Spring!

Spring in Alaska

What does spring mean to me? That’s the question posed by Sofia of Photographias in this week’s Lens-Artists Photography Challenge. For me, spring equals two things:  road tripping and wildflowers.

Anza Borrego State Park
Ajo Lilies in Anza Borrego State Park

This way of celebrating spring started for me when I used to work winters as a ranger in Death Valley National Park. There, I fell in love with the desert spring bloom. You would not think a land that averaged less than 2 inches of rain a year would have many wildflowers. Surprisingly though, in more years than not, it does.  Due to the great diversity of landscapes and elevations, even in a dry year you can find some wildflowers somewhere.

Death Valley Wildflowers
Wildflowers in Death Valley’s Saline Valley

It can be one of the most astounding natural events you’ll ever witness in a good year. During a Superbloom, the flowers start in January and just keep coming. Dry, rocky, barren land is suddenly completely carpeted with color. The variety is phenomenal. They are so thick on the ground that you can hardly take a step without crushing a half dozen blooms. Once I saw a real superbloom, I never wanted to miss another.

Spring wildflowers Joshua Tree National Park
Superbloom in Joshua Tree

So I started following the bloom. I would spend a lot of time in February and March traveling between my two favorite desert wildflower spots, Death Valley and Anza-Borrego State Park, and spending a few days at Joshua Tree National Park along the way.

Spring wildflowers Carrizo Plain National Monument
The wildflowers should be amazing in Carrizo Plain by mid-April.

Slowly starting my trip back home to Alaska in early April, I would try to visit Carrizo Plain National Monument. In a good year, this is the best place ever to see wildflowers. Despite the hype that is out there, this year is not a superbloom year. For that, you need a good soaker storm in the fall to get the seeds going. California did not receive all that rain until January. Carrizo Plain is starting to get some color but no big displays yet.  I think it could be fantastic in a couple more weeks, though, as more and more flowers germinated in January bloom.

Sierra Nevada spring wildflowers
Wildflowers could be incredible in the Sierra Nevada foothills, too.

Traveling north, I edge along the western foothills of the Sierra and make a fly-by visit to Yosemite’s waterfalls, another spring phenomenon.  I think the Sierra foothills are where the real superbloom will happen this spring.

Redwoods National Park
Redwood Sorrel

I would continue north through the Redwood Sorrel and Trilliums of northern California to my last big spring wildflower extravaganza, in the Siskiyou Mountains of southern Oregon. Since there were very few wildflowers blooming further north, I would beeline home from there, going back into winter along the way.

Spring wildflowers Siskiyou Mountains
Arrowleaf Balsamroot in the Siskiyou Mountains

This year is a little different. I have spent the entire winter in one spot, northern Washington’s Orcas Island. I’ve kept my carbon footprint low, only using two tanks of gas through the entire winter.

Red Warrior
Red Warrior

But that’s about to change. Although there are domestic flowers beginning to bloom here now –  crocuses, hellebore, fruit trees – there are no wildflowers. As I said last week, domestic flowers don’t thrill me. I need a wildflower fix before I head back into winter.

Fawn Lily
Fawn Lily

So starting April 2, I’m road tripping down to the closest place where I can see good wildflowers, the Siskiyous in southern Oregon. I’m in love with the trees of that region also, so I am really looking forward to it. I’ll visit a few friends and a few beaches along the way down, too.

Spring wildflowers
Shooting Stars

When I start heading home from there, I may detour into the southern Cascades for a day or two in search of mossy waterfalls to photograph. It all depends on how far spring has progressed by then.

Spring waterfall
I’ll be looking for waterfalls, too.

As I move north of the border, it’s time to start looking for spring wildlife instead of spring flowers. If I take the AlCan Highway, I may be rewarded by sightings of Woodland Caribou and the rare Stone Sheep. I will certainly see Wood Bison on that route. If I take the Cassiar, I will probably catch a glimpse of a bear or two.

Stone Sheep in Muncho Lake Provincial Park
Stone Sheep

By the time I reach the Yukon, I will have traveled back into winter. Well, it will look a bit like winter anyhow. Actually, it will be that in-between season, known in the Northland as Breakup.

Kluane National Park
It’s still winter in the Yukon in April.

Breakup is a rough time to try to travel off the paved roads. The snow is soft and soggy and will collapse and suck you in.  It’s slick and icy in the morning from all the melted water. Wherever it’s not snowy, it’s muddy. The rivers, no longer frozen, are running full, and full of ice. Springtime in Alaska.

Kluane Lake
But there are signs of Breakup.

There’s a third thing spring means to me. Home. It won’t be long before I’m home, back in McCarthy, trying to figure out how to negotiate the lake in my ATV trail and the downed trees on my walking path. But that’s another story for another time. Right now it’s spring!

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
Home Sweet Home!

