Thursday with 95°+heat in the forecast I got off the trailhead in Wildwood @ 5:30am
Made the summit in 2hrs (1016th summit) and decided an inventory of every different flower I saw would be of interest...
Since running my brush saw was outta the question with a Red Flag Alert
http://picasaweb.google.com/mattmaxon20 ... nyonTrail#
There's a few that haven't come out yet, notably Scarlet Larkspur & California Indian Pink Silene californica, these usually come out late. The Indian Pink stays around to the fall
Enjoy!
Matt
Flora along the Stone Cyn Trail
Wildwood is here.
Nice pics, Matt. Good stuff. Especially like the blue ceonothus and chia. Didn't know that Scarlett Bugler was also called Firecracker Penstemon. I'm going to have to get out and hike with the Sierra Club's Natural Science Section again. It's good stuff. I'd like to go to their Nature Knowledge Workshop in June, but that might be a bit much with the baby coming in only four months.
Nice pics, Matt. Good stuff. Especially like the blue ceonothus and chia. Didn't know that Scarlett Bugler was also called Firecracker Penstemon. I'm going to have to get out and hike with the Sierra Club's Natural Science Section again. It's good stuff. I'd like to go to their Nature Knowledge Workshop in June, but that might be a bit much with the baby coming in only four months.
Yeah all on one day.
I don't know the names of the little yellow jobs with the one petal that has the dark stripes
Or the variety of Indian Paint brush that is yellow
Rage stopped me from identifying the despised Greenbark Ceanothus (Ceanothus spinosus), the bane of XC hikers!
Those handful of little white flowers has eluded my elementary identification skills to date
Wildwood Picnic is in Big Tujunga Canyon, if you get there real early sometimes the gate is closed, but generally it isn't locked. just open it and go on in
Matt
I don't know the names of the little yellow jobs with the one petal that has the dark stripes
Or the variety of Indian Paint brush that is yellow
Rage stopped me from identifying the despised Greenbark Ceanothus (Ceanothus spinosus), the bane of XC hikers!
Those handful of little white flowers has eluded my elementary identification skills to date
Wildwood Picnic is in Big Tujunga Canyon, if you get there real early sometimes the gate is closed, but generally it isn't locked. just open it and go on in
Matt
Oh, yeah. Ya got that right. Still, a lovely flower with a subtle blue-lavender color.mattmaxon wrote:Rage stopped me from identifying the despised Greenbark Ceanothus (Ceanothus spinosus), the bane of XC hikers!
Dis one in da picture. Your Calflora link is right on. It has little edible seeds that can be shaken out after the head is dry. Nice snack.
Thanks. Really rough first trimester in terms of "morning sickness," but she's doing better now.
My wife is already telling me not to force our child to go hiking. I've already bought vibram soled baby booties. Do you think that's going too far?mattmaxon wrote:Sooo.... you can't get anybody to go hiking with you and decided to grow a hiking buddy from seed?