Blue Tan and White Bird in the Sierra Foothills
Coarsegold, California
Revised 6-27-09
Baby Blue-Eyes | Baby Blue-Eyes | Bachelor's Button | Bachelor's Button, Leaves |
Sierra Bluecup | Sierra Bluecup, Leaves | Blue Curls | Blue Curls, Leaves |
Blue-Dick | Blue-Dick | Elegant Brodiaea | Elegant Brodiaea |
Deerbrush | Deerbrush | Fiesta Flower | Fiesta Flower, Leaves |
Wild Blue Flax | Wild Blue Flax , Leaves | Bird's-Eye Gilia | Bird's-Eye Gilia |
Blue False Gilia | Blue False Gilia, Leaves | Foothill Gilia | Foothill Gilia, Leaves |
Foothill Gilia, Variant | Grass Nut | Grass Nut | |
Foothill Larkspur | Foothill Larkspur, Leaves | Prickly Lettuce | Prickly Lettuce, Leaves |
Bentham's Lupine | Bentham's Lupine, Leaves | Miniature Lupine | Miniature Lupine, Leaves |
Sierra Lupine | Sierra Lupine, Leaves | Silver Bush Lupine | Silver Bush Lupine |
Downy Navarretia | Downy Navarretia, Leaves | Gay Penstemon | Gay Penstemon, Leaves |
Common Phacelia | Common Phacelia, Leaves | Danny's Skullcap | Danny's Skullcap, Leaves |
American Speedwell | American Speedwell, Leaves | Birdseye Speedwell | Birdseye Speedwell, Leaves |
Tehachapi Wool Star | Tehachapi Wool Star |
Bloom: April–June Bloom: May–July Bloom: May–July Bloom: Early Spring Bloom: May–September NOTES:
American Speedwell
Bloom: Ma y– September
Description: Perennial herb, ½–2'. Flowers in long sprays. Large leaves lancelike.
Special: Native. Marshy places. BACK Baby Blue-Eyes
Bloom: March–June
Description: Annual. Low plant, up to 1', with slender, leaning, branched stems. Leaves ½–3", pinnately divided into segments with teeth along edges, opposite. 5-petaled, pale or clear blue, bowl-shaped, ½–1", with white center; often with black speckles.
Special: Native. Starts easily from seed. Closely related to Five Spot and Fiesta Flower. BACK Bachelor's Button
Bloom: May–October
Description: Annual herb, 1–3'. Stems erect, slender. Leaves linear with light gray hairs. Fluffy flower heads are blue, purple, pink, or white.
Special: Not native. BACK Bentham's Lupine
Bloom: March–June
Description: Annual herb, 2' or more. Typical blue flower with white banner splotch turning magenta with age, but leaves are unique. They resemble a spider's legs, long and extremely narrow, widely separated. Stalks are hairy.
Special: Native; limited to California. Major toxicity if ingested; can cause death. BACK Bird's-Eye Gilia
Bloom: March–April
Description: Annual herb. Flowers are dime-sized. Narrow flower tube is yellow with five deep purple lines or splotches. The petals are white or pale blue with blue-violet or pink at the tips. The anthers are covered with deep-blue pollen. Leaves are narrow, threadlike.
Special: Native; limited to California. Grows in large patches, making a haze of color. Flowers close on cloudy days. BACK Birdseye Speedwell
Bloom: April –August
Description: Annual herb, creeping or erect, to 12'. 4-petaled flowers are blue with dark lines and pale centers, borne on threadlike stalks from leaf bases. Leaves oval and scalloped, scattered along stems.
Special: Not native. BACK Blue Curls
Bloom: June–October
Description: Annual herb, 4–24". Flowers small and unusually shaped, delicately beautiful. Curved corolla tube is twisted, so that the long, curving stamens point toward the stem. The flower is blue except for the lip, which is white with blue dots leading inside (in our subspecies; some are entirely blue). Leaves are narrow and opposite.
Special: Native. Strong odor. Natives crushed fresh leaves and threw them into the water to stun fish. BACK Blue-Dick
Bloom: March–May
Description: Perennial herb, 12–24". Basal, grasslike leaves disappear early summer. Stem is leafless. ½" tubular blue flowers are tightly clustered together.
Special: Native. BACK Blue False Gilia
Description: Annual herb, 4–18". Dark violet-blue flowers in loose heads (4–8"). Leaves linear with 2–5 pairs of simple linear lobes.
Special: Native. BACK Common Phacelia
Bloom: March–June
Description: Annual herb. Finely haired, branched plant, glandular in upper parts. Fernlike leaves, ¾–4", opposite, coarsely toothed on erect stems. Flowers are in coils of broadly bell-shaped blue flowers, ¼", calyx with 5 unequal lobes, 5 round lobes on corolla, 5 stamens.
