flowers of the CT

The flowers on the trail are amazing. Fields of purple and yellow aster speckled with lupine   Fireweed  lights up lush creeks while columbines hold tight to the rocks in alpine meadows.  I did not take pictures of every variety of flower along the trail but here is a sampling of what I saw. 

Black eyed Susan near a creek. 

Not able to identify.   Lily of some type? 

Purple Lupine. 

Golden Aster Villosa flowers. 

Chiming Bells plant. 

Buttercup. 

Colorado columbine. 

Meadow of Alpine Sunflowers. 

Indian Paint brush. 
Shrubby Cinquefoil plants. 

Alpine Yarrow plants. 

More black eyed susans 

Fire weed. 

American Monk's Hood Flowers. 

Grouse Whortleberry Berries. 

Sun loving asters. 


Fairy trumpet flowers. 

Mountain Gentian flower. 

Raspberry bushes as far as the eyes can see. 

Fireweed is abundant along the trail. 

Mule's Ear Daisy. 

Tansy Aster plant. 

While the Pine pole is under attack by the pine beetle, beautiful wild flower gardens are growing with the improved lighting in the forest. 

Flowers need the right conditions to grow and thrive. Our children are no different, yet 14,000,000 children in the US struggle with food insecurity. I believe we all have a responsibility to care for our nation's children. Please consider donating to End 68 Hours of Hunger, so that children struggling with food insecurity can eat over the 68 hours from receiving a free lunch at school on Friday and a free breakfast Monday morning. It costs organizations like End 68 Hours of Hunger $10 per week to feed a needy child each weekend of the school year.  Please consider making a donation to:

Thanks,  Jim. 

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