First rose hyacinth orchid in Ku-ring Gai Chase NP: November 10 2025
Change of plans for the day - no cleaners means I can get out earlier - took the train to walk a track down to the water to look for rock orchids

New signage in Ku-ring Gai Chase NP

Bearded orchid seeded

Starburst flower - my name - is it a white flower day?

Did find a budding hyacinth orchid - close up photo did not work

Hibbertia starts the yellow campaign

Multi-flower version

Yellow pea flower

Drumsticks flower at the end of season

Lambertia formosa

Orchid of the day starts with bonnet orchid

A bit side on shows the bonnet well - cryptostylis erecta

An interesting bud. It is an orchid budding - next step of ID is to find the leaf. This is where it gets fun - quite often the spike is some way away from the leaf. Could not find it - burgundy colour to the spike is a clue

Close by was better evidence - cryptostylis erecta

The edge of the drop off to Cowan Creek below

Love the way the big trees work around living on a rock ledge

Trigger flower - pink

Purple this is - purple fan flower

Take two with a bit more light

Weather eroded an eye in this rock

Track photo of grey spider grevillea - you know me by now

On the purple theme - picked up the upside down flower to get a photo from below

More purple - dampiera purpurea

A big slice of leptospermum squarrosum just before the drip to the creek

They like this slice across the big rocks. Could not see any Aboriginal carvings

The challenging part of the walk is long sections through she-oak bush. The soil is too acidic for orchids - a tunnel of acid

The mission today - rock orchids - no flowers yet

Tom cats orchid - cestichis reflexa - no flowers yet. Maybe I can check from below

Came across this echidna on the way down. Happy to pose. Was still there when I came back

The cestichis reflexa from below - sone evidence of flower spikes but no flowers - on the left

View down to Cowan Creek. Not been able to walk the track along the water for years now

Did hear the lyre bird - did not see it. Got an artists version

Pink spider grevillea - more than one spider in shot

Budding bonnet orchid

Pale flax lily - tough photo in bright light

This was the surprise find - two orchids growing out of a crack in the rocks

Close up - rose hyacinth orchid - dipodium roseum - first find Sydney side. Was I surprised?

No! Have previously seen plants about where this one is. Seeds have gone with the water flow. What is amazing is how they landed in that rock gap - it is below in the flow line

Took the side track down to Cowan Creek views

Some grand trees with the same views

Was looking up for snake orchids - found this poser up high

Track view of scribbly gum

Budding hyacinth orchid

Context photo - the track below is still closed - 3 years later

Next context photo. The Great North Walk makes its way up to this station from the valley the other side I was walking

The old style station - station in the centre of the two lines

Newcastle train whizzing by - does not stop here
Nice walk - heaps of steps. Did cook dinner - duck sous vide
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Height183.0 cm | ![]() | Weight90.0 kg | ![]() | Body Fat% | ![]() |
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You bring me a good day with those beautiful pictures. Greetings
Finding the first rose hyacinth orchid must have been so special. I love how the post captures both the beauty of nature and the joy of those small discoveries during a walk.
the flowers pictures are great , it seems you are a fan of nature
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@carinnm,the flowers are so beautiful and for the echidna,does it have an English name or that is just the name? looking like a porcupine to me.
Echidnas, also known as spiny anteaters, are unique egg-laying mammals belonging to the family Tachyglossidae and the order Monotremata, making them one of only five living monotremes alongside the platypus.
They are native to Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea, where they inhabit diverse environments ranging from forests and woodlands to deserts and montane regions.
These solitary animals are covered in coarse hair and spines, which are modified keratin-based hairs, and possess a long, tubular snout used for both breathing and feeding.
Their diet primarily consists of ants, termites, earthworms, and insect larvae, which they locate using electroreceptors in their snouts that detect electrical signals from prey.
Thank you for clarifying.