Always to the frontier

Monday, July 2, 2012

California Redbuds in Native Habitat

Western North America has its own version of the lovely Redbud, a small flowering tree that puts on a dazzling show for those blessed enough to encounter one in spring.  A Redbud in the yard is lovely, to be sure, but in one of its native strongholds?  Absolutely gorgeous.  Both pictures below were taken in the Kern River valley in Sequoia National Park.


The bare white trees still waiting for their leaves to return are California Sycamores (Platanus Racemosa).  Like our eastern version of the Redbud, these lovely trees thrive along the upper margins of watercourses, here pictured just at the top right of the photo.
Like the Eastern Redbud (Cercis Canadensis), the California Redbud (Cercis Occidentalis) caught quite a bit of attention when it was first discovered.  Even in the Sierra Nevadas where towering peaks, majestic valleys, and giant trees captivate those who witness them, these lovely trees turn springtime in these mountains into something even more alluring.  They tend to favor the western slope of the Sierras, and can also be found in southwestern Utah and along the Grand Canyon.  They often grow in settings which stand in contrast to much of the rest of the arid, coniferous west.  

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