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Rains Prompt Rare Wildflower Display in Death Valley
AP ^ | AP-ES-03-14-05 1233EST

Posted on 03/14/2005 9:57:22 AM PST by TheOtherOne

Rains Prompt Rare Wildflower Display in Death Valley

By Juliana Barbassa Associated Press Writer
Published: Mar 14, 2005 DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) - A rare burst of color is softening the stark landscape of Death Valley, with clusters of purple, pink and white wildflowers dotting the black basalt mountainsides and great swaths of golden blooms bordering the blinding white salt flats on the valley floor.

The winter storms that brought mudslides and death to Southern California dropped 6 inches of rain on this thirsty desert - three times more than usual - encouraging wildflower seeds to sprout. Experts say this kind of show comes once in a lifetime.

The flowers have adapted to the desert by developing seeds with coatings so thick or waxy that they can hibernate for decades. Only continued heavy rains will coax them to grow. Then, when there's just the right amount of moisture, sunlight and warmth, "it's all systems go," says Pam Muick, executive director of the California Native Plant Society.

She says Death Valley hasn't seen such a wide array of flowers in about 50 years - blue pendants of desert lupine and tiny purple chias growing in clumps, golden California poppies scattering all over hillsides. Along roads leading into the park, long rows of bright yellow daisies wave, almost as if they'd been seeded to greet the visitors.

The normally forbidding landscape is not only alive with flowers, but fat, 3-inch-long green caterpillars that develop into Sphinx moths will come out soon to feast on the blooms, said Terry Baldino, a park ranger.

"They're the biggest, ugliest things you've ever seen," Baldino said. "And they have one thing on their mind - eating flowers."

The caterpillars and the abundance of new seeds will attract birds and small rodents, drawing in snakes and foxes in turn - a food chain that is very unusual for Death Valley, Baldino said.

Even in the early spring, temperatures are already soaring into the 90s, reminding tourists flocking in for the flower show that this is a place of extremes. A deep bowl about 156 miles long, the valley was created when great plates of earth pushed apart, giving rise to the Amargosa and the Panamint mountain ranges and dropping the valley floor 292 feet below sea level. The depression works like a convection oven, recirculating hot air and making the valley one of the hottest places on earth, with ground-level temperatures that can reach 200 degrees in summer.

It's also extremely dry, with less than 2 inches of rainfall a year. The water that does wash down the mineral-rich mountainsides carries salt deposits that have formed the great salt flats dominating the valley floor. Visitors can hike or drive for miles along the glistening salt pan, or examine the jagged salt formations that seem to mirror the snowcapped mountains looming in the background.

The recent storms have turned part of the salt pan around Badwater Basin - normally a brackish puddle a few inches deep - into a reflecting pool about five miles across. Kayakers and windsailers cut across the shallow, lifeless water. Other visitors wade in, only to emerge covered in a salt crust.

The flowers will continue to flourish until July, according to Baldino. The blooms in the southern reaches and lower elevations will fade within the next couple of weeks as temperatures climb, but the warmth will trigger seed banks farther north and higher up in the hillsides, creating a moving display.

These flowers will then drop seeds, which will lay dormant until the next really wet winter.

"This isn't a wasteland," Muick said. "It will start looking empty when the flowers are gone, but there's life there at all times."

---

On the Net:

Death Valley National Park: http://www.nps.gov/deva/.

AP-ES-03-14-05 1233EST


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: deathvalley; flowers; rain
Wild flowers bloom on the edge of the Badwater Basin, the lowest elevation in the United States, 282 ft (86m) below sea level, with the Panamit Range in the background at Death Valley National Park, Calif., on Thursday, March 10, 2005. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
Mon Mar 14,10:49 AM ET
AP


Wild flowers bloom on the edge of the Badwater Basin, the lowest elevation in the United States, 282 ft (86m) below sea level, with the Panamit Range in the background at Death Valley National Park, Calif., on Thursday, March 10, 2005. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Wild flowers bloom in Death Valley National Park, Calif., on Thursday, March 10, 2005. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Mon Mar 14,10:49 AM ET

AP


Wild flowers bloom in Death Valley National Park, Calif., on Thursday, March 10, 2005. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

A nature photographer kneels down with his tripod to capture the early morning light reflecting in the Badwater Basin, the lowest elevation in the United States, 282 ft. (86m) below sea level, with the Panamit Range in the background at Death Valley National Park, Calif., on Thursday, March 10, 2005. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Mon Mar 14,10:49 AM ET
AP


A nature photographer kneels down with his tripod to capture the early morning light reflecting in the Badwater Basin, the lowest elevation in the United States, 282 ft. (86m) below sea level, with the Panamit Range in the background at Death Valley National Park, Calif., on Thursday, March 10, 2005. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

1 posted on 03/14/2005 9:57:23 AM PST by TheOtherOne
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To: TheOtherOne

we are truly blessed people


2 posted on 03/14/2005 10:00:42 AM PST by Revelation 911
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To: TheOtherOne

How pretty! It's so cool how the desert can just come to life like that.


