California is awash this season, after the torrential downpour this winter with a rare bloom from the Eastern Sierra to Malibu, from the deserts near San Diego to the meadows north of Sacramento. These wildflowers in purples, oranges, yellows, and whites color across hillsides and valleys and according to reports, the last time the state experienced the phenomenon was four years ago. This is some news.
Rightly called as 'super blooms', these flowers are spreading across states and reports are coming this colourful riot of nature are seen from the space.
As stated by the California Department of Parks and Recreation, the right amount of rain, sun, wind, and temperature has set the stage for desert wildflowers in the late winter and early spring. The department further added they are positive that California's desert state parks will probably see an average to good wildflower bloom this year owing to the recent weather.
According to reports, the wildflowers are rolling hillsides turning into a flame-orange cover in the Antelope Valley north of Los Angeles. Further, carpets of yellow goldfields and purple phacelia have sprouted at the Carrizo Plain National Monument, the largest intact grassland in the state’s Central Valley, about 70 miles west of Bakersfield. A recent satellite sightings looked as if the valleys are "touched by a painter's brush".
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