Friday Flower Blogging
Nov. 24th, 2006 06:32 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Orange wildflower Growing in a dry wash near the Rillito, Tucson, November 2006 |
I went for a walk by the dry river this afternoon, hoping for a bit of desert broom. What I'd forgotten, until I noticed the mud caked and cracked like crazy paving on the bank of the little tributary wash, was that the river had its once-in-a-decade floods last summer. Then a splash of orange caught my eye, and I scrambled down to investigate. I ended up spending more than an hour wandering back and forth, clambering down banks and slogging through the sandy riverbed to get at
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There are more pictures on Flickr, here.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-11-25 07:30 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-11-25 07:52 am (UTC)Solanaceae and Convolvulaceae are, in fact, related -- notice I had the family name wrong for the morning glories. Anyway,convolvulaceae are in convolvulales, and solanaceae are in solanales, and they're both in solananae, which makes them somewhat related. What tipped me off is the furled flower.
Lost in all this obsessive categorizing, I failed to ask: is early winter the usual time for flowering? And you get the rain in what, late summer? Because that would mean that the time relationship between rain and flowering is about the same for your place and mine (I mean, a few months: clearly the day length relationship would be the opposite). But I don't think it is in the Mohave and Death Valley.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-11-25 04:33 pm (UTC)This year was unusual; we got almost no rain at all last winter, so very few wildflowers, but the summer monsoon rains were strong and early. There was one weekend when we had several inches in a few days, sometime in July, and the river was right up to its banks, probably over them in places.