View of the Gorge |
When I first arrived I was greeted with views of fields full of bright orange balsamroot and purple lupine. The two flowers complimented each other perfectly, with an intermittent addition of buckwheat, fiddleneck, or Oregon sunshine.
Further along the trail was a small pond with plenty of poison oak in bloom all around it. There was so much of it that you really had to watch your step in some areas. below the pond was a dry stream bed lined with tiny white and yellow flowers. The stream bed has an obviously wet and dry side, the wet side covered in lush green poison oak, and the dry side dry grasses.
Field of Carey's balsamroot and lupine. |
Field of lupine |
Field of Carey's Balsamroot |
Eriophyllum lanatum - Oregon Sunshine |
Lupinus latifolius- Broad leaved lupine |
Buckwheat flower |
Amsinckia menziesii- Common fiddleneck |
Eriogonum - Buckwheat |
Further along the trail was a small pond with plenty of poison oak in bloom all around it. There was so much of it that you really had to watch your step in some areas. below the pond was a dry stream bed lined with tiny white and yellow flowers. The stream bed has an obviously wet and dry side, the wet side covered in lush green poison oak, and the dry side dry grasses.
Dry stream bed |
On the lower bluffs returning back there were many Lomatium, a member of the carrot family with finely dissected leaves and umbels of large seeds. They were all kinds of sherbet colors, from light green to pink and looked like strange fluffy clouds. Commonly they are known as desert parsley or biscuitroot.
Yellow, orange, pink and green desert parsley in a field. |
Desert parsely, with buckwheat behind it. |
Unusual foliage of the desert parsley. |
Umbels of seeds up above the plant. |
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