Seeing Double – Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #69

Bandon, Oregon

For this week’s Lens-Artists Challenge, Tina asks us to focus on things that come in twos. My first inclination is to share some of my wildlife images that double the fun.

Kluane National Park, Canada
Dall Sheep on the Al-Can Highway
Piedras Blancas NWR
Elephant Seal Cows
Death Valley National Park
Burros nuzzling each other near Rhyolite, NV
Yellowstone National Park
Bison in Yellowstone
Rocky Mountain National Park
Elk in Rocky Mountain National Park

But I can’t resist adding a few desert wildflowers – because you know me, that’s what I do…

Death Valley National Park
Notch-Leaf Phacelia
Death Valley National Park
Desert Five-Spot
Joshua Tree National Park
Canterbury Bells
Joshua Tree National Park
Sand Blazing Star

I’d like to open and close this little exercise with seeing double in the landscape. No. I’m not talking about reflections – that’s a whole ‘nother post. I hope you enjoy seeing double!

Wrangell St. Elias National Park
Twin crags in the Crystalline Hills tower over the McCarthy Road, Alaska

Lens-Artists Photo Challenge: #26 A Photographic Review of 2018

Sunset at Pt. Arena lighthouse, California

This week’s photo challenge, brought to us by Ann-Christine, is to do a photographic review of 2018. As I looked over the files from all of my travels this year, I found it really hard to just pick a few favorites. I’ve done a lot of traveling this year! How do I narrow it down?

So many sunsets, like the feature photo of the lighthouse at Pt. Arena on the Mendocino Coast. I had a lot of red rock adventures, revisiting old favorites like Arches and Zion National Parks, and discovering new amazing places, Like Gold Butte and Vermillion Cliffs National Monuments.

Arches National Park, Utah
Alpenglow on Skyline Arch

Then there’s water. Incredible waterfalls and beautiful seascapes were hallmarks of my travels. The falls in Yosemite were peaking after a week of flooding rains when I passed through in the spring. Autumn found me deep in the rain forests of Olympic National Park. Great waterfalls there, too. Nothing like a waterfall to bring you serenity and inner peace.

Yosemite National Park, California
Waterfall in Yosemite

As I looked through my photos, though, I was struck by just how many of my favorite images were foliage. Trees were big for me this past year, both literally and figuratively. I got to know the redwoods a little better when I spent the month of February in Mendocino County, California.

Redwoods are TALL!
Redwood tree on the Avenue of the Giants

Springtime flower hunting introduced me to a new favorite, the Redbud trees of the Sierra foothills. I couldn’t get enough of these beautiful flowering trees and I was amazed that I’d never seen them before. The area where this image was taken burned in the fires over the summer. I’m thankful I got to see them before they were destroyed.

Merced River Canyon forest, California
Brilliant pink Redbud blossoms along the Merced River.

I spent my summer back home in beautiful wonderful Alaska. My summer image is not a tree, but a flower. I found these unusual albino fireweed blossoms in the middle of downtown Valdez, Alaska.

White Fireweed?
Albino Fireweed

Fall found me back in the big trees, the old-growth forests of Olympic National Park. Although I loved, and was awed by, these giants it wasn’t the size of the trees that captured my camera and my soul this time as much as it was the fertility  of the rain forest- the thick moss covering and hanging from every inch of bark, especially on the Bigleaf Maple trees

Bigleaf Maple in Olympic National Forest, Washington
Late afternoon sun backlights a maple tree in Olympic National Forest

For me, 2018 was a wonderful year. I’m hoping 2019 will prove to be yet another year full of wonder, with plenty of opportunities to be immersed in the natural beauty of our Mother the Earth. I’ll leave you with one more favorite. Happy New Year!

San Simeon Beach
California Coastal National Monument

Splash!

Colorado River near Moab, Utah

Patti’s Lens-Artists Challenge for us this week is Splash! – the magic of water.

Powerful magic indeed. Water – creator, destroyer. The most powerful force in our universe.

Waterfall, Yosemite National Park
The awe-inspiring power of water

Water and time, joining forces, create the landscape we see before us.

Glacial ice carving mountains.

Matanuska Glacier, Alaska
The Matanuska Glacier carves a course through the Chugach Mountains of Alaska.

Rivers cutting canyons…

The crystalline blue waters of the Smith River in Northern California cut a canyon through volcanic rock.
Smith River, California

Waves sculpt rocks, eroding away miles and miles of coastline.

Redwood National Park, California
It’s thrilling to witness the power and fury of a Pacific storm.

Blessed rain.

Rainbow over the Virgin Mountains near Mesquite, Nevada
Rainbows are the perfect union of water and light.

Water is beauty. Water is life – the key ingredient that unifies all life on Earth.

Merriman Falls, Washington
Water is life.

Without it, none of this would exist.

Buddha Beach in Oak Creek, Arizona
Desert reflections

Splash!

Cormorants on the Mendocino Coast, California
Wave Watching

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