Current:Home > ContactSuper bloom 2024? California wildflower blooms are shaping up to be spectacular. -Elevate Capital Network
Super bloom 2024? California wildflower blooms are shaping up to be spectacular.
View
Date:2025-04-17 02:59:24
The West has seen months of torrential rains, flooding and mudslides. Now the rainbow comes: red, blue, purple and golden flowers covering mile upon mile of wildland with colors so vivid that they could be seen from space last year.
The show is expected to draw crowds as the floral kaleidoscope sweeps up from South to North with the coming spring.
Wildflower blooms are usually especially stunning after a wet winter in the frequently dry West. Because last year was also a rainy year, this year's bloom could be even more spectacular — what's colloquially often called a "superbloom."
“Things are pointing to a good bloom year,” said Dan McCamish, natural resources manager with the Colorado Desert District of the California State Parks.
While it’s impossible to say 100% that there will be a big year for the desert to flower, the chances are high, said McCamish.
He’s been compiling rainfall totals over the last 11 years. So far three of those have had extremely above-average precipitation – 2016/2017, 2019/2020 and 2023/2024.
“In the previous two years where we have been so high above our rain average total, we have had an outstanding bloom, where we have seen those carpets of flowers,” he said.
Some areas of the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park have already begun to boom. The park has created an interactive map for visitors.
“We're just starting the kick-off of the winter annual flower season and I expect it will run to the beginning of April,” he said.
Blooming wildflowers could include lupine, coreopsis, desert sunflowers, evening or brown-eyed primroses, desert bells, desert poppies and desert lilies, according to the California State Parks.
The phenomenon occurs across the West, in Arizona, New Mexico, and up and down California. But the largest areas tend to be in the southern part of the state, in places like Death Valley, the Carrizo Plain and Antelope Valley. (In Death Valley, the National Park Service said last month they were expecting a good bloom, but not quite a "superbloom.")
Not every area will bloom — it depends on how much rain it got in the last year.
Areas where superblooms occur are often dry areas where plant species are primed to take advantage of wet conditions where the land suddenly become lush and fertile. If things stay dry, their seeds remain dormant, opting out of germinating. But when a wet year comes and then the soil warms, they burst forth in a dazzling display, growing blooming, spreading their seeds in an explosion of life before quickly dying when the hot, dry summer makes the soil inhospitable again.
The blooms typically begin in mid-March and run into May and sometimes June. To find the best viewing areas, the California Department of Parks and Recreation has a page online that covers what's blooming and where.
Don't doom the bloom
To protect the fragile lands where the flowering take place, it's important to stay on designated trails, avoid trampling the plants and only take pictures – picking the flowers is not only prohibited but means they can’t set seed to bloom again.
"We say, 'Don't Doom the Bloom,'" McCamish said. “These are very fragile flowers and ecosystems."
Too often when visitors visit an area of especially strong bloom, they crowd the roadways, sometimes stopping and leaving their cars to take photos, walking into fields and crushing the very thing they’ve come to see.
At times officials have had to close off hiking trails and areas of especially strong bloom because the crowds were doing so much damage to delicate wildland areas. They've even handed out fines and threatened those harming areas with arrest.
Even when they're open, park officials caution that many areas where the blooms are happening are remote. Cell coverage can be spotty or non-existent and GPS may not work. When it does, it might be on dirt roads that require 4-wheel drive vehicles.
It’s imperative that visitors help protect the plants so they can live to make more flowers in the future, said McCamish.
“These are very fragile flowers and ecosystems,” he said. “Be mindful of where you step, try to avoid stepping on the plants and the flowers.”
veryGood! (34)
Related
- Man charged with murder in death of beloved Detroit-area neurosurgeon
- Tax season can be terrifying. Here's everything to know before filing your taxes in 2024.
- Widower of metro Phoenix’s ex-top prosecutor suspected of killing 2 women before taking his own life
- Kamar de los Reyes, One Life to Live actor, dies at 56
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Subscription-based health care can deliver medications to your door — but its rise concerns some experts
- Teenager Najiah Knight wants to be the first woman at bull riding’s top level. It’s an uphill dream
- Argentina’s new president lays off 5,000 government employees hired in 2023, before he took office
- Kehlani Responds to Hurtful Accusation She’s in a Cult
- Purdue still No. 1, while Florida Atlantic rises in USA TODAY Sports men's basketball poll
Ranking
- Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
- Almcoin Trading Exchange: The Debate Over Whether Cryptocurrency is a Commodity or a Security?
- 2 teen girls stabbed at NYC's Grand Central terminal in Christmas Day attack, suspect arrested
- 2023 in Climate News
- What polling shows about Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris’ new running mate
- Here's What You Should Spend Your Sephora Gift Card On
- Beyoncé’s Childhood Home Catches Fire on Christmas
- Buffalo Bills playoff clinching scenarios for NFL Week 17: It's simple. Win and get in.
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
She died weeks after fleeing the Maui wildfire. Her family fought to have her listed as a victim.
Vikings TE T.J. Hockenson out for season after injury to ACL, MCL
German police say they are holding a man in connection with a threat to Cologne Cathedral
Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
Man trapped for 6 days in wrecked truck in Indiana rescued after being spotted by passersby
Mahomes, Purdy, Prescott: Who are the best QBs of the season? Ranking the top 10 before Week 17
Drone fired from Iran strikes tanker off India's coast, Pentagon says