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Yes, I am glad I have the opportunity to come around a bit.I'm not always satisfied with my pictures - sometimes I feel that the camera has its own will Not many wild plants to see yet, but soon I think they will show up.You used your 5 min in a good way! But it looks very dry there. What happens when the summer warmth arrives? Are wildfires a problem there?
I'm quite surprised by how many of those plants (or close species) we have grown and it is especially interesting to see the lomatiums. Umbels are so recognisable and common in many places that gardeners tend to regard them as weeds, but these are very attractive too and flower so early in the year. The drought sounds extremely serious. We have had periods here with extensive hosepipe bans in drought years (particularly because of the high population in the south-east), and artesian water is important, but recent years have been much wetter. My father worked on the irrigation of crops (especially soft fruit, and trickle irrigation, and also using spraying to lessen frost damage to fruit trees in spring), and comparing yields under different irrigation regimes. Very hard for farmers to look at their crops under these conditions of drought
Thanks Robert for the latest posts, I enjoyed them immensely. So nice to see Lewisia dediviva growing like that. I have two little lewisias in my rock garden but still tiny plants and I haven't seen a flower yet. The lupinus you photographed are beautiful too, especially L. albifrons. I would love to try that here. I just can't resist silver foliage... I love the lomatias, always been a big fan of umbels. We are quite apiaceae poor here in Australia I think, compared with the northern hemisphere. I also love your North america violets. That little yellow one is stunning isn't it? Flies in the face of the conventional blue purple shades we associate with viola. Do you see many astragalus on your treks? Perhaps they flower later, or occur at higher altitudes?
Robert,Do you know how many species it's around where you go?