CLIPBOARD : WHERE TO SEE SPRING WILDFLOWERS
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The five-year drought had threatened this year’s spring wildflower season, but recent rains have improved the situation significantly.
“Plants just greened up around here,” after the recent rains, Oak Canyon Nature Center naturalist Conrad Burton said.
Local parks and nature facilities report that plants that would usually begin to bloom in March will be flowering later than usual, with profusions of color expected by mid-April. Because of this, the spring wildflower season will stretch into at least early June.
The following lists the best locations in the county to see spring wildflowers and what is currently blooming or expected to bloom in the coming weeks.
1. ENVIRONMENTAL NATURE CENTER
1601 16th St., Newport Beach
(714) 645-8489
Flowers: California poppy, blue-eyed grass, California lilac, lemonadeberry and various penstemons and snapdragons
2. CRYSTAL COVE STATE PARK
8471 Coast Highway, Laguna Beach
(714) 494-3539
Flowers: Prickly-pear, sea dahlia and various mustards
3. CARBON CANYON REGIONAL PARK
4422 Carbon Canyon Road, Brea
(714) 996-5252
Flowers: Various mustards and lupines
4. SANTIAGO OAKS REGIONAL PARK
2145 N. Windes Drive, Orange
(714) 538-4400
Flowers: California poppy, elderberry, California buckwheat, Indian paintbrush, Johnny-jump-up, owl’s clover and various gooseberries and lupines
5. OAK CANYON NATURE CENTER
6700 E. Walnut Canyon Road, Anaheim
(714) 998-8380
Flowers: California lilac, bush monkey flower, miner’s lettuce, wishbone bush, fuchsia-flowered gooseberry, California peony, harvest brodiaea and various currants
6. IRVINE REGIONAL PARK
21501 Chapman Ave., Orange
(714) 633-8074
Flowers: Matilija poppy, California poppy, fiddleneck, wild cucumber, California everlasting, wild rose and various lupines, nightshades, sunflowers, currants and gooseberries
7. TUCKER WILDLIFE SANCTUARY
29322 Modjeska Canyon Road
Modjeska Canyon
(714) 649-2760
Flowers: Lemonadeberry, sugar bush, wild cucumber, California lilac and various gooseberries, currants and sages
8. O’NEILL REGIONAL PARK
30892 Trabuco Canyon Road
Trabuco Canyon
(714) 858-9365
Flowers: Prickly phlox, wild hyacinth, popcorn flower, Indian paintbrush, bush monkey flower, California poppy, Padres’ shooting star and California bell
9. RONALD W. CASPERS WILDERNESS PARK
33401 Ortega Highway
San Juan Capistrano
(714) 831-2175
Flowers: Blue-eyed grass, popcorn flower, fiddleneck, miner’s lettuce, California poppy and Indian paintbrush
Source: Individual parks
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