Apr 132018
 


NEW
– Cow parsnip with its large white umbel is blooming in meadows and oak woodlands.
– Cowbag clover is a tiny purple bloom in the meadow grasses.
– Fringe cups has lovely lobed foliage with its fringed flowers on a tall stalk.
– Herb robert, native of the United Kingdom, is blooming purple with a golden center is blooming along trails and in disturbed areas.
– Owl clover is a purple tuft in meadows.
– Redwood sorrel is blooming near the redwood in the sliver of Land Trust between 435 and 441 Laverne.
– Striped coral root, an orchid, is larger than the more common Spotted coral root that is found throughout Homestead.
– Wood rose blooms bright on rangy rose bushes in the forests.

Forests
Starting
– California nutmeg’s male cones are blooming white.
– Spotted coralroot with its red stalk and many orchid-shaped flowers is coming up in forests.
Peaking
– Forget-me-nots, native to Europe, is one of our most successful invaders. Easy to pull, easiest to identify when it’s flowering, so pull it then.
– Fairy bells cream flowers hang below the leaves of this woodland plant.
– False lily of the valley is coming up all over and brightening the forest floor with its white star flower.
– Feathery false lily of the valley has a long stalk with big puff flowers that smell sweet.
– Giant trillium with blooms in cream or pink is blooming in forests
– Indian warrior is a ruby carpet at 15 right along the Homestead Trail – that we finished clearing a few months ago.
– Manroot, a native vine with large maple-shaped leaves is blooming white as it climbs.
– Milkmaids, a pretty white flower with arugula-tasting leaves is blooming in forests.
– Miner’s lettuce one of our most popular edibles, has a small white flower. Claytonia had a false start with the early season rains but is coming on well now that they are picking up.
– Pacific bleeding heart is blooming under the redwood trees in the sliver of Land Trust between 435 and 441 Laverne.
– Pacific pea with pink and white flowers is blooming in forests
– Pacific sanicle with its showy bright foliage has mustard flower clusters.
– Star flower has dainty pink flowers and blooms in forests among the carpets of False lily of the valley.
– Thimbleberry, a shrub with soft maple-shaped leaves blooms in forests with a flat white flower.
– White flowered onion*, edible and native to the Mediterranean, is blooming in wet spots with its white cone flowers. Pull it up by the roots if you can.
– Wood sweet-cicely’s small white flowers fade to form long edible seed pods.
Fading
– California huckleberry with its small white lantern flowers is blooming in forests.

Forest edges
Starting
– Crimson columbine is blooming at the edge of the forest below 11.
– Purple sanicle and its magenta puff flowers blooms in forests along the Homestead Trail
– Sourgrass*, native to South Africa, is blooming up on the ridge. Although fun to chew on for kids, this plant is a very successful non-native spreading in wet locations where natives might otherwise grow.
– Sticky monkeyflower is blooming orange on bushes in meadows. It will bloom throughout the summer heat when its dark leaves will become sticky.
– Woodland strawberry blooms are starting now where there is sun, will persist for months in different habitats as they warm.
Peaking
– California blackberry is blooming with paper-white flowers, on a thinner, trailing vine than Himalayan blackberry.
– Douglas iris with blooms from pale cream to rich purple is blooming in the forests
Fading
– Barberry, hollylike leaves and clusters of fragrant, yellow flowers.
– Spring gold is blooming yellow on the Ridgewood Rock and in ridge meadows.

Meadows
Starting
– American vetch is blooming purple in the meadow grasses up on the ridge.
– Blue dicks is starting to bloom on Coyote Rock and along the Homestead Fire Road above the Waterview trailhead.
– Blue eyed grass, in the iris family, blooms purple with a yellow center
– California buttercup is starting to bloom bright yellow in meadows.
– California goldfields is just starting to bloom. When it’s peaking, carpets of bright yellow will cover the ground
– California plantain almost too small to see but getting very close is rewarded with the many translucent disks of its flower
– California poppy, one of the longest bloomers, is bright orange in meadows up on the ridge.
– Callery pear, native to China, has beautiful white dogwood-like flowers. The fruit, however, is inedible making me wonder if the original farmer who planted it knew it was just for show.
– Checkerbloom’s bright pink is starting to bloom on the ridges of Homestead Hill.
– Chickweed, native to Europe, medicinal and edible is blooming with its white star flower.
– Common vetch, native to the Mediterranean, has bright purple flowers on a pea vine.
– Filaree*, native to the Mediterranean, has small purple flowers and blooms in disturbed areas like trails
– French broom, native to the Mediterranean, is one of our most aggressive invaders and also one of the easiest to pull.
– Ground iris is blooming purple in meadows.
– Hill lotus is blooming in the meadow beside the trail near the Black elderberry.
– Oakland star tulip one of our rare plants, has a small delicate cup flower well worth scrutinizing in meadows.
– Red elderberry is blooming with cones of white blooms near the spring on the trail toward Amaranth from 4-Corners.
– Scotch broom, native to Western Europe, one of the most aggressive invaders of our meadows is blooming with its yellow pea flowers. Pull it before it goes to seed if you can.
– Short podded mustard, native to the Mediterranean, has small clusters of yellow flowers on long stalks. In the mustard family, the flowers are delicious.
– Silver lupine is blooming purple in bushes up on the ridge.
– Sky lupine, bright blue with white accents, is blooming on the ridge.
– Suncups on the ground with yellow flowers is starting down near 13 but will be on the ridge and in meadows soon.
– Winter cress with bright yellow flowers and waxy leaves is blooming up on the ridge
– Woolly lomatium’s cream colored discs are blooming above Homestead Fire Road near Panoramic.
Peaking
– Field madder, native to the Mediterranean, is one of the very small flowers in the grass of meadows.
– Shepherd’s needle, native to Eurasia, is blooming white with parsley foliage in meadows.
– Woodland star’s bright white stars are blooming in the seep on the edge of the Ridgewood Rock.
Fading
– Checker lily, brown lily-bell flower with leopard print cup. Look for it at the forest edge or sheltered in meadows.

Key to map:
I haven’t located plants on on the map if they are very prolific. Find them by their habitat.
HVLT Trail Map 022315 v28w

Gallery of wildflowers and plants found in Homestead.

*Non-native

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