3 posted on 03/14/2005 10:01:37 AM PST by Not A Snowbird (Official RKBA Landscaper and Arborist, Pajama Duchess of Green Leafy Things)
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To: TheOtherOne

Global warming - making the deserts bloom.


4 posted on 03/14/2005 10:02:23 AM PST by PAR35
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To: PAR35

Global cooling.......rain in the deserts


5 posted on 03/14/2005 10:04:33 AM PST by spokeshave (Strategery + Schardenfreude = Stratenschardenfreudery)
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To: TheOtherOne

Wow, thank you for posting this. I want to get out there and see it! Road trip.


6 posted on 03/14/2005 10:05:55 AM PST by Cinnamon Girl (OMGIIHIHOIIC ping list)
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To: Allan

See these.


7 posted on 03/14/2005 10:09:31 AM PST by ARridgerunner
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To: TheOtherOne

I saw a news story on this...its beautiful.


8 posted on 03/14/2005 10:12:00 AM PST by wallcrawlr (www.bionicear.com)
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To: SandyInSeattle

How pretty! It's so cool how the desert can just come to life like that.
-----
I second that. Life is so predictable most of the time, its nice to be utterly stunned by a beautiful act of God/nature, like this. Cool is the word.


9 posted on 03/14/2005 10:12:22 AM PST by Finalapproach29er (Open borders=National suicide)
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To: SandyInSeattle

Isa 43:18-19
(18) Do not remember the former things, nor consider the things of old.
(19) Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall sprout; shall you not know it? I will even make a way in the wilderness, rivers in the desert.


10 posted on 03/14/2005 10:16:41 AM PST by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: TheOtherOne
Beautiful pictures. Here is an example of one of California's many positive qualities. (The state is beautiful. It's just our legislature that's a mess, overrun with rodents.)

I need to plan a trip out there before the flowers fade. Thanks for posting this.

11 posted on 03/14/2005 10:23:58 AM PST by Pajamajan (Pray for Terri. Pray for Terri, Pray for Terri)
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To: TheOtherOne

Thanks for posting the story and the lovely pictures.


12 posted on 03/14/2005 10:36:53 AM PST by syriacus (Was Margaret Hassan kidnapped because she knew the Oil for Food program failed to aid Iraqis?)
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To: TheOtherOne

What seeds these? It is amazing. I'm always amazed at nature. Like at a weed growing from a small crack in the middle of a huge parking lot. Life is prolific.


13 posted on 03/14/2005 10:42:18 AM PST by whereasandsoforth
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To: Revelation 911

Except maybe for the ones that died in mudslides...


14 posted on 03/14/2005 10:43:07 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: TheOtherOne

How beautiful! Thanks for posting these.


15 posted on 03/14/2005 10:44:52 AM PST by najida (The older I get, the more I hate gravity.)
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To: TheOtherOne

I was posted at Ft Irwin in 67 when it rained like this, in addition to making such basin's bloom, all kinds of wildlife that had been laying dormant in the baked dirt for many many years suddenly hatched and the new lakes were teaming with them for several weeks. Funny looking almost prehistoric little critters.


16 posted on 03/14/2005 10:50:30 AM PST by kimoajax
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To: stuartcr
Except maybe for the ones that died in mudslides...

John 9:3“Neither this man nor his parents sinned,” said Jesus, “but this happened so that the work of God might be displayed in his life. 4As long as it is day, we must do the work of him who sent me. Night is coming, when no one can work. 5While I am in the world, I am the light of the world.”

17 posted on 03/14/2005 10:50:50 AM PST by Revelation 911
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To: TheOtherOne

Spectacular!


18 posted on 03/14/2005 10:59:08 AM PST by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: Revelation 911

???


19 posted on 03/14/2005 11:01:39 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: TheOtherOne
A nature photographer kneels down with his tripod to capture the early morning light reflecting in the Badwater Basin,

Look at where he is! He TRAMPLED all those innocent flowers to death, just to satisfy his egotistical lust to photograph the mountain soil that is as dead as his Awareness.

MURDERER!

SEPAL* will get you!

*SEPAL Saving the Environment by Abolishing Living People



HUGE SARCASM!!!

20 posted on 03/14/2005 12:50:37 PM PST by ApplegateRanch (The world needs more horses, and fewer Jackasses!)
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