Jan 212022
 


NEW
– California blackberry (Rubus ursinus) is blooming white climbing over brush on Homestead Hill.
– Douglas Iris (Iris douglasiana) is blooming white below Amaranth. The only one seen so far, this is months earlier than last year.
– Dwarf checkerbloom (Sidalcea malviflora ssp. malviflora) is blooming pink with its first blooms of the season on Homestead Hill.
– Footsteps of spring (Sanicula arctopoides) is marching with chartreuse steps across Homestead Hill.
– Fremont’s deathcamas (Toxicoscordion fremontii) is blooming in meadows with tall white clusters.
– Ground Iris (Iris macrosiphon) is blooming deep purple on Homestead Hill.
– Milkmaids (Cardamine californica) is blooming white in forests.
– Miner’s lettuce (Claytonia perfoliata) is blooming with small white flowers over fleshy disks in wet places.
– Sky lupin (Lupinus nanus) is blooming blue near the ground on Homestead Hill.
– Spring gold (Lomatium utriculatum) is blooming with ground hugging yellow clusters on the Ridgewood Rock.
– Woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca) is blooming white on Homestead Hill.
– Woolly lomatium (Lomatium dasycarpum) is blooming with ground hugging frothy cream clusters on Homestead Hill.

Forests
– Bay laurel (Umbellularia californica), one of the most common native tree in our forests is blooming with white, vanilla-scented flower clusters.
-Indian warrior (Pedicularis densiflora) blooms in large colonies making it one of the most showy flowers in Homestead. A hillside of it is blooming now with burgundy plumes at the unmarked junction 15 on the Homestead Trail.
– Manroot (Marah fabaceus), a wild cucumber is blooming white on fresh green vines in forests.
– Wood sweet-cicely (Osmorhiza berteroi) is blooming in forests with small white flowers.

Forest Edge
– Greene’s saxifrage (Micranthes californica) is only known to bloom in one location in Homestead, on the Ridgewood Rock. Its small white flowers are blooming there now.
– Fairy bells (Prosartes hookeri) is hard to spot as its bell flower hangs below the leaves of this small forest plant seen blooming near 11a.
– Fetid adder’s tongue (Scoliopus bigelovii) with its small chocolate flowers surrounded by bright green mottled leaves is blooming along the Homestead Trail from right near the 5 junction to above the 16 junction.
– Pacific hound’s tongue’s (Cynoglossum grande) foliage is emerging all over the forest edge meadow habitat on north facing slopes.
– Woodland star (Lithophragma affine), another where the Ridgewood Rock is the only location where it blooms in Homestead, is blooming white there now. I have never seen this flower bloom here before March, last year and the year before in April.

Gallery of wildflowers and plants found in Homestead.

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