Joshua Tree National Park Wildflower Report

Joshua Tree NP – April 12, 2011

 Nolina, a yucca relative with six-foot flower stems bearing dense clusters of creamy white flowers, is blooming on trails around West Entrance and in Queen Valley. Early annuals on the low-lying Bajada in the south of the park are being replaced by brittlebush and cactus, while yellow dandelions, senna, and coreopsis brighten the roadsides in Pinto Basin and Wilson Canyon.

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Wildflowers in Joshua Tree National Park – April 4, 2011

Joshua Tree National Park 

Trails and roadsides throughout the park, except at the highest elevations, are bright with large areas of flowers. More than 140 species have been reported in bloom. The best way to see wildflowers is to stop, park safely in a designated turn-out, get out of the car, and walk around a little. The Mastodon Peak and 49 Palms trails offer opportunities to see flowers while hiking.

 

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Wildflowers – Antelope Valley Poppy Reserve – April 1, 2011

The perennial grape soda lupine was also late in starting to bloom but these plants now have beautiful displays of the tall blue/purple flower stems covering the plants.  This spring, the display of the early season goldfields never matched their best displays in past years.  The goldfield yellow coloration of the slopes of Fairmont Butte, the hill to the north of the Poppy Reserve, started to fade more than two weeks ago and is now almost gone and the goldfields blossoms on the Reserve are starting to fade.  So far at least, the late March rain storm has, apparently, not revived the goldfield displays. 

This raises the question of what will be the impact of this storm on the poppy displays.  Only time will tell.  The poppy display can be called, at best, modest; a disappointing season so far.  The good news is that a large percent of the growing poppy plants are still small and have not yet put out their first blossom so there is still hope, especially with the major late season rain storm in late March helping to keep the soil moist. 

This year’s displays of owl’s clover, another favorite of Reserve visitors, have been better than most recent years.  Some mid-season plants such as chia and Fremont pincushion are now starting to blossom.  In a couple of weeks, the silver puffs should be providing carpets of their silver spherical seedheads.  The wishbone bushes are just now starting to form buds so it will also be a few weeks before these beautiful blue blossoms are showing.  To date, more than 40 different wildflowers have bloomed this spring.

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Wildflowers – Antelope Valley Poppy Reserve

Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve

Latest Poppy Reserve Research Field Notes and Observations
4-1-11: Mary Wilson

Antelope Trail North Loop
Poppies are just starting to bloom. 
Look for filaree, fiddleneck, pygmy-leaved lupine, and slender keel fruit.

Antelope Trail South Loop
Poppies just starting to bloom. 
Look for filaree, fiddleneck, pygmy-leaved lupine, and slender keel fruit. 

Lightning Bolt Trail
Poppies just starting to bloom.
Look for filaree, fiddleneck, pygmy-leaved lupine, bush lupine, slender keel fruit, lacey phacelia, red maids, forget-me-not, sun cups, hairy lotus, cream cups and rattlesnake weed.   

Poppy Trail North Loop Trail
Poppies just starting to bloom.
Look for filaree, fiddleneck, silver puff, pygmy-leaved lupine, slender keel fruit, forget-me-not, fringe pod, wild onions, red maids, sun cups, gold fields and owl’s clover.

Poppy Trail South Loop
Poppies just starting to bloom. 
Look for filaree, fiddleneck, pygmy-leaved lupine, goldfields, silver puffs and slender keel fruit.

 Tehachapi Vista Point Trail
Poppies just starting to bloom.
Look for filaree, goldfields, pygmy-leaved lupine, slender keel fruit and grape soda lupine.

Valley Vista Point
Poppies just starting to bloom. 
Look for filaree, fiddleneck, pygmy-leaved lupine, and slender keel fruit, forget-me-nots and evening snow.

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Antelope Valley Poppy Reserve – March 31, 2011

It’s a late poppy season this year, but with this week’s rains, the season may last longer too.
 
Individual poppy flowers are blooming around the reserve, so the fields are still mostly green but have brilliant orange dots scattered among the grasses. Grape soda lupine bushes are in bloom at the west end of the Tehachapi Vista Point Trail, and owl’s clover are starting to pop up on the North Poppy Loop Trail. Kitanemuk Vista Point has great views of the patches of goldfields that are starting to turn the surrounding hillsides yellow, and Lacy Phacelia are beginning to bloom on the west slope of the point. There are many poppy plants with buds forming, and several other wildflowers can be found blooming along the trails. Poppies bundle themselves up when it’s cold and windy, so check the forecast before coming out.

