Available Reviews
Triunfo Creek (Canyon) Park Topanga Canyon Malibu Creek SP Castro Crest Sunset Hills Open Space Las Virgenes View Park Hope Nature Preserve Point Mugu SP Paramount Ranch Santa Ynez Canyon Rancho Sierra Vista Zuma Canyon Corral Canyon Park Topanga Canyon State Park Stunt Ranch |
Date of Review
03/23, 03/19(2), 03/06, 2/20, 2/11. 3/17, 2/18. 03/06, 2/16. 02/27. 2/26. 2/25, 2/11, 2/9, 2/4. 2/25. 2/20, 2/11. 2/20. 2/15. 2/12. 2/3. 1/30. 1/27. 1/19. |
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It is gratifying to see a number of new people submitting flower reports.
If you are unfamiliar with the format of the reports or are submitting pictures I've added notes here. A quick note to let people know I have moved out of the Santa Monica Mountains. This will make it difficult for me to include my customary ramblings here at the beginning of the newsletter. On another front, I apologize that I have been neglecting the iPhone wildflower app. I know Apple's release of iOS 8 last year broke the style function but as everything else still works (although it looks ugly) I decided to move the patching this to the back burner. Picking up and moving to another state is time consuming, and to make matters worse I was also forced to buy and set up a new Mac computer to continue this work. In addition, this update seems like a good time to incorporate some of the new features I added when I created the Android version of the app. With a little bit of luck it should be ready soon... ‑ ed. |
Triunfo Creek Park |
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03/19/15 |
Took a trip to Triunfo today as despite living next to it for several years I've never noticed it! I opted to take the Pentachaeta Trail from the car park (sign posted). Was not disappointed with the displays of goldfields, purple owl's-clover, foothill plantain and some other good plants.
The most common plants of the day were wild hyacinth, purple nightshade agg., miner's lettuce (perfoliata), wide-throated monkey flower, shiny lomatium, Fuschia-flowering gooseberry, fiesta flower, caterpillar phacelia, "common" fiddleneck, cottonweed, western blue-eyed grass, fringed lianthus, California chicory, silver puffs, poison oak (in flower), everlasting nest straw, black sage. I was rather happy to find one of my long-standing "nemesis flowers" which was Padre's shooting-star, there is a large congregation about 20-25 minutes down the trail but most have lost their flowers. Lots of wild cucumber (which I mistook for white bryony being from Britain and all) with vines over many shrubs and oaks. Saw singles of Parry's Larkspur, Parry's phacelia, indian warrior, woolly blue-curls, mission woodland-star, chia, Calystegia sp, twining snapdragon, California peony, Pterostegia drymarioides and California poppy. There was a good comparison of musk filaree and red-stem filaree immediately by the car park in the rocks before the start of both paths (both non-native but interesting). Erodium botrys (non-native) also common along the trail. There was some sort of dodder off in the distance that I did not see well enough for ID. There was a good patch of white form wild hyacinth about 5-10 minutes down the trail from the car park where the path bends to the left (east). Not many butterflies but several Sara orange-tip, California sister, Behr's metalmark, white chequered-skipper and a fly-by duskywing sp. Lots of insect life about, my highlight was a snake fly (Agulla sp.) which I have not encountered before. I still have some unidentified plants to go through, not that this post needs to be any longer than it already is. I mostly stuck to the main path to avoid disturbance, it is a rather rocky trail with hilly regions, but worth doing if you can. ‑ James Bailey |
Point Mugu State Park |
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Spring 2015 |
Here is a list of plants submitted by the National Park Service's botanist Tarja Sagar. This list was generated as part of the Park's ongoing monitoring of the recovery of the habitiat that was burned in the Springs Fire two years ago. It was generated over the course of the last couple of months so not all of these would still be in flower.
PtMugu10Mar2015.pdf |
Miscellaneous Locations |
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mid February |
Lupinus succulentus, L. bicolor, L. longifolius, L. sparsiflorus, L. hirsutissimus are all flowering in several locations in the range.
