The first “spring” wildflowers are blooming on the Mendonoma Coast.

Every winter, beginning around Christmas, Rick and I look for Slink Pod, Scoliopus bigelovii, also called Fetid Adder's Tongue. This year we found our first one mid-January.

They can be very hard to spot, as they are quite tiny. They are members of the Lily family and the two leaves you can see just peeking up through the forest duff, will grow in the weeks ahead to be quite large. These leaves are oblong and mottled and if you see them later in the year, then next winter look for the tiny orchid-like bloom in the same spot.

Amy Ruegg found the first blooming Douglas Iris, Iris douglasiana.

Now that does seem early! I am looking for Milkmaids, Cardamine californica. The first leaf has appeared in spots but no sign of the flower stalk yet.

Thanks to Amy for allowing me to share her photo with you here.

Another dose of rain overnight, along with a few showers today. Coastal streams are full, creating beautiful waterfalls when they spill over bluffs. The weather forecast calls for sunny, warm days. Pretending to be spring?

2 thoughts on “The first “spring” wildflowers are blooming on the Mendonoma Coast.

  1. Anne Mary Schaefer

    Quite early, and not just here. On the east coast trees are confused and flowering 3 weeks earlier than average. Further evidence that climate change is accelerating.

    1. Jeanne Jackson

      Post author

      Early for the Douglas Iris, but not for the Slink Pod. I love looking for early wildflowers!

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