It was remarkable how quickly weather could transition in the Sierra Nevada mountain range of California. A late spring storm coated the rugged terrain with a smooth coat of snow, transforming the dry desert climate to a beautiful winter wonderland. But it didn't take long for this to change. In just 24 hrs, it transformed to its summer sheen, and was not longer the snowscape that it was just a day earlier. These two images show how quickly the weather can vary in the mountains.
Eastern Sierras
CA USA
Spring Thaws
California's magic unfolds as spring awakens Yosemite Valley. As snow-capped peaks begin to shed their winter coat, waterfalls roar to life, valleys become temporary lakes, and wildflowers paint the meadows in vibrant hues.
Yosemite National Park was one of the very first National Parks I had visited, and it's everlasting beauty played no small part in awakening my spirit of conservation. I hope that it inspires you to protect the rich diversity of this planet as well.
Yosemite National Park
CA USA
Floral explosion
The wild and unpredictable weather of California may have impacted the superbloom that was expected after the wet winter. While the colors may be more muted in most of California compared to the color explosion last year, Death Valley is experiencing a resurgence of colors after a perfectly wet winter. It remains to be seen if the other drier regions of the state experience a similar floral bloom.
Here are some of the blooms captured in the various wilderness areas in Southern California
CA USA
Meltwater
The spring thaws in the mountains bring about unpredictable dangers in the mountains. The warming temperatures thin the ice on frozen lakes, while meltwater gushing under snowbridges start weakening them. Cornices and avalanche slabs start to lose their strength and easily give way under the weight of a backcountry skier. All of these make it more challenging to traverse snow-capped mountain ranges in this transitional period.
And just like this picture, while it may seem like a pristine winter wonderland, the hidden dangers lay beneath the surface during spring.
Inyo National Forest
CA USA
Wildflower Closeups
I always wonder what led to rich diversity of wildflowers every time I witness a spring bloom event. The blooms I have witness comprise of anything from dainty buttercups with shiny golden yellow petals, blue petaled baby-blue eyes dotting the undergrowth near creeks, vivid reds of the Indian paintbrush in the thick bush, the soft orange of the ubiquitos California poppy fluttering in vast swathes under a sunny sky. And even though I have seen them from up close and from far away, I can never get tired of looking at nature's artwork.
Central California
USA
Spring Palette
Here are more visions of the California landscape from springs of years past. Vast surfaces of dusty brown that characterize the rolling hills and fallow lands during summer acquire a fresh coat of green. And out in the Central Valley, dry dustpans suddenly become wetlands harboring migratory birds. This is often the time I seek out hiking trails that take me out of civilization, to witness biomes and climate as it once had been.
Visions of Spring
The fallow lands in the agricultural plains of California are often a shade of rusty brown through most of the year, a side effect of the hot and dry climate experienced by the interior of the state for most of the year. These conditions do not spare the rounded hills that run along the western spine of the state. But the spring rains rejuvenate these lands, adding a fresh coat of green, and a dash of color from wildflowers.
Wild mustards, with their distinct lemon-yellow blooms, are the first ones to crop up on vast swathes of fallow lands. Soon after, the still-moist meadows proliferate with various flowering plants and spring grasses. The California black oak, a tree well adapted to this climate, acquires a fresh set of leaves after laying dormant all winter, and quickly envelop any mistletoe growing on their branches.
Driving through these lands often provide a window into the past, of how California used to be before it got as densely populated as it is now.
Central Valley
CA USA
Faces of DeVa
Picture a desert and the first vision that crops up is that of sand dunes stretching endlessly to the horizon. Undisturbed ripples of golden stand wiggle their way on the windward side, forming patterns akin to life-sized fingerprints. Mesquite Sand Dunes in Death Valley National Park is a classic example of this. But the park also features a vast low-level basin that are filled with white salt-flats. The salt flat is the remnant of an endorheic lake that dries out by late spring, leaving behind hexagonal patterns of crystallline salt.
Death Valley is more than just sand dunes and salt flats. But these are two key faces of this DeVa.
Death Valley National Park
CA USA
A Dante'ing Sunrise
Getting to Dante's view in Death Valley requires driving on a twisty mountain road from near the lowest point on the continent. And trying to get to this spectacular view point at sunrise requires commitment of a different sort. And yet, I was able to convince my entire family to wake up at dawn and make our way to the freezing summit at Dante's view to catch the sunrise.
Thankfully it did not disappoint. It was cold, windy, and extremely colorful. The eastern sky slowly changed from crimson to pastel tinges as the sun cleared the horizon. At the same time, shafts of light lit up the the mellow eastern slopes of the Panamint range, lighting the highest point in the National Park. Down below was Badwater basin, a salt flat at the lowest point in the Park that served as the drainage for the elongated valley.
It was very hard to take it all, especially with freezing winds blasting from the east. But it was worth the trip.
Death Valley National Park
CA USA
Is it a superbloom year?
It may be too early to tell whether the deluge of winter rains in California will lead to a superbloom. Last years spectacular blooms were attributed to the right amount of rain at the right time. Will the same happen this year?
Here are a few scenes of colorful poppies covering the sun-drenched slopes of the Antelope Valley Poppy Preserve.
Antelope Valley Poppy Preserve
CA USA