Showing posts with label native plant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label native plant. Show all posts

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Baylands in Bloom (Wildflowers, Palo Alto Baylands, CA, Silicon Valley)

I used to call you a Compositae
As I thought I was more sophisticated you became Asteraceae
You're a Daisy
Such a Big Family You Come From
Do You Know That, Little Darling?

~ ~ ~
Resources

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Hiking Windy Hill - California Buckye In Bloom


California Buckeye is in business on Windy Hill * serving up fragrant blooms to hikers, native bees and butterflies, like the Pale Swallowtail butterfly. This shrubby tree, found over much of the Western United States, is a great wilderness plant counted on by many natives. Before European contact, it was also a food source for native peoples, following an extensive toxic leaching process.

It's not a good neighbor in the  suburbs, however,  since there it may come into contact with non-native bees. That's because it's pollen, though extremely appealing to the European immigrant bees, is toxic to them.

So . . . we love it, but we don't plant it.
*Windy Hill is close to - Silicon Valley, Within the San Francisco Bay Area , is  nearby the 280 freeway
On my Flower-Lovin' Hiker's Bookshelf
              

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

New Bloom for a New Year: Dirca Occidentalis (Hiking Edgewood)

Please Click on the Illustration Above
For More Beautiful Detail
I always like to start out the year as I mean to proceed through it.

What better way than an afternoon's Bloomin' Hike at Edgewood Nature Preserve?

Can you believe the Leatherwood is already in bloom?

A good omen for 2013, if ever I saw one.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Friends of Fennel


Please click on the illustration above
to fully enjoy this postcard

I always feel a little guilty when I enjoy this invasive survivor. Fennel is certainly no friend to boosters of the California Native Plant Society, but it's still a gorgeous invader in the scruffier parts of town.