We have had some really marvelous warm spring weather in the last week or two. Temperatures into the 70’s and light to steady breezes quickly melted the snow and out of the wet ground sprouted delightful tiny wildflowers. Lots of insects hatched attracting lots of birds and the honey bees have been busy on the willow catkins, gathering pollen for their hives. For nearly a week I’d go outside a couple times a day and search for my former nemesis wildflower – steershead or Dicentra uniflora – and I was delighted to find it. As the snow line descended down into our draw, I found more and more of tiny plants with flowers the size of a dime. How could they have been here all these years and I never saw them til last year. Were they tucked under the bitterbrush that burned in 2014? Or did the fire stimulate seeds that may have laid dormant?
Steershead leaves emerge as soon as the snow melts
Waterleaf leaves
Bright green moss
Larkspur leaves
Bitterroot leaves
The bitterroot leaves were waiting patiently under the snow
Delightful tiny leaves peaking out from under a rock
Lomatium geyerii, our first wildflower to bloom
Busy honeybee taking a break
Inside the house, the clivia is blooming. My aunt gave me this plant many years ago and now it’s been three years since she died. Where does the time go?
The steershead flower bud
A rivulet running down our driveway from the melting snow
Hmmmm, I should know this one.
And then the yellow bells began popping out all over
The bluebells are now blooming too
And the steershead is full formed!
Lupine
A frozen vernal pond
Another Lomatium maybe gormaii or salt and pepper?
And soon there will be balsamroot on our hill!
Lots of steershead!
Prairie stars in Moses Coulee
Buttercups in Northrup Canyon
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