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Wildflowers – Mojave National Preserve – March 2011

Zyzzx
Bigelow’s monkeyflower (Mimulus bigelovei)
bladderpod (Isomeris arborea)
brown-eyed primrose (Camissonia claviformis)
checker fiddleneck (Amsinckia tessellata)
desert chicory (Rafnesquia neomexicana)
desert dandelion (Malacothrix glabrata)
desert gold-poppy (Eschoscholzia glyptosperma)
Emory rock-daisy (Perityle emoryi)
forget-me-not (Cryptantha)
Mojave-aster (Xylorhiza tortifolia)

Aiken Mine Road
Wallace’s woolly daisy (Eriophyllum wallacei)

Cima Dome
desert paintbrush (Castilleja angustifolia)
red-stemmed filaree (Erodium cicutarium)
turpentine broom (Thamnosma montana)
Wallace’s woolly daisy (Eriophyllum wallacei)

Devils Playground
desert dandelion (Malacothrix glabrata)
prickly poppy (Argemone corymbosa)


Old Dad Mountains (between Devils Playground and Mojave Rd)
beavertail cactus (Opuntia basilaris)

Jackass Canyon
beavertail cactus (Opuntia basilaris)
coyote melon (Cucurbita palmata)
desert chicory (Rafnesquia neomexicana)
desert dandelion (Malacothrix glabrata)

Kelso Depot Area
desert chicory (Rafnesquia neomexicana)
desert dandelion (Malacothrix glabrata)
Fremont pincushion (Chaenactis fremontii)

Kelbaker Road – south of Kelso
bladderpod (Isomeris arborea)Kelbaker Road – north of Kelso
bladderpod (Isomeris arborea)
desert dandelion (Malacothrix glabrata)
Wallace’s woolly daisy (Eriophyllum wallacei)

Brannigan Mine Road to Henry Spring
bladderpod (Isomeris arborea)
checker fiddleneck (Amsinckia tessellata)
chia (Salvia columbariae)
desert chicory (Rafnesquia neomexicana)
desert dandelion (Malacothrix glabrata)
forget-me-not (Cryptantha)
Fremont pincushion (Chaenactis fremontii)purple mat (Nama demissum)
red-stemmed filaree (Erodium cicutarium)
turpentine broom (Thamnosma montana)
Wallace’s woolly daisy (Eriophyllum wallacei)
Yellow cups (Camissonia brevipes)

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Joshua Tree National Park – March 29, 2011

The wildflower bloom is spreading north, and poppies, brown-eyed primroses, chia, lupine, and chuparosa continue to color both sides of the road south of the Cottonwood Mountains. The Bajada All-Access Trail still offers lots of variety and color as well, Or, join a ranger on a flower walk this Friday, April 1. Meet at the Cottonwood Visitor Center at 11 am, then drive to the best wildflower spot.

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Joshua Tree National Park – March 18, 2011

Fields of yellow poppies, brown-eyed primroses, chia, purple lupine, and red chuparosa may be found on both sides of the road south of the Cottonwood Mountains. The Bajada All-Access Trail offers lots of variety and color as well

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Antelope Valley Poppy Reserve

Current Status 3-10-11

Although there are many poppy plants with buds forming, there is only a handful of poppies currently in bloom. Several other wildflowers can be found blooming along the trails, but the fields are still predominantly green with yellow patches forming on some hillsides.

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Death Valley National Park – March 14, 2011

Wildflowers near Ashford Mill

Sand verbena (Abronia villosa) grow among a field of desert gold (Geraea canescens).

March 14, 2011
The southern part of Death Valley is the only place in the park that shows much of a sign of spring bloom so far this season. Don’t expect the eye-popping bloom like we had in 2005. This spring is more typical of what Death Valley offers: the miracle of a few delicate wildflowers in a harsh and unforgiving landscape.

Wildflowers in the area around Ashford Mill are at their peak this week. Desert gold and sand verbena are the primary stars, but a little searching will reveal desert five-spot here and there. The bloom has spread to the alluvial fans just above Ashford Junction along Hwy 178, the site of the biggest and most photographed field of flowers in 2005. This year the desert gold are only a few inches high instead of several feet and the density of plants only a fifth of what that bumper year had. Even so, it is still worth a visit.

In Rhodes Wash, to the east of Jubilee Pass there is a lot of wildflower diversity, but other than a nice area of brittlebush, most drivers on Hwy 178 will only notice patches of roadside flowers. If you get out of your car and take a closer look, it is possible to find 20 different species of wildflowers in bloom. Bring your field guides and close-up lens to best appreciate the flowers here.

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