Wildflower Fields, Carrizo Plain

Wildflower Fields, Carrizo Plain
Yellow and purple wildflowers from plain to hills, Carrizo Hills National Monument

Wildflower Fields, Carrizo Plain. © Copyright 2019 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Yellow and purple wildflowers from plain to hills, Carrizo Hills National Monument.

This is a straight up “look at all the flowers!” photograph, made just before the seasonal peak of the bloom in the Carrizo Plain. Something like this happens in many places in California that seem almost desert-like during most of the year. Once winter rains start (and if it isn’t a drought year…) there is sudden appearance of new plant life in the middle of winter, and these dry places start to turn green. The process continues until some point in March, during what I like to call the “impossibly green season,” when whole hillsides become greener than you might imagine. Then there is a brief period in late March and into April, before the grasses again go dormant, when wildflowers may appear in abundance.

If you visited this location during most of the year you would likely describe it as a very dry and hot place, and you might even be tempted to regard it as desert. But when I visited this year and extensive spring bloom was just getting underway. I photographed from just about the lowest point in a wide valley, at the edge of a dense field of yellow flowers. Beyond, the yellow flowers transitioned to equally dense fields of purple flowers. Then the yellow resumed and extend right on up the slopes of the distant mountains.


G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.

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