Available Reviews
Zuma Canyon Topanga Canyon State Park Malibu Creek State Park China Flat Rocky Oaks Stunt Ranch Circle X Ranch Paramount Ranch Castro Crest Newton Canyon Rancho Sierra Vista/Satwiwa Point Mugu State Park Charmlee Wilderness Park |
Date of Review
5/18. 5/17. 5/10. 5/9. 5/2. 4/26. 4/15. 4/11/17. 4/7/17. 4/3/17. 3/23/17. 3/14/17. 3/4/17. |
|
| ||
Things are drying out. If you've been putting off a flower hike time is running out.
This site performs a public service that anyone can participate in. Let us all know what you are seeing! In general, if you are submitting a report I will get it much faster if you use the gmail account 'SMMWildFlowers' rather than my nps.gov account. If you are new to submitting a report (or maybe even an old hand at it) be sure and read How To Submit a Flower Report — ed. |
Zuma Canyon |
|
5/18/17 |
The Backbone Trail section through upper Zuma Canyon is a garden right now, with over 80 species currently in bloom. In addition to the "usual suspects", some of the less common plants to be seen include: Checker Bloom, Stinky Gila (Allophyllum glutinosum), some white-flowered Elegant Clarkia, Large-flowered Phacelia, California Mustard (Caulanthus lasiophylllus), Pine Mat (Gallium andrewsii), and Mountain Dandelion.
— Jay Sullivan
|
Topanga Canyon State Park |
|
5/17/17 |
This year's wonderful flowers are starting to diminish in many places but the Nature Trail in Topanga Canyon State Park, especially the chaparral portion out on the edge of the hillside is still pretty wonderful. It isn't that there are unusual flowers there, just that there are so many massed flowers. There are bush mallow and lots of bush sunflowers, yucca, wild rose, bush lupine, narrow leaf milkweed and California buckwheat, in great quantities. We saw alligator lizards and a California whip snake. The only downside is that there is a lot of yellow star thistle growing in and near the trail. The prickles easily penetrate most trouser fabric and I pity anyone wearing shorts.
— Dorothy Steinicke
|
Point Mugu State Park |
|
3/14/17 |
Hillsides carpeted with California poppies. Gorgeous wildflowers all over the place including: morning glory, lupine, canyon sunflower, blue dicks, desert wishbone bush (five purple petals, five white stamens), purple nightshade, fiddlenecks (yellow, curling). Occasionally: paintbrush, shooting stars, clematis, pearly everlasting, treasure flower, Jimson weed. Other blooming plants: wild pea, wild cucumber, miners lettuce, black sage, ceanothus (blue and white), And many more whose names I don’t yet know. Thousands of lizards along the trail, particularly side-blotch, along with fence and alligator lizards. — David Harris |
Charmlee Wilderness Park |
|
3/4/17 |
Tons of Flowers!!
Fields of Shooting Stars in full bloom above the Nature Center. Fields of Blue Dicks on the entrance road. Hummingbird Sage in bloom with Anna’s Hummingbirds feeding in Oak Groves. MilkMaids, Canyon Sunflower, Stinging Lupine, Danny’s Skullcap, Wishbone Bush, Wild Peony, Prickly Phlox, Indian Paintbrush, Hairy leaf Ceonothus, Purple Nightshade. — Joseph Brooks |
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_Valois@nps.gov Or, for faster response use the gmail account SMMWildFlowers@gmail.com |
|