
Welcome to the Theodore Payne Foundation’s 42nd year of the Wildflower Hotline. The Hotline offers weekly on-line and recorded updates on the best locations for viewing spring wildflowers in Southern and Central California. All locations are on easily accessible public lands and range from urban to wild, distant to right here in L.A.
Entering mid-March, wildflower season remains quiet. Recent rainfall may bring relief to some drought-stricken areas, and annuals may awaken later this month. Rain will certainly benefit the spring bloom of perennial and woody natives. Annuals, however, are a bit more persnickety about their blooming conditions, responding only to a complex set of environmental factors occurring normally during the winter months. We shall see what happens.
Figueroa Mountain in the Los Padres National Forest is known for its dramatic gold and blue duo of blooming California poppy and lupine displays. It is also a good location to see chocolate lilies. Unfortunately, Figueroa Mt. was hit hard by the Lake Fire last July and is struggling to come back. Poppies and lupines can be found along the road, but not in great numbers or showy displays. In addition, the seasonally colorful native shrubs and perennials are now blackened skeletons in a bleak landscape. The slopes are greening up nicely however and hopefully the “green” is not just weedy grasses obscuring delicate wildflowers. The slopes below the main lookout were missed by the fire and should be populated with chocolate lilies soon after this rain current this rain event. You should visit the area. The vistas are still spectacular. Think of it as an opportunity to witness a post fire recovery and to take note of what species reappear in the landscape over the next few years.
The Hotline usually features Anza Borrego Desert State Park as a premier wildflower viewing destination during the month of March. This year however, the desert is bone dry with no great displays of the usual wildflowers. Perennials have fared a little better, especially along waterways. Hike in Coyote Canyon from second crossing along the water as much as possible, and you may see some ocotillo, brittlebush, indigo bush, white rhatany, sweetbush and silky dalea along with one species of hardy annual, desert needles. If you enjoy hiking in Anza, you may find scattered annuals far into the canyons on north facing slopes tucked in among boulders. You might need to expend some effort to find them.
A native plant garden at the Elizabeth Learning Center in Cudahy is unique for its school site Habitat Gardens. It is the site of an artificially created vernal pool that serves as a refuge for endangered fairy shrimp and threatened plants endemic to vernal pools. The garden also hosts Desert and a Chaparral habitat gardens. Wildflowers flourish here throughout the spring. The best part is that city dwellers can see most of the garden from the main street, but also can ask for a closer view with a teacher after school. Please learn how to arrange a visit by reading the online version of the Wildflower Hotline on Theodore Payne’s web page.
That’s it for this week. Visit the Wildflower Hotline website to see photos of these and more wildflower sites. The Theodore Payne Foundation’s. annual Native Plant Garden Tour is April 5 & 6. Tickets are now on sale. Check the TPF website theodorepayne.org for details. The next report will be available on Friday, March 21st.
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