So step outside and start exploring; you never know what you'll see or who you'll meet.
Last week I took a road trip to the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve to view the spring superbloom of flowers, but you don't always have to leave the city to explore nature. Sometimes it's as simple as taking a hike in your neighborhood. This morning I set out to discover the the urban wildflowers blossoming on my street and check out the capabilities of a new camera. Granted, the flowering shrubs I found are more cultivated than wild, but it afforded a relaxing opportunity to get out of the house without having to go far. And I met a couple of neighbors, one of which invited me into her backyard to see how she brings the wilderness home.
So step outside and start exploring; you never know what you'll see or who you'll meet.
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There’s an old saying that April showers bring May flowers. In California, it’s more like February showers bring March, April and, in some cases, May flowers. That’s if the rains fall, however. With six years of drought on record, the spring wildflower bloom has been somewhat less than spectacular over the past several spring seasons. With our wetter than normal rainy season this year, 2017 has blossomed a bit more dramatically. 6½” of precipitation followed by above average temperatures have created a super bloom in the mountains and high desert plateaus. Flowers have not been this plentiful or colorful in at least a decade, if not longer. This has sent hundreds of thousands of flower peepers scavenging for the latest hotspot of floral activity. Two of the best viewing locations are the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park – two hours northeast of San Diego – and the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve – two hours north of Los Angeles. Hoping to catch what some describe as a ‘once in a lifetime’ event, I made the trek through the Green Valley to the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve. The reserve is an 1800 acre swath of high desert protected by the state of California in the 1960s as this once ubiquitous plant disappeared from the landscape. The California Poppy was named California’s state flower in 1903, but even then the giant fields of California golden sunlight were being plowed under for farmland or paved over as rural areas became metropolitan. The reserve is now the last spot in California to view a mass bloom of these four-petal, burning-orange flowers. The trip to the reserve is a bit tricky in itself with many twists and turns along a mostly rural highway through the Santa Polena Mountains, but there is a substantial reward in driving through the Green Valley. As the name implies, the valley is incredibly lush and vibrantly green, a result no doubt of this winter’s extensive rainfall. The change in landscape is dramatic as you exit the valley and leave the mountains behind. The soft, rounded nature of the mountains gives way to hardscrabble, rocky hills with the Antelope Valley Plateau stretching out before you. The panorama vista is streaked with colorful swatches of orange, yellow, purple and green, like an impressionistic watercolor. And the shoulders of the road are ablaze with poppies – thousands of them. There are so many flowers that cars pull over to get up close and personal with the splashy display of nature long before they reach the reserve. It should be noted that these flowers are on private property and stopping to walk among them is technically trespassing, but the locals don’t seem to mind. Once at the reserve, you may have to sit in line for a short time to enter the park. There are so many cars bringing visitors that the park’s staff can get a bit overwhelmed. Weekdays are by far the best time to visit as weekend guests can quickly fill the park to capacity. Once in the park, there is a small visitor center with maps, dioramas, an audio-visual presentation about the ecology of the reserve and a collection of floral paintings created by Jane S. Pinheiro whose conservation efforts spearheaded the formation of the reserve. The park includes 7 miles of dirt trails winding through the fields and to the tops of several small hills for sweeping vistas across the valley and a wheelchair accessible paved section of trail. Visitors are required to stay on the trails and not venture out into the fields to protect the delicate ecology of this last remaining open field of poppies. While the poppies may be the most colorful specimen on display – and the biggest draw – they aren’t the only flowering plant in the reserve. Other botanic perennials include the purple Owl’s Clover, the yellow twisting Fiddleneck, and the lavender Lacy Phacelia. There are nearly two dozen different varieties of wildflowers carpeting the desert along with Joshua Trees, Rabbit Bush and other types of desert plant life.
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