california poppy

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

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

Spring of Flowers

Springs in California were spent driving around to various parts of the golden state to seek the colorful blooms of wildflowers. Hills, brown and dry during the summer and fall, transform in February to a verdant English landscape, and play host some of the largest varieties of wildflowers. Resplendent blooms of the california poppy, pygmy lupines, fiddlenecks, asters, daisies and many others carpet the sunlit slopes of the Sierra foothills. I am yet to witness such a transformation in any other part of the country.

Table Mountain Ecological Reserve
CA USA

A National Park Journey - Pinnacles National Park

My strongest memories of Pinnacles remains wandering through a wildflower meadow dominated by with brightly blooming California Poppies. Its vibrant orange blossoms were a show of delight against the dry chaparral vegetation, and egged me to go further on the trail on that warm spring day. I thought that was all there was to Pinnacles, but in my subsequent visits, I discovered that this park had far more to offer: I tracked breeding pairs of California Condors with a wildlife biologist, squeezed through narrow clefts and clambered over steep pinnacles, and watched the night skies above and the delicate under-canopy below.

It was perhaps this reason that Pinnacles was designated a National Park in 2013. While it may not carry the epic grandeur that is typical of National Parks, it preserves a rather unique part of California

Pinnacles National Park
CA USA

The Interconnected Planet

When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world

John Muir


Earth day is the one day of the year that the whole world pauses to think about the environment. But one day a year isn't enough, because protecting and preserving nature should be a lifelong guiding principle, and not of effort that is expended in just one single day. And because nature is so interconnected, it cannot be dependent just on actions that taken in a few locations. It should be the ethos for everyone.

For example, the California poppy is an ubiquitous flower, found in different parts of the west coast of North America in multiple different climates. A single flower from a single shoot, fragile though it may be, represents significant effort by the plant to propagate itself for future generations. And its success is dependent on so many interconnected factors: location, short-term weather and long-term climate trends, wildlife, pollinators and lastly, humanity. On a global scale, the human species has such a high impact and influence on nature, that the burden of preserving the delicate balance also falls on to us.

After all, the Earth is what we all have in common

Pinnacles National Park
CA USA

Escaping Paranoia

The last few weeks have certainly not been peaceful: between the rapid onset of a contagious virus, hyperactive media coverage, and a lack of decisive action by multiple developed countries, paranoia has set it. And in paranoia, human beings have not been rational actors. Not a day goes by when you don't hear of people defying quarantine, or of hoarders stocking for the next decade, disrupting the finely tuned supply-chains. It makes you realize what a thin veneer of order human beings superficially present, and how quickly this can be subverted

In then end, I am eternally grateful for the people who keep civilization functioning: the medical personnel taking care of the sick and researchers finding the next cure, the expansive supply chain supplying essential goods, transit workers, safety services, and utility providers without whom nations would grind to a halt.

During these pressing times, what gives me solace are the little signs of upcoming spring: a poppy flower opening up its colorful petals, a budding field of color heralding warmer weather, bountiful waterfalls under fleeting light, and alpine meadows renewing under the growing warmth of the sun. I hope that by the time spring rolls around, things will become more peaceful again. And in the meantime, I am going to be hunkered down at home, admiring memories of these little signs of solace.

CA USA

Wildflower Season

The longer days of warm sunlight and the rising temperatures of spring leads to the remarkable transformation that is the vast California wildflower display. Tiny seeds in the rolling hills, meadows and open grasslands all over the golden state await for the right conditions before sprouting with early spring shoots and young buds that lead to colorful displays of wildflowers every year like clockwork. Colors range the specturm, from the vibrant orange state flower (the California Poppy) to the bright yellow of the Coreopses and the blues of the Gilias and baby blue eyes.

I long for the days when I would go hunting for wildflowers during its month-long migration northward, and where I would sense joy in seeing nature come alive in a grand spectacle for the birds and insects that pollinate the tiny plants. Here is one such memory from the Antelope Valley Poppy preserve from a bloom a couple of years ago

And if you want to ensure that future generations get to see this amazing spectacle, please give these hardy plants a little space and lots of care when you go to admire them.

Antelope Valley Poppy Preserve

CA USA

Spring Greens

The golden hills of California stay golden for a reason - the lack of rains through summer and fall. So when the rains do appear, the golden hills of California turn green, the barren oak trees sport new leaves, and colorful wildflowers sprout across the state. And as a nature photographer, hunting around for such idyllic Californian landscapes was an endeavor I looked forward to every spring.

I found this beautiful scene while on one such trip out to the Table Mountain Ecological Reserve near the town of Oroville. Here is to hoping that this year is just as colorful.

North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve

CA USA

A Sea of Flowers

The surface ebbed and flowed. A million particles of light and color glimmered with every gust of wind. Patterns of blue, pink, purple, yellow, and green lay awash on that rolling landscape, like the broad brushstrokes of a mighty painter with a colorful palette. That was the sea of flowers blooming on top of Table Mountain in Oroville a couple of springs ago.

Zooming in on the details, I spotted tiny poppies poking through a mass of Sierra primroses, while an amalgam of poppies, goldfields, blue dicks and lupines formed a colorful background. Rivers of purple lupine wound their way alongside lush creeks while masses of bright orange poppies stood guard along rocky ledges.

It is the opportunity to witness this diversity of colorful life that often motivates me to seek out amazing landscapes and thriving nature-scapes to shoot next. Table Mountain in Oroville, is just one of those multitudes of places on this vibrant planet.

Table Mountain Ecological Reserve
CA USA

Spring Blossoms in California

As the winter turns to spring in California, the biggest signs of change would be the vast fields of wildflowers that would start to dominate the untouched wild-lands of the state. And with the bountiful rains this year, the wildflower spectacle is promising to be a good one.

One such location which I had thoroughly enjoyed visiting a few years ago was Knights ferry in the Sierra Nevada foothills, which was witnessing a California poppy explosion. Grassy, black oak lined slopes were carpeted by the blindingly bright bloom of the yellow poppies. Interspersed in between the mats of yellow were the ubiquitous bush lupine and the occasional blue dicks. But the overwhelming number of blooming poppies that had spread out across the entire river valley, made this vibrant display visible from a mile away.

Knights Ferry State Recreation Area
CA USA