ΤΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟ ΜΑΣ ΞΕΠΕΡΑΣΕ ΜΕΧΡΙ ΣΗΜΕΡΑ ΤΙΣ 3.720.000 ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΕΙΣ.

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Los Angeles Times
PRESENTED BY CITY NATIONAL BANK* 
April 18, 2023

By Ryan Fonseca

Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California newsletter. It’s Tuesday, April 18.

Large numbers of a little orange flowers are drawing thousands out to the far north of Los Angeles County. But just how bright is this year’s bloom?

While a bountiful rainy season raised hopes of a superbloom, the orange-hued hillsides at the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reservearen’t fully popping this spring.

Despite that, poppy seekers are driving out to the desert each week to get a glimpse — and plenty of photos — of California’s iconic wildflower. On Sunday, the road leading to the reserve was slow going for miles. The parking area up at the reserve was full for a time, leaving visitors to park where they could and walk up to the trailheads.

Once you get on the trails, you’re sure to see the trademark orange of Eschscholzia californica, which became the state flower 120 years ago.

But you’ll also see a lot of yellow flowers on curled stems towering over the poppies. These are fiddlenecks, and as state park volunteer Patrick Saatzer explained, cold conditions in recent weeks gave these and other plants an advantage to “overwhelmed the poppies.”

Yellow curled stems of fiddleneck weeds growing above a few orange poppies.
Fiddlenecks grow faster and taller than the California poppy, limiting the abundance of the state flower at the Antelope Valley reserve this spring. (Ryan Fonseca / Los Angeles Times)

Saatzer, a retired Air Force colonel, has been a volunteer at the state park for three years and gives this year’s bloom a “C” compared to the past couple years.

Despite some visitors seeming “a little bit underwhelmed,” Saatzer said he enjoys meeting “all the different people that come out here [from] a lot of different countries.”

“They’re all really fascinated with the wildflowers,” he said.

But he wishes the state would step up their efforts to deal with the resulting traffic.

“What they need to do out here is have a shuttle bus because look at this,” he said, gesturing to the long line of cars stretching nearly a mile from the road adjacent to the reserve, along the street at the front entrance and up to the parking lots. “It’s just a disaster.”

After finding a spot in the lot — or making the long walk up from the main road below — families, couples and friends wandered the winding trails, taking in the view and snapping plenty of photos along the way.

Summer Kim made the drive from Anaheim with family and friends, hoping to see the bloom.

“I heard it is not that much of a superbloom because it has been so cold,” she said. Still, they enjoyed a rare “outdoorsy” adventure.

A woman holds up a phone and takes a photo of another woman in front of colorful wildflowers.
Summer Kim, right, takes a photo of a friend on the trail at the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve on Sunday. (Ryan Fonseca / Los Angeles Times)

As far as what constitutes a superbloom, that’s really in the eye of the flower beholders.

“The superbloom is really a cultural phenomenon, where people decide that there are enough flowers here, right now, that we’ll call it a superbloom,” Daniel Winkler, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center, recently told The Times.

Eschscholzia californica officially became California's state flower 120 years ago.
Eschscholzia californica officially became California’s state flower 120 years ago. (Ryan Fonseca/Los Angeles Times)

From a hilltop with a 360-degree view of the reserve and the surrounding Antelope Valley, Melanie Copas and her daughter, Addison Copas, took some photos. The two decided to drive out from Thousands Oaks on a whim earlier that day.

“Traffic was a bear,” Melanie said. “Had we known about the traffic issue, we would have come during the week. But it’s still beautiful — worth the drive for sure.”

Their impromptu trip left 16-year-old Addison unprepared for the sunny hike, but after buying a new hat from the reserve gift shop and borrowing sun screen from a generous stranger in the parking lot, they hit the trails.

“I love the fact that I’ve heard every language today from around the world,” Melanie said.

A family sits on a bench looking out over hills and mountains in the distance.
Romesh and Cynthia Abraham, far left and far right, sit on a bench with their children, taking in the scenery at the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve on Sunday. (Ryan Fonseca / Los Angeles Times)

Tehachapi residents Romesh and Cynthia Abraham visited the reserve with their three kids for the first time.

“I’m just amazed to see all the greenery and the flowers blooming,” Romesh said. “The last couple years with the drought, it just hasn’t been the same.”

Wildflowers swaying in the breeze in the Antelope Valley on Sunday.
Wildflowers swaying in the breeze in the Antelope Valley on Sunday. (Ryan Fonseca / Los Angeles Times)

The hillsides aren’t the only place to find pops of color. Wherever people are stopped to check out the poppies, there are also the rainbow umbrellas of the fruteros, selling cups of fresh fruit, raspados and more to hungry hikers.

While the poppies on the state reserve bloom (or don’t) based entirely on nature, flower seekers looking for a more uniformly orange — albeit manufactured — backdrop can find it a few miles east of the state park.

Out here, near massive electrical towers, a lush expanse of poppies stretch along a hillside in neatly formed rows.

It’s unclear who planted them, but the flowers appeared to be arranged and maintained with human help. Hundred of visitors walked along the rows and ventured into the flower fields on small paths, angling for a good photo.

Rows of California poppies stretch along a hillside in the Antelope Valley, drawing flower seekers.
Rows of California poppies stretch along a hillside in the Antelope Valley, drawing flower seekers. (Ryan Fonseca / Los Angeles Times)

Alex Khou and Sara Angione drove out from Thousand Oaks to enjoy the poppies after hearing about the supposed superbloom on the news. They snapped some photos for Instagram, but also to share with Angione’s parents back in Canada.

“It’s gorgeous... it takes your breath away,” she said. “I feel like the photos don’t do it justice.”

A couple pose for a selfie in a field of bright orange poppies.
Sara Angione snaps a poppy-rich selfie with boyfriend Alex Khou in a field of flowers in the Antelope Valley on Sunday. (Ryan Fonseca / Los Angeles Times)

But photos will have to do: California law states that no one “willfully or negligently cut, destroy, mutilate, or remove plant material” of any kind growing in state or county rights-of-way, or public land or private land (without express content from the owner). That means picking poppies is illegal.

While most people walking among the poppies were watching their step and leaving the flowers alone, there were some casualties of all that foot traffic. And a few people held bundles of the orange flowers in their hand.

Visitors walk through a large field of California poppies.
Visitors walk through a large field of California poppies near the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve on Sunday. (Ryan Fonseca / Los Angeles Times)

Interested in seeing the poppy bloom for yourself? Now’s the time. Next weekend marks the California Poppy Festival, which is held in nearby Lancaster and is likely draw even more people out to the reserve and blooms along the route.

Want to try elsewhere? Check our our guide: California’s breathtaking superbloom is here. Mapping where to go, see amazing photos.

Make sure to bring comfortable walking shoes, snacks that won’t melt in the desert sun, plenty of water and some patience for traffic and crowded trails. And after waiting in line to park, be prepared to wait in line for the bathrooms as well.

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