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Visitors 171
Modified 22-Mar-24
Created 21-Apr-19
36 photos

I intend to sort my select images into three groups each year, corresponding to our three seasons.

We don't have winter here, the kind of winter they have in snow country. Just three distinct seasons: the rainy season, spring, and summer.

The rainy season takes place during the wettest and darkest months: December, January, February, and March. (In 2019, rain extended well into April, but spring could not be held back: spring started as April arrived.) With the return of the rains, deciduous trees put out new bright green leaves. Seeds sprout. Early wildflowers appear. Top bucks assemble harems of does and impregnate them.

Spring comes after most of the rainy season, and before high summer: April, May, June, July. Rains taper off in springtime, but the still-moist ground and strengthening sunlight lead to accelerating growth and productivity. Spring sees the peak of the wildflowers -- but the rolling symphony of wildflowers begins in the rainy season and extends well into the farewell-to-spring of the summer.

Spring 2019 saw a symphony of Goldfields, Poppies, Owl's-clover, and more in the serpentine grasslands; carpets of Lupine on the lower grasslands above Corte Madera Creek; and quieter wildflowers in the lush woodlands -- as well as new leaves on (almost) every tree. (But I missed the parade of Newts along Trail 3, to or from San Francisquito Creek.)

The dry months continue relentlessly into summer. The land and the plants dry out and hang on, resting through August, September, and perhaps October and part of November. This is the lean time for many local plants. Fog drip on Skyline keeps many creeks running; others dry up. Valley oaks, blue oaks, and other deciduous trees lose their leaves and pull back, waiting. The annual European grasses dry out, turning our California hills "golden". The final wildflowers of the year appear and linger on through the heat.

With the coming of the rainy season, a new year begins.

The California buckeye (Aesculus californica) is supremely adapted to our local climate. In the rainy season, the buckeye drops its seeds and leafs out, ready for the confluence of moisture and sunlight that allows peak productivity. In springtime, the leaves are full. Peak productivity, peak photosynthesis. The buckeye puts forth its flowers and sets its seeds. Then the leaves wither. In summer, the leaves fall, and the hemispherical buckeye trees sport bare limbs, decorated with the mature buckeye seeds, waiting through the dry time for the best time to plant the seeds, when the rains come again.

The California buckeye is a remnant species, hanging on despite the disappearance of its companion macrofauna -- but that is a story for another day. Do the buckeye a favor, spread their seeds, you are all they have now.
Early MornWelcoming TrailSmooth Mule Ears (Wyethia glabra) Welcome the Morning SunSandstone Boulder, Grinding RockVisitors' Valley Oak (Quercus lobata)Old Valley Oak (Quercus lobata)Lone Valley Oak (Quercus lobata) in Spring Finery (2)Lone Valley Oak (Quercus lobata) in Spring Finery (3)Lone Valley Oak (Quercus lobata) in Spring FineryMistletoe-covered Valley Oak (Quercus lobata)Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo lineatus) in FlightMale Nuttall's Woodpecker (Dryobates nuttallii)Male Tree Swallow (Tachycineta bicolor)Western Scrub Jay (Aphelocoma californica) Greets the DawnGoldfields Explosion (2)Springtime Flowers with Lone Valley OakSerpentine Grasslands in the SpringGolden TrailSerpentine Grasslands in the Spring (2)Serpentine Grasslands in the Spring (3)

Guestbook for 2019 Springtime
Valerie(non-registered)
Brewer's Onion by Serpentine rock, Tree swallow, Flowers on trail leading eye to Lone Valley Oak
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