Tag Archives: lupinus perennis

Springtime in Pacoima

As Previously Blogged: This year’s long rainy season is bringing a landscape transformation. At the top of the Valley — that brown-baked sprawl of industrial blight where the 210, the 5, the 14, and the 118 tangle — that dusty Kansas of the soul, from which sore eyes are usually averted — I found a Technicolor Land of Oz.

Whatever mental pictures you have of the San Fernando Valley, here’s a cool mountain breeze to blow them out of your brain.

Above are arroyo lupines, Lupinus succulentus, which prefer growing close to the stream bed. On the west-facing slopes are found the famous California wild lupines, Lupinus perennis.

Native plants holding their own against invasive brome and Too Much Mustard…

The only flashes of red in the meadow are from two shrubs. First, the invasive castor bean plant, which was introduced as a cash monocrop, failed, escaped, and has naturalized all over California. They are awesome, dread plants to behold, quite otherworldly. A cheerier red comes from the budding leaves of the laurel sumac.

Giant coreopsis, known as “tickseed,” from its confusion with some other flower that has tiny tick-shaped seeds.