Best Spots in Joshua Tree for Early Season Wildflowers

Joshua Tree National Park

“What? Wildflowers now? I just went rock climbing in Joshua Tree this weekend. I didn’t see any wildflowers!”

If you’re looking in the iconic, big boulder, Dr. Seuss Joshua Tree part of the park, you’re right. It’s higher in elevation and won’t really get going until April.

Joshua Tree National Park
Desert Lupine

To find flowers when it’s winter in the rest of the country, you’ll have to go south, south of the Mojave, to the Colorado Desert.

Enter the park by the southern Cottonwood entrance, just north of I-10.  You’ll start seeing flowers right away. One of the best wildflower walks in the park is the Bajada Trail, at just over a quarter of a mile, this very short legstretcher is easy for anyone and is smack dab in the middle of the best wildflower fields in the park.

Joshua Tree National Park
Chuparosa

Actually, any place you can park from the park entrance to the Cottonwood VC is a good place to start checking out what’s blooming. There’s a great little wash across the road from the Bajada trail that offers awesome displays of belly flowers if you’re into macro.

This area is the best place to see Bladderpod and Chuparosa, two of the showiest bushes in the park. Desert Dandelions, Desert Gold Poppies, Desert Lupine and Chia put on some prolific displays here, too.

Desert Tortoise, Joshua Tree National Park
Watch out for the Desert Tortoise!

Please drive slowly. Desert Tortoise are also out and about looking for wildflowers, and it takes them a long time to cross the road. Don’t touch the tortoise or try to pick them up to help them. They can contract deadly diseases from human hands, and lose all their water if you scare the piss out of them.

Joshua Tree National Park
Canterbury Bells

North of Cottonwood VC, check out the washes for the next 15 miles or so, up to and including Porcupine Wash.  My favorite is hiking downstream in Smoke Tree Wash. The Smoke Trees won’t be blooming yet, but they have great form and are beautiful bonsai-looking kind of trees. These washes are a great place to find what I think is the prettiest flower in the park, Canterbury Bells. Look for bountiful bouquets of Cryptantha and Brown-Eyed Evening Primrose. I’ve also found Spanish Needles blooming here in the early season.

Joshua Tree National Park
Spanish Needles

If you’re into four-wheeling or mountain biking, try the Pinkham Canyon Road or Old Dale Road, both excellent wildflower trails.

Just outside the entrance to the park, a dirt road runs west parallel to the highway. This road leads to the Berdoo Canyon Road, where there is a BLM shooting range. There are probably good wildflowers along here if you don’t care about the highway noise at first and then lots of guns later. It’s also a free place to camp, although I prefer to get a little farther away from the highway by going south from I-10 down the Mecca Road.

Mecca Hills
Mecca Road

Outside the park, the Mecca Road has great camping and sublime wildflowers.  Backcountry four-wheel drive roads accessing the Mecca Hills Wilderness, lead off of it. It’s an amazing land to hike and explore.

While you’re near the south entrance, be sure to check out the Desert Lily Sanctuary near Desert Center for more wonderful wildflower sightings.

Anza Borrego State Park
Ajo Lily

Happy flower hunting!

Watch Out for Tortoises!

Arroyo Lupine (Lupinus sparsiflorus) & Desert Gold Poppies (Eshscholzia glyptosperma)

We’re not the only ones excited about the  bloom. One denizen of the desert, the Desert Tortoise, is especially delighted with springtime. That’s because they EAT flowers! Check out the “milk mustache” of green that this dude is sporting!
Right now they are on the move, looking for the next delectable dinner, maybe even looking for love!
Which leads me to my cautionary tale of the week – please be aware of the desert tortoise! He’s pretty slow sometimes (ever hear of the tortoise and the hare?), but he won’t win his race if you run him over!  Watch out for this guy if you’re out there in southern California checking out the flowers. They are out and about, and easy to run over if you’re driving fast and not paying close attention.

Lots of good tortoise munchies in this meadow!

We found this tortoise trying to cross the road in southern Joshua Tree, and barely had time to divert a speeding truck bearing down on him. We decided we needed to help him cross the busy road or he would have next to no chance of survival.

Desert Tortoise on a busy road

This was not a decision we made lightly, because contact with humans is often fatal to tortoises, even if they are not being flattened by a speeding truck. If you see a desert tortoise, do not pick him up. If you absolutely have to, to save his life, do not use your bare hands. People carry germs that are transmitted to tortoises. They may get sick and die. We used a newspaper to pick him up so that our hands did not contact his shell.
Being handled by humans can literally scare the piss out of them. This is also deadly, as they need the water in their bladder to survive until the next rainstorm. We kept him low to the ground when we moved him so that we wouldn’t frighten him TOO badly. It seemed to work. He held his water. Whew!

Wildflower update
Joshua Tree (Yucca brevifolia)
Chia (Salvia columbariae)

Here’s a flower update for Joshua Tree National Park. The Joshua Trees are blooming!
So are yucca, but the real show is happening in the Lower Colorado Desert section of the park, especially south of the Cottonwood Visitor Center.

Canterbury Bells (Phacelia campanularia)
Bladderpod Bush (Isomeris arborea)
Canterbury Bells (Phacelia campanularia) & Cryptantha (Cryptantha augustifolia)

 

 

 

 

 

 

This area is at its peak now. I’m especially impressed by the Canterbury Bells. In my opinion they are the most beautiful flowers in the park.

The meadows are awash with a rainbow of color. The indigo shades of Canterbury Bells and Chia complement the golden hues of Bladderpod and Desert Gold Poppies.

Taller flowers float over a groundcover of creamy Brown-eyed Evening Primroses and white Cryptantha, accented by lighter purple lupines and phacelia.

 

Bigelow Monkeyflower (Mimulus bigelovii) and Desert Gold Poppy (Eshscholzia glyptosperma)

Get out and walk around. You’ll see even more diversity. You may even find a splash of the brightest pink, the exquisite blooms of Bigelow Monkeyflowers.

The Lower Colorado Desert is peaking right now. Get out soon or you’ll miss it! Stay tuned to this blog for an update on the phenomenal flowers in Anza Borrego State Park, coming soon!

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