The logistic equation near a=1.75 shows so called type-I intermittency, where a periodic orbit is born out of the chaotic regime by a tangent bifurcation. For a larger than the bifurcation value, the graph of the third iterate of the map intersects the diagonal six times: Three times for the stable period three orbit, and three times for an unstable counterpart (slope at the intersection has modulus larger than unity), plus one intersection for the unstable genuine fixed point (period one orbit). For a slightly below the bifurcation value, none of these 6 intersections exists, but the graph touches the diagonal almost tangentially (therefore tangent bifurcation). It thus forms, together with the diagonal, a very thin channel, through which the trajectory has to pass in very many iterations. Hence, one observes long episodes of almost period-three motion, until the trajectory leaves these channels and performs for some steps chaotic motion. You can convince yourselves that this is indeed the case by selecting a part of the trajectory which starts just before an almost period part and finishes just after the end of this periodic part (assumed to be stored in the file intermittency.dat) and plotting only every third data point with lines:

plot '< delay intermittency.dat -d3 ' every 3 w linespoints, x