Page Revised: 02/13/2011

 

Available Site Reviews

Zuma/Trancas Canyons

Point Mugu State Park

 

Date of Reviews

02/06/2011

01/22/2011 & 12/13/2010.

 

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        Everything is green and growing although some plants are showing the effect of lack of water. We had a great start this year with many of our winter flowers appearing as early as  December. The warm weather we have had has made for pleasant hiking but has also shortened the season for some of our early flowers. I can’t remember a shorter Bigpod Ceanothus bloom up here at Circle X Ranch. The Shooting Stars are mostly finished in many places too. The warm weather keeps tricking me into thinking that there should be more flowing now but it’s still early for many things. In addition, this extended dry spell has been hard on a lot of the plants. Hopefully we will get some rain soon so our flower season isn’t cut short. I recently went down to the Grotto but there really wasn’t anything new to report. This probably explains why this web site, which depends on volunteer submissions, has not had much to report so far this year.

        As always, if you want to contact me or submit a flower report my email address is at the at the bottom of this page.  See you on the trails.

        – ed.

 


 

 

Circle X Ranch  –

Point Mugu State Park

Backbone Trail

 Date: 02/12/2011

 

 

        Today’s hike was the second leg of the 2011 Backbone Trail series cosponsored by the National Park Service and the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council.  We are hiking west to east covering one segment every two weeks. This time descending from Sandstone Peak (3,111’) through dense chaparral and riparian environments to the Danielson Multi-use Area (300’)

        The following native species were noted in bloom: deerweed, chamise, buckwheat, black sage, wild cucumber, big pod ceanothus, two tone everlasting, sugar bush, purple nightshade, shiny lomatium, chaparral current, prickly phlox, hairy-leaf ceanothus, hoary-leaf ceanothus, eastwood manzanita, saxifrage, popcorn, shooting star, lace pod, gold fields, peony, greenbark ceanothus, blue dicks, morning glory, rock rose, lotus (species ?), canyon sunflower, gooseberry fuchsia, miner's lettuce, hedge nettle, woodland star, bedstraw - prostrate, bush sunflower, skull caps, golden yarrow, common yellow monkey, wishbone, lupine - stinging, rattlesnake weed - spurge, wooly aster, wild sweet pea, poison oak, Indian paintbrush, oxalis, virgin's bower, blackberry, mule fat.  A good flower day.  – N. Cusworth (and others)

 

Zuma/Trancas Canyons

Zuma Loop Trail    

 Date: 02/06/2011

 

 

        With a few weeks of warm weather to hasten the bloom, 30 species were sighted on this easy 2-mile hike. Though many were just starting to bloom, a few species had numerous flowers, such as wild cucumber, bush sunflower, coast paintbrush, bigpod ceanothus, fuschia-flowered gooseberry, willow, and black walnut. Other notables were foothill lupine, chaparral pea, canyon sunflower, both white and purple nightshades, California everlasting, coffeeberry, mountain mahogany, blackberry, and holly-leaf redberry – many of them unexpectedly early. The non-native grasses were thick and green, giving an overall lush appearance, but much of it is already going to seed. The trail earned a “Fair” rating, with good portents of things to come – and hopes for rain to prolong the season.  Jack Gillooly

 

Rancho Sierra Vista / Satwiwa

Native Plant Garden

 Date: 01/29/2011

 

 

        The recent warm weather has increased the blooming plants at the Satwiwa native plant garden.  Golden currant and fuchsia-flowered gooseberry both are loaded with blossoms.  The Manzanita  (native to California, but not southern California) is covered with showy blossoms. The hummingbird sages and big pod ceanothus are just starting to bloom.  Also enjoyable are the bush sunflowers and the alder tree with it’s new cones showing.  Sheila Braden

 

Point Mugu State Park

Backbone Trail

 Date: 01/22/2011

 

 

      

        Today’s hike was the first leg of the 2011 Backbone Trail series cosponsored by the National Park Service and the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council.  We are hiking west to east covering one segment every two weeks.

        Walking through Coastal Sage Scrub and Sycamore Savannah environments of Pt. Mugu St. Park the following species were noted in bloom: bind weed, lemonade berry, deer weed, rattlesnake weed, wild cucumber, locoweed, Indian paint brush, wishbone, black mustard, bladderpod, bush sunflower, purple nightshade, big pod ceanothus, coast wallflower, fiddleneck, popcorn, hedge nettle, canyon sunflower, wooly blue curls, prickly phlox, prickly pear, shooting star, chaparral currant, greenbark ceanothus, gooseberry fuchsia, two tone everlasting, miner's lettuce, Sheppard’s purse, golden top - grass, lomatium - quite small, oxalis, parry’s phacelia. All in all it was a good flower day for January!  – N. Cusworth (and others)

 

Solstice Canyon

 

 Date: 01/19/2011

 

 

        With a few weeks of warm weather to hasten the bloom, 30 species were sighted on this easy 2-mile hike. Though many were just starting to bloom, a few species had numerous flowers, such as wild cucumber, bush sunflower, coast paintbrush, bigpod ceanothus, fuschia-flowered gooseberry, willow, and black walnut. Other notables were foothill lupine, chaparral pea, canyon sunflower, both white and purple nightshades, California everlasting, coffeeberry, mountain mahogany, blackberry, and holly-leaf redberry – many of them unexpectedly early. The non-native grasses were thick and green, giving an overall lush appearance, but much of it is already going to seed. The trail earned a “Fair” rating, with good portents of things to come – and hopes for rain to prolong the season.  Sheila Braden

 

Point Mugu State park

Multiple Trails

Date: 12/13/2010

 

 

      

It has been an astonishing year so far. Here is what a friend and I found in bloom at six areas in Point Mugu State Park:

1. Chumash Trail (first quarter mile from PCH) ---

chaparral sunflower; deerweed; paintbrush; and a small yellow, native oxalis

2. PCH half a mile on either side of La Jolla Canyon ---

giant coreopsis

3. Parking lot of trailhead of Ray Miller and La Jolla trails ---

wood mint; sweet pea

4. Sycamore Canyon Trail (1.1 miles or so from PCH) ---

bush mallow; buckwheat; chicory; elderberry

5. Serrano Trail (westernmost half mile) ---

blackberry; and that same small yellow, native oxalis

6. Serrano Trail (easternmost quarter mile, from Serrano Road) ---

white and purple nightshade; chaparral currant; canyon sunflower; blue-flowered greenbark ceanothus and white-flowered ceanothus; chaparral gooseberry; and most amazing of all, a matilija poppy in full bloom.

        Matthew F. Delaney

 


 

Contact Information:

 

Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area

 

401 West Hillcrest Drive
Thousand Oaks, CA 91360

 

805-370-2301

www.nps.gov/samo

If you would like to contribute to the wildflower report you can e-mail the editor at:
Tony_Valois@partner.nps.gov

 

or phone Tony at 310-457-6408

What’s Blooming

on the web at

 www.researchlearningcenter.com/bloom

or go to

www.nps.gov/samo and click on “What’s Blooming”