It is of a species more common in Israel, Palestine and Syria, but here on Cyprus maybe half a dozen plants cling on, thriving in the water of a small spring.
But before then:
Up at seven, as it is the weekend, the hotel is packed, so to get a prime spot on the terrace for breakfast, you have to be first.
The terrace was indeed empty, apart from the group of waiting cats, who purr for titbits and morsels, although the owner does feed them actual cat food.
Unattended plates are likely to be raided. But we are wary, and always post a guard over left plates.
This was to be a long day, so we left the hotel at half eight, heading to Paphos along familiar roads, then past the airport to the side of a hill where a rare Wheatear might be spotted.
Rain had already begun to fall, so Richard and I stayed in the van while the others tried to spot one, but didin't.
So back aboard the Skylark, and off to a mountainside, dominated by two decade old turbines, we set about looking for reptiles.
All the harder due to the rain, hail and thunderstorms.Under racks we found a lizard or two, and a fine adult gecko, as you see here.
And again back down to the van, now in bright sunshine for a drive to the canyon.
Alarms had been sounded every day this week, but the site is known to the police, so after passing through one base, into the valley, we park next to the canyon wall, where the handful of plants had begun to flower a full month early, and one of the plants at the roadside was in flower, so we could get shots of Epipactis veratrifolia.
That done, scramble back into the van for another long drive through Limassol to a green valley, and a track lined with more orchids, and where we would eat our snap.
The afternoon was getting on, and we had one more site to visit: a picnic area near the centre of the island's lacemaking industry. Here hundreds of Ophrys elegans thrived, and we took shots of many of the plants in the hour we wandered around But also saw signs of where plants had been dug up.
And from there it was a two and a half hour drive back, but on the way we stopped at a huge café for drinks. Huge it was, with dozens of tables, but only three being used, as most shops and cafes had already closed at three.
An hour's blast along the motorway back to Paphos as the sun sank in the west, and the road gave us views of the sunset over the calm sea.It was nearly dark by the time we got back, so we went straight into the restaurant for dinner, as there was a huge party of local walkers in for the night, and they were going to have a disco.



























