Los Angeles Times

Too much love for state’s bloom

Some eager visitors to desert ‘super bloom’ are crushing petals and stems

- L.A. Times

Throngs are trampling the colorful eruption of f lora that blossomed after heavy winter storms.

If it’s not drought that’s keeping the flowers down, it’s the visitors.

After a record series of winter storms buried the Sierra Nevada in snow and filled rivers and lakes to the brim, a “super bloom” of desert flowers has sprouted in long-parched Southern California and painted the landscape in swaths of bright red, orange, yellow and purple.

The eruption of flora — perhaps the largest in more than a decade — has drawn a steady stream of eager flower peepers, including naturalist­s, tourists and hordes of amateur photograph­ers seeking the perfect trophy shot for their social media accounts.

Unfortunat­ely, this extraordin­ary bloom has also caused many visitors to stray from establishe­d foot paths and sent them tromping through fields of California poppies and other flowers, crushing their delicate petals and stems.

Initially, state and local park managers viewed the jump in visitor traffic as a boon. Now, however, some are finding it a nightmare as they struggle to preserve the ephemeral blooms amid growing crowds.

At Diamond Valley Lake in Riverside County, park officials were forced to close a section of the mile-long wildflower trail because visitors were marching off the path to snap photos.

“We had literally thousands of people a day coming out to visit in a couple weeks. We’ve never seen it this busy,” said Wendy Picht, a senior environmen­tal specialist with the Metropolit­an Water District, which manages Diamond Valley Lake. “But at the same time, it was a little bit too much.”

The trail, opened Feb. 24, drew a trickle of visitors at first. But that rapidly grew as word spread of what this year’s historic rainfall had wrought. By March 29, operators ordered the trail closed because of wildflower losses.

The trail was reopened Wednesday — a week later. This time, however, signs were posted in four languages warning hikers to stay on the footpath, and volunteers were stationed along the trail to guide people.

The poppy fields draw the most eyes, Picht said. The flowers last the longest and are brighter than other area species, such as baby blue eyes, arroyo lupine, caterpilla­r phacelia and Canterbury bells.

“It happened sort of suddenly, people started disregardi­ng the rules and trail guides,” Picht said. “You can’t really blame them, but at the same time, we couldn’t allow that.”

Her concerns were echoed in the high desert, where throngs of visitors have trekked to the California Poppy Reserve to get the best photograph­s, an employee said.

A search on Instagram for “#superbloom” turns up more than 50,000 results with recent photos coming from local and state-run parks.

Some photos show visitors holding plucked bouquets of wildflower­s, while others show them striking poses within the blooms.

“Spent 3 hours in the car to take pictures for 30 minutes,” one woman wrote on Instagram. The post included an image of her sitting in a bed of poppies.

“Bloom where you’re planted,” wrote a man who was photograph­ed lying on his back with crushed petals next to his head.

Lancaster’s massive field of golden flowers has been popular on social media in recent weeks, and the effects are starting to show.

At least two new “paths” have emerged at the reserve from people’s continuous steps, and workers have had to add signs telling visitors to stay on the trail and to watch out for wildlife, a park employee said.

Meanwhile, at Walker Canyon in Lake Elsinore, visitors have turned dusty highway shoulders into improvised parking lots.

The area has few trails, but offers plenty of flowercove­red hillsides to amble through.

“We even had folks parking on the freeway,” Lake Elsinore city spokeswoma­n Nicole Dailey said. “The land abuts the 15 Freeway so they’re taking it upon themselves to pull over to the shoulder.”

Commuters have reported hourlong traffic jams because of the cars exiting into the canyon, she said.

A wave of visitors to Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, which reaches into San Diego, Imperial and Riverside counties, brought similar issues last month, said Kathy Dice, the park’s superinten­dent.

“This was the first super bloom where we experience­d the power of social media and the Internet,” Dice said. “This really drove our numbers beyond anything.”

At the peak of the rush, some guests parked their cars on the side of the road or private property and left trash behind, she said. “That was the downside of the flower bloom,” she lamented. “The vast majority of people were great, but there are people who don’t behave properly.”

But not every park with a super bloom has shared the fate of those in Southern California.

At the Carrizo Plain National Monument in the Central Valley, a record number of visitors swarmed the park over the last month to see the best bloom in recent memory — but they behaved, said Serena Baker, a spokeswoma­n for the federal Bureau of Land Management.

The visitor center had more than double its average number of guests over the weekend, and drivers eager to see the flowers filled the parking lot or stopped on the side of the road leading into it, Baker said.

Despite the crowd sizes, people have been courteous, she said. “People have been really good; we’re really proud of them,” she said.

 ?? California State Parks ?? LANCASTER’S massive field of golden flowers has been popular, and the effects are starting to show. Two new “paths” have emerged at the California Poppy Reserve from people’s continuous steps, and workers have added signs telling visitors to stay on...
California State Parks LANCASTER’S massive field of golden flowers has been popular, and the effects are starting to show. Two new “paths” have emerged at the California Poppy Reserve from people’s continuous steps, and workers have added signs telling visitors to stay on...

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