Special: Native. Can cause dermatitis. Not related to Heliotropes grown in gardens. BACK Danny's Skullcap
Bloom: March–July
Description: Perennial herb, 1–8". Dark blue corolla tube bent above a hairy calyx. Lower petal lip has a central notch. Leaves broadly oval, coarsely toothed margins. Velvety look and feel.
Special: Native. BACK Deerbrush
Bloom: April–July
Description: Shrub, openly branched. Up to 13', erect or spreading. Leaves lanceolate to ovate, alternate, to 2½", 3 main veins. Upper side darker than lower, which may be covered with fine, white hairs. Inflorescence is a branched cluster of white or pale blue saucer-shaped, fragrant flowers. The tiny flowers have 5 petal-like sepals and 5 spoon-shaped petals.
Special: Native. Sweet, spicy honey scent. Some species have thorns. Natives hardened the branches with fire, then used them as digging sticks. BACK Downy Navarretia
Bloom: May–July
Description: Annual herb, 4–12". Blue-purple flowers in a ball, with finely divided, dark-green sticky leaves below.
Special: Native; limited to California. BACK Elegant Brodiaea
Bloom: April–June
Description: Perennial, from a corm, up to 2'. 3–5 linear leaves (4–16") at base; usually withered by flowering time. Inflorescence is an umbel of fluorescent violet or blue-violet funnel-shaped flowers, each with 3 sepals and 3 petals, 1½" long. Prefers heavy soils.
Special: Native. Corms were an important staple food of natives. BACK Fiesta Flower
Bloom: March–May
Description: Annual herb, 1–4'. Taller & weaker version of its cousin, Baby Blue-Eyes. The flowers are a darker blue (to lavender or purple) than Baby Blue-Eyes. Leaves dandelionlike, with a swept-back jet look. The plant looks like a vine, but is simply weak-stemmed.
Special: Native. Shade-loving. Hangs onto nearby plants for support with its reverse-barb prickles. BACK Foothill Larkspur
Description: 1–2'. Dark or pale blue flowers in spikes. The 2 lower petals are a rounded dome, heavily haired. Leaves narrowly divided into shiny green divisions. Rust-colored veins on underside.
Special: Native. BACK Gay Penstemon
Description: Perennial herb, ½–3'. Flowers blue-violet to pink to red-purple. Stems erect and distinctly sticky-haired.
Special: Native. Dry, open mountain slopes. BACK Grass Nut
Bloom: April�June
Description: Perennial herb, up to 3' long with basal, linear leaves. Leafless stems, pale blue or purple flowers in an open umbel. Individual flowers are almost 1" long.
Special: Native; limited to California. Natives prized the small corm for its nutty flavor. BACK Miniature Lupine
Description: Annual or perennial herb. Small (4–16"), grayish, hairy, branched plant with palmately compound leaves. Pea flowers (3/8") are blue-violet & white, arranged in whorls in short, thick, conelike racemes.
Special: Native. Major toxicity; can cause death if ingested. Common companion to California Poppy. BACK Prickly Lettuce
Description: Annual herb, 2–5'. S ingle tall, white stem has broad, gray-green, pinnate lobed leaves. Yellow prickles on both sides of leaves. Small yellow flower heads open only in the morning. Closed heads show blue on tip. Seeds are fluffy parachutes.
Special: Not native; invasive. BACK Sierra Bluecup
Bloom: May–June
Description: Annual herb, 2–8". Blue cuplike flowers.
Special: Native, limited to California. Most common the year after a forest fire. BACK Sierra Lupine
Bloom: May–July
Description: Perennial herb, �–2'. Banner petal has a bright yellow spot, sides slightly curved back. Leaves hairy, silvery to gray.
Special: Native, limited to California. Likes dry slopes. Major toxicity. BACK Silver Bush Lupine
Bloom: Early Spring
Description: Shrub, to 3–4' and more. Silvery, hairy leaves consist of 6–10 narrow, pointed, widely separate leaflets as long as 1�". The large blue-purple flowers (¾") have a tightly reflexed banner in the center that is yellow or white, flecked with black, which turns red-purple with age. The tips of the long (to 1') flower spikes are silver, and flowers still in bud are a soft, fuzzy white.
Special: Native. Major toxicity. BACK Tehachapi Wool Star
Bloom: April–June
Description: Perennial herb, 4–16". Deep blue-violet funnel-shaped flowers have stamens attached at & between petal lobes. Leaves have 3�9 threadlike lobes.
Special: Native; limited to California. BACK Wild Blue Flax
Bloom: May–September
Description: Slender perennial, up to 30". Alternate linear leaves ¼–1" long. Five-petaled blue flowers, ¾–1½" wide, nodding in bud. Fruit contains 10 shiny brown seeds.
Special: Not native. Natives soaked the root for eye medicine, the stem for upset stomachs. They ate the roasted and ground seeds, and used the stems for cordage. BACK
Source: http://www.birdmom.net/wildflowersblue.html
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