Plagiobothrys collinus is flowering at Wildwood, a few P. nothofulvus and P. acanthocarpus at Triunfo Creek Park (Semler) Acmispon [Lotus] maritimus, A. sparsiflorus, and A. glaber are all flowering in various places in the range. Escscholzia caespitosa is flowering along trail to Upper Sycamore waterfall. Astragalus trichopodus that is flowering is the variety lonchus at west end--abundant along Yellow Hill fire road and Willow Springs trail up from Leo Carillo, for example. Phacelia viscida and parryi are both flowering in lots of places in the range. I haven't seen Camissonia bistorta flowering yet--only Camissoniella micrantha, but bistorta could be flowering some place. Oxalis californica is flowering along the coastal slopes ‑ Tarja Sagar |
Las Virgenes View Park |
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2/9/15 |
The New Millennium Trail is in the City of Calabasas. The trailhead that I used is in the Dog Park, just south of the intersection of Las Virgenes and Agoura Road , across the street from A E Wright Middle School. It is the ridge that is to your left if you are driving south on Las Virgenes Road.
Thanks to a recent light rain, Purple Filliree is now lining the lower trail. There are also more Red Maids growing. I took the short-cut that goes up a ridge to join the south loop. Blue Dicks are growing on the short- cut trail, and near the top, some Lupines are starting to bloom. Turning right on the trail junction, I noticed that a lot of Caterpillar Phacelia is growing, but it is not blooming yet. Further on, near the top of the ridge, there is a nice patch of California Golden Poppies blooming (see pic). Continuing on, I turned right on the trail that stays on the ridge ( instead of staying on the loop trail). There I found more Blue Dicks, Popcorn Flower, Chia, and a few Bush Sunflower. ‑ Jim Garafalo |
Corral Canyon Park |
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1/30/15 |
The Sara Wan Trail is an excellent place to ramble through coastal sage scrub. It is a loop trail and I always do it clockwise in order to enjoy the ocean views on the descent. Things are not yet awash in blooms here. The predominantly apparent flowers are the wild cucumbers which sprawl over the tops of shrubs pushing up their racemes of white flowers and with spiky fruits dangling below. There are also bush sunflowers, mule fat, purple nightshade, some wild sweet pea in bloom as well as some poison oak. I saw the very beginnings of Indian paintbrush, wishbone flower and purple sage. As I descended the ocean facing hillside I could see pods of dolphins in the ocean. The hillside was covered with ground hugging lupines (Lupinus succulentus? I'm not sure) ‑ Dorothy Steinicke |
Topanga Canyon State Park |
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1/27/15 |
After our little bit of rain the mountainsides are blooming with honey scented white blossoms of big pod ceanothus. I hiked The Musch Trail and it was everywhere. When there was a breeze there was a "snowfall" of white blossoms. Additionally the manzanita are in bloom with bell shaped flowers and wild cucumber is really getting going. There is an occasional splash of color from purple nightshade. I returned on the fire road where there were California everlasting and telegraph weed blooming alongside the road. So there was not a great variety of plants in bloom but the quantity of the blooming ceanothus make getting your boots muddy well worth it. ‑ Dorothy Steinicke |
Stunt Ranch |
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1/19/15 |
The milkmaids are out alongside the creek. I always think of them as the first harbingers of spring. Even more impressive were the many varieties of mushrooms and other fungus in evidence. I wish I knew them better. There was also a fair amount of wild cucumber. Venturing up into the chaparral the big pod ceanothus are just starting to bloom. There were also chaparral currant, both the usual pink flowered ones and also the white flowered ones that I only know from this trail. We saw a single blooming bush poppy. ‑ Dorothy Steinicke |
Santa Monica Mountains NRA 401 West Hillcrest Drive Thousand Oaks, CA 91360 805-370-2301 www.nps.gov/samo |
If you would like to contribute a wildflower report you can e-mail the editor at: Tony[underscore]Valois@nps.gov |
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