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Monthly Archives: January 2017

Winter Wildflowers

January 25, 2017by concretechaparral Leave a comment

Season’s first wild flowers are blooming

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Hikes/Walks, Native Plants, Urban Parks

Avoiding Unintentional Poisoning

January 11, 2017by concretechaparral Leave a comment

Rat Poison & Local Wildlife

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Articles/Links, Habitat & Wildlife

With the Rains

January 11, 2017by concretechaparral Leave a comment

With the rains, green returns

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Garden, Native Plants

‘Greater than the Sums of its Parts’

January 8, 2017by concretechaparral Leave a comment

You can’t talk about urban wilderness without talking about coyotes.

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Articles/Links, Habitat & Wildlife

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A willet (Catoptrophorus semipalmatus) searches the tide pool for a tasty snack. Soon they will leave for their summer range in the north-central United States and south-central Canada, one of the shorter migration for our winter shorebirds.
On the rocky beaches of Pablo’s Verde a whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus) enjoys their last days of California sunshine. Whimbrels summer in the far north of Alaska and Canada.
New flower emerging on a California bush sunflower (Encelia californica).
Malva Rosa (Malva assurgentiflora) has one of the most stunning flower of California natives. Interestedly, its two to three inch flowers are obscured by its own foliage. These flowers I saw only because I was weeding around it. Evolutionary-wise, I wonder how that came to be. Colorful flowers can take a lot of a plant’s energy to create and are meant to attract pollinators, so why do malva rosa hide their flowers?
What!? No one told me yesterday was California Poppy Day! >sigh< Here are some California poppies (Eschscholzia californica) and a Concha ceanothus (Ceanothus ‘Concha’). If you planted ceanothus before, you would know it is a bee magnet. However, the poppies have a stronger pull - few bees are visiting the ceanothus while dozens go from poppy to poppy. Everyone loves the poppies!
An Anna’s Hummingbird (Calypte anna) grabbing a quick snack.
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